Reservoir Dogs | Canadian First Time Watching | Movie Reaction | Movie Review | Movie Commentary
Simone & George are reacting to Reservoir Dogs for the first time! Canadians React!
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00:00 - Intro
01:09 - Reservoir Dogs
21:21 - Discussion
Welcome to Cinebinge, we are watching Reservoir Dogs for the first time!
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Reservoir Dogs was supposed to be an Indie post-college low budget type film so Tarantino could show people he could direct. However, when Harvey Keitel read the script he immediately poured money into the project and got top-notch actors to sign on. Secured a distribution deal for Tarantino and suddenly Tarantino was the hottest young director in Hollywood. Making a movie 10 times better quality than his peers for one-tenth the money. Sending Tarantino into legendary status.
@cgmat7804
2 жыл бұрын
You don't need sets and green screen when the dialogue and performances are this good
@gabagool_and_psychiatry4856
2 жыл бұрын
the power of great writing.
@jp3813
2 жыл бұрын
@@cgmat7804 Heck, "My Dinner with Andre" (1981) is just two people talking.
@nomchompsky2883
11 ай бұрын
incredibly nice synopsis of the happening of the movie.
@ThatMessiFan10
11 ай бұрын
Keep copy pasting comments on every reaction like a loser.
You caught the implications of Blonde being gun-happy from the opening scene, that's cool, but there were other subtle character hints in there too (Orange, being the cop, rats out Pink for not putting in a dollar)
@rememberblackmesa
Жыл бұрын
Mr Pink also being the only one not to tip, and gives extensive reasons for doing so, he always struck me as a hard thinker, no surprise he's the one who gets away alive in the end and with the money.
@zeltzamer4010
Жыл бұрын
@@rememberblackmesaHe gets arrested offscreen.
"I've never associated this song with terror." -- and now whenever you hear it, this is the FIRST thing you'll think of. Tarantino and Scorsese both seem to be masters of contrast between on screen action, and the soundtrack of the scene.
@AdamtheGrey02
2 жыл бұрын
Yep, happened to me.
@reconsoldier135
2 жыл бұрын
Fact, can’t hear that song without thinking about slicing someone’s ear off
@jishin75
Жыл бұрын
Like playing Layla during Goodfellas when there are all the people killed.
@HughGenvoenni
Ай бұрын
@@jishin75I still call the piano interlude of Layla the “Theme From Goodfellas”
Two of the many remarkable things about this film: it's a heist movie in which you never see the heist, and with the exception of the flashbacks, it all takes place in that warehouse. You could practically play it on a stage.
@TheGoodChap
2 жыл бұрын
Sort of similar to goodfellas in that regard
@Jerzeejaylive
3 ай бұрын
Which makes sense because it feels like a play.
Vic (Victor) Vega, aka Mr Blonde, is Vincent Vega's (John Travolta from Pulp Fiction) brother. There are a bunch of references across Tarantino's films that connect them to a cinematic universe. Such as the fictional brand of cigarettes, "Red Apple", that all the characters smoke.
@MrBlueSkyof1607
2 жыл бұрын
There was even going to be a prequel featuring the two before the events of both films, but it ended up being cancelled.
@JacopoBasanisi
2 жыл бұрын
In that universe there are a lot of people that look like Tarantino XD
@pete_lind
2 жыл бұрын
Tarantino 2nd movie , directer by Tony Scott , True Romance 1993 , script Tarantino had to sell to make this one , he got $50 000 for it , only difference to original script is movie scenes are in chronological order , not a box office buster , people have not even heard of it , even when it has top casting .
@StreetHierarchy
2 жыл бұрын
Mr. White also shares a last name with Jimmy from Pulp Fiction: Dimmick.
