REACTING to *Inglorious Basterds* I WANT MY SCALPS!! (First Time Watching) Tarantino Movies
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James and Nobu are reacting to Inglorious Basterds and I want my scalps! Enjoy this wild and crazy Nazi-hating ride of a film starring Brad Pitt, Christoph Waltz, Eli Roth, Daniel Brühl, Michael Fassbender, and Mike Myers! Enjoy this bloody and incredible film about assassinating Hitler from the Mind of Quentin Tarantino!
#firsttimereaction #quentintarantino #ingloriousbasterds #wwiii #warfilm #moviereaction #moviereview #firsttimewatching #christophwaltz #bradpitt
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What is your favorite war film? serious or otherwise?
*•* Come and See *(1985)*
*•* Grave of the Fireflies *(1988)*
ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT (2022)
All quiet on the western front from 2022
The Warriors. Actually inspired by the story behind 300 (Snyder's film is also pretty darn awesome). But those aren't the real nitty gritty war films.
The great escape
Probably the second scariest thing about Hans Landa (the first being wether “he knows” or not), is that he doesn’t seem to actually buy into nazism. He seems more like a sadist who’s looking for an excuse to hurt people, and would probably kill anyone regardless of race/religion, if given the chance
Yup, Landa would've been a good KGB agent, a good British imperialist in the Raj, a Japanese soldier during Nanking, a plantation owner, et al. Ideology wasn't anything he gave a damn about.
He is just a guy who found true job-satisfaction...
What's also interesting is how he compares Jews to rats when speaking to the farmer - when he points out that Perrier simply doesn't like rats, and couldn't say why, you think he's implying that that's how he himself feels about Jews, but looking back on it, it sounds like him describing prejudice in general, as if it's something he just knows about Hitler and those under him. You could apply the rat metaphor to any group that's been targeted by another. And there's been many of those throughout history. It's like he's stating human prejudice and discrimination as a fact, rather than his own feelings.
Maybe that wasn't intentional, but it's something I thought about.
I always interpreted him as just an opportunist. He doesn’t care about being called the “Jew Hunter” as it was just a name that stuck. He did the job because he was good at it and it was better than the alternative. But as soon as the winds started changing and it appeared that the Nazis’ days were numbered, he capitalized and made sure he ended up on the right side. He has no ideology and no loyalty. He does what serves himself.
@@cranberryrosebud he said that to illustrate the situation. Actually he desn't care if the people are jews or not, he just like to catch them, and in this case there are plenty of jews to catch, it's a game for him. Thats' why he switches side so easily at the end, and btw in the scripts he's described like that
As someone who speaks the three main languages in this movie I absolutely love it. Regarding Fassbender's accent: it's noticeably foreign sounding, doesn't sound like any familiar dialect either. Any German speaker would notice something was off.
And the thing is, the actor's German.
Italian is pretty awful, Christoph Waltz has to sound like he speaks it quite well, but he doesn’t 😅 in fact I can’t understand all of what he says 😬
@@giuliacheney Christoph doesn't have to sound like he speaks it quite well. Just that he can speak it better than the American's in order to scare them, which he relishes.
Yea that's wat I was gonna say...he's good with dialects cause he is German....
@@Argumemnon if you meant Fassbender, i think it’s because he was raised in Ireland and that could’ve contributed to his foreign-sounding German
"Look at that guys ABSURDLY large glass of beer"
That’s just the regular beer glass size in Germany 😅
As a Dane I also found it to be a completely reasonable glass size for beer. ^^
Not nessessarily. Most german pubs serve draught beer in 0,2 litre glasses. There is a helping tool, a "bierkranz", that allows you to carry 8-12 glasses simultaneously. But if you get beer in a bottle you can ask for a 0,5 l glas. Interestingly enough some sorts go with different glasses, for example "malz" if I am not mistaken is being served in a 0,5 l tall glass as opposed to a 0,5 pitcher. I have seen 1 litre pitchers as well, but seldom. They are so big that the beer usually gets too warm before you finish it so people dislike them. I think they are available at the October festival, which a huge beer drinking festival.
