Quentin Tarantino is one of the most prolific filmmakers of the modern era. Among his expansive filmography, one movie stands high above the rest: Kill Bill. Billed as one large film (and counted as such by Tarantino himself in terms of quantifying his own work) but released in two parts due to its length, Kill Bill is a true classic of the revenge genre. It has one of the strongest storylines in modern cinema due to its simplicity and universality. Of all Tarantino’s films, Kill Bill is the most likely to have the most enduring appeal.Kill Bill follows former Deadly Viper assassin Beatrix Kiddo (Uma Thurman), better known as the Bride, when she wakes up in the hospital after a terrible attack. She embarks on a mission to exact vengeance on the Vipers’ leader, Bill, for killing her soon-to-be husband and leaving her for dead on her wedding day. With a list of her former allies, Kiddo goes head-to-head with everyone who wronged her, culminating with Bill himself.Quentin Tarantino is no stranger to experimenting with the structure of his films. Pulp Fiction, perhaps the most famous of his films, utilizes one of the most unconventional timelines in modern cinematic history. Rather than being linear, like most films, it highlights all the characters independently and has their actions impact all the others even if they never directly interact. Though it’s interesting and executed well, it can be confusing for first-time viewers and, therefore, doesn’t take the crown as Tarantino’s best usage of this technique.RELATED: 10 Best Revenge Plots in Movies, Ranked
Quentin Tarantino is one of the most prolific filmmakers of the modern era. Among his expansive filmography, one movie stands high above the rest: Kill Bill. Billed as one large film (and counted as such by Tarantino himself in terms of quantifying his own work) but released in two parts due to its length, Kill Bill is a true classic of the revenge genre. It has one of the strongest storylines in modern cinema due to its simplicity and universality. Of all Tarantino’s films, Kill Bill is the most likely to have the most enduring appeal.
Kill Bill follows former Deadly Viper assassin Beatrix Kiddo (Uma Thurman), better known as the Bride, when she wakes up in the hospital after a terrible attack. She embarks on a mission to exact vengeance on the Vipers’ leader, Bill, for killing her soon-to-be husband and leaving her for dead on her wedding day. With a list of her former allies, Kiddo goes head-to-head with everyone who wronged her, culminating with Bill himself.
Quentin Tarantino is no stranger to experimenting with the structure of his films. Pulp Fiction, perhaps the most famous of his films, utilizes one of the most unconventional timelines in modern cinematic history. Rather than being linear, like most films, it highlights all the characters independently and has their actions impact all the others even if they never directly interact. Though it’s interesting and executed well, it can be confusing for first-time viewers and, therefore, doesn’t take the crown as Tarantino’s best usage of this technique.
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