Skip navigation

Tarantino digs his outlaw genius status

‘We just let our imaginations go wild,’ says director about ‘Grindhouse’

Quentin Tarantino
Quentin Tarantino’s hands never stop moving when he talks.
Matt Sayles / AP
Slideshow
Image: New Moon
  November movies
The “Twilight” sequel, “New Moon” hits the big screen, along with George Clooney in “The Men Who Stare at Goats” and “Fantastic Mr. Fox” and the apocalyptic “2012” and “The Road.”

more photos

By Miki Turner
msnbc.com contributor
updated 4:26 p.m. ET April 16, 2007

LOS ANGELES - At first glance “Grindhouse,” the new exploitative double feature joint from the inventive minds of Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez looks like one of those films that will subsequently have you grumbling about the three hours of your life that you can’t get back.

But somehow spending that time watching a quirky Tarantino flick, doesn’t seem like such a waste. Tarantino’s films aren’t always brilliant, but they are inarguably entertaining on some level. And, he has such a way with the bizarre that it’s highly likely that “Grindhouse” will go down as one of the top cult classics in history.

The film, which opens Friday, features Rose McGowan, Freddy Rodriguez, Josh Brolin, Naveen Andrews, Marley Shelton and Bruce Willis (cameo) in “Planet Terror,” a throwback to “Dawn of the Dead.” All hell breaks loose when some strange plague hits the town and turns the locals into zombies and it’s up to a one-legged former go-go dancer Cherry (McGowan) and her ex-boyfriend (Rodriguez) to save the world.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

Kurt Russell, Tracie Thoms, Sydney Tamia Poitier, Rosario Dawson, Jordan Ladd, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Zoe Bell and McGowan star in Tarantino’s “Death Proof,” a spoof on the slasher genre in which the madman (Russell) hunts down babes in his car as opposed to chasing them through the woods.

‘Quentin and Robert are outlaws’
“When I read it I knew I had to be in it,” said Freddy Rodriguez. “Quentin and Robert are outlaws who do their own thing. That’s the beauty of them. They make their own rules and they come up with these ideas that no one else will try. That’s why as an actor, when they call, you just say, I’m there.”

Tarantino and Rodriguez came up with the concept one night when Rodriguez stumbled across an old movie poster from the ’50s at Tarantino’s home in Austin.

“He says, ‘Hey, see that poster?” Tarantino said. “‘I’ve always wanted to do a double feature like that.’ And I said, ‘let’s do it. I’ll do one and you do the other.’ And he said, ‘we’ll put fake trailers in it and call it ‘Grindhouse.’”

Slideshow
Image: The Cinema Society Hosts The Screening Of "The Private Lives Of Pippa Lee"
  Celebrity sightings
Slimed Timberlake, billionaire skinhead, ‘Blades’ of Ferrell, and more.

more photos

The origin of “The Grindhouse” is a little ambiguous. According to the press notes, some folks believe it referred to films that included a lot of bumping and grinding. Others say that it came from the way the films were “grinded out” on ancient projectors. One thing, however, is very clear. These films generally included lots of sex and violence. The more bizarre the scene, the better. Nothing needed to make sense and it didn’t.

“Grindhouse” contains all of those elements.

“We were trying to capture the entire Grindhouse experience and hopefully it works correctly,” said Tarantino. “We wanted to kind of take you on a ride.”

Yeah, a really gory one.

‘We just let our imaginations go wild’
“We knew there would be some things that would be hard for people to watch,” Rodriguez said. “But we’re both fans of zombie movies and we knew we would have to step it up so other fans of that genre wouldn’t be disappointed. We just let our imaginations go wild.”

Additionally, these movies were always accompanied by really cool trailers that were just as entertaining, if not more so, than the main attractions.

“Grindhouse” not only has some great trailers — including “Werewolf Women” directed by Rob Zombie — but it also includes the infamous “missing reels” slate that sometimes appeared on screen when these films were shown at the drive-in.

“Hopes are high that we’ll find them,” Tarantino joked. “I have a detective working on mine and he said maybe there’s a possibility that mine might be in a basement in Holland. There’s talk about Acuna, Mexico — and that might be where Robert’s missing reel is but the English soundtrack is completely gone, so we don’t know.”


Sponsored links

Resource guide