I haven't seen the boot glass in a while. One bar in our town still used them until recently but not anymore because people kept stealing the glasses.
The position of the fingers held up when it comes to numbers is so culturally unique in European countries, it's genius.
wrong
@@XENONEOMORPH1979 what is?
@@miguelamador4017 only germans and just a small number use the thumb as a three
for example i use one finger to use as a 3
as you have three lines to a finger as when you count in one hand there is 14
@@XENONEOMORPH1979 uh????
My boss was German, I showed staff members the 3 finger glitch and then got my boss to show the staff how you would order 3 glasses, they freaked. I did show my boss the clip after, she freaked as well.
The "3" hand gesture was such a small but genius detail! As an Italian, but I think I can speak for most if not all europeans, the first time I watched this movie I immediately saw that and knew he effed up cause it's so weird to sign the number three like that for us. GENIUS
One of the many strokes of genius of this GENIO. Perfettamente d'accordo.
Great reaction, as always. And mad props to Christoph Waltz, to be fluent in German, English, French and Italian is no small feat... It makes this role so much more believable.
When Landa walks in the house one of the girls looks at the floor, he knew where the family was the whole time. Like he says he is a hunter hunting requires patience...
The Bond movies did Waltz so dirty, that wasn't on him, it was all in the writing, great actors can elevate any material they are given but there's a limit to how much their talent can make up for the writing.
Exactly, I completely agree 👏🏼
Yeah Waltz in this movie is practically already a Bond villain
@@darthsader7089 or Indiana Jones 😂
That opening scene is now taught on a bunch of filmmaking courses. A masterclass in tension.
I was thinking the same thing. The whole tavern scene made we wish I could just skip ahead and get it over with when I first saw it.
This has like three of film history's greatest and most suspenseful scenes. All in one film. It's insane and fits such a great film.
What I love about this film is that they got actors that speak multiple languages. Diane Kruger is fluent in French as well as her native German and English, same goes for Christoph Waltz except he is Austrian. Michael Fassbender is German/Irish, he speaks the latter's language as well. As for Daniel Brühl (like Fassbender he is half German) is a full polyglot, you heard him speak German, English and French, but he is also fluent in Spanish and Catalan.
Don’t forget Brad pitt😂
I just learned a few days ago that Waltz is actually German, he received Austrian nationality as a second nationality as of 2010 although he’s born in Vienna, Austria (just a fun fact)
@@zyzz527 oh that’s so cool, thanks for the correction!
@@zyzz527 Yeah, his father was German and applied for German citizenship for Christoph.
so the german actor Til Schweiger plays an Austrian and the austrian actor Christoph Waltz plays a German 😁
1.One of my favorite unspoken details is when Hans says that he "exhausted" his knowledge of French...after having an incredibly fluid conversation with the man.
It shows that Landa was *never* fooled, he knew the man was hiding something and was just playing with his food and was slowly tightening the noose.
2. The scary thing about him as well as that its implied that he really has no investment in the Nazi regime or its politics. He's just an efficient sadist who took the opportunity to turn his interest into a job with real authority.
I love that Tarantino uses so many languages and casts native speakers in his movies. I can´t sit through another WW2 movie with american actors butchering the german language.
The joke of so many people being named Hermann always cracks me up, especially by the time Landa even looslely suggests it's so common.
It's actually just Landa calling every German 'henchman' Hermann. He doesn't give a flip about the guys working under him (I don't remember where I heard that, I think it's from the DVD)
It was based on the idea that "Hermann" is the Germanization of "Armenius", the Roman-trained German who defeated Rome and kept Germany from falling to the Roman empire in the 1st century BC. He became a folk-hero in Bismark Germany, as part of unification, and a ton of German boys were named Hermann in his honor just before the war.
Christoph Waltz is Austrian German actor, he’s the best villain I’ve ever seen! Glad he won the Oscar for this performance!
If you guys are actually considering to start a Tarantino marathon, all I can say is:
It'll be a f***ing wild ride that I'm here for!
Tarantino had all sorts of auditions as to who would play Landa. Just as he was about to give up hope, Waltz came in like his knight in shiny armour and saved the day.