@AeonAxisProductions
2 жыл бұрын
Django was supposed to be in hateful eight because of the bounty hunters but it was dropped early on in development
As many have pointed out, Vic Vega is the brother of Vincent Vega from Pulp Fiction. One of Tarantino's many unrealized projects was a movie called The Vega Brothers, which would've brought back Michael Madsen and John Travolta. Tarantino implied in an interview at some point that they would be playing the twin brothers of Vic and Vincent, since both characters die in their respective movies. However, the movie was never made -- Tarantino often talks about making sequels or spin-offs of his existing movies, but he never does it. IMO, it seems obvious that he genuinely loves his characters, so he always has fun speculating on what they get up to outside the margins of the films, but the appeal of pulling on those threads is never as strong as making a brand new set of characters (lots of people seem to believe he'll make Kill Bill Vol. 3 as his tenth and supposedly final film, but I'd be very surprised). Sam Jackson said in an interview for Pulp Fiction that he auditioned for Reservoir Dogs and didn't get it. It increased his resolve to get the role in PF. In the final confrontation, there is a notorious gaffe. Joe is pointing his gun at Mr. Orange. Mr. White is pointing his gun at Joe. Nice Guy Eddie is pointing his gun at Mr. White. Mr. White shoots Joe, Nice Guy Eddie shoots Mr. White. Everyone in the stand-off dies, but nobody was pointing a gun at Nice Guy Eddie. Mr. Blue was played by a real-life criminal named Eddie Bunker, who left crime behind by writing a novel based on his experiences called No Beast So Fierce, which was later turned into a movie called Straight Time (very good). He consulted on and appeared in lots of crime movies after that, similar to Danny Trejo, who he met in prison. His character has no story because Bunker is sort of a glorified cameo, a reference to his real-life exploits. There is no other cut of this movie. I really hope you guys watch Tarantino's Jackie Brown soon. I think it's one of his best movies but it is also one of his least-seen and/or least-celebrated, so it never wins polls, but I think it will blow you away. I do get the impression that you're going to do the whole Tarantino catalog, but I hope Jackie Brown isn't last. Also, for reasons I won't divulge, it should be paired with Out of Sight (1998), starring George Clooney and Jennifer Lopez, and directed by Steven Soderbergh (the Ocean's movies), which is another underrated '90s masterpiece.
@cristonsloan
2 жыл бұрын
Watch it in 0.25 speed. You'll see that Mr White first shoots Joe, then swings his arm slightly to his left and shoots Nice Guy Eddie. Shoots him twice, in fact. Sequence is: Joe shoots Mr Orange. Mr White shoots Joe. Nice Guy Eddie shoots Mr White. Mr White shoots Nice Guy Eddie twice. The fact that they were able to get it perfectly in that sequence in such a short space of time is a testament to both the acting and the film-making. I'd love to know how many takes it took.
@davddd81
2 жыл бұрын
There's no gaffe in the final confrontation. Mr. White shoots twice. He shoots Joe and then Nice Guy Eddie.
@cristonsloan
2 жыл бұрын
@@davddd81 He shoots thrice, in fact.
@Harv72b
2 жыл бұрын
Jackie Brown is an excellent film. True Romance is a _great_ film, though, and gets skipped over far too often by people watching Tarantino flicks.
@RobertDoomsdayVasquez
2 жыл бұрын
yep the same way Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez's movies are a shared universe with crossover characters
This was Tarrantino's directorial debut but his first screenplay to be made into a movie was "True Romance" (which features Samuel L Jackson) and should very much be on your list.
@justinbriley2531
2 жыл бұрын
True Romance features everyone, Val Kilmer, James Gandolfini, Dennis hopper, Christopher Walken, Brad Pitt, and the list goes on.
@pete_lind
2 жыл бұрын
He had to sell True Romance scrip to finance this movie , Reservoir dogs came out before True Romance and still lot of people have not heard of it .
@Bunny_Aoife
2 жыл бұрын
true romance is so good, one of, if not my favourite tarantino movie, even though it's not directed by him.
@St.Maliki
2 жыл бұрын
Just thinking about that Hopper vs. Walkin scene gives me chills
@Harv72b
2 жыл бұрын
So much this. The combination of Tarantino's script with Tony Scott's direction and *so* many great actors acting great...True Romance is one of the better films out there, period. Let alone among Tarantino projects.
I love the connection between this and Pulp Fiction is the Vega brothers. Both are kind of trigger happy, but Victor Vega is ten times moreso than his brother Vincent is in Pulp Fiction.
@jkhristian9603
2 жыл бұрын
Mr. White also references Alabama from True Romance.
@zaekinfo
2 жыл бұрын
The black & white suits are also connected to pulp fiction.
@philvenn576
2 жыл бұрын
Also natural born killers. Jack Scagnetti
@mojoshivers
2 жыл бұрын
@@jkhristian9603 Good catch. Missed that reference.
@maceomaceo11
2 жыл бұрын
Well, Vincent was rather loose with his trigger finger. He did casually shoot Marvin in the face mid conversation.
"Stuck In The Middle With You" was just a fun little song before I saw this movie. Now it's forever associated with Michael Madsen dancing around with a severed ear.
@waynecanning4122
2 жыл бұрын
I had been listening to oldies station my whole life and had NEVER heard Stuck in the middle with you. The moment this movie started to pick up steam it became a staple of every oldies station. Quentin has done this for countless other songs.
@hendrsb33
2 жыл бұрын
@@waynecanning4122 LOL! Goes to show how old I am... I was hearing it when it was still considered Top 40s! ;-D
@waynecanning4122
2 жыл бұрын
@@hendrsb33 That’s cool. You have to admit it re-popularized it. Such a good song
@hendrsb33
2 жыл бұрын
@@waynecanning4122 Yeah, I admit it. But then again, I still prefer the "oldies but goodies"!
