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Kill Bill

The Complete Guide

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Contents
Articles
Overview
Kill Bill films 1 1 4 4 12 15 17 19 21 22 30 30 33 36 36 49

Characters
List of Kill Bill characters Beatrix Kiddo Bill Deadly Viper Assassination Squad Earl McGraw Edgar McGraw Hattori Hanzo

Music
Kill Bill Vol. 1 Original Soundtrack Kill Bill Vol. 2 Original Soundtrack

Related Topics
Quentin Tarantino Uma Thurman

References
Article Sources and Contributors Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors 59 62

Article Licenses
License 63

Overview
Kill Bill films
Kill Bill Series

Kill Bill Logo


Directed by Produced by Written by Starring Quentin Tarantino Lawrence Bender Quentin Tarantino Uma Thurman David Carradine Lucy Liu Vivica A. Fox Michael Madsen Daryl Hannah Gordon Liu Julie Dreyfus

Cinematography Robert Richardson Editing by Studio Distributed by Release date(s) Budget Sally Menke A Band Apart Productions Miramax Films October 3, 2003 and April 16, 2004 $55 million

Kill Bill action/thriller film written and directed by Quentin Tarantino. Kill Bill was originally scheduled for a single theatrical release, but with a running time of over four hours, it was separated into two volumes: Kill Bill Volume 1, released in late 2003, and Kill Bill Volume 2, released in early 2004. A third installment was planned for the year 2014,[1] but in a 2012 interview from Tarantino, concerning Kill Bill: Vol. 3, he remarked, "we'll see, probably not".[2]

Kill Bill: Volume 1


Kill Bill: Volume 1 was released in theaters on October 10, 2003. In the United States and Canada, Volume 1 was released in 3,102 theaters and grossed $22 million on its opening weekend.[] Volume 1 was the widest theatrical release of Tarantino's career to date,[] and it was also his highest-grossing opening weekend to date. Outside the United States and Canada, Kill Bill Volume 1 was released in 20 territories. By November 2, 2003, it had made $31 million in the 20 territories.[3] Kill Bill Volume 1 grossed a total of $70 million in the United States and Canada and $110.9 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $180.9 million.[]

Kill Bill films The movie follows a character initially identified as "The Bride", a former member of an assassination team who seeks revenge on her ex-colleagues who massacred members of her wedding party and tried to kill her. During the first movie she succeeds in killing two of the five members. Kill Bill Volume 1 is often noted for its stylish direction and its homages to film genres such as Hong Kong martial arts films, Japanese chanbara films, Italian spaghetti westerns, girls with guns, and rape and revenge.

Kill Bill: Volume 2


Kill Bill: Volume 2 is a 2004 American thriller film written and directed by Quentin Tarantino. It is the second of two volumes that were released several months apart. Kill Bill was originally scheduled for a single theatrical release, but with a running time of over four hours, it was separated into two volumes. Kill Bill Volume 1 was released in late 2003, and Kill Bill: Volume 2 was released in early 2004. The volumes follow a character initially identified as "The Bride", a former member of an assassination team who seeks revenge on her ex-colleagues who massacred members of her wedding party and tried to kill her. Like the first film, Kill Bill: Volume 2 is also noted for its stylish direction and its homages to film genres such as Hong Kong martial arts films, Japanese chanbara films, Italian spaghetti westerns, girls with guns, and rape and revenge.[citation needed]

The Whole Bloody Affair


Tarantino announced at the 2008 Provincetown International Film Festival that a single film version of part 1 and 2 called Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair with an extended animation sequence was to be released in May 2009.[4] Screenings of the complete film began on March 27, 2011 at the New Beverly Cinema.[5] This was verified to be the original print that premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in 2003,[] before the decision was made to split the film into two parts due to the roughly four-hour length. The print shown at the New Beverly even retained the French subtitles necessary for screening an English-language film at the Cannes festival. Differences in this version in comparison to the separate Vol. 1 and Vol. 2 versions include the "old Klingon proverb" shown at the beginning of Vol. 1 is not present, although a dedication to filmmaker Kinji Fukasaku is in its place; the anime sequence is slightly longer with more gore; The House of Blue Leaves battle is in color (it had been toned down to black and white for the USA release of Vol. 1 only)[citation needed]; Sofie Fatale loses both of her arms; the revelation that The Bride's daughter is alive at the end of Vol. 1 is not present, nor is the short black and white scene at the beginning of Vol. 2 where The Bride is driving and sums up the action to that point; in its place is a small musical intermission that leads straight into Chapter 6.

Sequel
Tarantino told Entertainment Weekly in April 2004, that he was planning a sequel: Oh yeah, initially I was thinking this would be my "Dollars Trilogy". I was going to do a new one every ten years. But I need at least fifteen years before I do this again. I've already got the whole mythology: Sofie Fatale will get all of Bill's money. She'll raise Nikki, who'll take on The Bride. Nikki deserves her revenge every bit as much as The Bride deserved hers. I might even shoot a couple of scenes for it now so I can get the actresses while they're this age. According to Bloody-Disgusting.com, details emerged around 2007 about two possible sequels, 'Kill Bill Volumes 3 and 4. According to the article, "Bennett Walsh said at the Shanghai International Film Festival, the third film involves the revenge of two killers whose arms and eye were hacked by Uma Thurman in the first stories". The article adds that the "fourth installment of the popular kung fu action films concerns a cycle of reprisals and daughters who avenge their mother's deaths".[6] Quentin Tarantino said at the 2006 Comic Con that, after the completion of Grindhouse, he wants to make two anime Kill Bill films. One will be an origin story about Bill and his mentors, and the other will be an origin starring

Kill Bill films The Bride. The latter is most likely to be a prequel, but could also follow the rumored (sequel) plot reported in Entertainment Weekly in April 2004.[7][8] At the Morelia International Film Festival on October 1, 2009, while being interviewed on an Italian TV show after being asked about the success of the two Kill Bill films, Tarantino addressed the hostess by claiming "You haven't asked me about the third one" then asking the woman to ask the question would he be making a third Kill Bill film, which he replied "Yes", and claiming "The Bride will fight again!"[9] On October 3, 2009, he further predicted that Kill Bill 3 would be his ninth film, and would be released in 2014.[10] He said he intends to make another unrelated film before that date as his eighth film. He confirmed that he wanted ten years to pass between the Bride's last conflict, to give her and her daughter a period of peace.[11] In December 2012 however, Tarantino said that Kill Bill, Vol. 3 now looks unlikely, and that he wishes to focus on other unrelated projects.[2]

References
[1] http:/ / www. independent. co. uk/ arts-entertainment/ films/ quentin-tarantino-plans-kill-bill-3-for-2014-release-movie-news-recap-1796842. html [2] http:/ / ca. ign. com/ articles/ 2012/ 12/ 12/ no-kill-bill-3-for-tarantino [4] (http:/ / www. advocateinsider. com/ provincetown_film_festival_2008/ index. html) [7] Rodriguez and Tarantino Present Grindhouse! (http:/ / comingsoon. net/ news/ movienews. php?id=15618), Blake Wright on ComingSoon.net, July 22, 2006. Retrieved August 7, 2006. [8] SDCC '06: Tarantino Confirms More Kill Bill! (http:/ / www. bloody-disgusting. com/ news/ 6841), Bloody-Disgusting.com, July 22, 2006. Retrieved October 5, 2007. [9] Quentin Tarantino Talks Kill Bill 3: The Bride Will Fight Again! (http:/ / www. badtaste. it/ index. php?option=com_content& task=view& id=9753& Itemid=29), BadTaste.it, October 1, 2009. Retrieved October 2, 2009.

Characters
List of Kill Bill characters
The following is a list of characters from the film Kill Bill. Written and directed by Quentin Tarantino, the film was released in two separate parts, Kill Bill Vol. 1 in 2003 and Kill Bill Vol. 2 in 2004. The film takes place after a massacre that killed the fianc and friends of the main character, The Bride, at the chapel in which she was to be married; she was also thought to have been killed by being shot in the head. However, The Bride survived, but was put into a coma for four years as a result of the attack. Upon finally awakening she plots her vengeance against the killers.

Deadly Viper Assassination Squad


Beatrix Kiddo (Black Mamba, also known as The Bride)
Beatrix Kiddo, a.k.a. The Bride (portrayed by Uma Thurman), is the protagonist of the film. She abandons her life as a hired assassin for the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad (DeVAS) upon realizing she is pregnant with Bill's child, denying him the right of fatherhood to preserve her unborn's future. This action provokes the attacks on her and her loved ones and its ensuing revenge, which is the entire basis of the film. Her code name while working for DVAS was Black Mamba.

Bill (Snake Charmer)


Bill (portrayed by David Carradine) is the main antagonist of the film. He is the founder and leader of The Deadly Viper Assassination Squad, to which The Bride formerly belonged, and also her former lover. Because the code names of the members are all referring to venomous snakes, Bill's code name is Snake Charmer. He and the four remaining Deadly Vipers attempt to kill her after she learns she is carrying Bill's child and leaves him without warning. Some time after the massacre, the squad has disbanded. When Bill finds out The Bride isn't dead but instead in a coma, he sends former Squad member and mistress Elle Driver to the hospital to kill her, but Bill changes his mind and tells Elle to abort the mission, saying that killing a helpless person would demean the name of the Assassination Squad.

O-Ren Ishii (Cottonmouth)


O-Ren Ishii, a.k.a. Cottonmouth (portrayed by Lucy Liu), is a half-Japanese, half-Chinese-American woman. O-Ren experienced her first encounter of death when at the age of nine, while hiding underneath a bed, she witnessed both her parents being brutally murdered under the orders of a Yakuza boss (who turned out to be a pedophile) and his associates. An anime flashback showed her father in a U.S. Army uniform wearing the rank of sergeant major fighting the assassins. Though he was apparently a skilled martial artist who took down two of the boss's men, he was eventually overwhelmed and killed, along with his wife whom the crime boss personally murdered by killing her in either the head or the chest with the same sword used to execute her father. The house was later destroyed in a fire to cover up the act but young O-Ren escaped and although she was left physically unharmed, she was left psychologically and emotionally scarred for life, swearing revenge against the crime boss responsible. After going through intense training, two years later and at the age of eleven, she succeeded in getting her revenge against the crime boss by sneaking into his house and killed him but not before asking if he remembered her or if she looked like someone he'd killed. Once she'd murdered the crime boss, O-Ren killed his two bodyguards and escaped, later

List of Kill Bill characters becoming an expert assassin, proficient in marksmanship and sword fighting, raising through the ranks to become one of the world's top female assassins at the age of twenty. Though once a member of the Deadly Vipers, she eventually became the head of the Tokyo Yakuza, with Bill's help, and possessed her own bodyguard army, the Crazy 88. O-Ren is fiercely proud of her heritage, going so far as to decapitate her own subordinate when he vented his frustration over being led by "a Chinese Jap-American half breed bitch". The Showdown at House of Blue Leaves is the chapter in which O-Ren Ishii visits a Japanese club together with various Crazy 88 members, her lawyer and friend Sofie Fatale, and personal teenage bodyguard, Gogo Yubari. While sitting in a room apart from the other guests, O-Ren hears a sound outside the room and throws a dart in that direction. She orders Gogo to take a look; however, Gogo finds nothing. Later, Sofie Fatale is captured by The Bride and taken to the main hall of the restaurant, where The Bride calls O-Ren, who appears with her bodyguards. The Bride reveals herself to O-Ren, cutting off Sofie's arm, horrifying the other guests to flee the restaurant. The Bride defeats countless Crazy 88s and Gogo, finally meeting O-Ren in a garden scene atop the club. During the battle, O-Ren mocks The Bride as a "silly Caucasian girl who likes to play with samurai swords." After resuming their fight, O-Ren receives a wound and apologizes for her earlier remark. The Bride accepts and eventually kills O-Ren by lopping off the top of her head. It is hinted that O-Ren and the Bride may have had a genuine friendship in the past; O-Ren is the only member of the Deadly Vipers besides Bill that the Bride shows any remorse over. O-Ren utters with her dying breath "That really was a Hattori Hanzo sword", having been close enough to both see the symbol of Hattori Hanzo and feel the blade.

Vernita Green (Copperhead)


Vernita Green, a.k.a. Copperhead (portrayed by Vivica A. Fox), is a member of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad who took part in the massacre at the Two Pines Wedding Chapel. She is second on the Bride's "Death List Five". Four years after the massacre, she is depicted living a normal life under the alias of Jeannie Bell. She is trained in hand-to-hand combat and knife fighting, and it is hinted that she and The Bride share a mutual, professional respect for each other. At the start of the first movie, they engage in a vicious fight, destroying Vernita's living room in the process. However, the fight is interrupted when Green's four-year-old daughter, Nikki, arrives home from school in the middle of the fight, and they stop fighting because the Bride does not wish to kill Vernita in front of her child. Green sends Nikki to her room and she talks with the Bride over coffee, apologizing for betraying her and asking for mercy on behalf of her daughter and family. The Bride coldly refuses and they agree to meet in the middle of the night to have a knife fight. However, Vernita betrays her promise, and shoots at the Bride with a handgun concealed within a box of Kaboom cereal. She misses, and the Bride throws a knife into her heart, killing her instantly. Nikki unintentionally witnesses her mother's death, for which the Bride apologizes. The Bride then adds that, when Nikki grows up, if she ever wants to avenge her mother's death she'll be waiting for her and leaves. Incidentally, Vernita Green's alias (Jeannie Bell) is a direct reference to the actress and former Playboy Playmate Jeanne Bell who starred in the 1974 blaxpoitation film T.N.T. Jackson (writer/director Tarantino is a noted fan of cult 1970's cinema).

Elle Driver (California Mountain Snake)


Elle Driver, a.k.a. California Mountain Snake (portrayed by Daryl Hannah), is another swordswoman who is loyal to Bill. Elle and the Bride despise each other immensely, and it is implied that their mutual hatred came to be before the events of the film. Elle is jealous of the Bride's status as Bill's lover, implying that Elle herself also had some kind of sexual relationship with him. Despite this, Elle does grudgingly respect the Bride, describing her as "the greatest warrior [she] had ever met" and also believing that she deserved better than to have supposedly met her end at the hands of someone like Budd. Like Bill and The Bride, Elle was trained by Pai Mei. When she showed disrespect to Pai Mei by calling him a "miserable old fool", he responded by plucking out her right eye for her insolence, which is why she is shown to

List of Kill Bill characters wear an eyepatch. In retaliation, Elle murdered Pai Mei by poisoning his meal of fish-heads. When Bill learns that the Bride survived the attempt on her life, he orders Elle to go kill her at the hospital where she was then lying comatose. Disguised as a nurse, Elle nearly injects the Bride with a deadly poison when Bill calls her to abort the mission. Though Elle wanted to kill the Bride while she was incapacitated, she abides by Bill's wishes. When Budd (Sidewinder) captures the Bride, he calls Elle to offer her the Bride's Hanzo sword. Elle agrees to pay one million dollars for the sword, on the condition that Budd makes The Bride "suffer until her last breath". Budd buries the Bride alive, but she eventually escapes and lies in wait near Budd's trailer. Elle pays Budd for the sword with a suitcase containing $1 million but when Budd opens the case, a concealed black mamba bites Budd and he succumbs to its venom. Elle calls Bill and frames the Bride for Budd's death, also taking credit for Budd's live burial of the Bride and tells Bill the grave's location. When Elle is about to leave the trailer, the Bride ambushes her. The two women engage in an improvised weapons fight which evolves into a sword fight, with the Bride having to use Budd's Hanzo sword (thought to have been long-ago pawned, by Budd's statement to Bill). During the fight, Elle reveals that she killed Pai Mei; enraged, the Bride snatches out Elle's remaining eye. The Bride leaves Elle, now completely blind, thrashing wildly on the floor of the trailer with the black mamba still loose inside. Though it can be inferred that Elle was also killed by the black mamba, her fate is unknown or rather undecided.

