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Post by KAMALARAMBO: BOOMSHAKALAKA!!! on Jan 12, 2013 19:16:58 GMT -5
I just saw this in theaters and was surprised by how many old fogeys there were there. I guess the Western thing stuck out more to them than the Tarantino thing.
Overall, I thought it was a super fun flick. Waltz was fantastic as always and the rest of the cast worked well together. Not my favorite Tarantino movie, but I'm sure I'll watch it a bunch more when it comes out on DVD.
On a random note I did notice that one of the people in the theaters walked out and never came back when the first rap song started playing during a shoot out. Haha.
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Post by KAMALARAMBO: BOOMSHAKALAKA!!! on Jan 12, 2013 19:17:51 GMT -5
Also, just wanted to mention that I'm sure there has been a topic on it already, but I didn't see it on the first two pages so figured I'd start anew.
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Crappler El 0 M
Dalek
Never Forgets an Octagon
I'm a good R-Truth.
Posts: 58,479
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Post by Crappler El 0 M on Jan 12, 2013 19:35:02 GMT -5
I enjoyed seeing Bruce Dern, Tom Wopat, Franco Nero, and Don Johnson if that's what you mean by 'old fogies.' Of course Tarantino has made a career of casting actors of the past that Hollywood had lost interest in and stopped using. There was Travolta in Pulp Fiction, Pam Grier and Robert Forster in Jackie Brown, David Carradine in Kill Bill, and Rod Taylor in Inglourious Basterds.
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Post by Bishblast on Jan 12, 2013 19:39:14 GMT -5
I thought he was talking about the viewers in the audience. Yes, there were many old people when I went to this, if that is what you mean.
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Post by KAMALARAMBO: BOOMSHAKALAKA!!! on Jan 12, 2013 19:58:58 GMT -5
I thought he was talking about the viewers in the audience. Yes, there were many old people when I went to this, if that is what you mean. Yeah, I was definitely talking about the people in the audience, not the actors.
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