From now on whenever you hear "Stuck in the middle with you" by Stealers Wheel you will picture Michael Madsen dancing in the warehouse.
@JokerScars69
2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely
@RoscoeRMS
2 жыл бұрын
Not necessarily . kzread.info/dash/bejne/dIONktKwpdjZmJs.html
What makes this reaction so amazing is that George and Simone never consider Tim Roth to be the rat until he shoots Vic Vega. The Cinebinge team falls for the psychological trick that Tarantino played with the characters. BEcasue Tim Roth was shot so early in the movie we absolve him of being the rat, even though Geroge says it earlier in the reaction, subconsciously he lets his human empathy mislead his logical thought process. This is the beauty of how Tarantino layers his character's progression throughout a movie. Tarantino knows how to mind fuck the audience like few others can.
@krautgazer
2 жыл бұрын
I'm pretty sure they say at the beginning that him getting shot doesn't exclude him as the rat.
@lethaldose2000
2 жыл бұрын
@@krautgazer They say it, but their comments afterward negate it. Because they are sucked into the psychological dynamic happening between Tim Roth and Harvey Kitel.
@MrRezRising
3 ай бұрын
The scene where Pink and White are discussing who the rat is, the only color in the room is the soap bottles against the wall. The _orange_ soap bottles. 🙂🤘
@lethaldose2000
3 ай бұрын
@@MrRezRising nice catch. Great info
I’ve been riding the Tarantino train since the beginning, when his films were considered Arthouse. Had to drag my date, now my wife of almost 30 years, to the theatre for Pulp Fiction when it premiered. By the end of that movie, I think the film won her over. Ever since, we’d both go to the latest film from him until Once Upon A Time in Hollywood.
One thing that often gets overlooked. When Orange is telling his story, he gets asked why the buy was taking place at the train station with the drugs right there and why the brother was arrested. Orange was able to quickly give an answer without missing a beat, further validating the truth of his story. In contrast, when Eddie was telling the story of Lady E, he could not explain what things her husband "did" to her, thus destroying the credibility of his story.
I'm surprised George didn't bring up the time when Itchy & Scratchy parodied the torture scene! I recommend looking that up. I'm also really envious of you guys seeing this at an adult age. I learned this by heart when I knew zilch about anything so any element of surprise is forever lost to me. I wish I could forget this and Pulp Fiction and watch them for the first time again. If I get memory loss in my old days, I'm pretty sure that after I've forgotten my kids' faces and where my own hands are, I can still recite all the dialogue from these films.
@meobeus
2 жыл бұрын
IASIP did a great parody as well
@dabe1971
2 жыл бұрын
There's also a parody of the "don't point that gun at my Dad..." scene in 'Shaun of the Dead'
@shadypelican
2 жыл бұрын
It's worth mentioning that in that episode, the cartoon Quentin Tarantino comes out and proclaims "What I'm trying to say here is that violence is like everywhere...even our breakfast cereals man!" And some years later in Kill Bill, Vernita Green would hide a pistol in a box of cereal.
@TheCrazyCanuck420
2 жыл бұрын
@@shadypelican I can't believe I didn't connect the dots between the Simpsons episode and Kill Bill.
@spacechannelfiver
2 жыл бұрын
I was at university when it came out and we went to the local arthouse to watch it, mind blown. Back in those days they advertised that smoking was allowed in the theatre so distinctly remember skinning up and getting tutted at while getting stoned. It was the third great cinema moment of my life, with Empire Strikes Back and Ghostbusters preceeding it. (Maybe T2 also)
Hey George and Simone, the character subtext in this movie is so next level. Because Harvey Keitel feels responsible for getting Tim Roth shot. HE stops thinking like a criminal and starts taking on a father figure role, soothing Tim Roth as he bleeds out. He knows ROth's going to die, he feels responsible for it and it won't let him entertain the fact that Tim Roth is a cop. Tarantino's subtext is always next level and gives the meaning of events in the movie so much more psychological impact than would be in a normal shoot-em-up heist flick.
My favorite line in this movie is "you shoot me in a dream you better wake up and apologize", even not yet in the movie knowing for certain the men were criminals that line was ice cold gangster.
As far as the title goes, this is from imdb: The title for the film first came to Quentin Tarantino while visiting a production company and noticing that they had a pile of unsolicited scripts under the label "Reservoir dogs". All those scripts were fighting with each other for attention as dogs trapped in a reservoir tank. The name got stuck in his mind.