Also the fact that the man can speak German, English, French and Italian in the same movie so fluently.... I'm only down to 3 languages people!
Makes me wanna study a language
Tarantino being the first person we see being scalped by the Basterds is either poetic or really weird, I can never tell with that guy XD And of course he couldn't help himself and had to put Sam L. Jackson in there somewhere, did you guys notice that it was his voice reading the backsotry of Hugo Stiglitz and the tidbit about nitrate film?
I've seen this movie about half a dozen times now and a bunch of reactions over the years, and this is the first time I noticed that lmao!
I noticed it. Not right away but after a while.
That opening is one of the best movie openings ever. The tension...
I truly believe that the opening scene alone made Waltz win the Oscar.
In both QT films he plays someone who hunts people for a living.
The Pipe Landa smokes is a austrian or german made Calabash Pipe. They were made from the calabash Gourd with a Meerschaum insert were you smoke the tobacco in, makes for a pleasend cool (temperature wise) smoke. Sadly these you see in the film are no longer made.
The strudel scene.....Hans knows....when he tells her to wait for the cream, its not kosher and he wants to watch her eat it....he knows because he orders her milk to drink...Dreyfuss were dairy farmers
So he is just toying with her the whole time?
My favorite scene is the one where Landa betrays the Nazis. Up until then it seemed like a normal war movie and the details like the german three and the fact jews couldn't eat that cream gave it a good degree of realism, but I was waiting for the moment where the mission went wrong cause we know from history that Hitler wasn't killed, he killed himself, so our characters would have to fail in their respective attacks against the nazis, all I could do was hope that the characters survived the movie after their plans failed... and lo and behold Tarantino got me. Both plans went through and people died in both camps, Shoshana's and the Basterds.
Tarantino actually wrote this film years before it was made, but he thought he'd never get to make it because he couldn't find anyone to play Hans Landa the way he wanted. Then he auditioned Christoph Waltz and he thanked him for making the film possible. Waltz's performance here is one of my favourites, he's so chilling when the veil drops and you see the steely cold ruthlessness. Amazing
This was the movie that introduced Hollywood to the veteran actor Christoph Waltz*, which subsequently made him the toast of the year and suddenly spurred a demand for him in the English-speaking (predominantly North American) movie circles. Makes one wonder how many other brilliant thespians often go undetected by the public due to lack of promotion and publicity (e.g., typecast actors who have small yet devoted cult followings, such as Alan Ford, Søren Pilmark, or John Rafter Lee).
Incidentally, (and this is my subjective opinion), I find it amusing how Waltz's meticulously planned and carefully coreographed portrayal of SS Colonel Hans Landa is more like a Bond villain than Waltz's _actual_ portrayal of a Bond villain half a decade later. It speaks volumes of Tarantino's eye for details and commitment to filmmaking that he could perfect this cinematic alchemy from such an unlikely film script and such a motley cast of international actors.
* Another name that leaps to my mind is Daniel Brühl (Fredrick Zoller), whom I've already seen in _Goodbye, Lenin!_ (2003), and whom I understand has portrayed a Marvel villain.
Django unchained would be a good follow up to this due to the contrasting characters Waltz plays
“You just say bingo”. “Bingo! How fun”
Christoph Waltz Born in Austria, he is Austrian with having Citizenship in Germany as well. So he is an Austrian Actor, he could be considered as Austrian-German Actor but not a German Actor.
Like Hitler
Possibly my favorite film ever. Never gets old. The scene in the tavern is just GOLD. And so many others in this film.
one of my favourite details in this movie, and one of the most unsettling, is one thats hard to catch if you don't speak any French. When Hans Landa has the Dreyfus family killed the last thing he says is "adieu" which in French is more of a long term goodbye. As Shosanna is running away he says "au revoir" could be translated as "see you soon"
When Tarantino starts his movies off "Once upon a Time" it's version of what if this happened instead of the grim truth. Kinda like what happened in "Once upon a Time in Hollywood"
In the Cafe when Hans orders the milk he is playing with her because of what he drank in the opening scene
When people asked why Tarantino spelled the title wrong he said because “that's just the way you say it”. Also in the script of the movie we actually get to read that Aldo Raine survived a lynching and that scar is from rope burn. Also also when Diane Kruger is being choked, its by Tarantino because he thought he could give it more realism.