Budd (Sidewinder)
Budd, a.k.a. Sidewinder (portrayed by Michael Madsen), is Bill's degenerate younger brother who was recognized by Bill as 'the only man I ever loved', an epigraph etched onto Budd's Hanzo sword. He was the only other male Deadly Viper Squad member and, since the assassination squad's disbandment, adopted a redneck-like life-style. Living in a mobile home where he steadily became an alcoholic, Budd makes ends meet by working as a bouncer at a local strip club. When told by Bill that Beatrix was coming to kill him, Budd philosophically stated "That woman deserves her revenge. And we deserve to die. But then again, so does she." (When Budd makes this statement in Volume 1, the last sentence is not included; the full statement is spoken in Volume 2). Budd once owned a Hattori Hanzo katana, and told Bill and Elle that he had sold it for $250 in El Paso, Texas. He actually lied because The Bride later found the sword in a golf bag in the bedroom of Budd's trailer. During Bill and Budd's discourse, Bill mentions an unpleasant event between the two of them that led to their falling out, but the details of this event are never explicitly mentioned. When the Bride finally does find Budd, he is prepared for her sneak attack, shooting her with rock salt from a double-barreled shotgun (making him the only Deadly Viper to single-handedly defeat The Bride) and buries her alive (later described as a 'Texas funeral'). Before closing the casket, he tells The Bride that her live burial is retribution for breaking Bill's heart. Returning to his trailer, Budd gives the Bride's priceless Hattori Hanzo sword to Elle in return for $1 million in cash; he is then repeatedly bitten in the face by a black mamba concealed in the suitcase (ironically The Bride's Deadly Viper codename) containing the cash. She takes advantage of the situation in torturing Budd slowly by reading useful information about Black Mamba poison and the effects off it if not injected with anti-venom. As he dies in agony minutes later, Elle tells Budd that she feels regret because she never had a chance to take the Bride on herself and that she had to die at the hands of miserable cowboy like him.

List of Kill Bill characters

Associates of O-Ren Ishii


In the quest for revenge, The Bride's first target is O-Ren Ishii, who during the intervening four years has risen to become a major leader of the Tokyo organized crime world. But before The Bride battles and defeats her, she must first confront and bring down her associates one by one.

Sofie Fatale
Sofie Fatale (portrayed by Julie Dreyfus) is O-Ren Ishii's lawyer, second-in-command, and best friend.[1][2] Sofie Fatale is of mixed Japanese/French descent and serves as an interpreter and is seen speaking English, Japanese and French fluently.[3] Although she is referred to as a protege of Bill's, she does not display any martial arts skills during her appearances. Sofie Fatale is present at the "House of Blue Leaves" when The Bride arrives to kill O-Ren Ishii. The Bride is riding her motorbike through Tokyo, stalking Sofie's Nissan Fairlady Z when she is seen at a stop light using her phone; her left-handedness, and later, the phone's "Auld Lang Syne" ringtone, are recognized by The Bride. She remembers that Sofie was present during the El Paso massacre, and while she did not assist in beating The Bride, she did answer her ringing phone, while callously ignoring the injured Bride and the rest of the carnage. The Bride captures Sofie at the House of Blue Leaves and brings her to O-Ren Ishii. The Bride then cuts off Sofie's left arm (the arm she holds her phone with) as a means of both exacting revenge on her and showing Ishii her intentions for a duel.[4] Later, The Bride interrogates Sofie to learn the location of the rest of the members of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad, threatening to further dismember her when she refuses to speak. She then sends her rolling down a hill to a hospital for medical attention so she can live on and tell Bill what has happened and that the Bride is still alive.[5][6] Although her fate is left ambiguous, Tarantino has commented that a potential third Kill Bill movie would focus on the revenge of Vernita's daughter Nikki against the Bride, and that Nikki would be trained by Elle and Sofie. Apparently, Sofie would inherit all of O-Ren and Bill's money.[citation needed]

Crazy 88
The Crazy 88 are a masked Yakuza gang under her control who originally employed to help O-Ren take control of the Tokyo underworld. It includes members of both sexes and a wide age range. Most of them fight using katanas except for three members. One is shown with a pair of throwing axes and another is seen briefly wielding a meteor hammer. Johnny Mo, the clan's leader (under O-Ren), uses dual shortswords which, when each is sheathed in the other's handle, can be used as a fighting staff. The Bride manages to fend off the entire gang, killing, mortally wounding, and dismembering many. After the fight, any surviving member was taken into custody after leaving the nightclub. Their arrest by Japanese police and hospitalization before being locked up in prison is not shown. One of the last of the Crazy 88 member the Bride faces before O-Ren is a very timid teenage boy whose katana she cuts into several pieces with her own, after which he surrenders immediately. She spanks him with the flat of her blade and orders him to leave the criminal business by the word "Go home to your mother". Aside from Johnny Mo, only one member of the Crazy 88 is identified and named. Miki is apparently O-Ren Ishii's bodyguard, aside from Gogo. He is the first member to attack the Bride although he's quickly killed when the Bride impales his chest with her sword. Quentin Tarantino appears as one of the members whose throat is slit after the Bride dismembers the eye of one of the gangsters. The Crazy 88 allegedly does not actually have eighty-eight members. Bill says that they adopted the name because it "sounded cool". There are only 40 actors credited to the Crazy 88.[7] Metaphors are used to create the Crazy 88. 8 ( hachi, ya) is considered a lucky number in some Eastern culturesWikipedia:Avoid weasel words - it suggests growing prosperous, because the letter () broadens gradually. 8 ( ya) was also seen as holy in ancient times.[citation needed]. Another metaphor is that there are 88 keys on a standard piano. The gang are dressed in black and white like the piano keys.

List of Kill Bill characters There are two different versions of the fight scene with the Crazy 88. The original version was released as a Japanese Unrated Limited Edition DVD in Japan and U.S. which has the fight in full color. Tarantino was forced to tone down the violence of the whole fight the scene by omitting a few scenes and adding a black and white effect to the finished product for the film's release. The Black and White version is used on television airings up to this day.

Johnny Mo
Johnny Mo (portrayed by Gordon Liu, who also portrays Pai Mei in the sequel) is the leader of O-Ren's personal army, the Crazy 88. Johnny Mo is most prominently featured in the "House of Blue Leaves" scene. After The Bride kills Gogo Yubari and O-Ren Ishii's six bodyguards, Johnny Mo, armed with a pair of sht, arrives with an army of Crazy 88s. He is a more proficient fighter than the rest of the gang, nearly tipping the scales in their favor and holding his own against The Bride for several minutes alone while fighting her on top of a balcony railing. She eventually chops off his leg and he falls into a bloodied fountain pool from the second floor balcony and is presumed dead thereafter.

Gogo Yubari
Gogo Yubari (portrayed by Chiaki Kuriyama) is a young associate of O-Ren Ishii. Gogo is a bloodthirsty and severely disturbed seventeen-year-old schoolgirl who takes a sadistic delight in killing. Her fighting style is a combination of wushu techniques using chain whip and rope dart. She is O-Ren's top assassin and personal bodyguard. Gogo's disturbed mind and vicious penchant for killing is displayed when she offers herself to a drunken man in a bar and then disembowels him, asking him, "Do you still wish to penetrate me?... Or is it I who has penetrated you?" Later on, she takes on Beatrix Kiddo when the latter has already slaughtered several of O-Ren Ishii's immediate guards at the House of Blue Leaves. Although the Bride gives her the opportunity to walk away, Gogo refuses and takes her on with a large meteor hammer, almost overcoming the Bride by strangling her savagely with the chain. Eventually Kiddo distracts Gogo by driving a broken chair leg studded with nails into her foot, then kills her by driving the nails into the side of her head. Gogo Yubari resembles the character that Chiaki Kuriyama previously portrayed in the 2000 Japanese film, Battle Royale,[8] Takako Chigusa.

Other characters
B.B.
B.B. (portrayed by Perla Haney-Jardine) is the four-year-old daughter of The Bride and Bill who was in utero during the massacre at the Two Pines chapel. Upon first coming out of her coma, The Bride believes her unborn child was killed in the attack and promises to avenge her death. The audience does not learn that she is alive until the last line of Vol. 1, and The Bride does not find out until the final act of Vol. 2. B.B. was named (probably in homage to her parents, Beatrix and Bill) and raised by Bill, who in Vol. 2 openly admitted to her the terrible crime he had committed against The Bride.

Buck
Buck (portrayed by Michael Bowen) is a male nurse at the hospital where The Bride laid comatose for four years. During this period, he regularly took sexual advantage of The Bride, raping her unconscious body and later also prostituting her to other male clients. After she first awakens, The Bride attacks Buck and interrogates him on the whereabouts of Bill. Suddenly, she begins recalling Buck's prior assaults on her (including his infamous line, "My name's Buck and I'm here to fuck!") and, in a fit of rage, slams his head with a door, killing him with an intracranial hemorrhage. The Bride then steals Buck's clothes and escapes from the hospital in his truck, the "Pussy Wagon"

List of Kill Bill characters (censored to "Party Wagon" for network broadcast). She uses the truck during her scenes in the United States during Volume 1, but in Volume 2 says that it has broken down and she has thus acquired another vehicle.

Earl McGraw
Earl McGraw (portrayed by Michael Parks) is a Texas Ranger who investigates the murders at the wedding chapel, and the first person to realize that The Bride has managed to survive the attack. This is the second appearance of McGraw in a Tarantino film, as he had previously been a character in From Dusk till Dawn (in which he was killed by Tarantino himself starring as Richie Gecko); he would later appear in both features that make up Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez's Grindhouse.

Esteban Vihaio
Esteban Vihaio (portrayed by Michael Parks) is an eighty-year-old Mexican pimp based in the border city of Ciudad Acua who, as a friend of Bill and Budd's mother, was seen by Bill as a father figure. His prostitutes' illegitimate children are apparently recruited into an organized crime gang called the Acua Boys, of which Esteban is the de facto leader. When The Bride visits him, he tells her of Bill's whereabouts, noting that it is what Bill would have wanted Esteban to do ("How else is he ever going to see you again?"). He also notes that if he were in Bill's situation when Bill had tracked the Bride down he says he would have only mutilated her face instead of trying to kill herrevealed as his apparent discipline of choice for his prostitutes.

Hattori Hanz
Hattori Hanz (portrayed by Sonny Chiba) is still the finest swordsmith in the world; however, he has not created a new sword in 28 years since taking a blood oath before God to never again make instruments of death. He became the owner of a sushi shop in Okinawa. The choice of Okinawa was deliberate, as the island is regarded as one of the worst places to get sushi, making a sushi shop there an excellent hiding place.[citation needed] Hanz initially met the Bride when she was under the guise of an American tourist visiting Okinawa. Hanz initially refused to make a sword for her, or even give her one he had previously made, but was convinced to make one for her after the Bride alluded that she wanted to kill his former student Bill. It is also alluded in the film that the mere mention of Bill's name was sufficient to make Hanz violate his blood oath because Bill did something to make Hanz truly furious with him (possibly because Bill chose to become a contract killer), and made the sword so Bill could be killed with it. According to Hanz, it is the finest and sharpest sword he has ever made, and stated to The Bride "If, on your journey, should you encounter God, God will be cut." When the Bride tells Bill that she got him to make her a sword by giving him his name, Bill admits "that'd do it." Quentin Tarantino stated in the supplementary material on the Kill Bill DVD that the character was named in tribute to Sonny Chiba's former role as Hattori Hanz (the real-life historical 16th-century Iga Ninja) in Shadow Warriors (Kage no Gundan). The joke is that Chiba played multiple generations of the character: even when the character actually died, the next installment would shift to covering his descendant, also named "Hattori Hanz" after his famous predecessor. The implication is that the "Hattori Hanz" seen in Kill Bill is the current descendant of the Hanz lineage in the present-day. Tarantino went so far as to call him Hattori Hanz the XIV. Chiba's own daughter, Japanese actress Juri Manase, also appears as a member of the Crazy 88.

List of Kill Bill characters

10

Karen Kim
Karen Kim (portrayed by Helen Kim) is an assassin sent to kill The Bride while she was still a Deadly Viper. She narrowly misses hitting The Bride with shotgun fire. Before the shootout can worsen, Karen is convinced to leave in peace when The Bride proves that she is pregnant, to which Karen says 'Congratulations', and then leaves.

Larry
Larry (portrayed by Larry Bishop) is the owner of the strip club, My Oh My Club, where Budd works as a bouncer. He is seen doing cocaine with one of the dancers before Budd strolls into work 20 minutes late. An argument ensues over the fact that "there is nobody there to bounce". He almost fires Budd but tells him to come back when he calls him.

Nikita "Nikki" Bell


Nikita "Nikki" Bell (portrayed by Ambrosia Kelley [9]) is a young girl and the four-year-old daughter to Vernita Green and Dr. Lawrence Bell. She makes an appearance in Vol. 1 when she unknowingly interrupts a battle between her mother and The Bride in the living room. Vernita explains that the family dog made the mess, to conceal her past from Nikki. Nikki accidentally witnesses her mother's death at the hands of The Bride, who was unaware that Nikki was present until she turned around and saw her. The Bride tells her that her mother had it coming. However, with sympathy, the Bride tells Nikki if she still feels "raw" about it, she will be waiting for her in the future. Quentin Tarantino has commented that any potential Kill Bill sequel will focus on her revenge against the Bride.

