T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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95.1 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Wed Mar 24 1993 09:48 | 24 |
| Oh, I think "Dogs" already _is_ a cult classic - though the people who
go to it solely for the scene you mention in .0 make me rather nervous.
:-}
_I_ think it should have gotten more mainstream exposure. There just
aren't enough wide-distribution films these days that inspire people to
bolt from the theater halfway through. (Admittedly, it's rather rough
on the folks who bolt - or, as was the case in the showing I attended,
try to bolt and faint on the way out - but it makes those who stay
feel that much more rewarded. Major-league manipulation on the part of
the director, and it's carried off flawlessly...)
Lots of really fine scenery-chewing in this one, terrific
characterizations, a storyline that unfolds in bits and pieces of
flashbacks (and, for you puzzle fans out there, that plays fair with
the data while making it a bit of a game to figure it out). But it _is_
a little rough on the sensitive among us, who are advised either to
skip this entirely or to bring a friend who's seen it before and can
cue them about when to uncover their faces.
Easily my favorite Harvey Keitel performance, by the way, though he had
plenty of company in the "good performance" category.
-b
|
95.2 | "(Here I Am) Stuck in the Middle With You" | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Let us now kiss the carpet | Wed Mar 24 1993 12:50 | 7 |
| > Anyone know the artist and the title??.
To quote the lovely lilting Stephen Wright: "The Rafferty brothers...
and a band... of studio... professionals... hit it big... with this
Dylanesque tune... under the name... of Stealers Wheel."
Ray
|
95.3 | Har loving har | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Let us now kiss the carpet | Wed Mar 24 1993 13:55 | 12 |
| Incidentally, flower-wearin' San Francisco gave the Dogs their most
boffo box-office, packing a first-run theater for nigh onto 6 months.
I saw the movie three times myself and would've made it four if I
wasn't too shy to ask anyone for a date.
Harvey Keitel was great, but I've been impressed by movies which
featured more of him. (Get your mind out of the gutter, I'm not
talking about "Bad Lieutenant".) But Tim Roth, Steve Buscemi, Michael
Madsen, and Nice Guy Penn were great too, and I've never been as
impressed by any of them.
Ray
|
95.4 | | 44243::SNEIL | | Fri Mar 26 1993 06:28 | 8 |
|
Tim Roth was in a BBC drama a few years ago called "Made in Britain"
This raised a few eye brows at the time.If you get the chance,it's well
worth watching.
SCott
|
95.5 | "I don't tip." | 12035::RIVERS | may this vale be my silver lining. | Fri Apr 09 1993 10:06 | 18 |
| Got to see this last night.
I really liked it. It was, well, riveting. Quirky, perhaps, and not
very linear, but riveting. Michael Madsen, as Mr. Blonde, managed to
portray one of the most quietly menacing (read: scary) people I've seen
on the screen. And I really, really, really liked Tim Roth's
performance. Anybody know how old this guy is? He looked about 20-22.
Not for the squeamish, to be sure, although none of the violence was
particularly gratuitous (although I suppose one could say it was
graphic).
This is a soundtrack I shall probably pick up. Does anyone know what
the hell the title refers to, though?
**** out of ****
kim
|
95.6 | | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Ray Shakey | Fri Apr 09 1993 13:36 | 15 |
| Director / writer / Mr. Brown, Quentin Tarantino, says that the phrase
"reservoir dogs" "did come from somewhere" but he refuses to say where.
An interviewer asked Steve Buscemi if Tarantino told him the secret and
Buscemi, annoyingly true to character, said "He did. But I'll take it
to my grave."
Non-linear is right. That's one of the things I like about it: it's
structure is beautiful, convoluted enough to keep the audience's sense
of time off-balance and to keep the film from becoming static, but so
well-handled that you don't feel lost or jerked around. The flashback
/ flashforward / fantasy in which Tim Roth simultaneously learns and
tells a joke is one of the flashiest bits I've seen in an American
commercial film.