If you are curious about the sniper film being premiered at the cinema, Tarrentino actually made this and included it on the DVD. It is called 'Nation's Pride'.
The german way to ask for 3 with your hand is by putting up the middle, index and thumb up. And the soldier put up the ring, middle and index finger
Not only German
The diner scene with Landa. He asked for the cream for the strudel because the cream isn't kosher and Jewish people won't eat it
Don’t know if this has been commented yet, but did you notice the actor for Fredrick Zoller? Daniel Brühl plays the villain in Civil War, Baron Zemo! Such a great actor 👌🏼
I remember watching an interview where tarantino talks about some producer having doubts about the tabern scene, and how it was too long for not having any major character in it, and how he thought about the same thing when writing the script, but the scene was so tense that he had to keep writing until the string snapped, so he just kept going and going. And this is one of the scenes that makes this movie the best tarantino movie for a lot of people. Myself included.
Tarantino was about to cancel the entire project because he just couldn't find a Lander....in walks Christoph Waltz and the rest is history
Speaking German as first language, I can only say that you definitely hear that Lt. Hicox is not from any part of Germany 😉
Fun fact. Michael Fassbender is actually half German half Irish (just like me) and his German in real life is much better than it is in this movie.
Another fun fact - I love how surprised many English speakers are at how many of the actors speak more than one language. It's quite common in Germany to speak at least two (German and English are being taught in every school) and by choice learn Spanish or French or Latin or.... too.
Now enough with this comment 😂
Enjoy this movie..I certainly will and I am already looking forward to Django 😊
The US and Canada are neighboring nations and being situated in North America means both are isolated from most other countries.
So I think it's less that Americans and Canadians aren't interested in learning new languages, it's that we have very few opportunities to use it so it doesn't stick. In contrast, European countries (which are generally smaller than US states or Canadian provinces) border one another and each one either speaks a different language or a variant of a language, so Europeans have far greater exposure to other languages and the opportunity to use them.
Please watch "All Quiet on the Western Front". Winner of 4 Oscars.
Yessss
Are you talking about the original black and white movie I had to watch back in 8th grade? Or a remake? The original was pretty good from what I remember from 1992. Lol
The remake slaps too
One of my favourite things about this movie is that they actually cast germans to speak the german parts and most of the german actors are known in germany
14:05 they mention "Sergeant York" which is a really good WWI war film.
Brad Pitts character wasn't just no nonsense, he was no nazi.
This is a fantastic movie. All of the characters are very amazing.
When I went to see this at the theater with my then bf, we came out and he asked me what I thought. I said I loved it and he acted surprised. Said he thought I'd complain about it not being historically accurate. I laughed at him and said "You don't go see Tarantino movies for historical accuracy. You go see them for the great writing and gratuitous violence."
Also, I'm from near Maynardville TN. They sent Brad Pitt to our area to learn the accent. He does a great job with it!
Originally Tarantino wrote the part of the Bear Jew for Adam Sandler, but he couldn't play the role because he was busy filming "Funny People"
Funny story about accents and how they sound the same to those not from an area/who don’t speak a language, but a native speaker can tell:
I live on the border between two Appalachian states. Go over the state line and the accent is WAY thicker. It’s a local joke, in fact. I mean, this is, locally, basic knowledge. And, as someone who grew up in the area, to me it is incredibly noticeable. I can tell which side of the border someone is from when they greet me.
In college, my linguistics professor, who is not local, explained we are in “a zone of transition “ for accents where the more northern accent is shifting to the southern.
He then said, “My understanding is that you all think people across the state border have a thicker southern accent?”
The room exploded in things like, “Of course they do!” I mean, the guy had basically just said the equivalent of, “My understanding is that fire is hot.”
He then said, “As someone not from the area…. I can’t tell the difference.”
We went insane.