@samqualls1339
2 жыл бұрын
There is another story about the title as well, and I have no idea if either is correct. When Tarantino worked at a video store he suggested a French film “Au Revoir Les Enfants” to a customer, and the customer replied “I don’t want no reservoir dogs”. It stuck with Tarantino and he decided to use it as the movie title because the movie was heavily inspired by French cinema.
@balucious
2 жыл бұрын
Drowning puppies, all in the same bag, all doomed.
@dantedja
2 жыл бұрын
There are also other theories to the title, since Tarantino apparently changed the story as to how he got the idea for the title. Another one is that either he or a customer at the video store he used to work at got, the title for a french movie wrong. There's also a speculation that it might be slang or symbolism referring to rats (as in big rats in a reservoir).
@balucious
2 жыл бұрын
@@samqualls1339 See 'City On Fire'.
@KronnangDunn
2 жыл бұрын
I always thought it was a reference to the Hollywood Reservoir....
Debut film as a director and has absolute perfect control of narrative, camera, editing and the actors. I saw it when it came out at a midnight screening and I still think it's his best.
Now you will never hear THAT song without thinking of that scene. Welcome to the club.
fun fact, the restaurant they are eating at in the beginning of the movie is still open to this day in Eagle Rock California. Its called Pat and Lorrain's and their food is awesome.
one of my favorite bits in the film, is when Mr. Orange is casing the store with Mr. White, you can tell he's getting soft with Mr. White with how he is joking and talking to him, but the moment Mr. White describes how to torture and manager to give up the safe, shows to us and Mr. Orange that despite how funny or interesting we see these guys, they are ruthless criminals willing to do anything for themselves and their goal.
@marti9734
Жыл бұрын
Totally! Their scenes together are all so well done. You can really feel they liked each other and that they are acting way too unprofessional (even worse for Orange since he tried to get close to White for informations and ended up actually be fond of him... you can really feel his struggle) Just from the opening scene when they are all together you can already tell that this two are close just from their body language. Really well acted roles
There's a line in the film where Joe says that Mr. Brown is"dead as Dillinger" that's because the actor Laurance Tierney played John Dillinger decades earlier.
@sandbagger57
2 жыл бұрын
Laurence Tierney was one of the toughest actors in movies. He was a legend. Many fist fights in Bars, on Movie Sets and elsewhere. It is fun to see him.
@ToniMcGinty
2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I spotted that too. Similarly, in the Pulp Fiction scripr, Lance says to Vincent that something is "dead as disco", yet, in the film, Eric Stoltz (Lance) tells John Travolta that it is "dead as... dead, alright?" I've always thought that no-one had the heart to criticise disco to Travolta's face.
This film shows that if you make great characters and have incredible dialogue you can make a iconic movie. I mean it's a movie about a heist where you never even see the heist.
1992 was a great year for dialogue in cinema: Quentin Tarantino's "Reservoir Dogs", Aaron Sorkin's "A Few Good Men", & David Mamet's "Glengarry Glen Ross".
This was so different, so new, back when it came out in 93 or so. The style, the dialogue, the story were all unlike anything i'd seen up to then. I'm always amazed that no-one has done this as a play, as the main scenes are all in one setting, with only the events leading up to being in the warehouse being shot outside. Of course, a year later, in 94, Tarantino gifted us Pulp Fiction and confirmed there was a new maestro director in the world.
@becksimilian2955
2 жыл бұрын
Totally agree! I've seen this movie a bunch of times and every time I watch it I'm struck with how cool this would be as a 3 act play.
@EricAKATheBelgianGuy
2 жыл бұрын
I wasn't in it, but my college did do it as a play, and they did it in sequential order.
@tonygriffin_
2 жыл бұрын
@@EricAKATheBelgianGuy Glad to hear that someone took that step with it. I bet it worked well.
@tonygriffin_
Жыл бұрын
@@mr.gadfly6249 That's actually an accurate review of your comment. The irony!
George asks about Samuel L.Jackson being in this movie but it's hard to believe he may not have been in any Tarantino movies if Laurence Fishburne hadn't tuned down the role of Jules in Pulp Fiction.
@ToniMcGinty
2 жыл бұрын
He was very close to getting the Randy Brooks part here in Dogs.
To think this film is where Tarantino started. Blows my mind.
Legendary comedian Steven Wright was also in a movie called Canadian Bacon where Americans were played by Canadians and vice versa to poke fun at each other. Wright played a Canadian Mountie. It's hilarious.
Simone's reference to Fargo saying Steve Buscemi is gonna take the diamond and bury them in the snow was so funny and brilliant! Really made me laugh! Great reaction too, guys!