Ray
|
95.7 | | 12035::RIVERS | may this vale be my silver lining. | Fri Apr 09 1993 14:17 | 7 |
| Has Mr. Tarantino done other things besides this? One, he looked quite
familiar (of course, so did most of the "not very Name-y cast"). Two,
the name sounds familiar.
kim
|
95.8 | | 12368::michaud | Jeff Michaud, DECnet/OSI | Sun Apr 11 1993 00:22 | 15 |
| I must admit I didn't know what to expect not having read the
box and since I hadn't read any of the reviews hear yet (though
reading them now I still wouldn't of know what to expect :-).
Based solely on that first scene in the restaurant I thought
the table conversation was great to listen to, and I hoped
the whole film would be like that.
I soon caught on however that this was a cops and robbers
film, and had to change my mind set again. Once I did that
again I liked the film. As an earlier reply said, the use
of flashbacks was interesting, and even though the first one
lost me, the other ones were easy to follow the actual timeline.
I must admit though, I was hoping for a different ending ....
|
95.10 | Mr Blue | 44243::SNEIL | | Sun Apr 11 1993 07:23 | 15 |
|
I heard that 'dogs' has been banned from video release in the UK,Or at
the very least it's release has been postponed.When will they relies
that banning a film is great publicity and gives prime time slots to
films that might just slip on by with no one really paying much
attention to it.
Don't really see what all the fuss is about,When I went to see it
there was two old ladies in from of me and they didn't looked shocked
in the least.I really hate when some pompous git tells me what I can and
can not watch.(think I'll see if we've got a note on censorship)
SCott
|
95.11 | | 16316::DDESMAISONS | | Mon Apr 12 1993 10:32 | 4 |
|
Excellent movie. Format, dialogue, and acting were all
super. This is one of those "gotta watch it again" films.
|
95.12 | | 12035::RIVERS | may this vale be my silver lining. | Mon Apr 12 1993 10:33 | 9 |
| Why was it banned? Violence? (it surely couldn't be sex, there wasn't a
sex scene in the whole film.)
There's far, far more graphic, far bloodier and far more gratuitously
violent films out there, and you don't have to look very hard to find
them.
kim
|
95.13 | | 44243::SNEIL | | Mon Apr 12 1993 10:46 | 10 |
| re.12
That's what annoyed me so much as well.There's less Violence/deaths
than an average "Arnie" film.
**Spoiler**
Maybe it's because everyone(bar the waitress)in the film dies.
SCott
|
95.14 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Mon Apr 12 1993 11:18 | 9 |
| Well, there's violence and there's violence. This film's violence
certainly had me crawling in a way that the cartoon/shoot-em-up stuff
never does; and I felt more involvement with the characters than I do
in most of the Arnie-style flicks, which just added to the tension.
(And then there's the anticipation-of-violence; it's so nice to find a
new movie where the director understands that what you think might
happen can be a lot scarier than what you see...)
-b
|
95.15 | | 44247::SNEIL | | Mon Apr 12 1993 11:40 | 8 |
|
Know what you mean.When Tim Roth was shot he bled ALLOT,in your average
Arnie movie you get a wee round hole and a trickle of blood
SCott
|
95.16 | | 16316::DDESMAISONS | | Mon Apr 12 1993 11:44 | 8 |
|
>> (And then there's the anticipation-of-violence; it's so nice to find a
>> new movie where the director understands that what you think might
>> happen can be a lot scarier than what you see...)
Hear, hear.
When he's dancing around with that razor, man oh man.
|
95.17 | Brideshead Massacre | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Ray Shakey | Mon Apr 12 1993 13:54 | 11 |
| Amusing to hear about the UK. Tim Roth said in interviews that he's
sticking to American movies (and he was pretty sticky in "Reservoir
Dogs") for now because the British film industry refuses to do anything
but tedious tributes to upper-class twits.
This is Tarantino's first film as director, although he sold at least
one script (a romance which I haven't seen) before making it. He's
also written the script for what's slated to be John Woo's second
Hollywood job.