Pai Mei
"Pai Mei" redirects here. For the historical figure, see Bak Mei. Pai Mei (Chinese: ; pinyin: Bi Mi; literally White Eyebrow) was performed by veteran Chinese actor Gordon Liu (who previously played Johnny Mo in the prequel). As depicted in the film, Pai Mei was a powerful, very old, practitioner of the Bak Mei style of kung fu. Pai Mei was the former teacher and master of The Bride, Bill, and Elle, although it is unclear if he instructed the other members of the DeVAS. Despite being a wise and knowledgeable White Lotus priest, he also was bigoted (specifically towards Caucasians), xenophobic towards the Japanese and Americans), and a misogynist. He only agreed to take on The Bride as a student after having a very violent (offscreen) martials arts duel with Bill, who then adds that Pai Mei was a very, very old man whose advancing years had taught him the value of company, while not brightening up his angry disposition. In spite of being both a Caucasian American and a woman, Beatrix ultimately wins his approval for her perseverance under his torturous training regimen. Pai Mei was alleged to be able to perform the lethal Five Point Palm Exploding Heart Technique. Bill describes the technique as the deadliest blow in all of martial arts. He adds that Pai Me hits the victim with his finger tips at five different pressure points on the victim's body and then lets him/her walk away. But once the victim has taken five steps, the heart explodes inside the body and the victim dies[10] Pai Mei claims that he teaches no one this maneuver. He ultimately makes an exception because he has given the Bride his sincere respect after the first stages of brutal training. He teaches the Bride this blow offscreen and the Bride, in turn, uses it to kill Bill. Elle, Pai Mei's last student, is responsible for his death. During a training session, Elle insults Pai Mei by calling him a "miserable old fool". As punishment for her insolence, Pai Mei plucks out Elle's right eye. In retribution, Elle puts a deadly poison in fish heads that he subsequently eats, killing him. In the first version of the script, Gordon Liu' character speaks Cantonese while Quentin Tarantino dubs his voice in English and it resulted in a bad dub job. This idea was ultimately discarded, and Mei's dialogue was left undubbed.[11]

List of Kill Bill characters

11

Rufus
The organ player at the Two Pines chapel, Rufus is a former professional blues musician who died in the massacre. Rufus states that he has played with Rufus Thomas and numerous other well-known R&B acts: "I was a Drell. I was a Drifter. I was a Coaster. I was part of The Gang. I was a Bar-Kay... If they come through Texas, I done played with them." The character was portrayed by Samuel L. Jackson, who had starred in two previous Tarantino films, Pulp Fiction and Jackie Brown; and starred in Django Unchained later on and performed the narration in two scenes in Inglourious Basterds.

Tommy Plympton
Tommy Plympton (portrayed by Christopher Allen Nelson) is The Bride's fianc who is murdered at Two Pines. He is the proprietor of a record shop and employed The Bride, who used the assumed name Arlene Machiavelli when she met him.

References
[6] Film Review, paged 57. Visual Imagination Ltd., 2004. Item notes: no.50-52(2004) [9] http:/ / www. imdb. com/ name/ nm1549953/ [11] http:/ / www. mooviees. com/ 7582/ trivia

Beatrix Kiddo

12

Beatrix Kiddo
Beatrix Kiddo
Kill Bill character

The Bride fights the Crazy 88 First appearance Volume 1 Last appearance Volume 2 Created by Portrayed by Q&U Uma Thurman

Information Aliases The Bride Black Mamba Arlene Machiavelli Assassin B.B. (Daughter) United States

Occupation Children Nationality

Beatrix Kiddo (primarily known as The Bride), codename Black Mamba, is a fictional character and the protagonist of the two-part movie Kill Bill directed by Quentin Tarantino. She is portrayed by Uma Thurman and was selected by Empire Magazine as one of The 100 Greatest Movie Characters of All Time.[1] Entertainment Weekly also named her as one of the 100 Greatest Characters of the Last 20 Years.[2]

Beatrix Kiddo's past


Kiddo is a former member of the "Deadly Viper Assassination Squad", an elite, shadowy group of assassins. A formidable, ruthless warrior trained under martial arts master Pai Mei (Gordon Liu), she served at the right hand of Bill (David Carradine), her boss and lover, a position that provoked the furious envy of fellow Viper Elle Driver (Daryl Hannah). Kiddo, a master of the Tiger/Crane style of kung fu, is the only Viper to learn the "Five Point Palm Exploding Heart Technique", a method of killing a person by quickly striking five pressure points around the heart with the fingertips. After the victim takes five steps, the heart explodes and he/she falls dead. Pai Mei supposedly refused to teach this technique, which was said to be "the deadliest blow in all of martial arts", to Bill or anyone else. Kiddo's determination wins his respect, however, and he teaches her the forbidden technique - a secret that Kiddo withholds from Bill until they meet for their final showdown.

Kill Bill Vol. 1


These events are described in chronological order. The film's sequence varies. Kiddo is first seen on the day of her wedding rehearsal in rural Texas, pregnant and living under the name "Arlene Machiavelli", having previously left Bill and abandoned the Vipers. Bill finds her, however, and gate-crashes her wedding rehearsal with the other Vipers and murders everyone inside. Bill then shoots her in the head, leaving her in a coma. Just before Bill shoots her, she tells him that it is his baby. She remains comatose for four years, during which she is repeatedly prostituted and raped by an orderly named Buck (Michael Bowen). After being bitten by a mosquito, she awakens just as she is about to be violated by one of Buck's

Beatrix Kiddo "clients." Even though weakened by atrophy, she kills the would-be rapist and then Buck, before beginning a mission of revenge on the other Vipers. She presumes that her baby died in the womb, further fueling her hatred of the Vipers. She then travels to Okinawa, where she convinces the legendary swordsmith Hattori Hanz (Sonny Chiba) to come out of retirement and forge a katana for her. After getting the sword, Kiddo arrives at the "House of Blue Leaves", where she faces O-Ren Ishii (Lucy Liu). Kiddo encounters O-Ren Ishii's lawyer Sofie Fatale (Julie Dreyfus) in a washroom, where she recognizes her cellphone's "Auld Lang Syne" ringtone, and remembers her from the El Paso massacre. Kiddo captures her and brings her to O-Ren, where she cuts off her left arm and challenges O-Ren to a duel. O-Ren Ishii, the Crazy 88 gang and Gogo Yubari (Chiaki Kuriyama) fight Kiddo; the Bride kills or dismembers all but one (whom she spares due to his young age). She then faces off against O-Ren, climaxing in a dramatic swordfight in a snow covered garden. At the end of the duel, Kiddo cuts off the top of O-Ren's head, killing her. After killing O-Ren, Kiddo tortures Sofie Fatale for the locations of the rest of the members of the Vipers. She then sends her rolling down a hill to a hospital for medical attention so she could live on and tell Bill what had transpired, and that Kiddo is still alive. Kiddo then finds Vernita Green (Vivica A. Fox), who had renounced her life as a hired killer and started anew in a quiet suburban neighborhood with her husband and daughter. Kiddo shows up at her doorstep and engages her in a brutal fight. However, during the fight, Green's daughter Nikki comes home from school, and Kiddo is unwilling to kill Green in front of her child. Green tries to apologize for what she had done, but Kiddo is implacable. Green shoots at her with a handgun concealed in a cereal box, but misses, and Kiddo quickly throws a knife at Green, killing her. Nikki goes to the kitchen just in time to see Kiddo kill her mother. Kiddo tells the girl that it was not her intent to kill Green in front of her; and that if the young girl wishes to avenge her mother's death when she grows up, Kiddo would be waiting.

13

Kill Bill Vol. 2


Vol. 2 expands on the circumstances of Kiddo's shooting. Bill finds her on the day of her wedding rehearsal and pretends to give her his blessing; moments later, however, he leads the Vipers in massacring the wedding party in the chapel and shooting Kiddo in the head, putting her in a coma. The film then returns to where Vol. 1 left off. After killing Vipers O-Ren Ishii and Vernita Green, Kiddo goes after Budd (Michael Madsen), Bill's brother. Laying in wait underneath Budd's trailer, she charges in the front door only to be shot in the chest by Budd with a shotgun loaded with rock salt. He sedates her and calls Elle Driver, Kiddo's arch-rival within the Vipers, to bargain a price for Kiddo's Hanzo sword. Budd and an accomplice then take her to a graveyard and bury her alive. During her imprisonment, she recalls her rigorous training sessions under the tutelage of the martial arts master, Pai Mei. Using one of the many techniques she learned from him, Kiddo breaks open the casket and goes back to Budd's trailer where he lies dead, having been bitten by a black mamba hidden in the suitcase Driver brought that contained the money for the sword and Beatrix's death. Driver, still in the trailer after Budd's death, engages Kiddo in a brutal battle, in which Driver reveals that she had killed Pai Mei as revenge for tearing out her eye. Enraged, Kiddo tears out Driver's other eye, leaving her completely blind, and leaves Driver inside the trailer with the angry black mamba still inside. Beatrix then pursues her final target, Bill. When she finds him, from information provided by Esteban Vihaio (Michael Parks), she discovers that their daughter, B.B. (Perla Haney-Jardine), whom she presumed had died in utero, is alive and well. They spend the evening together as a family until B.B. goes to bed, and then Bill and Kiddo settle their differences. Bill explains that he tried to kill her because he was angry at her for leaving him, and argues that she could never be anything but a killer. Kiddo, under truth serum, admits that she left because she wanted their daughter to have a chance at a normal

Beatrix Kiddo life, but that she knows deep down that she doesn't have it in her to lead a normal life herself. At the end of their conversation, a fight ensues where Kiddo fatally strikes Bill using the "Five Point Palm Exploding Heart Technique". As Bill dies, the two forgive each other and make their peace. He then walks five steps and falls to the ground, dead. Kiddo then disappears with B.B. in the middle of the night. The next morning, she lies on the bathroom floor of the hotel that she and B.B stayed in after she fled Bill's villa, crying and laughing at once. The two then drive off into the sunset to begin a new life.

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Cultural impact
Beatrix Kiddo was well received by audiences. Empire Magazine ranked the character 66th out of 100 in its list of The 100 Greatest Movie Characters of All Time.[3] Entertainment Weekly also named The Bride as 99th on its 2010 list of the 100 Greatest Characters of the Last 20 Years.[4] In 2013, researchers named a new species of parasitic wasp, Cystomastacoides kiddo, after the character, stating that the naming was inspired by "the deadly biology [of the wasp] to the host."[5][]

References
[1] http:/ / www. empireonline. com/ 100-greatest-movie-characters/ default. asp?c=66 [3] http:/ / www. empireonline. com/ 100-greatest-movie-characters/ default. asp?c=66

External links
Beatrix Kiddo (http://www.imdb.com/character/ch0001801/) at the Internet Movie Database

Bill

15

Bill
Bill
Kill Bill character

Bill from Kill Bill First appearance Volume 1 Last appearance Volume 2 Created by Portrayed by Quentin Tarantino David Carradine

Information Aliases Occupation Family Children Snake Charmer Assassin Budd (brother) B.B. (daughter)

Bill is the fictional titular character and the main antagonist of the film Kill Bill directed by Quentin Tarantino. He was portrayed by David Carradine. In the film, he is the leader of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad, which included his brother, Budd (Michael Madsen).[] Bill's codename is Snake Charmer. At some point, he became the student of legendary swordsmith Hattori Hanz (Sonny Chiba) and kung fu master Pai Mei (Gordon Liu). For his performance, Carradine won the Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor (the final award of his life) and was nominated for a Golden Globe.

Story
Deeply saddened by the apparent murder of one of his assassins (and his lover) Beatrix "Black Mamba" Kiddo, aka "The Bride" (Uma Thurman), Bill personally seeks out her killers only to find that she is still very much alive, trying to clear her past, and to start a new life with her unborn child.[] Bill surfaces unannounced at Kiddo's wedding rehearsal at the Two Pines Wedding Chapel and promises not to interfere with her new life. When Bill meets Kiddo's fianc, Kiddo covers for Bill by saying Bill is her father. Bill wishes Kiddo the best of luck as he moves to the bride's side of the wedding chapel. At the same time, the remainder of his assassin squad moves in from outside and massacres the entire wedding party.[] Bill delivers a final speech to Kiddo, after which he performs the coup de grce by shooting her in the head. Before he fires, Kiddo tells him that he is the father of her unborn child.[1] Kiddo miraculously survives the ordeal, but falls into a coma for four years. When she awakens, she assumes that her baby died because of her traumatic ordeal. Kiddo then proceeds to hunt down and kill the remaining assassins of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad. In a final confrontation at the end of Kill Bill: Volume 2, Kiddo storms in on Bill expecting to find him alone, but standing beside Bill is her daughter, now four years old. Bill has already told the girl, B.B. (Perla Haney-Jardine), that Kiddo is her mother. It's evident during her time in a coma, that Bill has done a perfect job raising her. Bill then tells B.B. bluntly that he shot and tried to kill "Mommy". B.B. does not seem fazed by this revelation, and they spend the evening together as a family. After B.B. nods off to sleep, Bill and Kiddo settle their grievances and decide to conclude their "unfinished business".[2] In the short final fight, Kiddo fatally strikes him with the "Five Point Palm Exploding Heart Technique", which she learned from Pai Mei.

Bill Bill holds her hand one last time before Bill walks to his death. The two warriors forgive each other and Bill tells her that she is "a terrific person... my favorite person.", however, he adds that "every once in a while you can be a real cunt". Kiddo drives off with B.B. to begin their new life.[]

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References External links


Bill (Kill Bill) (http://www.imdb.com/character/ch0001806/) at the Internet Movie Database

Deadly Viper Assassination Squad

17

Deadly Viper Assassination Squad


Deadly Viper Assassination Squad
First appearance Volume 1 Last appearance Volume 2 Created by Quentin Tarantino

Statistics
Name Status Purpose Leader Members Deadly Viper Assassination Squad All members dead except Beatrix and Elle (with status unknown) Assassinations Bill (Snake Charmer) played by David Carradine Beatrix Kiddo (Black Mamba) played by Uma Thurman O-Ren Ishii (Cottonmouth) played by Lucy Liu Vernita Green (Copperhead) played by Vivica A. Fox Elle Driver (California Mountain Snake) played by Daryl Hannah Budd (Sidewinder) played by Michael Madsen

Known associates Sofie Fatale (No snake codename) played by Julie Dreyfus

The Deadly Viper Assassination Squad (or DeVAS) is a group of fictional characters in Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill. It is a reference to Buddhism's "Five Poisons".[1]

History
Bill and Budd are brothers who grew up without a father (although Esteban Vihaio, a pimp, acted as a father-figure for a time). O-Ren Ishii was left an orphan after her parents were killed by Japanese crime boss Matsumoto. They were, as their name suggests, an assassin squad, run and managed by Bill. He is known to have had a romance with Kiddo (his girlfriend and protge, whom he impregnates}. Although their name suggests that the members of the team are codenamed with vipers' names, the black mamba and the California mountain snake do not belong to the viper family; the black mamba is an elapid and the California mountain snake belongs to the colubrids. At the time of The Bride's revenge, the group has largely disbanded. Vernita lives as a housewife with a daughter, O-Ren is a crime boss in Tokyo, Budd is a bar bouncer, Bill is shown mostly as a retired killer to whom Elle remains fanatically devoted. The Bride has just recovered from a four-year coma, which started when the others came to her wedding rehearsal and killed the wedding party, but mistakenly left her alive. Bill delivers what he believes to be the coup de grce as revenge for walking out on him. Their daughter is delivered while she is in a coma, and is being raised by Bill without her knowledge. Although never explicitly said, it is widely held that Black Mamba is the most lethal and skilled of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad after Bill himself, making her the deadliest woman on the planet. Many of them wield katana, and in the case of Bill and Budd, forged by Hattori Hanz, an Okinawan sword maker of legendary standing, who comes out of retirement to make his final masterpiece, The Bride's samurai sword. Bill, The Bride and Elle Driver are trained by Pai Mei, a Chinese martial arts master who is later poisoned by Elle Driver. Besides their training in

Deadly Viper Assassination Squad the martial arts, they are also fluent in several languages, well-versed in the use of firearms, and skilled in various assassination, espionage, surveillance and weapon combat techniques. Some members seem to have personal specialties. O-Ren seems to favor ranged weapons (a sniper rifle in her flash-back and throwing darts in the confrontation at the House of Blue Leaves), Vernita favors close combat using knives (as stated by the Bride, quoting Bill) and Elle seems to favor poisons (she uses this tactic to kill Pai Mei in a flashback, attempted to use it against the comatose Bride, before Bill stopped her and arguably used it against Budd by way of the black mamba). Budd seems to favor firearms (he is seen carrying an AK-47 as the DeVAS approach and enter the Two Pines wedding chapel. Also he shoots a round of rock salt into the bride with his shotgun.) Bill and Kiddo never demonstrate a preference for any specific weapon or tactic, although Bill's codename (Snake Charmer) and the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad almost exclusively female membership may imply that Bill's speciality is his way with women. Kiddo kills Green, Ishii and Bill in her quest for revenge. Budd is killed, fittingly, by a black mamba which Driver puts in a suitcase filled with money. It is left ambiguous whether Driver survives; she is left blinded and locked up with the black mamba that killed Budd, ranting and screaming in an isolated desert trailer. At the end of the film, all the characters who have been killed have their names crossed out on Kiddo's list, but Elle's name instead has a question mark over the top of it, suggesting that she could still be alive.