@garybacica5709
2 жыл бұрын
And then meet up with his two buddies at the bowling lanes. 😉
@crowtcameron
2 жыл бұрын
@@garybacica5709 That too
Hey Simone and Geroge, I feel that the opening scene of them at breakfast establishes many things, but mainly each character is intensely passionate for whatever ideology they have come upon. The other thing is Harvey Keitel is willing to go against JOe, when he won't give him his notebook. Tarantino's dialogue is never there for fluff. it always takes us somewhere. We never understand until the movie credit roll, but it's there for a reason.
@shatterquartz
2 жыл бұрын
As George correctly guessed, the finger gun was absolutely foreshadowing.
@StormhavenGaming
2 жыл бұрын
That scene also sets up all of the characters. Tim Roth immediately rats out Mr Pink for not tipping, letting us know he's the rat. Pink is selfish and refuses to tip, letting us know that he is only in it for himself and will want to split as soon as the job goes south. @Dave already mentioned Blond's finger guns. It's an incredibly well written scene.
@lethaldose2000
2 жыл бұрын
@@StormhavenGaming so true, so true.
@errwhattheflip
Жыл бұрын
@@StormhavenGaming I think it's less that he's selfish and more that he's a wild card. He doesn't really care much for established rules
As for why it's called "Reservoir Dogs"... The title for the film first came to Tarantino while visiting a production company and noticing that they had a pile of unsolicited scripts under the label "Reservoir dogs". All those scripts were fighting with each other for attention as dogs trapped in a reservoir tank. The name got stuck in his mind. As for Samuel Jackson, he actually auditioned for Reservoir Dogs but didn't work out well because Harvey Keitel and Tim Roth didn't show up and Jackson had to audition with unknown actors that were taking their place and they were "terrible" according to Jackson.
DJ is stand up comedian Steven Wright, one of my all time fave comedians. "So I put a skylight in my roof. The people in the flat above me are furious !" A great film with Stallone (really untypical non-hero role) with Harvey Keitel, Robert de Nero, and Ray Liotta is Copland.
Tarantino has history of seeing cool names and just using them. With nothing more than 'it sounds cool' as the reason, so I wouldn't think too hard on it.
One of the best moments of foreshadowing is in that very first scene. When Joe asks “Who didn’t pitch in for the tip?” Mr Orange rats him out immediately!!
No Samuel L. Jackson, although he did audition for the part of Marvin, the cop.
Tarantino says that he originally wanted to play Mr. Pink (Buscemi's character) "which is why I gave him so many great lines".
@DaCarnival
3 ай бұрын
Boy am I glad he didn't though.
People were really up in arms about the ear scene at the time but you never actually see the act but hearing the screams somehow makes it more terrifying
@ToniMcGinty
2 жыл бұрын
In the UK there was a lot of fuss about that. However, in the published screenplay, there is a photo of an alternate take where you actually see the ear being detached. Available to anyone of any age in shops.
@steve-rb9bm
2 жыл бұрын
It's a movie technic,camera pulls away,and your mind fills in the gap
@allyourmoney
2 жыл бұрын
It's amazing that there's actually nothing to censor. You can show that scene on TNT. Of course all the F-bombs would be gone from the movie, so it wouldn't be worth it.
@TheGoodChap
2 жыл бұрын
Which is so insane to me that they made a huge deal about the violence in Tarantinos first two movies when they really weren't it's almost all talking and then CASINO came our a few years later lmao...
@JH-lo9ut
3 ай бұрын
The camera makes a really unusual move: panning to the side, focusing on nothing in particular. This trick automatically gives you the feeling of looking away from the horror taking place in front of you.
The code names are a homage to an older crime movie The Taking of Pelhem 123 (1974)
@dorkarama3135
2 жыл бұрын
Love that movie. Very funny. Walter Matthau, talking about the lead bandit-Robert Shaw:"The guy who's speaking has a heavy British accent...so he's probably a fruitcake". Something like that.
@MrRezRising
3 ай бұрын
Great movie!
Tim Roth was in a junkie-comedy movie alongside Tupac, "Gridlock'd". Worth checking out.
Such an amazing neo noir thriller from Quentin Tarantino! Following the aftermath of a failed jewelry heist, violent thieves begin to realize that one of their own might be a police informant, but which one? Saw this on VHS in 1996 and it's pretty impressive! Tarantino said that John Carpenter's THE THING was a major influence on making this movie, as the criminals suspect one of these guys is not who he appears to be.
Vic Vega is supposed to be Vincent Vega's brother. Tarentino intended to do a movie starring them both but the project never saw the light of day. But I think some of the ideas for it went into From Dusk till Dawn : With the "2 brothers, one level headed, and one psychopath" sort of plot.
When you watch this movie again. Notice that Mr. Blond ( Michael Madson's character) leaning against something when you first see him in the movie. What he is leaning up against, are coffins. When Nice Guy Eddie tells Mr. Blond to babysit these two. Mr. Blond is sitting on a hearse.
