“Like the atomic bomb, it’s there; like the bomb, the temptationwill always exist to use it.There can no longer be a worldwithout the atomic bomb; there can no longer be a worldwithout violent movies.”
“Paradoxically, that large screen in the cavernous, crowdedroom creates intimacy. And violence is an intimate act. If youare punching someone, or if you are pinpointing someone inthe telescope of your rifle, you are as close to your victim as toa lover, trying to think like them, anticipate their moves, overcomethem.”
“The key difference between a geek and a critic is that acritic digs deep and tries to get behind the surface of things,for better or worse, while a geek is interested in his own hedonism,the thrill of discovery.A geek is expansive and associativeand doesn’t necessarily care what a film or a scene ‘means’. It’sthe difference between the encyclopaedia and the scholar. Acritic likes an interesting association, a nice phrase; the geekadmires the beau geste, a pulpy story and its codes of honourtaken seriously.Tarantino rather combines those two roles. He is encyclopaedicbut also interpretive. He is a human Rolodex ofcredits. His films are like stuffed overnight bags breaking at theseams. The Handel of filmmakers, he takes the whole ofcinema as his resource. But he also provides new meanings,new interpretations of old moments by the way he recontextualizesthem.”
“Guns and women can make an atom bombing look like an ice cream social.”
“We think we know.""Know? That's worse than an atom bomb, and always was.”
“Somehow the world survived the Nazis, the atomic bomb, and modern music”
“The atom bomb is a paper tiger which the United States reactionaries use to scare people. It looks terrible, but in fact it isn't.”