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Cultural references
The five assassins of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad are a reference to the Five Deadly Venoms, a group of five Hong Kong action actors employed by Run Run Shaw in many old Shaw Brothers martial arts films that were part of the inspiration for Kill Bill. The actors first worked together in a movie called The Five Deadly Venoms, and were referred to as such when seen in later movies together. In another Tarantino movie, Pulp Fiction, Mia Wallace (also played by Uma Thurman) states that she worked on a pilot episode of "Fox Force Five", which included five very different women with special talents that are similar to the talents of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad. It was also mentioned in Pulp Fiction that her character was "the deadliest woman in the world with a knife", whereas in Kill Bill Vernita Green is described by The Bride as such. It is also of note that the list of names that Thurman's character makes in Kill Bill is titled "Death List Five". Tarantino also cited the 1973 Ted V. Mikels film The Doll Squad as an inspiration.[2]

Other
While Sofie Fatale is not an official member of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad, she was at least involved in their operations and is in personal contact with Bill (who is mentioned to have previously been her mentor). Bill has been shown telling at least three members of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad that he loves them: The Bride, Elle Driver (on the phone) and Budd (on an inscription on his Hanzo sword). The Deadly Viper Assassination Squad are mentioned in the science fiction novel Glasshouse by Charles Stross.

References
[2] http:/ / japattack. com/ japattack/ film/ tarantino. html

Earl McGraw

19

Earl McGraw
Earl McGraw and Edgar McGraw
From Dusk Till Dawn, Kill Bill and Grindhouse character First appearance From Dusk Till Dawn (Earl) From Dusk Till Dawn 2 (Edgar) Last appearance Grindhouse Created by Quentin Tarantino Robert Kurtzman Michael Parks James Parks Information Aliases Occupation Children Quick Draw McGraw (Earl) Texas Rangers Dr. Dakota McGraw Block (Earl's daughter)

Portrayed by

Earl McGraw and his son Edgar McGraw are two fictional characters played by Michael Parks and James Parks. They appear in several feature films by Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino, including the From Dusk Till Dawn franchise, Kill Bill Volume 1, and in various works from the Grindhouse project.

Overview
Despite being killed off in his first appearance in From Dusk Till Dawn, Earl returned in several other films from Rodriguez and Tarantino. Talking with a heavy Mid-western accent and delivering profanity laden dialogue, the character often serves as comic relief. In Kill Bill Volume 1, he scolds his son, Edgar McGraw, for saying "goddamn" in a chapel, and then goes into a profane rant himself. He and Edgar are consistently portrayed as Texas Rangers. Edgar is portrayed by James Parks, the real-life son of Michael Parks. He also has a daughter who is introduced in the Grindhouse films, named Dakota, played by Marley Shelton. To date, he has only made cameos, but Dakota has a large role in Planet Terror.

Appearances
In From Dusk Till Dawn, Earl McGraw goes to a liquor store, where killers Seth and Richie Gecko are hiding. Before McGraw can leave, he is shot in the head by Richie, who mistakenly believed that the store's clerk whispered "help us" to McGraw. Edgar (as Deputy McGraw) appears briefly in two scenes in the sequel film From Dusk Till Dawn 2: Texas Blood Money. Bo Hopkins references Edgar's businesslike demeanor: "Oh, them Gecko brothers killed his daddy." In Kill Bill Vol. 1, Earl McGraw and Edgar investigate the massacre at the Two Pines Chapel, where 10 people have been brutally murdered. He soon discovers that the bride, Beatrix Kiddo, is still alive. During the Grindhouse segment Planet Terror, Earl McGraw is forced to kill his wife Ramona after she turns into a zombie, while Dakota takes refuge in his house. McGraw also helps survivors gather and fight, as well as staying behind to fight off the zombie attack while the others escape. He reappears near the end, where he saves Dakota by killing her infected husband, Doctor Block. In the other Grindhouse segment, Death Proof, Earl, accompanied by Edgar, visits a hospital after Stuntman Mike's first attack. He is the only person aware of the fact that Stuntman Mike was responsible for the deaths of five girls, but Mike is cleared of all charges because the girls were intoxicated. Although he can't formally arrest him, Earl does however run Mike out of Texas. His

Earl McGraw daughter Dakota also appears in Death Proof with Shelton reprising her role. Edgar McGraw appears making out with Sartina's sister in a deleted scene featured on the Machete Blu-ray and DVD releases.

20

External links
Earl and Edgar McGraw [1] at the Internet Movie Database

References
[1] http:/ / www. imdb. com/ character/ ch0001809/

Edgar McGraw

21

Edgar McGraw
Earl McGraw and Edgar McGraw
From Dusk Till Dawn, Kill Bill and Grindhouse character First appearance From Dusk Till Dawn (Earl) From Dusk Till Dawn 2 (Edgar) Last appearance Grindhouse Created by Quentin Tarantino Robert Kurtzman Michael Parks James Parks Information Aliases Occupation Children Quick Draw McGraw (Earl) Texas Rangers Dr. Dakota McGraw Block (Earl's daughter)

Portrayed by

Earl McGraw and his son Edgar McGraw are two fictional characters played by Michael Parks and James Parks. They appear in several feature films by Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino, including the From Dusk Till Dawn franchise, Kill Bill Volume 1, and in various works from the Grindhouse project.

Overview
Despite being killed off in his first appearance in From Dusk Till Dawn, Earl returned in several other films from Rodriguez and Tarantino. Talking with a heavy Mid-western accent and delivering profanity laden dialogue, the character often serves as comic relief. In Kill Bill Volume 1, he scolds his son, Edgar McGraw, for saying "goddamn" in a chapel, and then goes into a profane rant himself. He and Edgar are consistently portrayed as Texas Rangers. Edgar is portrayed by James Parks, the real-life son of Michael Parks. He also has a daughter who is introduced in the Grindhouse films, named Dakota, played by Marley Shelton. To date, he has only made cameos, but Dakota has a large role in Planet Terror.

Appearances
In From Dusk Till Dawn, Earl McGraw goes to a liquor store, where killers Seth and Richie Gecko are hiding. Before McGraw can leave, he is shot in the head by Richie, who mistakenly believed that the store's clerk whispered "help us" to McGraw. Edgar (as Deputy McGraw) appears briefly in two scenes in the sequel film From Dusk Till Dawn 2: Texas Blood Money. Bo Hopkins references Edgar's businesslike demeanor: "Oh, them Gecko brothers killed his daddy." In Kill Bill Vol. 1, Earl McGraw and Edgar investigate the massacre at the Two Pines Chapel, where 10 people have been brutally murdered. He soon discovers that the bride, Beatrix Kiddo, is still alive. During the Grindhouse segment Planet Terror, Earl McGraw is forced to kill his wife Ramona after she turns into a zombie, while Dakota takes refuge in his house. McGraw also helps survivors gather and fight, as well as staying behind to fight off the zombie attack while the others escape. He reappears near the end, where he saves Dakota by killing her infected husband, Doctor Block. In the other Grindhouse segment, Death Proof, Earl, accompanied by Edgar, visits a hospital after Stuntman Mike's first attack. He is the only person aware of the fact that Stuntman Mike was responsible for the deaths of five girls, but Mike is cleared of all charges because the girls were intoxicated. Although he can't formally arrest him, Earl does however run Mike out of Texas. His

Edgar McGraw daughter Dakota also appears in Death Proof with Shelton reprising her role. Edgar McGraw appears making out with Sartina's sister in a deleted scene featured on the Machete Blu-ray and DVD releases.

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External links
Earl and Edgar McGraw [1] at the Internet Movie Database

Hattori Hanzo
The following is a list of characters from the film Kill Bill. Written and directed by Quentin Tarantino, the film was released in two separate parts, Kill Bill Vol. 1 in 2003 and Kill Bill Vol. 2 in 2004. The film takes place after a massacre that killed the fianc and friends of the main character, The Bride, at the chapel in which she was to be married; she was also thought to have been killed by being shot in the head. However, The Bride survived, but was put into a coma for four years as a result of the attack. Upon finally awakening she plots her vengeance against the killers.

Deadly Viper Assassination Squad


Beatrix Kiddo (Black Mamba, also known as The Bride)
Beatrix Kiddo, a.k.a. The Bride (portrayed by Uma Thurman), is the protagonist of the film. She abandons her life as a hired assassin for the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad (DeVAS) upon realizing she is pregnant with Bill's child, denying him the right of fatherhood to preserve her unborn's future. This action provokes the attacks on her and her loved ones and its ensuing revenge, which is the entire basis of the film. Her code name while working for DVAS was Black Mamba.

Bill (Snake Charmer)


Bill (portrayed by David Carradine) is the main antagonist of the film. He is the founder and leader of The Deadly Viper Assassination Squad, to which The Bride formerly belonged, and also her former lover. Because the code names of the members are all referring to venomous snakes, Bill's code name is Snake Charmer. He and the four remaining Deadly Vipers attempt to kill her after she learns she is carrying Bill's child and leaves him without warning. Some time after the massacre, the squad has disbanded. When Bill finds out The Bride isn't dead but instead in a coma, he sends former Squad member and mistress Elle Driver to the hospital to kill her, but Bill changes his mind and tells Elle to abort the mission, saying that killing a helpless person would demean the name of the Assassination Squad.

O-Ren Ishii (Cottonmouth)


O-Ren Ishii, a.k.a. Cottonmouth (portrayed by Lucy Liu), is a half-Japanese, half-Chinese-American woman. O-Ren experienced her first encounter of death when at the age of nine, while hiding underneath a bed, she witnessed both her parents being brutally murdered under the orders of a Yakuza boss (who turned out to be a pedophile) and his associates. An anime flashback showed her father in a U.S. Army uniform wearing the rank of sergeant major fighting the assassins. Though he was apparently a skilled martial artist who took down two of the boss's men, he was eventually overwhelmed and killed, along with his wife whom the crime boss personally murdered by killing her in either the head or the chest with the same sword used to execute her father. The house was later destroyed in a fire to cover up the act but young O-Ren escaped and although she was left physically unharmed, she was left psychologically and emotionally scarred for life, swearing revenge against the crime boss responsible. After going

Hattori Hanzo through intense training, two years later and at the age of eleven, she succeeded in getting her revenge against the crime boss by sneaking into his house and killed him but not before asking if he remembered her or if she looked like someone he'd killed. Once she'd murdered the crime boss, O-Ren killed his two bodyguards and escaped, later becoming an expert assassin, proficient in marksmanship and sword fighting, raising through the ranks to become one of the world's top female assassins at the age of twenty. Though once a member of the Deadly Vipers, she eventually became the head of the Tokyo Yakuza, with Bill's help, and possessed her own bodyguard army, the Crazy 88. O-Ren is fiercely proud of her heritage, going so far as to decapitate her own subordinate when he vented his frustration over being led by "a Chinese Jap-American half breed bitch". The Showdown at House of Blue Leaves is the chapter in which O-Ren Ishii visits a Japanese club together with various Crazy 88 members, her lawyer and friend Sofie Fatale, and personal teenage bodyguard, Gogo Yubari. While sitting in a room apart from the other guests, O-Ren hears a sound outside the room and throws a dart in that direction. She orders Gogo to take a look; however, Gogo finds nothing. Later, Sofie Fatale is captured by The Bride and taken to the main hall of the restaurant, where The Bride calls O-Ren, who appears with her bodyguards. The Bride reveals herself to O-Ren, cutting off Sofie's arm, horrifying the other guests to flee the restaurant. The Bride defeats countless Crazy 88s and Gogo, finally meeting O-Ren in a garden scene atop the club. During the battle, O-Ren mocks The Bride as a "silly Caucasian girl who likes to play with samurai swords." After resuming their fight, O-Ren receives a wound and apologizes for her earlier remark. The Bride accepts and eventually kills O-Ren by lopping off the top of her head. It is hinted that O-Ren and the Bride may have had a genuine friendship in the past; O-Ren is the only member of the Deadly Vipers besides Bill that the Bride shows any remorse over. O-Ren utters with her dying breath "That really was a Hattori Hanzo sword", having been close enough to both see the symbol of Hattori Hanzo and feel the blade.

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Vernita Green (Copperhead)


Vernita Green, a.k.a. Copperhead (portrayed by Vivica A. Fox), is a member of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad who took part in the massacre at the Two Pines Wedding Chapel. She is second on the Bride's "Death List Five". Four years after the massacre, she is depicted living a normal life under the alias of Jeannie Bell. She is trained in hand-to-hand combat and knife fighting, and it is hinted that she and The Bride share a mutual, professional respect for each other. At the start of the first movie, they engage in a vicious fight, destroying Vernita's living room in the process. However, the fight is interrupted when Green's four-year-old daughter, Nikki, arrives home from school in the middle of the fight, and they stop fighting because the Bride does not wish to kill Vernita in front of her child. Green sends Nikki to her room and she talks with the Bride over coffee, apologizing for betraying her and asking for mercy on behalf of her daughter and family. The Bride coldly refuses and they agree to meet in the middle of the night to have a knife fight. However, Vernita betrays her promise, and shoots at the Bride with a handgun concealed within a box of Kaboom cereal. She misses, and the Bride throws a knife into her heart, killing her instantly. Nikki unintentionally witnesses her mother's death, for which the Bride apologizes. The Bride then adds that, when Nikki grows up, if she ever wants to avenge her mother's death she'll be waiting for her and leaves. Incidentally, Vernita Green's alias (Jeannie Bell) is a direct reference to the actress and former Playboy Playmate Jeanne Bell who starred in the 1974 blaxpoitation film T.N.T. Jackson (writer/director Tarantino is a noted fan of cult 1970's cinema).