@TheGoodChap
2 жыл бұрын
Yea the warehouse they were in waa formerly uses for embalming, one of the rooms they go to early on to argue had embalming fluid in drums sitting there
$200 million marvel movies Vs a good story filmed mostly in a warehouse. Just goes to show how far the story and acting can carry a low budget movie.
@CyberBeep_kenshi
2 жыл бұрын
Same with the usual Suspects. Minimal budget, killer script and acting.
@TheGoodChap
2 жыл бұрын
This is a movie you're glued to the whole time but the last marvel movie I saw I almost fell asleep to i just didn't care about any of the stuff going on. Maybe the most exciting scene in this movie and maybe my favorite visually is just my pink running down the street with the camera dollying right next to him. Found that road on Google street view too lol
Vic Vega: "You're gonna stand there and bark all day little doggy, or you gonna bite." Love it. Such epic lines, such epic dialogue. Thank you Tarantino for inventing the Vega brothers.
That's some movie for a first time Director. What's amazing is how confident he was in doing his own vision. There are scenes where the camera stays on one character and doesn't do a reaction from the other character. The DoP would tell Tarantino, "want to shoot some reaction footage in case you decide you want it while editing?" and Tarantino would reply, "no, not necessary." I think he was going to make it with the $50,000 he got from writing True Romance. Then Harvey Keitel saw the script and said he wanted to be in it and need he'd talk some friends into doing it, too. Once Keitel was on board Tarantino was able to get some more money but it was still very low budget. That's why he put himself in it, so he wouldn't have to pay another actor.
I saw an interview a long time ago in which Tarantino mentioned the 1987 French film, Au Revoir Les Enfents, and sort of misheard the title as Reservoir Dogs and he liked it so much that he wanted it to be the title of his first film even though it didn't really mean anything.
It is actually great interogation technic, to pretend that you are not interested in what the subject can tell you, and just interrogating him for your own pleasure.
I saw this 3 or 4 times in a local independent theater when it first came out. Needless to say, I was mesmerized. Glad you two got a chance to experience it unspoiled.
I saw this in the theater back in 1992 and was blown away and had never seen anything so tense take place on one set. Such incredible writing. Made me an instant Tarantino fan (being securely cemented when Pulp Fiction came out a few years later). Edit - I know it didn't take place on one set, but the "present" story mostly does.
*Random trivia:* In the Tarantinoverse, Vic Vega (Reservoir Dogs, Michael Madsen) and Vincent Vega (Pulp Fiction, John Travolta) are supposedly brothers. *Another random trivia:* The personal traits of Mr. White (Harvey Keitel) and Mr. Blonde (Michael Madsen) are said to illustrate the difference between a sociopath and a psychopath, respectively. And the title Reservoir Dogs would be something like these guys are the reserve hired hands that you pull in for a job.
Y'all my new favorite channel You watch all the movies that shaped me and it's fun to see movie fans discovering some of these classics
I think the reason that I can't lock down a favourite Tarantino movie is that I love this one so much, I'm hesitant to put anything ahead of it (even though he's certainly made "better quality" films). The writing, the casting, the soundtrack and the fact that it could largely be put on as a stage play just make this one an unforgettable classic.
After this was released, Madonna sent Tarantino a letter. "Dear Quentin, It's about love. Madonna." LOL!
Another subtle clue of who the rat was was in the bathroom scene between Pink and White. If you look at the bottles of liquid on the counter behind them, there are pink and white liquids together and orange liquid separated on the other side.
I like how George gets the title mixed up with that of Reservation Dogs starring Jerry Seinfeld. Its tagline was, "Anybody can just take a reservation. You have to hold the reservation."
Saw this during the first run, remember coming out of the theater, 'I'm feeling raw.' A watershed moment, witnessing a new genre.
One Of Quentin Tarantino's Masterpieces Ever Made, Cool Reaction As Always Simone & George, You Both Take Care
3:04 That is the legendary comedian Steven Wright, he delivers gags just like that. My favourite: "I can remember the first time I had to go to sleep. Mom said, “Steven, time to go to sleep.” I said, “But I don’t know how.” She said, “It’s real easy. Just go down to the end of tired and hang a left.” So I went down to the end of tired, and just out of curiosity I hung a right. My mother was there, and she said “I thought I told you to go to sleep.”
@nicholascross3557
2 жыл бұрын
"It's a small world. But I wouln't want to paint it." - S.W.
@ToniMcGinty
2 жыл бұрын
"My grandfather used to put me in a small room, and he'd stand by my side. We'd just stand there, for 3 minutes, not looking at each other, not talking to each other. When I asked him why we did this, he'd say "elevator practice"".
