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|WatchFreeMovies| Inglourious Basterds Watch Full Length

  1. rating 1203377 Votes
  2. 2hour 33 min
  3. tomatometer 8,9 of 10
  4. Actor Eli Roth
  5. Adventure

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My favorite actor, his voice is so mesmerizing. I hope he wins another Oscar for Spectre. Sally was quentins movie editor. She was working alone and whenever a scene startet or came to an end the actors say hi sally to greet her. she passed away some years ago...

Whats with the hi sally all the time? xD.

Credit music is from Allonsanfan? Oh, Morricone

Bye Sally... Christoph Waltz Multi Talent. Speaks French, German, english and. by the way. is a great actor. 0:42 It says here that you speak German fluently Yes Well, you might be a cunning linguist, but I'm a master debater. This ending is the best part of the movie along with the scene where the basterds pretend to be Italian.

It‘s just them saying Hello Sally! Those aren‘t Bloopers. YOU Solider runs away and get s shot Damn it,Hirschberg XD. Longest entrance, by far. “No reason for you to feel anxious.” Col. Hans Landa said to the girl that he allowed to live a few years earlier despite massacring the rest of her family. I know the context of the line is TECHNICALLY different, but it still shows how Hans Landa is magnificent bastard that we love to hate.
Brad Pitt is such a huge movie star that his acting has become extremely underrated. Too busy worried about his romance and candid life we forget the guy is a phenomenal actor. Should have won an academy award for best actor in this movie, Benjamin Button and Moneyball.

 

Beautifully shot, meticulously orchestrated, and lyrically scripted, it is Tarantino's answer to friend Paul Thomas Anderson's There Will Be Blood; a statement that says "anything you can do, I can do better. Is it better? Now that is a tough question, one that numbers cannot truly define. Is it QT's self-proclaimed masterpiece as he so shamelessly alludes to with the last line of dialogue? I still say Pulp Fiction can't be beat, but this one definitely makes me take pause.
What I love about Tarantino is his fresh, smart, and generally amusing as hell dialogue. Each film he has written bears his voice and excels as a result. However, as each entry to his oeuvre is made, the sequences seem to go longer and longer. It started with Kill Bill and continued to the extreme in Death Proof with overlong passages that, while not petering out towards the end, definitely contain some dead spaces. The 153-minute runtime here doesn't necessarily feel long, yet also doesn't hide itself. Rather than a feeling of boredom, I was anxious to get to the next scene, to see what would result from the previous instance of gravitas. Because this movie is chock full of tense plot points of huge importance. Not one second is wasted, well, maybe the unnecessarily hokey titlecard to usher a quick film reel history of Hugo Stiglitz and the other Sam Jackson narrated vignette about nitrate film) and the weight of every word and pause is felt. Were scenes drawn out, needing a trim here or there? No. If anything they were just so tightly wound that I couldn't breathe or wait from the anticipation of what was to come. I'm not quite sure if that is praise or criticism because, while taking me out of the film, I don't think I'd have wanted it any other way.
Oddities aside, the Stiglitz freeze-frame wasn't the only instance of font overkill—did we really need to know the names of the men in the theatre suites. this is vintage Tarantino pastiche. Right from the start, you aren't quite sure what is going on. Denis Menochet's Perrier LaPadite is shot with stoic strength, deliberately moving as he watches Nazi soldiers approach his house. Reminiscent of a Western standoff, the scene is accompanied by a reworked classical music piece I couldn't quite put my finger on, and the close-ups and camera angles made me look to see when Menochet and Christoph Waltz's Col. Hans Landa would inch their hands close to their gun holsters for a quick draw. Instead, we get a pipe juxtaposition showing the dearth of proximity their two classes are in—French milk farmer and German SS Colonel. The scene sets the stage for what is to come, showing the incident that ultimately leads to the revenge bent at the film's core while also showing us the cucumber cool and sarcastic wit of Waltz's Landa, by far the most interesting creature playing amongst the hyper-reality at hand.
The trailers harp on the Basterds themselves far too much because they are, to me, the least interesting plot thread. Yes, Brad Pitt is fantastic—the coarse Southern accent, the ruggedness complete with horrific neck scar, and the blank-faced comedic timing with his atrocious Italian and matter-of-fact dialogue delivery; and yes, Eli Roth is so over-the-top you can't help but love "The Bear Jew" without remorse. His lack of acting skill is quite obvious, but his exuberance and intensity more than make up for it. I also really enjoyed Til Schweiger's Stiglitz, the consummate badass out to kill the bad guys, no matter what side he is on. But, once the initial joy of their brutality and humor dissipates, you realize how thin their role really is. Bounty hunters sent on behalf of the American army, they are out to kill Nazis by maiming, branding, and butchering—mindless fun for sure; intelligent storytelling, not so much. No, that aspect is brought to form by Mélanie Laurent's Shosanna Dreyfus, once a Jewish girl in hiding, now a woman hiding in plain sight with fake name and papers and a movie theatre to run. By sheer coincidence, dumb luck. or divine intervention, the people responsible for her family's massacre not only come to her door, but the man who ordered the killing arrives himself, making it all too easy a decision on whether to host a propaganda premiere for "Nation's Pride" a filmed reenactment of German hero Fredrick Zoller and the one against three hundred odds he overcame.
The conspiracies that form around this premiere, whether between Shosanna and Daniel Brühl's smitten Zoller or with Diane Kruger's German actress traitor Bridget von Hammersmark and the Basterds, by way of British infiltrator Archie Hicox, a fun turn by Michael Fassbender, are what resonate. Remembering the scene at a French restaurant between Waltz and Laurent still gives me chills as this woman must control her emotions while sitting across from the man that killed her brother, what a release at its conclusion) as does the tense basement bar rendezvous between Kruger, Fassbender, and a bunch of Germans on leave to celebrate one's newborn son. It all culminates with Chapter Five, an exercise in sheer cinematic brilliance, from its wondrous opening with Laurent set to David Bowie's "Cat People" to its mix of drama and laughs from Waltz, to its intensity in Roth's malice, to the massacre of guns, fire, and bodies that ensues. It is poetry in blood and never ceases to amaze, right down to its blatant disregard for historical accuracy. Much like Tarantino's earlier work that took existing films and appropriated that which he needed to tell the messed up stories in his head, Inglourious Basterds starts with the French occupation background of WWII and springboards out to carnage, espionage, and fiction. The man has style and it is all his own. Welcome back QT and hopefully we can expect a new singular vision sooner rather than later.

This speech is just marvelous. Just watched 2 times in a row, pausing at thinker /pee moments the 2nd round, and I got it. It's an incredible movie. One of my new favorite. Missed it when it came out, I suppose because I wasn't ment to see it till tonight. 20 thumbs up. 1:36 Mel Gibson cameo. I want a tape with Christoph Waltz reading the longest book ever written. I want him to read it in all languages ever spoken. and I swear I won't die until I can get what I want.
Christoph waltz had many memorable scenes in this movie. Oooh that's a bingo. That phrase is immortal.

Fun Fact: One of the Jewish names carved on The Bear Jew's bat is Anne Frank. “Gots us German who wants to die for country! Obliged Him!”. Weinstein alert. Hello, Sally.
What's that music.
Adoxoi bastardi weather.
I mean in the end landa won, right? I mean he's not dead he still has a deal with that general, he'll still live with his wife and kid (if he has any) in that Island. He'll also get rich and will be considered a colonel even after being a nazi lol But god damn that is one hell of a Revenge.
The acting in this film was superb, especially Landa.

 

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