Elle Driver (California Mountain Snake)


Elle Driver, a.k.a. California Mountain Snake (portrayed by Daryl Hannah), is another swordswoman who is loyal to Bill. Elle and the Bride despise each other immensely, and it is implied that their mutual hatred came to be before the events of the film. Elle is jealous of the Bride's status as Bill's lover, implying that Elle herself also had some kind of sexual relationship with him. Despite this, Elle does grudgingly respect the Bride, describing her as "the greatest warrior [she] had ever met" and also believing that she deserved better than to have supposedly met her end

Hattori Hanzo at the hands of someone like Budd. Like Bill and The Bride, Elle was trained by Pai Mei. When she showed disrespect to Pai Mei by calling him a "miserable old fool", he responded by plucking out her right eye for her insolence, which is why she is shown to wear an eyepatch. In retaliation, Elle murdered Pai Mei by poisoning his meal of fish-heads. When Bill learns that the Bride survived the attempt on her life, he orders Elle to go kill her at the hospital where she was then lying comatose. Disguised as a nurse, Elle nearly injects the Bride with a deadly poison when Bill calls her to abort the mission. Though Elle wanted to kill the Bride while she was incapacitated, she abides by Bill's wishes. When Budd (Sidewinder) captures the Bride, he calls Elle to offer her the Bride's Hanzo sword. Elle agrees to pay one million dollars for the sword, on the condition that Budd makes The Bride "suffer until her last breath". Budd buries the Bride alive, but she eventually escapes and lies in wait near Budd's trailer. Elle pays Budd for the sword with a suitcase containing $1 million but when Budd opens the case, a concealed black mamba bites Budd and he succumbs to its venom. Elle calls Bill and frames the Bride for Budd's death, also taking credit for Budd's live burial of the Bride and tells Bill the grave's location. When Elle is about to leave the trailer, the Bride ambushes her. The two women engage in an improvised weapons fight which evolves into a sword fight, with the Bride having to use Budd's Hanzo sword (thought to have been long-ago pawned, by Budd's statement to Bill). During the fight, Elle reveals that she killed Pai Mei; enraged, the Bride snatches out Elle's remaining eye. The Bride leaves Elle, now completely blind, thrashing wildly on the floor of the trailer with the black mamba still loose inside. Though it can be inferred that Elle was also killed by the black mamba, her fate is unknown or rather undecided.

24

Budd (Sidewinder)
Budd, a.k.a. Sidewinder (portrayed by Michael Madsen), is Bill's degenerate younger brother who was recognized by Bill as 'the only man I ever loved', an epigraph etched onto Budd's Hanzo sword. He was the only other male Deadly Viper Squad member and, since the assassination squad's disbandment, adopted a redneck-like life-style. Living in a mobile home where he steadily became an alcoholic, Budd makes ends meet by working as a bouncer at a local strip club. When told by Bill that Beatrix was coming to kill him, Budd philosophically stated "That woman deserves her revenge. And we deserve to die. But then again, so does she." (When Budd makes this statement in Volume 1, the last sentence is not included; the full statement is spoken in Volume 2). Budd once owned a Hattori Hanzo katana, and told Bill and Elle that he had sold it for $250 in El Paso, Texas. He actually lied because The Bride later found the sword in a golf bag in the bedroom of Budd's trailer. During Bill and Budd's discourse, Bill mentions an unpleasant event between the two of them that led to their falling out, but the details of this event are never explicitly mentioned. When the Bride finally does find Budd, he is prepared for her sneak attack, shooting her with rock salt from a double-barreled shotgun (making him the only Deadly Viper to single-handedly defeat The Bride) and buries her alive (later described as a 'Texas funeral'). Before closing the casket, he tells The Bride that her live burial is retribution for breaking Bill's heart. Returning to his trailer, Budd gives the Bride's priceless Hattori Hanzo sword to Elle in return for $1 million in cash; he is then repeatedly bitten in the face by a black mamba concealed in the suitcase (ironically The Bride's Deadly Viper codename) containing the cash. She takes advantage of the situation in torturing Budd slowly by reading useful information about Black Mamba poison and the effects off it if not injected with anti-venom. As he dies in agony minutes later, Elle tells Budd that she feels regret because she never had a chance to take the Bride on herself and that she had to die at the hands of miserable cowboy like him.

Hattori Hanzo

25

Associates of O-Ren Ishii


In the quest for revenge, The Bride's first target is O-Ren Ishii, who during the intervening four years has risen to become a major leader of the Tokyo organized crime world. But before The Bride battles and defeats her, she must first confront and bring down her associates one by one.

Sofie Fatale
Sofie Fatale (portrayed by Julie Dreyfus) is O-Ren Ishii's lawyer, second-in-command, and best friend.[1][2] Sofie Fatale is of mixed Japanese/French descent and serves as an interpreter and is seen speaking English, Japanese and French fluently.[3] Although she is referred to as a protege of Bill's, she does not display any martial arts skills during her appearances. Sofie Fatale is present at the "House of Blue Leaves" when The Bride arrives to kill O-Ren Ishii. The Bride is riding her motorbike through Tokyo, stalking Sofie's Nissan Fairlady Z when she is seen at a stop light using her phone; her left-handedness, and later, the phone's "Auld Lang Syne" ringtone, are recognized by The Bride. She remembers that Sofie was present during the El Paso massacre, and while she did not assist in beating The Bride, she did answer her ringing phone, while callously ignoring the injured Bride and the rest of the carnage. The Bride captures Sofie at the House of Blue Leaves and brings her to O-Ren Ishii. The Bride then cuts off Sofie's left arm (the arm she holds her phone with) as a means of both exacting revenge on her and showing Ishii her intentions for a duel.[4] Later, The Bride interrogates Sofie to learn the location of the rest of the members of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad, threatening to further dismember her when she refuses to speak. She then sends her rolling down a hill to a hospital for medical attention so she can live on and tell Bill what has happened and that the Bride is still alive.[5][6] Although her fate is left ambiguous, Tarantino has commented that a potential third Kill Bill movie would focus on the revenge of Vernita's daughter Nikki against the Bride, and that Nikki would be trained by Elle and Sofie. Apparently, Sofie would inherit all of O-Ren and Bill's money.[citation needed]

Crazy 88
The Crazy 88 are a masked Yakuza gang under her control who originally employed to help O-Ren take control of the Tokyo underworld. It includes members of both sexes and a wide age range. Most of them fight using katanas except for three members. One is shown with a pair of throwing axes and another is seen briefly wielding a meteor hammer. Johnny Mo, the clan's leader (under O-Ren), uses dual shortswords which, when each is sheathed in the other's handle, can be used as a fighting staff. The Bride manages to fend off the entire gang, killing, mortally wounding, and dismembering many. After the fight, any surviving member was taken into custody after leaving the nightclub. Their arrest by Japanese police and hospitalization before being locked up in prison is not shown. One of the last of the Crazy 88 member the Bride faces before O-Ren is a very timid teenage boy whose katana she cuts into several pieces with her own, after which he surrenders immediately. She spanks him with the flat of her blade and orders him to leave the criminal business by the word "Go home to your mother". Aside from Johnny Mo, only one member of the Crazy 88 is identified and named. Miki is apparently O-Ren Ishii's bodyguard, aside from Gogo. He is the first member to attack the Bride although he's quickly killed when the Bride impales his chest with her sword. Quentin Tarantino appears as one of the members whose throat is slit after the Bride dismembers the eye of one of the gangsters. The Crazy 88 allegedly does not actually have eighty-eight members. Bill says that they adopted the name because it "sounded cool". There are only 40 actors credited to the Crazy 88.[7] Metaphors are used to create the Crazy 88. 8 ( hachi, ya) is considered a lucky number in some Eastern culturesWikipedia:Avoid weasel words - it suggests growing prosperous, because the letter () broadens gradually. 8 ( ya) was also seen as holy in ancient times.[citation needed]. Another metaphor is that there are 88 keys on a standard piano. The gang are dressed in black and white like the piano keys.

Hattori Hanzo There are two different versions of the fight scene with the Crazy 88. The original version was released as a Japanese Unrated Limited Edition DVD in Japan and U.S. which has the fight in full color. Tarantino was forced to tone down the violence of the whole fight the scene by omitting a few scenes and adding a black and white effect to the finished product for the film's release. The Black and White version is used on television airings up to this day.

26

Johnny Mo
Johnny Mo (portrayed by Gordon Liu, who also portrays Pai Mei in the sequel) is the leader of O-Ren's personal army, the Crazy 88. Johnny Mo is most prominently featured in the "House of Blue Leaves" scene. After The Bride kills Gogo Yubari and O-Ren Ishii's six bodyguards, Johnny Mo, armed with a pair of sht, arrives with an army of Crazy 88s. He is a more proficient fighter than the rest of the gang, nearly tipping the scales in their favor and holding his own against The Bride for several minutes alone while fighting her on top of a balcony railing. She eventually chops off his leg and he falls into a bloodied fountain pool from the second floor balcony and is presumed dead thereafter.

Gogo Yubari
Gogo Yubari (portrayed by Chiaki Kuriyama) is a young associate of O-Ren Ishii. Gogo is a bloodthirsty and severely disturbed seventeen-year-old schoolgirl who takes a sadistic delight in killing. Her fighting style is a combination of wushu techniques using chain whip and rope dart. She is O-Ren's top assassin and personal bodyguard. Gogo's disturbed mind and vicious penchant for killing is displayed when she offers herself to a drunken man in a bar and then disembowels him, asking him, "Do you still wish to penetrate me?... Or is it I who has penetrated you?" Later on, she takes on Beatrix Kiddo when the latter has already slaughtered several of O-Ren Ishii's immediate guards at the House of Blue Leaves. Although the Bride gives her the opportunity to walk away, Gogo refuses and takes her on with a large meteor hammer, almost overcoming the Bride by strangling her savagely with the chain. Eventually Kiddo distracts Gogo by driving a broken chair leg studded with nails into her foot, then kills her by driving the nails into the side of her head. Gogo Yubari resembles the character that Chiaki Kuriyama previously portrayed in the 2000 Japanese film, Battle Royale,[8] Takako Chigusa.

Other characters
B.B.
B.B. (portrayed by Perla Haney-Jardine) is the four-year-old daughter of The Bride and Bill who was in utero during the massacre at the Two Pines chapel. Upon first coming out of her coma, The Bride believes her unborn child was killed in the attack and promises to avenge her death. The audience does not learn that she is alive until the last line of Vol. 1, and The Bride does not find out until the final act of Vol. 2. B.B. was named (probably in homage to her parents, Beatrix and Bill) and raised by Bill, who in Vol. 2 openly admitted to her the terrible crime he had committed against The Bride.

Buck
Buck (portrayed by Michael Bowen) is a male nurse at the hospital where The Bride laid comatose for four years. During this period, he regularly took sexual advantage of The Bride, raping her unconscious body and later also prostituting her to other male clients. After she first awakens, The Bride attacks Buck and interrogates him on the whereabouts of Bill. Suddenly, she begins recalling Buck's prior assaults on her (including his infamous line, "My name's Buck and I'm here to fuck!") and, in a fit of rage, slams his head with a door, killing him with an intracranial hemorrhage. The Bride then steals Buck's clothes and escapes from the hospital in his truck, the "Pussy Wagon"

Hattori Hanzo (censored to "Party Wagon" for network broadcast). She uses the truck during her scenes in the United States during Volume 1, but in Volume 2 says that it has broken down and she has thus acquired another vehicle.

27

Earl McGraw
Earl McGraw (portrayed by Michael Parks) is a Texas Ranger who investigates the murders at the wedding chapel, and the first person to realize that The Bride has managed to survive the attack. This is the second appearance of McGraw in a Tarantino film, as he had previously been a character in From Dusk till Dawn (in which he was killed by Tarantino himself starring as Richie Gecko); he would later appear in both features that make up Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez's Grindhouse.

Esteban Vihaio
Esteban Vihaio (portrayed by Michael Parks) is an eighty-year-old Mexican pimp based in the border city of Ciudad Acua who, as a friend of Bill and Budd's mother, was seen by Bill as a father figure. His prostitutes' illegitimate children are apparently recruited into an organized crime gang called the Acua Boys, of which Esteban is the de facto leader. When The Bride visits him, he tells her of Bill's whereabouts, noting that it is what Bill would have wanted Esteban to do ("How else is he ever going to see you again?"). He also notes that if he were in Bill's situation when Bill had tracked the Bride down he says he would have only mutilated her face instead of trying to kill herrevealed as his apparent discipline of choice for his prostitutes.

Hattori Hanz
Hattori Hanz (portrayed by Sonny Chiba) is still the finest swordsmith in the world; however, he has not created a new sword in 28 years since taking a blood oath before God to never again make instruments of death. He became the owner of a sushi shop in Okinawa. The choice of Okinawa was deliberate, as the island is regarded as one of the worst places to get sushi, making a sushi shop there an excellent hiding place.[citation needed] Hanz initially met the Bride when she was under the guise of an American tourist visiting Okinawa. Hanz initially refused to make a sword for her, or even give her one he had previously made, but was convinced to make one for her after the Bride alluded that she wanted to kill his former student Bill. It is also alluded in the film that the mere mention of Bill's name was sufficient to make Hanz violate his blood oath because Bill did something to make Hanz truly furious with him (possibly because Bill chose to become a contract killer), and made the sword so Bill could be killed with it. According to Hanz, it is the finest and sharpest sword he has ever made, and stated to The Bride "If, on your journey, should you encounter God, God will be cut." When the Bride tells Bill that she got him to make her a sword by giving him his name, Bill admits "that'd do it." Quentin Tarantino stated in the supplementary material on the Kill Bill DVD that the character was named in tribute to Sonny Chiba's former role as Hattori Hanz (the real-life historical 16th-century Iga Ninja) in Shadow Warriors (Kage no Gundan). The joke is that Chiba played multiple generations of the character: even when the character actually died, the next installment would shift to covering his descendant, also named "Hattori Hanz" after his famous predecessor. The implication is that the "Hattori Hanz" seen in Kill Bill is the current descendant of the Hanz lineage in the present-day. Tarantino went so far as to call him Hattori Hanz the XIV. Chiba's own daughter, Japanese actress Juri Manase, also appears as a member of the Crazy 88.

Hattori Hanzo

28

Karen Kim
Karen Kim (portrayed by Helen Kim) is an assassin sent to kill The Bride while she was still a Deadly Viper. She narrowly misses hitting The Bride with shotgun fire. Before the shootout can worsen, Karen is convinced to leave in peace when The Bride proves that she is pregnant, to which Karen says 'Congratulations', and then leaves.

Larry
Larry (portrayed by Larry Bishop) is the owner of the strip club, My Oh My Club, where Budd works as a bouncer. He is seen doing cocaine with one of the dancers before Budd strolls into work 20 minutes late. An argument ensues over the fact that "there is nobody there to bounce". He almost fires Budd but tells him to come back when he calls him.

Nikita "Nikki" Bell


Nikita "Nikki" Bell (portrayed by Ambrosia Kelley [9]) is a young girl and the four-year-old daughter to Vernita Green and Dr. Lawrence Bell. She makes an appearance in Vol. 1 when she unknowingly interrupts a battle between her mother and The Bride in the living room. Vernita explains that the family dog made the mess, to conceal her past from Nikki. Nikki accidentally witnesses her mother's death at the hands of The Bride, who was unaware that Nikki was present until she turned around and saw her. The Bride tells her that her mother had it coming. However, with sympathy, the Bride tells Nikki if she still feels "raw" about it, she will be waiting for her in the future. Quentin Tarantino has commented that any potential Kill Bill sequel will focus on her revenge against the Bride.