Ray
|
95.18 | Is it a remake (potentially w/different title)? | 12368::michaud | Jeff Michaud, DECnet/OSI | Mon Apr 12 1993 15:56 | 3 |
| I think I heard on CNN HN or somewhere that this was a
remake? I didn't listen to the whole news clip, only
thought I heard this glimps of it.
|
95.19 | | 16316::DDESMAISONS | | Mon Apr 12 1993 17:26 | 7 |
|
spoiler question
Does Mr. White shoot both Joe and Eddie, or is Eddie shot
by Mr. Pink? It's difficult to tell what goes on at that
moment.
|
95.20 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Mon Apr 12 1993 17:44 | 12 |
| Re .19:
<spoiler warning>
I've read somewhere that the director claims that Mr. Pink shot Eddie,
but I prefer to believe that Mr. White got both Eddie and Pop.
I think Shakespeare would have _loved_ that ending.
-b
|
95.21 | | 16316::DDESMAISONS | | Mon Apr 12 1993 18:01 | 12 |
|
spoiler warning
Thanks, b! If you watch the segment a bunch of times, it
looks like Mr. White doesn't have time to get off two shots,
but on the other hand, I believe Eddie is shot squarely in the
chest, which would have been unlikely if it were Mr. Pink, given
the angle. Again, thanks for that info - interesting.
Diane
|
95.22 | Most realistic portrait ever of the American workplace | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Ray Shakey | Mon Apr 12 1993 19:45 | 10 |
| This is _not_ a remake, but several people (including Tarantino) have
mentioned that it's partly inspired by the great "heist gone horribly
wrong" films noir, particularly "The Asphalt Jungle" and "The Killing".
Harvey Keitel is in the usual Sterling Hayden role.
It's also partly inspired by Samuel Beckett, the recent lively school
of Hong Kong gangster films, and Tarantino's experiences with Hollywood
producers.
Ray
|
95.23 | | 35186::BACH | They who know nothing, doubt nothing... | Tue Nov 02 1993 10:14 | 40 |
| Big time **Spoilers**
(Mr. Pink did not die, BTW)
I had a problem believing in a few things that happened in the movie.
1) Why didn't the cop just cut the officer loose, claim he over
powered the whacko and ran away. (That would have accounted for
death of whacko and let the cop live)
2) Why did he have to wait for "Joe" to show up at all? It seemed
that they had plenty on the guy. Or, once he did show, why didn't he
blow them all away?
Why couldn't cops wait *in* the warehouse and take the bad guys as they
showed up?
3) Why in the world, after Mr. White already killed several cops
(flash back), would Mr. Orange tell him the truth? I know many cops,
narcotics, vice, undercover, etc., and no matter how honorable a bad guy
might have been for a moment, they are still scum. I doubt that a real
undercover cop would have been so moved after the carnage those clowns
had wrought. I tend to think a real undercover guy would have been
pleased by the idea that he fooled the scumbag into protecting him.
He also would have served Mr. White better to have talked him in
surrender *then* explaining he was the cop.
I really thought the ending was incongruent with the foundation from
which the movie built itself.
Other than the last few minutes, I loved the movie. When Mr. Whacko
got shot I offered an audible "GET THAT S&^*##(*!!!!". I almost
grabbed for the fast forward button when I thought the movie was gonna
let him finish his work.
Those are my thoughts.
Chip
|
95.24 | Answers, maybe...? | 32880::LABUDDE | Denial is not a river in Egypt | Fri Nov 05 1993 12:52 | 24 |
|
Chip,
I'll try to answer some of those spoilers:
I think Mr. Orange didn't cut the cop loose because he really couldn't
walk or move very good. He was lying there holding his guts in.
And I think he told White he was the cop for two reasons, he was dying,
full of bullets, and since White showed so much compassion for him, he
wanted to tell him before he died?
I don't think it makes a lot of sense... either.