That whole tavern/pub scene is one of my all time favorites in any film. Such an amazing way they built and alleviated and doubled down on the tension of the scene. I could watch it a hundred times.
Also, Christoph Waltz is amazing in this film, if any single actor was a standout, it's him. His character is not just one of those "always-one-step-ahead" type villains, the menacing thing about his character is that you can never tell if he IS one step ahead. He may know exactly what's going on, he may be using a conversation to interrogate you to find out what's going on, but either way, he's not going to play his hand, and he's going to make sure that *you* never feel like you are certain of what he knows.
Regarding the bar scene: What blew his cover was the hand gesture. Germans have a different way of signaling the number Three. So when he made that gesture, the Nazi Officer immediately zeroed in and confirmed his suspicions.
Fun little detail about the opening scene is Landa's use of French. At first he is very formal, speaking like someone who only knows conversational French, hence why he chose to switch to English. However when he switches back to French he's much more casual, showing a greater grasp of the language to the point of being completely fluent. Shows that he was just trying to speak without the Jewish family knowing his plans.
I just realised while watching your reaction, "masquerade" is a French word, deriven from the Italian "maschera". The Dreyfuses would 100% have been aware what was about to happen to them.
Great reaction as always guys, small correction though, Christoph Waltz is not a German but an Austrian actor. That s about the same as calling an American actor a Canadian one ;)
Oh shoot!! My bad
Samuel L. Jackson’s narration is such a great touch
I swear you guys are reading my mind, I was just thinking of this film last night and how I hadn't seen it for while! Loved your reaction ❤ Christoph waltz is a living legend and his performance in this is incredible!
Brad pits Italian in this 🤣
recommending "hoodwinked", "racing stripes", "flushed away", "the boxtrolls", "the dark crystal" (reboot series and film), "mowgli: legend of the jungle", "watership down" (reboot series), "the book of life", "farewell my concubine", "miracle in cell no. 7", "grave of the fireflies", "equilibrium", "the prestige", "now you see me" and "a monster in paris"
There is a reason Landa was called a "Nazi Sherlock Holmes" by many viewers. He even has a pipe.
The farm scene and the tavern scene are some of the most tense I've seen in cinema.
This is my favorite Tarantino film. Everything about it is so masterful and interesting and compelling. The movie never gets old.
Django or Pulp Next!
The reason the German commander knew the one undercover wasn't German was because of how he held his 3 fingers up. He held up his pointer, middle and ring finger. If I recall, it would be expected that a German would hold up their thumb, pointer and middle finger instead. A tiny detail, perfectly fitting for Tarantino.
🖖
I think this is Taratino's masterpiece as well. The man's amazing.
The person who played The Jew Bear is Eli Roth, who is the director of Hostel and more relatively recently The Green Inferno. He was a large part of the "torture porn" craze of horror films in the 2000s.
When Aldo Raine says at the end “I think this might be my masterpiece.” was basically Tarantino saying that.
The reason the spelling in the title is weird is because there is a 1978 Spaghetti Spanish film called “The Inglorious Basterds” which Tarantino took the title from also a World War 2 film.
The man who played Winston Churchill was legendary actor Rod Taylor who starred in the sci fi classic The Time Machine and this was his final film role while Mike Myers was the British General also in that scene giving Fassbender’s character the rundown.
Also the bar scene is a perfect example of the bomb story by Hitchcock paraphrased:
Let's say you have a scene of some people sitting around talking about baseball and suddenly there is an explosion and you learn there was a bomb under the table well you give the audience one quick reactive shock, but it wears off. Now we have the same scenario, but this time the audience knows there is a bomb under the table and it is going to go off in five minutes, by giving the audience extra information you just made the scene more tense because the audience will think "What are you doing stop talking about baseball and leave there".
Plus Christoph Waltz won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor for this film.
Christoph is not a german actor, he's an Austrian actor.
The riveting dialog is a trademark characteristic of all Tarantino movies. Christoph Waltz is the best actor of our times. His speaking ability is legendary, due to the way he can go from utterly charming and endearing to devilishly menacing and terrifying in a heartbeat, literally like flipping a switch!