@ToniMcGinty
2 жыл бұрын
Once my grandmother gave me 5 bucks. She said "here's 5 bucks. Don't tell your mother". I said "it'll cost you more than that".
@ToniMcGinty
2 жыл бұрын
"Sometimes I like to sit in a full bathtub and put the shower on, and I pretend I'm in a sinking submarine".
@MrRezRising
3 ай бұрын
"There's a light switch in my house that doesn't do anything when I flick it up and down. But last week I got a letter from a woman in Germany saying, 'Cut it out'."
Some more hints of Mr. Orange. In the scene where Mr. White & Mr. Pink are talking, on the right there are colored bottles. A bunch of pink ones and a white one on the left side of the shelf. On the right side are a couple of orange ones, seperate from the other group.
Tim Roth starred in the film "Four Rooms" , which is an unusual film with 4 parts , each directed by a different director ( including Tarantino and one by Robert Rodriguez ). It has the framing device of each of the segments being one room in the hotel Roth works in. Very worth seeing.
@mizrolist
2 жыл бұрын
Four Rooms is very underrated and absolutely hilarious.
@chriswhinery925
Жыл бұрын
I love Four Rooms and it showed that Roth has some serious comedy chops to go along with his more dramatic roles that he usually does.
The actor who played Mr blue is an actual robber turned actor his role is just a cool little cameo
"Easy, peasy, Gary Sinisee" is AWESOME
Keitel should have at least gotten a nomination for this movie. It's probably my favorite role of his, but it was Tarantino's first movie and I'm guessing the Academy had no idea what to make of it.
My favorite fan theory connects "Reservoir Dogs" with "Pulp Fiction" through Steve Buscemi. Reservoir Dogs would happen first, meaning that Mr. Pink managed to survive and escape from the police. Things obviously didn’t go well after that, with Mr. Pink on the run and unemployed, so he had to take a job that would allow him to keep a low-profile - and what better than one where you have to wear a disguise all day. Ironically, Mr. Pink was now being forced to work the job he criticized so much, and now he had to deal with non-tippers. Life is a roller-coaster, they say.
Not sure if it was answered, but it was called Reservoir Dogs because Tarantino liked a film by the late, great French director Louis Malle called, Au Revoir, Les Infants (Goodbye, Children). Tarantino could never remember/pronounce it so he just kept referring it to as Reservoir Dogs. When he wrote the script for Reservoir Dogs, the ill-used name fit perfectly for the gang of diamond thieves.
The song at the end was "da lime in the coconut" a song about a woman with a stomachache and Orange had a gut shot the entire movie. Also I saw Simone's head bobbing lol 😆
The razor blade Mr. Blonde uses to cut off the cop's ear is the same razor blade used by the Bride in Kill Bill 2. when she escapes the grave.
One of the singer Pink's origin stories of her name are from this movie, she was Mr Pink in her crew. There are other stories I have heard her tell though.
Tarantino has mentioned a LOT in the past few years that he's contemplated circling back around to this movie in book form. Would be super curious to see what shape that would take. This movie hit like a ton of bricks when it first came out. There was NOTHING like it at the time. ...at least nothing stateside. LOL Dude borrowed a TON from international cinema in this movie and subsequent movies.
The lady Orange has to shoot was Tim Roth's dialect coach. He pleaded for her to take the role, I guess because he knew what would happen to her.
Mr. Blue was a guy named Edward Bunker, who was a real career criminal who had spent almost all of his early life in prison, but had also gone on to be an accomplished writer (if you want a spectacular example of that, watch "Straight Time", 1978- book and screenplay by Eddie Bunker.
This movie is taking place on the same day of “Pulp Fiction” and Mr. White’s brother is Vince in the movie. You now need to react to Tarantino’s lesser reacted to movies: “Pulp Fiction”, “4 Rooms” and “From Dusk Til Dawn”!
I saw this at a college screening when it first came out. The best thing about it was that almost no one knew what it was, so it really blew everyone's mind. A year or so later, there were portions of a leaked script for Pulp Fiction that were all over the early internet.
Nice Guy Eddie (the kid in the track suit) is Chris Penn, Sean's brother. Chris died of heart disease at age 40.
another great choice and great reaction.. thanks.. you guys are so good
The name Reservoir Dogs comes from Tarantino's mom, Connie, She called him and his friends, when he was a kid, a bunch of Reservoir Dogs back in his hometown, Knoxville, Tennessee. It is like a bunch of hooligans or a motley crue of little trouble makers.
I can't hear "Stuck in the Middle With You" anymore without thinking of that scene!
0:59 “Does that mean, like, they’re all going to kill each other?” Goddamn, what? She called the ending of this movie in LITERAL seconds… That has GOT TO BE some kind of a record!
Great video guys!!
And you will now forever think of that scene when you hear Stuck in the Middle with You.