As for catching Joe...
Yeah, I don't see why the cops couldn't just wait inside, unless they
wanted to get them all at once? Still doesn't make too much sense.
But I loved the movie.
|
95.25 | | UHUH::MARISON | Scott Marison | Fri Nov 05 1993 14:24 | 10 |
| Spoilers...
> And I think he told White he was the cop for two reasons, he was dying,
> full of bullets, and since White showed so much compassion for him, he
> wanted to tell him before he died?
I always thought it was obvious why Mr. Orange told Mr. White he was a cop...
Mr. White took a bullet for Mr. Orange, trying to save his life...
/Scott
|
95.26 | | 35186::BACH | They who know nothing, doubt nothing... | Fri Nov 05 1993 15:34 | 13 |
| Spoilers...
Thats why I guessed it happened. My only contention is that if an
undercover cop/fed/narc can get a scumbag to save their life by fooling
them, they absolutely will try and do it. I just thought it was not a
very accurate portrayal of someone thats gone under. (At the very
least, I didn't think it was a realistic reaction, especially after
this yahoo blew away three cops and was ready to kill the cop that
was tied up.)
anyway...
|
95.27 | | UHUH::MARISON | Scott Marison | Fri Nov 05 1993 16:07 | 27 |
| spoilers...
> Thats why I guessed it happened. My only contention is that if an
> undercover cop/fed/narc can get a scumbag to save their life by fooling
> them, they absolutely will try and do it. I just thought it was not a
> very accurate portrayal of someone thats gone under. (At the very
> least, I didn't think it was a realistic reaction, especially after
> this yahoo blew away three cops and was ready to kill the cop that
> was tied up.)
Well - Mr. Orange already thought he was gonna die... and after White got
shot, well - it looked like White was gonna die too... Also, at that point,
nobody else was alive to hear him confess to White that he was a cop,
and if Orange did get out of it alive, White would be put away or would have
died. So, Orange still would've been safe...
Besides, whose to say Orange wanted to do that type of job anymore, after
that experience!!!
/Scott
p.s. In essence, Orange had nothing to lose by confessing to White...
Orange already though he would die...
|
95.28 | Rainbow Coalition | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Even when I was twelve | Mon Nov 08 1993 12:47 | 16 |
|
Mr. Orange's confession worked for me, luckily. The movie is about
trust, honor, the conflict of social codes and work codes, the
arbitrary way in which the conflicts are resolved -- it seemed as
though everything was meant to lead up to that confession.
Any other reaction from Mr. White would've screwed it up, though.
I don't think Mr. Pink will actually be around for RESERVOIR II: DOGS
IN VEGAS. True, we see him grab the loot and run out. But immediately
after, we hear cops ordering someone to stop, and lots of gunfire, and
no car screeching away. Somehow it figures that Mr. Pink wouldn't
get the dignity of an on-screen death scene.
Ray
|
95.29 | | 35186::BACH | They who know nothing, doubt nothing... | Wed Nov 10 1993 10:50 | 6 |
|
spoiler
Actually, I believe you hear Pink getting arrested in the background.
I thought you could hear him pleading with the coppers...
|
95.30 | No reservations | YUPPY::SECURITY | Security @LDO | Thu Jan 27 1994 06:48 | 9 |
|
The first time, I thought I could hear Mr. Pink getting shot. The
second viewing, I was not so sure. Damn fine film.
Apparently, at Tim Roth's insistance, the woman he exchanged bullets
with was his American accent tutor.
Bizarre.
|
95.31 | Magnum Twister | EDABOT::RDAVIS | Simile: God like you | Tue Mar 08 1994 17:30 | 40 |
| I finally saw the Hong Kong movie Tarentino ripped off most directly
for "Reservoir Dogs". What threw me off the scent was that it _wasn't_
directed by John Woo, though it did have the same two stars as "The
Killer".
Name of it is "City on Fire", directed by Mr. Dynamite, Ringo Lam. (I
really should find out the guy's Chinese name, though he gets extra
points for coming up with an English moniker like "Ringo".)