Pai Mei
"Pai Mei" redirects here. For the historical figure, see Bak Mei. Pai Mei (Chinese: ; pinyin: Bi Mi; literally White Eyebrow) was performed by veteran Chinese actor Gordon Liu (who previously played Johnny Mo in the prequel). As depicted in the film, Pai Mei was a powerful, very old, practitioner of the Bak Mei style of kung fu. Pai Mei was the former teacher and master of The Bride, Bill, and Elle, although it is unclear if he instructed the other members of the DeVAS. Despite being a wise and knowledgeable White Lotus priest, he also was bigoted (specifically towards Caucasians), xenophobic towards the Japanese and Americans), and a misogynist. He only agreed to take on The Bride as a student after having a very violent (offscreen) martials arts duel with Bill, who then adds that Pai Mei was a very, very old man whose advancing years had taught him the value of company, while not brightening up his angry disposition. In spite of being both a Caucasian American and a woman, Beatrix ultimately wins his approval for her perseverance under his torturous training regimen. Pai Mei was alleged to be able to perform the lethal Five Point Palm Exploding Heart Technique. Bill describes the technique as the deadliest blow in all of martial arts. He adds that Pai Me hits the victim with his finger tips at five different pressure points on the victim's body and then lets him/her walk away. But once the victim has taken five steps, the heart explodes inside the body and the victim dies[9] Pai Mei claims that he teaches no one this maneuver. He ultimately makes an exception because he has given the Bride his sincere respect after the first stages of brutal training. He teaches the Bride this blow offscreen and the Bride, in turn, uses it to kill Bill. Elle, Pai Mei's last student, is responsible for his death. During a training session, Elle insults Pai Mei by calling him a "miserable old fool". As punishment for her insolence, Pai Mei plucks out Elle's right eye. In retribution, Elle puts a deadly poison in fish heads that he subsequently eats, killing him. In the first version of the script, Gordon Liu' character speaks Cantonese while Quentin Tarantino dubs his voice in English and it resulted in a bad dub job. This idea was ultimately discarded, and Mei's dialogue was left undubbed.[10]

Hattori Hanzo

29

Rufus
The organ player at the Two Pines chapel, Rufus is a former professional blues musician who died in the massacre. Rufus states that he has played with Rufus Thomas and numerous other well-known R&B acts: "I was a Drell. I was a Drifter. I was a Coaster. I was part of The Gang. I was a Bar-Kay... If they come through Texas, I done played with them." The character was portrayed by Samuel L. Jackson, who had starred in two previous Tarantino films, Pulp Fiction and Jackie Brown; and starred in Django Unchained later on and performed the narration in two scenes in Inglourious Basterds.

Tommy Plympton
Tommy Plympton (portrayed by Christopher Allen Nelson) is The Bride's fianc who is murdered at Two Pines. He is the proprietor of a record shop and employed The Bride, who used the assumed name Arlene Machiavelli when she met him.

References
[6] Film Review, paged 57. Visual Imagination Ltd., 2004. Item notes: no.50-52(2004) [10] http:/ / www. mooviees. com/ 7582/ trivia

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Music
Kill Bill Vol. 1 Original Soundtrack
Kill Bill Vol. 1 Original Soundtrack
Soundtrack album to Kill Bill Vol. 1 by various artists Released Genre Length Label Producer September 23, 2003 Soundtrack 47:02 A Band Apart, Maverick, Warner Bros. The RZA Quentin Tarantino Lawrence Bender Quentin Tarantino film soundtrack chronology

Jackie Brown (1997)

Kill Bill Vol. 1 Original Soundtrack (2003)

Kill Bill Vol. 2 Original Soundtrack (2004)

RZA film soundtrack chronology

The World According to RZA (2003)

Kill Bill Vol. 1 Original Soundtrack (2003)

Birth of a Prince (2003)

Professional ratings Review scores


Source Allmusic IGN Stylus (8.0/10) A [] [] Rating [1]

Kill Bill Vol. 1 Original Soundtrack is the soundtrack to the first volume of the two-part Quentin Tarantino film Kill Bill. Released on September 23, 2003, it reached #45 on the Billboard 200 album chart and #1 on the soundtracks chart. It was organized, and mostly produced and orchestrated by RZA from the Wu-Tang Clan.

Kill Bill Vol. 1 Original Soundtrack

31

Soundtrack development
In a 2003 Interview, RZA spoke about the soundtrack's creation process: It was more of a collaboration. He had an idea and a vision when he wrote the script. I think I was more of somebody that kept it in the guidelines of what he wanted. He was like, here go the eggs, the milk, the cake, the sugar, everything, and Im going to stir it up. Put this in the oven, watch it, take it out in forty-five minutes. Now, am I going to take it out in forty five minutes or am I going to fall asleep? I made sure it got out and if I saw something wrong with it, I fixed it. So when he saw it, he was like, this is cake. There was one situation where you see, "Crane and White Lightning." Thats part of the original score, so its not really a song. A lot of that stuff is what I use to keep the vibe going between songs. "Crane and White Lightning" is a piece of music that Quentin wanted on the soundtrack, but was originally set for a Metallica track. Theres only one piece of music that I didnt feel comfortable with when we were done. We lost a sample, I made one Hip Hop beat. I was like I gotta throw one in there. Quentin loved this beat. We rocked with it and it was one of the first things we did. I could've gotten away with it. It was a sample, but so undetectable. So unnoticeable. I wanted to take a chance, but in the movie business you cant take those kind of chances. I wouldnt risk nobody else. If it was my movie, I would have taken a chance. But this is Quentin Tarantinos movie.[2]

Track listing
1. "Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)" by Nancy Sinatra 2:40 2. "That Certain Female" by Charlie Feathers 3:02 3. "The Grand Duel (Parte Prima)" by Luis Bacalov 3:24 4. "Twisted Nerve" by Bernard Herrmann 1:27, from the eponymous film. 5. "Queen of the Crime Council" by Lucy Liu and Julie Dreyfus 0:56 6. "Ode to O-ren Ishii" by The RZA 2:05 7. "Run Fay Run" by Isaac Hayes 2:46 8. "Green Hornet Theme" by Al Hirt 2:18 9. "Battle Without Honor or Humanity" by Tomoyasu Hotei 2:28 10. "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood" by Santa Esmeralda 10:29 11. "Woo Hoo" (cover The Rock-A-Teens) by The 5.6.7.8's 1:59 12. "Crane/White Lightning" by The RZA and Charles Bernstein 1:37 13. "The Flower of Carnage" by Meiko Kaji 3:52, from Lady Snowblood 14. "The Lonely Shepherd" by Zamfir 4:20 15. "You're My Wicked Life" by David Carradine, Julie Dreyfus and Uma Thurman 1:14 16. "Ironside" (excerpt) by Quincy Jones 0:16 17. "Super 16" (excerpt) by Neu! 1:06 18. "Yakuza Oren 1" by The RZA 0:22 19. "Banister Fight" by The RZA 0:21 20. "Flip Sting" (SFX) 0:04 21. "Sword Swings" (SFX) 0:05 22. "Axe Throws" (SFX) 0:11 The last three are merely noises that occur as sound effects in the movie. The vinyl record version includes only the first fifteen tracks.

Kill Bill Vol. 1 Original Soundtrack

32

Not included
Numerous tracks used in the film and to advertise it were not included in the soundtrack album: "Seven Notes in Black" by Vince Tempera From Sette note in nero ("Seven Notes in Black"; AKA The Psychic). Heard when The Bride awakens and fends off her would-be rapists; background music for the RZA's "Ode to O-ren" "Truck Turner Theme" by Isaac Hayes heard, appropriately enough, when The Bride tracks down Buck's truck. "A Long Day of Vengeance" by Armando Trovaioli From I Lunghi Giorni Della Vendetta. Heard in the anime sequence after one of Boss Matsumoto's men murders O-Ren's father. "Kaifuku Suru Kizu (The Wound That Heals)" by Lily Chou-Chou From the film All About Lily Chou-Chou. Heard when The Bride marvels at Hattori Hanzo's sword collection. "I'm Blue" and "I Walk Like Jayne Mansfield" additional songs performed by the 5.6.7.8's in the House of Blue Leaves. "From Man to Man" from the Death Rides a Horse soundtrack by Ennio Morricone heard in the House of Blue Leaves battle. Used prominently to advertise Kill Bill. Kenka Karate Kyokushin Ken Opening Themeheard in the house of Blue Leaves when the bride fights the boss of the crazy 88s (Terockman "Nobody but Me" by The Human Beinz heard in the House of Blue Leaves battle. "Police Check Point" by Harry Betts (from the film Black Mama, White Mama) heard briefly in the House of Blue Leaves battle. "Yagyu Conspiracy" by Toshiaki Tsushima (from Shogun's Samurai) background music for "You're My Wicked Life" "Funky Fanfare" by Keith Mansfield heard as the logo music for the Our Feature Presentation film snipe. "I Giorni Dell'Ira" by Riz Ortolani (from "Day of Anger") heard when The Bride plucks an eye from one of the Crazy 88. Intrestingly, this track would be later used in another Tarantino film Django Unchained, where it was included in the soundtrack. Other brief clips are not included nor are credits as to who wrote or performed them available.

References

Kill Bill Vol. 2 Original Soundtrack

33

Kill Bill Vol. 2 Original Soundtrack


Kill Bill Vol. 2 Original Soundtrack
Soundtrack album to Kill Bill Vol. 2 by various artists Released Genre Length Label Producer April13,2004 Soundtrack 46:12 Maverick Records Quentin Tarantino RZA Robert Rodriguez Quentin Tarantino film soundtrack chronology

Kill Bill Vol. 1 Original Soundtrack (2003)

Kill Bill Vol. 2 Original Soundtrack (2004)

Death Proof (2007)

Professional ratings Review scores


Source Allmusic Rating [1]

Kill Bill Vol. 2 Original Soundtrack is the soundtrack to the second volume of the two-part Quentin Tarantino film, Kill Bill. First released on April 13, 2004, it reached #58 on the Billboard 200 and #2 on the Billboard soundtracks chart in the US. It also reached the ARIA Top 50 album charts in Australia. It was orchestrated by Tarantino's fellow filmmaker and personal friend Robert Rodriguez, as well as RZA from the Wu-Tang Clan.[]

Development
Robert Rodriguez was hired by Tarantino to score the film. Rodriguez did it as a favour for his friend, Tarantino, asking to be paid one dollar for his work. Tarantino repaid this favour by directing a scene of Rodriguez's Sin City for the same fee.[2] RZA said of the soundtrack: "With Kill Bill I did score and songs, meaning that we put a lot of songs in [the movie] from old collections of records and I composed music for some scenes, natural music. When we did Kill Bill 2, you know, we brought Robert Rodriguez in. Check this out, he took my music and he kept the foundation there, though. With Robert he didn't want to remove any of the electronic [sounds]. He said 'No.' I was like 'Take out all the electronic stuff, you know, so it can be [more like a traditional score].' He said 'No, man. I like the electronic stuff. This is the reason I wanted to do this.' So he took the electronic stuff and kept it there, then built the orchestrations on top of it, you know what I mean?" [3]

Kill Bill Vol. 2 Original Soundtrack

34

Track listing
1. "A Few Words from the Bride" by Uma Thurman 0:42 2. "Goodnight Moon" by Shivaree 4:03 3. "Il tramonto" by Ennio Morricone 1:15 4. "Can't Hardly Stand It" by Charlie Feathers 2:48 5. "Tu Mir" (edit) by Lole y Manuel 4:00 6. "Summertime Killer" by Luis Bacalov 3:39 7. "The Chase" by Alan Reeves, Phil Steele, and Philip Brigham 1:03 8. "The Legend of Pai Mei" by David Carradine and Uma Thurman 2:06 9. "L'arena" by Ennio Morricone 4:46 10. "A Satisfied Mind" by Johnny Cash 2:50 11. "A Silhouette of Doom" by Ennio Morricone 2:54 12. "About Her" by Malcolm McLaren 4:49 13. "Truly and Utterly Bill" by David Carradine and Uma Thurman 0:47 14. "Malaguea Salerosa" by Chingon 4:05 15. "Urami Bushi" by Meiko Kaji 3:33 Hidden Track: "Black Mamba" by The Wu-Tang Clan 2:38 (Appears at the end of Urami Bushi, after a lengthy period of silence.)

Song notes
"About Her" by Malcolm McLaren sampled The Zombies's song "She's Not There" and Bessie Smith from the movie "St. Louis Blues"

Not included
Numerous noteworthy tracks used in the film and to advertise it were not included in the soundtrack album: Nora Orlandi's "Dies Irae" used in the conversation between Bill and Budd. "Ay Que Caray" by Marilu Esmeralda Aguiluiz source music in the strip club. "Budd's Trailer Suspicions" original, incidental music by Robert Rodriguez, heard when The Bride lurks around Budd's trailer. "A Fistful of Dollars (prima)" by Ennio Morricone, from A Fistful of Dollars heard as Budd spits on the bride and injects her with tranquilizers. "Il mercenario (ripresa)" by Ennio Morricone, from the film The Mercenary heard as Budd seals The Bride in the coffin. "Pai Mei Theme" original incidental music by Robert Rodriguez; heard as The Bride ascends the stairs to Pai Mei's temple. "Title Theme from Three Tough Guys" by Isaac Hayes used for the Bride/Pai Mei fight training sequence. "Invincible Pole Fighter" by Sho Chun Hou & Stephen Shing; used for The Bride's training montage with Pai Mei. "Sunny Road to Salina" performed by Christophe and composed by Bernard Girard used for The Bride's march through the desert, frequently used in Kill Bill ads. The "Budd Twang" original guitar piece by Robert Rodriguez, one version heard after Budd shoots the Bride, another when Elle is about to escape with the cash. "I giorni dell'ira" (Days of Anger) by Riz Ortolani When Elle does a mid air kick toward the Bride with sound effects. "The Demise of Barbara and the Return of Joe" by Ennio Morricone, from Navajo Joe, used for the death of Bill.