The soundtrack(whatever form you prefer), is excellent….it’s like listening to a Steven wright radio show. Hope you react to Four Rooms.
There is foreshadowing in near the beginning that tells you that Orange is the rat. When Mr. White and Mr. Pink are talking in the back by themselves there is a wide shot in which you can see off to the right there are three pink containers sitting next to a white container, and then further to the right by itself is an orange container, subtly hinting at how Orange has separate loyalty from the other two. As a separate piece of trivia, some of the money that Tarantino used to make this movie was earned from a cameo appearance as an Elvis impersonator in an episode of The Golden Girls.
Scenes that make you imagine what is happening can be quite fun. For example, in the first Avengers movie when Thor holds his hand out to call for Mjolnir while fighting the Hulk. When Mr. Pink seems to get a clean getaway in this film you can hear the police shooting Mr. Pink to death outside and the scene plays in your imagination alone because this film delivers the mantra of "live by the sword, die by the sword" to every one of the characters.
There's clues that orange is the rat, like when he immediately tells on pink about not tipping, or the orange balloon
Reservoir Dogs was originally going to be a much shorter film, and it was actually going to be one of the three segments of Pulp Fiction back when Quentin Tarantino and Roger Avary intended for Pulp Fiction to be a crime anthology movie, with Avary writing and directing The Gold Watch segment. They scrapped the idea after being unable to find a third collaborator for Pulp Fiction and Tarantino ended up expanding Reservoir Dogs into a full length feature, and then wrote The Bonnie Situation and Vincent Vega and Marcellus Wallace's Wife as a replacement in Pulp Fiction, directing the entire movie himself.
The name refers to stray dogs that fall into the very shallow LA reservoirs and can’t get out. They end up eating each other to survive.
I think the title Reservoir Dogs is a reference to Tarantino working in a video store. He was talking to a customer about a movie called "Au revoir les enfants" and the customer said something like "I don't want no reservoir dogs"
Not sure if someone else explained here in the comments but a "reservoir dog" is dog that has no home and no pack. It survives day to day on the streets by toughness and ferocity. Hence........ Reservoir Dogs. I enjoy your reactions.
Another great reaction! I have never been a huge Tarantino film, but I do like this film quite a lot. Quick recommendation: The use of colours for the aliases is an homage to The Taking of Pelham One Two Three (1974) which is an AMAZING heist film. Highly recommend!
I love Tarantino's first two movies. I just wish I had seen them in the cinema at the time but without the world wide web is was so much harder to get info on a movie. Tv shows about movies were often very commercial in nature (still are) so I got to know many of these movies by watching them on tv or buying them after reading the dvd reviews on Amazon back in the 90's.
See also the Winchester stand off in Shaun of the dead, " stop pointing that gun at my mum!! "
The title of "Reservoir Dogs" is meant to evoke the image of dogs fighting over water and/or in an enclosed space, like the characters.
This was my favorite movie for a while. When I saw Pulp Fiction for the first time in the theater it didn't seem as good at first because it had so much color to it, and I liked how neutral and desaturated everything was in the first movie. Plus how low-budget the whole thing was. The reservoirs are everywhere in the L.A. area. They're for run-off from the rain.
Tarantino says he wrote the part of Mr Pink for himself. Steve Buscemi came in to audition and T said, alright, this is mine, you have to take this from me. He was so blown away by his audition that Buscemi got the part instead.
This Is One Of My All Time Favorite Movie's,Nice Reaction Guy's
A heist movie without a heist in it. Hell of a calling card for Quentin!
Anyone getting a laugh from Simone counting the “dicks” in the first scene should join the Patreon so they can see the True Detective episode where Simone counts the “butts” in the show’s intro.
Stuck In The Middle With You is a really well known song - because of this movie. When it came out, most people weren't that familiar with it.
One of the older legends about the origin of the title that I've read is that, when Tarantino was a video store clerk, he had trouble pronouncing the title of the French film "Au Revoir Les Enfants" and would refer to it as the "reservoir movie." He then mashed that together with the Sam Peckinpah film "Straw Dogs." There is another Tarantino universe connection aside from the Vega brothers. During the Mr. White flashback, Joe asks Mr. White about Alabama. Alabama, of course, was the Patricia Arquette character in True Romance.
I got to see that movie at the time of its original release, back when Quentin Tarantino was a complete stranger. Thanks to its playing at the 1992 Cannes Festival, it was released in France later that year, before it got to hit the American screens. One thing about Tarantino is that he's a huge fanboy of Wong Kar-wai, and he set up his own distribution company just so that Chungking Express could be seen in cinemas by American audiences. As regards the poster for Reservoir Dogs, several versions of it exist, but the tagline for this one is my favorite.