Spoiler description of "City on Fire"'s ending:
Undercover cop has infiltrated gang doing big heist. One of the
leading members of the gang (though not Mr. Big) takes him under his
wing. They talk about life, love, etc., male bond. Despite impeccable
planning, zillions of cops show up for the robbery. During bloody gun
battle, undercover cop shoots a uniformed cop in a reflex action while
confused by male bonding, and gets badly wounded. (Sounds
unbelievable, but, as in "Reservoir Dogs", it's convincingly filmed.)
The survivors crawl back to the hideout. After a while, Mr. Big shows
up and claims that there must be an undercover cop in the gang, and
since Our (Cop) Hero is the only one he hasn't worked with before,
_he's_ got to be it. Our (Gangster) Hero says no, you're wrong, you
don't know this guy, he's great. Everyone pulls guns on everyone else.
After a while, another gangster comes in and pulls _his_ gun.
Imbalance! Everyone shoots. Everyone's dead or dying.
The cops are closing in. Our (Cop) Hero tells Our (Gangster) Hero to
make his escape while he has a chance. "I can't leave you here," says
O(G)H, trying to drag O(C)H out. "Leave me here." "I can't leave you
here." "Gosh darn it all," says O(C)H, "I'm a cop." "Wha?" "I'm the
cop." Hilarity ensues.
Note that there's more motivation for the cop's confession in Lam's
version, since it actually might make a difference to the gangster's
survival, whereas in Tarentino's version it's pure metaphysics.
Ray
|
95.32 | | 44247::SNEIL | FOLLOW WE WILL | Thu Jun 02 1994 11:41 | 7 |
|
Anyone know if the video ban on RD in the UK will also affect it's
it being shown on Satellite(SKY).
SCott
|
95.33 | FWIW | 65320::RIVERS | Stupid, STUPID rat creatures! | Thu Jun 02 1994 12:16 | 9 |
| Dunno if it's been mentioned yet, but Reservior Dogs (and "The Killer)
are out on video for sale. Saw 'em at Suncoast video. RD is on sale, I
think.
kim
|
95.34 | The title explained | KOLFAX::WIEGLEB | Cloning the nose | Tue Jun 21 1994 23:24 | 16 |
| In an article on Tarantino in "Vanity Fair", Tarantino's mom finally
tells all on where the name "Reservoir Dogs" comes from.
Spoiler warning for those who want to remain in the dark:
Really and truly now...
Tarantino's girlfriend wanted to persuade him to go with her to see
Louis Malle's "Au Revoir Les Enfants", to which Quentin replies, "I
don't want to see no @#$%@! 'reservoir dogs'!"
Now you know...
|
95.35 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Mon Nov 21 1994 10:42 | 39 |
| I finally rented this over the weekend.
It was rather better than I had expected. I was primed for gratuitous
violence, but found very well motivated (in context!) violence
and character elaboration.
I can settle some spoilers:
> I've read somewhere that the director claims that Mr. Pink shot Eddie,
> but I prefer to believe that Mr. White got both Eddie and Pop.
I slo-mo'd through this a couiple of times because I was puzzled too.
Mr. White shot both of them.
The order of shots was:
- Joe shoots Mr. Orange
- so Mr. White shoots Joe
- so Eddie shoots Mr. White
- who has time to turn his arm in 10 frames or less (1/3 of a second)
to shoot Eddie
Mr. White has the best gun and the most operational skill, so he "wins."
> I think Shakespeare would have _loved_ that ending.
Well he certainly would have recognized it!
On the other matter of why Mr. Orange admitted to being a cop....
He was a new undercover cop, still too willing to bond to the bad guys.
Recall he spoke well of "Long Beach Mike" (or whoever the stoolie that
vouched for him) and his mentor (the black cop with the Red Chinese hat)
had to chide him and point out that Mike was a %^*^%# scumbag who was selling
out his amigos.
