However modern day action blockbusters seem dumb to me, compared to fdtd. The transition is very rapid, and quite a few of my friends dont like the way the vampires look, being used to twilight and generally more aesthetic looking blood suckers. I can see how the change from Gangster movie, to sudden Vampire spladder can be off putting. To me it feels like a clever movie, as if someone put a lot of thought into creating this twisted little fantasy. Maybe only Scott seemed a little redundant haha. Great music (quite a few tracks from Tito and Tarantula), good acting, grin spanning one liners, Chet's speech, Salma Hayek's snake dance, the plausible dynamic among the Gecko brothers (George Clooney and Quentin Tarantino) and also the Christians, the Titty Twister, all the other generally interesting characters (like Sexmachine) and the thousand other little details. The atmosphere the movie creates makes my heart glow. However even if I go back nowadays, rewatching it with a more critical eye, I still consider it a masterpiece. My dad is, and I watched it with him at an early age, so that is probably where I'm coming from. The kidnappers and their victims go inside to await a rendezvous for a money drop, and that's when the vampire plot begins.Generally people seem to dislike the Robert Rodriguez movie. The doorman is played by Cheech Marin, who also plays two other roles, popping up to often he doesn't need the vampire plot to qualify as undead. In Mexico, the mobile home wheels up to the Titty Twister, a scroungy strip joint with a bizarre decor (this goes next door to Jack Rabbit Slim's in the Tarantino Mall). Rodriguez doesn't make it very real, though, wisely handling the death of a harmless bank teller in flashes too quick to be seen, since more detail would sink the macabre mix of violence and humor. His son thinks he knows better: "Dad - I watch the reality shows!" The charm of the dialog in these scenes has a lot of competition from the state-of-the-art mayhem, which leaves blood and brains spattered everywhere. The minister is inclined to cooperate with the desperadoes. Now the minister and his kids are heading south in a mobile home the Gekkos hope to hide in while crossing the border. The minister has left the church after the death of his wife, leaving an opening for another of Tarantino's passages of theological dialog. Holed up in a sleazebag motel, they take hostages: a former Baptist minister ( Harvey Keitel) and his children ( Juliette Lewis and Ernest Liu). Richard has helped Seth break out of prison, and now they're heading for the Mexican border with the bank loot, and Richard, who is a rabid loony, is blasting everyone in sight, including innocent bystanders. They've robbed a bank and left a trail of dead and wounded (all toted up by a TV news reporter's digital carnage readout). After the title sequence, we get to know the central characters, Seth and Richard Gekko ( George Clooney and Tarantino). Those who liked the shoot-outs in Rodriguez's " El Mariachi" and " Desperado" will like the second half, which is non-stop mayhem in a scuzzy bikers' and truckers' strip joint, with lots of vampires, exploding eyeballs, cascading guts, and a weapon made out of a powered wooden stake (I guess you could call it a Pneumatic Vampire Drill). Those who loved the invention of Tarantino's dialog in " Pulp Fiction" will like the first half, especially a brilliant pre-title sequence featuring Michael Parks as a Texas Ranger who creates a whole world out of a little dialogue. Actually, a lot of people will hate half of the movie and like the other half.
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