Kill Bill Vol. 2 Original Soundtrack

35

References
[1] [ Allmusic review] [2] IGN: Tarantino Confirmed for Sin City (http:/ / filmforce. ign. com/ articles/ 527/ 527099p1. html) [3] 2004/04 IGN.COM: RZA Talks Tarantino (http:/ / wuforever. com/ index. php?name=Sections& req=viewarticle& artid=39& page=1)

36

Related Topics
Quentin Tarantino
Quentin Tarantino

Tarantino on February 25, 2011 Born Quentin Jerome Tarantino [1] March 27, 1963 Knoxville, Tennessee, United States American Fleming Junior High School Film director, producer, screenwriter, actor 1984present Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction, Jackie Brown, Kill Bill, Inglourious Basterds, Django Unchained Sergio Leone, Brian De Palma, Howard Hawks, Jean-Luc Godard, Samuel Fuller, Martin Scorsese, Jean-Pierre [2] [3] [4] [5] Melville, Jack Hill, Richard Pryor, Elmore Leonard, David Mamet, Mario Bava, Sergio Corbucci, Sam [6] [7] Peckinpah, Fernando Di Leo, Chang Cheh, Douglas Sirk, Michael Cimino 6ft1in (1.85m) Connie McHugh (mother) Tony Tarantino (father)

Nationality Education Occupation Years active Notable work(s) Influencedby

Height Parents

Quentin Jerome Tarantino[8] (pronunciation: /trntino/; born March 27, 1963) is an American film director, screenwriter, producer, and actor. His films have been characterized by nonlinear storylines, satirical subject matter and an aestheticization of violence that often results in the exhibition of neo-noir characteristics.[9] Tarantino has been dubbed a "director DJ," comparing his stylistic use of mix-and-match genre and music infusion to the use of sampling in DJ exhibits, morphing a variety of old works to create a new one.[10] Born in Knoxville, Tennessee, Tarantino grew up an avid film fan and worked in a video rental store while training to act. His career began in the late 1980s, when he wrote and directed My Best Friend's Birthday; its screenplay

Quentin Tarantino would form the basis for True Romance. In the early 1990s, he began his career as an independent filmmaker with the release of Reservoir Dogs (1992); regarded as a classic and cult hit, it was opined as the "Greatest Independent Film of All Time" by Empire magazine. Its popularity was boosted by the release of his second film, Pulp Fiction (1994), a neo-noir crime film that became a major critical and commercial success, widely regarded as one of the greatest films of all time. Paying homage to 1970s blaxploitation films, Tarantino released Jackie Brown in 1997, an adaptation of the novel Rum Punch. Kill Bill followed six years later released as two films, Vol. 1 (2003) and Vol. 2 (2004) a highly stylized "revenge flick" in the cinematic traditions of Chinese martial arts, spaghetti westerns and Italian horror. He released Death Proof (2007) as part of a double feature with friend Robert Rodriguez under the collective title Grindhouse. His long-postponed Inglourious Basterds (2009) became Tarantino's second highest-grossing film to date ($321 million), which tells the fictional alternate history story of two plots to assassinate Nazi Germany's political leadership. His most recent and highest grossing work is Django Unchained (2012), a western film set in the antebellum era of the Deep South, receiving critical acclaim. Tarantino's films have garnered both critical and commercial success. He has received many industry awards, including two Academy Awards, two Golden Globe Awards, two BAFTA Awards and the Palme d'Or and has been nominated for an Emmy and Grammy. Filmmaker and historian Peter Bogdanovich has called him "the single most influential director of his generation."[11]

37

Early life
Tarantino was born in Knoxville, Tennessee, the son of Tony Tarantino, an actor and amateur musician, and Connie (McHugh), a nurse.[12][13] He has a younger half-brother, Ron. Tarantino's father, from Queens, New York, is of Italian descent, while his mother has Irish and Cherokee ancestry.[][14][15] His stepfather was Curt Zastoupil, a musician.[16] He was raised by his mother, as his parents separated before his birth.[17] When he was two years old, he moved to Torrance, California, and later to the Harbor City neighborhood of Los Angeles. There, he went to Fleming Junior High School in Lomita, and took drama classes.[17] He attended Narbonne High School in Harbor City for his freshman year before dropping out of school at age 15 (Quentin Tarantino has provided contradictory information about this elsewhere, he claimed he was 16 when he dropped out),[18] to attend an acting class full-time at the James Best Theater Company in Toluca Lake.[19] He grew bored with the James Best Acting School and quit after two years, although he made a point of keeping in touch with all his acting friends. Then he landed a job which threatened to interfere with his long-term acting ambitions.[20] As an employee of the Video Archives, a now-defunct video rental store in Manhattan Beach, he and fellow movie enthusiasts, including Roger Avary, discussed cinema and customer video recommendations at length. He paid close attention to the types of films people liked to rent and has cited that experience as inspiration for his directorial career.[21] Tarantino has been quoted as saying, "When people ask me if I went to film school I tell them, 'no, I went to films.'"[]

Quentin Tarantino

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Film career
1980s
After Tarantino met Lawrence Bender at a Hollywood party, Bender encouraged him to write a screenplay. Tarantino directed and co-wrote a movie called My Best Friend's Birthday in 1987. The final reel of the film was almost fully destroyed in a lab fire that occurred during editing but its screenplay would form the basis for True Romance.

1990s
In January 1992, Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs was screened at the Sundance Film Festival and was an immediate hit. The film received a positive response from critics. Reservoir Dogs was a dialogue-driven heist movie that set the tone for his later films. Tarantino wrote the script in three and a half weeks and Bender forwarded it to director Monte Hellman. Hellman helped Tarantino to secure funding from Richard Gladstein at Live Entertainment (which later became Artisan, now known as Lionsgate). Harvey Keitel read the script and also contributed to funding, taking a co-producer role, and a part in the movie.[22] Tarantino's screenplay True Romance was optioned and eventually released in 1993. The second script that Tarantino sold was Natural Born Killers, which was revised by Dave Veloz, Richard Rutowski and director Oliver Stone. Tarantino was given story credit, and wished the film well.[23] Following the success of Reservoir Dogs, Tarantino was approached by Hollywood and offered numerous projects, including Speed and Men in Black. He instead retreated to Amsterdam to work on his script for Pulp Fiction. In Pulp Fiction (1994), Tarantino maintained the aestheticization of violence, for which he is known, as well as his non-linear story lines. Tarantino received an Academy Award in the category Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen, which he shared with Roger Avary. He also received a nomination in the category Best Director. The film received another 5 nominations, including Best Picture. Tarantino also won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival for Pulp Fiction. The film has grossed over $200 million and was met with outstanding reviews.

Tarantino has had a number of collaborations with director Robert Rodriguez.

After Pulp Fiction was completed, he then directed Episode Four of Four Rooms, "The Man from Hollywood", a tribute to the Alfred Hitchcock Presents episode that starred Steve McQueen. Four Rooms was a collaborative effort with filmmakers Allison Anders, Alexandre Rockwell, and Robert Rodriguez. The film was very poorly received by critics. He appeared in and wrote the script for Robert Rodriguez's From Dusk Till Dawn, which saw mixed reviews from the critics yet led to two sequels, for which Tarantino and Rodriguez would only serve as executive producers. Tarantino's third feature film was Jackie Brown (1997), an adaptation of Rum Punch, a novel by Elmore Leonard. An homage to blaxploitation films, it starred Pam Grier, who starred in many of that genre's films of the 1970s. Leonard considers Jackie Brown the best of the twenty-six different screen adaptations of his novels and short stories.[citation
needed]

Quentin Tarantino

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2000s
Tarantino had planned to make the war film provisionally titled Inglourious Basterds, but postponed it to write and direct Kill Bill (released as two films, Vol. 1 and Vol. 2), a highly stylized "revenge flick" in the cinematic traditions of Wuxia (Chinese martial arts), Jidaigeki (Japanese period cinema), Spaghetti Westerns and Italian horror. It was based on a character (The Bride) and a plot that he and Kill Bill's lead actress, Uma Thurman, had developed during the making of Pulp Fiction. In 2004, Tarantino returned to Cannes, where he served as President of the Jury. Although Kill Bill was not in competition, Vol. 2 had an evening screening, while it was also shown on the morning of the final day in its original 3-hour-plus version, with Tarantino himself attending the full screening. Tarantino then went on to be credited as "Special Guest Director" in Robert Rodriguez's 2005 neo-noir film Sin City for his work directing the car sequence featuring Clive Owen and Benicio del Toro. The next film project was Grindhouse, which he co-directed with Rodriguez. Released in theaters on April 6, 2007, Tarantino's contribution to the Grindhouse project was titled Death Proof. It began as a take on 1970s slasher films,[24] but evolved dramatically as the project unfolded. Ticket sales were low despite mostly positive reviews. Among his producing credits are the horror film Hostel (which included numerous references to his own Pulp Fiction), the adaptation of Elmore Leonard's Killshot (for which Tarantino was credited as an executive producer, although he was no longer associated with the film after its 2009 release.)[25] and Hell Ride (written and directed by Larry Bishop and Jonny Lane, who both appeared in Kill Bill Vol. 2). Tarantino's 2009 film Inglourious Basterds is the story of a group of guerrilla Jewish-American soldiers in Nazi-occupied France during World War II. Filming began in October 2008.[26] The film opened on August 21, 2009 to very positive reviews[27] and the No. 1 spot at the box office worldwide.[28] It went on to become Tarantino's highest grossing film until surpassed by Django Unchained three years later.[29]

2010s
In 2011, production began on Django Unchained, about the revenge of a slave in the U.S. South in 1858. The film stemmed from Tarantino's desire to produce a spaghetti western set in America's Deep South; Tarantino has called the proposed style "a southern",[] stating that he wanted "to do movies that deal with America's horrible past with slavery and stuff but do them like spaghetti westerns, not like big issue movies. I want to do them like they're genre films, but they deal with everything that America has never dealt with because it's ashamed of it, and other countries don't really deal with because they don't feel they have the right to".[] The film was released on December 25, 2012. During an interview with Krishnan Guru-Murthy about the film on Channel 4 News, Tarantino reacted angrily when questioned about an alleged link between movie violence and real life violence in light of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting.[30] A long running rumor in the industry is that Tarantino has been interested in filming a new version of Bret Easton Ellis book Less Than Zero (1985). His fellow Tarantino in Paris in January 2013, at the French "Archivist" Roger Avary adapted Rules of Attraction, also based on a premiere of Django Unchained. novel by Ellis, in 2002 and since both he and Tarantino like the works by Ellis, Tarantino has been eyeing the possibility of adapting Less Than Zero. Ellis recently confirmed, in an interview for Vice Magazine, that Quentin Tarantino has been "trying to get Fox to let him remake it" [31] At a Q & A at Harvard Book Store (2012) Bret Easton Ellis once again confirms, in

Quentin Tarantino a reply to a question if Less Than Zero will be remade, that Quentin Tarantino "has shown interest" in adapting the story. This Q & A filmed by WGBH Forum Network an is available on YouTube [32] called Bret Easton Ellis Imperial Bedrooms.

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As producer
In recent years, Tarantino has used his Hollywood power to give smaller and foreign films more attention than they might have received otherwise. These films are usually labeled "Presented by Quentin Tarantino" or "Quentin Tarantino Presents". The first of these productions was in 2001 with the Hong Kong martial arts film Iron Monkey which made over $14 million in the United States, seven times its budget. In 2004 he brought the Chinese martial arts film Hero to U.S. shores. It ended up having a No. 1 opening at the box office and making $53.5 million. In 2006, the latest "Quentin Tarantino presents" production, Hostel, opened at No. 1 at the box office with a $20.1 million opening weekend, good for 8th all time in January. He presented 2006's The Protector, and is a producer of the (2007) film Hostel: Part II. in 2008 he produced the Larry Bishop helmed Hell Ride, a revenge biker film. In addition, in 1995 Tarantino formed Rolling Thunder Pictures with Miramax as a piece to release or re-release several independent and foreign features. By 1997, Miramax shut down the company due to "lack of interest" in the pictures released. The following films were released by Rolling Thunder Pictures: Chungking Express (1994, dir. Wong Kar-wai), Switchblade Sisters (1975, dir. Jack Hill), Sonatine (1993, dir. Takeshi Kitano), Hard Core Logo (1996, dir. Bruce McDonald), The Mighty Peking Man (1977, dir. Ho Meng-Hua), Detroit 9000 (1973, dir. Arthur Marks), The Beyond (1981, dir. Lucio Fulci) and Curdled (1996, dir. Reb Braddock).

Other potential films


Before Inglourious Basterds, Quentin Tarantino had considered making The Vega Brothers. The film would have starred Michael Madsen and John Travolta reprising their roles of Vic (Mr. Blonde) from Reservoir Dogs and Vincent from Pulp Fiction. In 2007, because of the age of the actors and the onscreen deaths of both characters, he claimed that the film (which he intended to call Double V Vega) is "kind of unlikely now."[33] In 2009, in an interview for Italian TV, after being asked about the success of the two Kill Bill films, Tarantino said "You haven't asked me about the third one", and implied that he would be making a third Kill Bill film with the words "The Bride will fight again!"[34] Later that year, at the Morelia International Film Festival,[35] Tarantino announced that he would like to film Kill Bill: Vol. 3. He explained that he wanted ten years to pass between The Bride's last conflict, in order to give her and her daughter a period of peace.[36] In a 2012 interview for the website We Got This Covered, Tarantino said that a third Kill Bill film would "probably not" happen. He also said that he would not be directing a new James Bond film, saying that he was only interested in directing Casino Royale at one point.[37] In a late 2012 interview with the online magazine The Root, Tarantino clarified his remarks and described his next film as being the final entry in a Django-Inglourious Basterds trilogy called Killer Crow. The film will depict a group of World War II-era black troops who have "been fucked over by the American military and kind of go apeshit. They basically -- the way Lt. Aldo Raine (Brad Pitt) and the Basterds are having an 'Apache resistance' -- [the] black troops go on an Apache warpath and kill a bunch of white soldiers and white officers on a military base and are just making a warpath to Switzerland."[38]

Personal life
Tarantino has been romantically linked with American actress Mira Sorvino,[39] directors Allison Anders and Sofia Coppola, writer/author Lianne Spiderbaby, actresses Julie Dreyfus and Didem Erol,[40] and comedians Margaret Cho and Kathy Griffin[41] There have also been rumors about his relationship with Uma Thurman, whom he has referred to as his "muse".[42] However, Tarantino has stressed that their relationship is strictly platonic.[43] Tarantino stated "I'm not saying that I'll never get married or have a kid before I'm 60, but I've made a choice, so far, to go on this road alone. Because this is my time to make movies." Tarantino revealed in an interview with Howard Stern, that he

Quentin Tarantino is now dating a writer for a horror film magazine.[44] Tarantino is the best friend of fellow filmmaker Robert Rodriguez who, in the credits of Kill Bill Volume 2, he refers to as his brother. He is also close friends with Eli Roth, Paul Thomas Anderson, Kevin Smith, and Harvey Keitel. He has stated he believes in God but does not belong to a specific religion.[45] Tarantino also has said that he plans to retire from filmmaking at age 60, to focus on writing novels and film literature. He also is skeptical of the film industry going digital, saying, "If it actually gets to the place where you can't show 35mm film in theatres anymore and everything is digital projection, I won't even make it to 60."[46] On February 18, 2010, it was announced that Tarantino had bought the New Beverly Cinema. Tarantino allowed the current owners to continue operating the theater, but he will be making programming suggestions from time to time. He was quoted as saying: "As long as I'm alive, and as long as I'm rich, the New Beverly will be there, showing films shot on 35mm."[47] Tarantino's Chevy Malibu from the movie "Pulp Fiction", stolen from the set in 1994, was recovered in 2013.[48]