Other must-see Quentin Tarantino movies include “Pulp Fiction” and “Django Unchained.” I would love to see you react to them as well!
I remember leaving the Theater on opening night saying Christophe Waltz would win the Oscar. And he did.. ✨💫⭐️
You really need to watch this and Django Unchained back to back. Waltz is such an amazing actor, but indeed: criminally under-used in the 007 series. (he's Austrian though, not German). What I love most about this movie is Tarantino's very precise use of a whole list of German actors to really make it all work: Brühl is pretty well known by now via The Avengers, but Gedeon Burkhardt & Til Schweiger (Wicki & Stiglitz ), August Diehl (playing the card game), Christian Berkel (pub owner) and Sylvester Groth (Göbbels) - to name but a few - also come to mind. (some of whom were also part of 'Der Untergang'/ 'Downfall', a serious movie about the tail-end of the war)
Y’all gotta watch Django Unchained now! Waltz really shines in that.
24:10 his german is really good, but his pronunciation of the letter "r" gives him away.
Christoph Waltz is so freaking incredible in this movie
I'm a huge Tanantino fan, and it's really a cool experience to watch it with your first time thoughts. One of the few truly unleashed artistic and creative directors of a lifetime. And he was soley responsible for giving actors a whole new career, years after their acting star power had passed. And QT was able to get a masterful performance out of every single one of them. And their agents started calling with other lead roles again
Finally can't wait to see nobu's reaction to this Stella movie
It's Baron Zemo from Winter Soldier. He's the sniper.
i just love christoph waltz and everything he does haha
also somehow forgot that till schweiger (a german actor) was in this even tho i just watched it a few weeks ago
52:12 lol "He just wears a lot of hats." 😆
I stopped this video around half an hour in, to go and watch the movie for myself for the first time. It was worth it, so thank you for being the last push I needed to finally make myself watch it - my friend recommended it to me, but I never got around to it.
The rest of the commentary was a lot more enjoyable with the extra context. Great video as always (:
I still think one of the most underrated scene is when Waltz breaks into almost hysterical laughter at the story given to him about how her keg was injured. He knows he has her but he just howls at the lie she actually chose to tell him.
This is the movie Waltz got his Oscar for....
Since no one else has said it, YES to the Tarantino.
Just as the fire and explosions ended in the movie theater, your video went to a Panera ad, which starts with the line "Melted to perfection." I had to laugh.
When an SS Colonel asks "could you" do something while on an official visit in your home its not exactly a friendly request guys.
that fire fight was not on her guys...she did not know other germans were going to be there and that other german guy
"Absurdly large glass of beer."
LoL
Omg yes Tarininto! would love to see you guys react to more, possibly pulp fiction next? Keep it up guys :)
according to Tarantino, Landa's massive pipe is basically Landa saying "I got you"
I really enjoyed ‘Inglorious Basterds’😁🔥. I loved Christoph Waltz’s performance in this movie as he is such a brilliant actor🤩. Brad Pitt was really really good as well👍. Loved your reaction, take care and have a good one❤️🔥
IRL I want to be Nobu, But I am for sure a James. .... Regardless, love the content. Keep it coming
The writing of this movie is just amazing.
It makes me super uncomfy knowing that the actress was actually choked by Tarantino's hands to make the choking look as real as possible 😢.
This movie is just phenomenal! one of my favorites
One of my favourite films of ALL TIME
2:40 no he is not german, he ist from Austria. Close, but not the same 😅 Same goes for Hitler btw, everybody thinks he was german when in facts he was austrian.
YESSSS MORE QUENTIN FILMS!!!!
I really love the fact they called themselves bast@rds 😂
Shoshanna avenging her people from beyond the grave is so poetic I love it 😂
This film was first time I saw Christopher Waltz and Daniel Brühl. I got intrested by these actors and looked more films where they were. Few Days later I watched Django Unchained (2012) also by Tarantino and Rush (2013) by Ron Howard where Daniel Brühl portrayed Niki Lauda. Ever since I have been fan of these two actors.
Rush was fantastic 👌
Great reaction guys. Thanks!