Actor Quentin Oliver Lee has sadly died at the age of 34.
22.11.2022 - 05:39 / deadline.com
Quentin Tarantino’s second book, Cinema Speculation, is as hard to put down as his “novelization” of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. His film education began at age 7, when he quickly warmed to the violent R-rated movies he makes today. Now, the mission for this interview was not to get Tarantino to rehash controversies for soundbites — like answering yet again what he wished he could have done to stop Harvey Weinstein’s predatory path or talking about his next film (he seems to be wistful about continuing Brad Pitt’s Cliff Booth character, but maybe that is my own wish after reading how the character was fleshed out in that novelization, which makes you understand everything about his match with Bruce Lee and so much more). Tarantino’s also keeping his multi-ep TV series plan quiet, the one he dropped on Elvis Mitchell. He did say he would only ever shoot one if it can be done on film. This interview is for Tarantino’s hardcore fans, a primer to his book and a glimpse into how he became the filmmaker he did.
DEADLINE: Cinema Speculation is a coming-of-age tour of your cinematic education. It starts at the tender age of 7 and is largely composed of manly R-rated thrillers, full of violence and revenge. Was the young Quentin not much for films for a female demo?
QUENTIN TARANTINO: I actually like the idea that Daisy Miller is sitting there all by her lonesome. Almost like, “What is that even doing here?” It’s interesting because I only started realizing that as I was putting the thing together that, “Oh, these are all really violent crime movies.”
DEADLINE: What was the good and the bad of absorbing so much adult male-themed imagery at age 7?
TARANTINO: Well, that’s not the only thing I saw, though. It’s a matter of
Actor Quentin Oliver Lee has sadly died at the age of 34.
Quentin Tarantino has been on a book tour lately, doing all the interviews on podcasts and with traditional media. When Tarantino is on a publicity tour, you know he’s going to share some of his hot takes about the film industry.
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Filmmaker Quentin Tarantino is making the rounds to promote his nonfiction novel “Cinema Speculation” and, while speaking with Elvis Mitchell during the book tour (via IndieWire) in NYC, dished out some tiny details about the script for his tenth and final film. READ MORE: Quentin Tarantino Has TV Limited Series Coming In Early 2023, No Plot Details Yet The writer/director revealed that the untitled project would come from an “original script” rather than being an adaptation like his fantastic film “Jackie Brown,” which Tarantino adapted/reimagined from the Elmore Leonard crime novel, “Rum Punch.” However, he was once tempted to adapt Lenoard’s book “Stick” but has since moved away from that idea.