Note that Mr. White shows no such bonding and puts the bullet into
Mr. Orange's chin that causes the cops to gun HIM down.
- tom]
|
95.36 | | NETRIX::michaud | Mel Torme | Fri Mar 17 1995 11:50 | 5 |
| Entertainment Weekly indicates the directors cut of this film
should be out (on video) in August.
Seeing how violent this film was to begin with, I wonder what
was left out of the original release?
|
95.37 | Definately a classic | COMICS::SHELLEY | Thats all I have to say about that | Fri Sep 01 1995 08:14 | 11 |
| Saw this the other night. It certainly a very shocking and brilliantly
stylish film.
Reading this notestring has clarified a few points that I was wondering
about.
I understand there is a tie in to True Romance. If so which character
was it ? I think Joe asks one of the guys how 'the girl' is referring
to Alabama in TR. Or have I got this all wrong.
Royston
|
95.38 | | FABSIX::I_GOLDIE | resident alien | Fri Sep 01 1995 12:16 | 8 |
|
this is an excellant movie.I'm ashamed of myself for only watching it 4
times so far but no doubt there will be more.Has it ever been on cable?
Also....has anyone ever heard that there may be a directors cut
available soon?
ian
|
95.39 | | PCBUOA::BELLOWS | | Fri Sep 01 1995 13:29 | 2 |
| Quentin ripped it off from John Woo's City on Fire. It is an excellent
flick. I loved Michael Madsen.
|
95.40 | | FABSIX::I_GOLDIE | resident alien | Sat Sep 02 1995 11:44 | 9 |
|
Quentin has ripped off a few movies but the end results are excellant!
re-1
I agree on the Michael Madsen quote!
ian
|
95.41 | Names, names, names | KOLFAX::WIEGLEB | Horses are fine, so are books | Wed Sep 06 1995 20:50 | 15 |
| "City on Fire" is actually a Ringo Lam film, not John Woo.
There are a number of names that show up in common between the various
Quentin Tarantino films, but it's not clear whether they are meant to
be the same characters.
The name Scagnetti shows up in RD as Mr. Blonde's (Michael Madsen)
parole agent, but I don't think it's meant to be the same Scagnetti
that shows up in NBK.
The same may apply to the name "Alabama", who was Mr. White's (Harvey
Keitel) old partner that Joe asks about in RD. I'm not sure whether it
is meant to be the same Alabama as in TR.
- Dave
|
95.42 | | PCBUOA::BELLOWS | | Thu Sep 07 1995 10:12 | 4 |
| re: .41
Oh yeah. I've spent the summer watching Ringo Lam, John Woo, and Wong
Jing films. After a while, it's kind of hard to tell them apart.
|
95.43 | | COMICS::SHELLEY | Thats all I have to say about that | Mon Nov 06 1995 13:35 | 9 |
| Can anyone help me out here. I'm trying to remember the line
that Mr Pink says near the begining when he rubs his thumb and finger
together and makes a joke about playing the world's smallest violin.
What was the whole phrase he used ?
Thanks
Royston
|
95.44 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Got into a war with reality ... | Mon Nov 06 1995 13:45 | 4 |
|
Sounds like the old "faux sympathy" retort of "Know what this
is? The sound of me playing the world's smallest violin".
|
95.45 | | MDNITE::RIVERS | No comment | Mon Nov 06 1995 14:53 | 8 |
| He said, basically, "Hear this? This is me playing the world's smallest
violin for all the waitresses in the world."
If you want an exact quote, I can get it from the script.
kim
|
95.46 | | COMICS::SHELLEY | Thats all I have to say about that | Tue Nov 07 1995 06:57 | 3 |
| Thx for the replies. The exact quote would be great please kim.
Royston
|
95.47 | | KERNEL::PLANTC | Make it so!!! | Tue Nov 07 1995 11:23 | 9 |
|
the standard line is:
know what this is....its the world's smallest violin and its playing
just for you!
Chris
:)
|