41

Influences and style of filmmaking


An awards ceremony in the Critics Choice Awards celebrated Tarantino, citing his start in filmmaking in his 20s. Music is an important part of his filmmaking style. He said he would listen to music in his bedroom and create scenes that correlated to the music playing.[49] In the 2012 Sight & Sound directors' poll, Tarantino revealed his top 12 films: Apocalypse Now, The Bad News Bears, Carrie, Dazed and Confused, The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, The Great Escape, His Girl Friday, Jaws, Pretty Maids All in a Row, and Rolling Thunder, Sorcerer, and Taxi Driver.[50] In 2009, he named Kinji Fukasaku's violent action film Battle Royale as his favorite film released since he became a director in 1992.[51] He is also a fan of the 1981 film Blow Out directed by Brian DePalma, so much so that he used the main star of the film (John Travolta) in Pulp Fiction.[52] Tarantino praised Mel Gibson's 2006 film Apocalypto, saying, "I think it's a masterpiece. It was perhaps the best film of that year."[53] In August 2007, while teaching a four-hour film course during the 9th Cinemanila International Film Festival in Manila, Tarantino cited Filipino directors Cirio Santiago, Eddie Romero, and Gerardo de Len as personal icons from the 1970s,[] citing De Leon's "soul-shattering, life-extinguishing" movies on vampires and female bondage, particularly Women in Cages. "It is just harsh, harsh, harsh," he said, and described the final shot as one of "devastating despair".[] Upon his arrival in the Philippines, Tarantino was quoted in the local newspaper as saying, "I'm a big fan of RP (Republic of the Philippines) cinema." He often uses graphic violence that has been proven seductive to audiences and has received harsh criticism for his use of gore and blood in an entrancing simultaneously repulsive way. His films have been subject to staunch criticism and scorn for his use of violence, blood and action as a "colour" within cinema, rebuked for allegedly using human suffering as a punchline.[54] Actor Steve Buscemi has described Tarantino's different style of film making as "bursting with energy" and "focused,"[] a style that has earned him many accolades worldwide. According to Tarantino, a recurring hallmark in all his movies is that there is a different sense of humor in each one, which gets the audience to laugh at things that aren't funny.[55] However, he insists that his films are dramas, not comedies.[56] Michael Winner, while appearing on an episode of Piers Morgan's Life Stories (an ITV production), stated that Quentin Tarantino was a "big fan" of Death Wish. Tarantino has admitted that the celebrated animation-action sequence in his film Kill Bill (2003) was inspired from the use of 2D animated sequences in actor Kamal Hassan's Tamil film Aalavandhan. Tarantino often seeks to harness, manipulate and ultimately imitate the aesthetic elements and conventions typically used in the cartoon medium. More specifically, he often attempts to meld comic strip formulas and aesthetics within a live action film sequence and in some cases uses the literal use of cartoon or anime images. Tarantino's cinematic ambition to marry artistic expression via live action and cartoonism is yet another example of his ability to morph genres and conventions to produce a new and authentic style of his own.[57]

Quentin Tarantino He often manipulates the use of commodities to propel plot development or present an intriguing juxtaposition that ultimately enhances his notorious combination of humor and violence, equating a branded genre with branded consumption.[9] He often pairs bizarre props with an equally bizarre scene, in which the prop itself develops into something of higher substance. Likewise, he often favors particular brand names of his own creation to make promotional appearances. The typical brands he uses within his films are "Acuna Boys Tex-Mex Food", "Big Kahuna Burger", "G.O. Juice", "Jack Rabbit Slim's", "K-Billy", "Red Apple cigarettes", "Tenku Brand Beer", and "Teriyaki Donut".[58] In an interview with Charlie Rose, Tarantino said: "There is one [biopic] story that I could be interested in, but it would probably be one of the last movies I [ever make]", "My favorite hero in American history is John Brown. He's my favorite American who ever lived. He basically single-handedly started the road to end slavery and the fact that he killed people to do it. He decided, 'If we start spilling white blood, then they're going to start getting the idea.' "[59]

42

Controversies
Gun violence
Quentin Tarantino does not believe that violence in movies inspires acts of violence in real life, stating in response to a question about the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in 2012, that "the issue is gun control and mental health." He also said "it's disrespectful to their memory... of the people who died to talk about movies."[60] When asked in 2013 by Britain's Channel 4 News reporter Krishnan Guru-Murthy "Why are you so sure that there's no link between enjoying movie violence and enjoying real violence?", Tarantino responded by saying, "I refuse your question. I'm not a slave and you're not my master... It's none of your damn business what I think about that... I have explained myself many times over the last twenty years, I just refuse to repeat myself over and over again."[61]

Racial epithets
Spike Lee questioned Tarantino's use of racial epithets in his films, particularly the racially offensive epithet "nigger". In a Variety interview discussing Jackie Brown, Lee said: "I'm not against the word... and I use it, but Quentin is infatuated with the word. What does he want? To be made an honorary black man?"[62] Tarantino responded on Charlie Rose by stating: As a writer, I demand the right to write any character in the world that I want to write. I demand the right to be them, I demand the right to think them and I demand the right to tell the truth as I see they are, all right? And to say that I can't do that because I'm white, but the Hughes brothers can do that because they're black, that is racist. That is the heart of racism, all right. And I do not accept that... That is how a segment of the black community that lives in Compton, lives in Inglewood, where Jackie Brown takes place, that lives in Carson, that is how they talk. I'm telling the truth. It would not be questioned if I was black, and I resent the question because I'm white. I have the right to tell the truth. I do not have the right to lie.[63] In addition, Tarantino retaliated on The Howard Stern Show by stating Lee would have to "stand on a chair to kiss my ass."[64] Samuel L. Jackson, who has appeared in both directors' films, defended Tarantino's use of the word. At the Berlin Film Festival, where Jackie Brown was being screened, Jackson responded to Lee's criticism by saying: I don't think the word is offensive in the context of this film... Black artists think they are the only ones allowed to use the word. Well, that's bull. Jackie Brown is a wonderful homage to black exploitation films. This is a good film, and Spike hasn't made one of those in a few years.[65] Tarantino has defended his use of the word, arguing that black audiences have an appreciation of his blaxploitation-influenced films that eludes some of his critics, and, indeed, that Jackie Brown, another oft-cited example, was primarily made for "black audiences".[66]

Quentin Tarantino According to a 1995 Premiere magazine article, actor Denzel Washington also confronted Tarantino on his usage of racial slurs in his pictures, but mentioned that Tarantino was a "fine artist."[67] Django Unchained was the subject of controversy due to its use of racial epithets and depiction of slavery; many reviewers[68] have defended the usage of the language by pointing out the historic context of race and slavery in America.[69] Spike Lee, in an interview with Vibe magazine said he would not see the film, explaining "All I'm going to say is that it's disrespectful to my ancestors. That's just me...I'm not speaking on behalf of anybody else."[70] Lee later tweeted, "American Slavery Was Not A Sergio Leone Spaghetti Western. It Was A Holocaust. My Ancestors Are Slaves. Stolen From Africa. I Will Honor Them."[71] Writing in The Los Angeles Times, journalist Erin Aubry Kaplan noted the difference between Tarantino's Jackie Brown and Django Unchained: "It is an institution whose horrors need no exaggerating, yet Django does exactly that, either to enlighten or entertain. A white director slinging around the n-word in a homage to '70s blaxploitation la Jackie Brown is one thing, but the same director turning the savageness of slavery into pulp fiction is quite another."[72]

43

Filmography and critical reception


This is a selection of films that Tarantino has directed. For the full list, see Quentin Tarantino filmography.
Year Film Notes RT 96% 95% [73] [76] MC 78 94 [74] [77] IMDB 8.4 9.0 6.5 7.5 8.2 8.0 7.7 8.3 8.6 [75] [78] [80] [83] [86] [89] [92] [95] [98]

1992 Reservoir Dogs 1994 Pulp Fiction 1995 Four Rooms 1997 Jackie Brown 2003 Kill Bill: Vol. 1 2004 Kill Bill: Vol. 2 2007 Grindhouse 2009 Inglourious Basterds 2012 Django Unchained Segment: Death Proof

Segment: The Man from Hollywood 14%[79] N/A 86% 85% 84% 83% 88% 89% [81] [84] [87] [90] [93] [96] 64 69 83 77 69 81 [82] [85] [88] [91] [94] [97]

Recurring collaborators
This chart lists every actor who has appeared in more than one film directed by Tarantino. Samuel L. Jackson is Tarantino's most prolific collaborator, having appeared in six of his films, the sixth being True Romance, though Tarantino did not direct it.

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Actor Michael Bacall Zo Bell Michael Bowen Steve Buscemi Paul Caldern Laura Cayouette Omar Doom Julie Dreyfus Kathy Griffin Sid Haig Craig Hamann Brenda Hillhouse Samuel L. Jackson Linda Kaye Harvey Keitel Jonathan Loughran Michael Madsen James Parks Michael Parks Stevo Polyi Tina Rodriguez Eli Roth Tim Roth David Steen Bo Svenson Uma Thurman

My Best Friend's Birthday

Reservoir Dogs

Pulp Fiction

Four Rooms

Jackie Brown

Kill Bill

Death Proof

Inglourious Basterds

Django Unchained

Total 3 4 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 5 3 3 2 2 3 3 3 2 2 3 2 2 2

Quentin Tarantino

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3 2 2 2

Rich Turner Rowland Wafford Christoph Waltz Bruce Willis

Awards
Year Award Category Grand Jury Prize Dramatic Best Director Pulp Fiction Cannes Film Festival 1995 Academy Awards Palme d'Or Best Director Best Writing (Original Screenplay) BAFTA Awards Best Direction Best Original Screenplay Golden Globe Awards Best Screenplay Best Director 2004 Saturn Awards Best Director Best Writing Satellite Award 2005 Saturn Awards Best Original Screenplay Best Director Best Writing 2007 Cannes Film Festival 2009 2010 Academy Awards Best Director Best Writing (Original Screenplay) BAFTA Awards Best Direction Best Original Screenplay Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards Critics' Choice Award for Best Original Screenplay Critics' Choice Award for Best Director Golden Globe Awards Best Screenplay Best Director Palme d'Or Death Proof Inglourious Basterds Kill Bill Volume 2 Kill Bill Volume 1 Nominated work Reservoir Dogs Result Nominated Nominated Won Won Nominated Won Nominated Won Won Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Won Nominated Nominated Nominated

1992 Sundance Film Festival Independent Spirit Award 1994

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Screenwriter of the Year Best Original Screenplay Best Original Screenplay Django Unchained Won Nominated Nominated Won Won Nominated Won Won Nominated

2012 Hollywood Film Festival San Diego Film Critics Society Awards Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Awards 2013 Academy Award BAFTA Awards

Best Writing (Original Screenplay) Best Original Screenplay Best Direction

Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards

Critics' Choice Award for Best Original Screenplay Best Screenplay Best Director

Golden Globe Awards

Reservoir Dogs was given the Critic's Award at the 4th Yubari International Fantastic Film Festival in 1993.[99] Pulp Fiction won the Palme d'Or (Golden Palm) at the 1994 Cannes Film Festival.[] The film was nominated for seven Oscars, winning one for Best Original Screenplay, which was shared jointly by Tarantino and co-writer Roger Avary. In 1996, Tarantino was nominated for a Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Supporting Actor in From Dusk Till Dawn, but lost against Marlon Brando in The Island of Dr. Moreau. In 2005, Quentin Tarantino won the Icon of the Decade Award at the 10th Empire Awards. On August 15, 2007, Philippine president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo presented Tarantino with a lifetime achievement award at the Malacaan Palace in Manila.[100] In 2008, Quentin Tarantino was honored with the Filmmaker on the Edge Award at the Provincetown International Film Festival. In 2009, his film Inglourious Basterds was nominated for eight Oscars including Best Picture, Best Director and Best Original Screenplay, winning one for Best Supporting Actor. In March 2010, Tarantino was awarded the Order of Merit of the Hungarian Republic along with Lucy Liu and Andy Vajna for producing the 2006 movie Freedom's Fury.[101] In February 2011, Tarantino received an honorary Csar from the Acadmie des Arts et Techniques du Cinma.[102] In January 2013, he was honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award by the Rome Film Festival[103] In January 2013, he won the Golden Globe Award for Best Screenplay for his film Django Unchained. In February 2013, Django Unchained was nominated for five Academy Awards, including Picture and Original Screenplay. Tarantino won the latter.

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References
[9] "Serious Gourmet Shit": Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction Journal of Literary Studies (June 1999), 15 (1-2), pg. 8-32 [10] Quentin Tarantino and the Director as DJ The Journal of Popular Culture (April 2012), 45 (2), pg. 391-409 Michael Rennett [17] Quentin Tarantino biography (http:/ / movies. yahoo. com/ movie/ contributor/ 1800021942/ bio) at yahoo.com [20] Clarkson, Wensley (1995). "Quentin Tarantino Shooting From The Hip, pg. 61. The Overlook Press Woodstock, New York ISBN 0-87951-676-3 [22] Keitel heard of the script through his wife, who had attended a class with Lawrence Bender (see Reservoir Dogs special edition DVD commentary). [34] Quentin Tarantino Talks Kill Bill 3: The Bride Will Fight Again! (http:/ / www. badtaste. it/ index. php?option=com_content& task=view& id=9753& Itemid=29), BadTaste.it, October 1, 2009. Retrieved October 2, 2009. [35] Festival Internacional de Cine de Morelia [41] I'm the One That I Want (http:/ / www. popmatters. com/ film/ reviews/ i/ im-the-one-that. shtml). [43] Web.archive.org (http:/ / web. archive. org/ web/ 20080129011539rn_1/ www. rollingstone. com/ news/ story/ 5939241/ a_magnificent_obsession) [45] (http:/ / www. empireonline. com/ magazine/ 250/ directors-of-our-lifetime/ 5. asp) [47] Lewinski, John Scott. "Quentin Tarantino saves L.A. theater" (http:/ / www. hollywoodreporter. com/ news/ quentin-tarantino-saves-la-theater-20854), The Hollywood Reporter, February 18, 2010. Retrieved February 5, 2011. [48] http:/ / www. cbsnews. com/ 8301-504083_162-57581987-504083/ quentin-tarantinos-pulp-fiction-chevy-malibu-stolen-from-set-in-94-recovered-in-2013/ [49] Critics Choice Award award ceremony about Quentin Tarantino. Telecast January 15, 2011 on VH1. Information: (http:/ / blog. vh1. com/ 2011-01-10/ quentin-tarantino-critics-choice-movies-awards/ ) [50] (http:/ / explore. bfi. org. uk/ sightandsoundpolls/ 2012/ voter/ 1134). bfi.org.uk [51] Quentin Tarantino's Top 20 Favorite Films (http:/ / www. comcast. net/ slideshow/ entertainment-tarantinotop20/ 2/ ). comcast.net [53] Interview with Quentin Tarantino, FILMINK Magazine, August 2007. [54] Childhood Living James and Tarantino Patrick O'Donnell (bio) Michigan State University, The New Centennial Review, Volume 9, Number 2, Fall 2009 [55] There is a sense of humor in all of my movies (http:/ / www. gomolo. in/ features/ article. aspx?ArticleID=202). gomolo.in (October 1, 2009) [59] " An hour with Filmmaker Quentin Tarantino about his film 'Inglourious Basterds' (http:/ / www. charlierose. com/ view/ interview/ 10567)". August 21, 2009. [73] "Tomato Meter Rating of 'Reservoir Dogs'" (http:/ / www. rottentomatoes. com/ m/ reservoir_dogs/ ). Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved December 7, 2012. [74] Reservoir Dogs Reviews, Ratings, Credits, and More (http:/ / www. metacritic. com/ movie/ reservoir-dogs). Metacritic. Retrieved on 2012-06-16. [75] "IMDB Reservoir Dogs" (http:/ / www. imdb. com/ title/ tt0105236/ ). IMDB. Retrieved April 24, 2013. [76] "Tomato Meter Rating of 'Pulp Fiction'" (http:/ / www. rottentomatoes. com/ m/ pulp_fiction). Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved December 7, 2012. [77] Pulp Fiction (http:/ / www. metacritic. com/ movie/ pulp-fiction). Metacritic. Retrieved November 27, 2011. [78] "IMDB Pulp Fiction" (http:/ / www. imdb. com/ title/ tt0110912/ ). IMDB. Retrieved April 24, 2013. [79] "Tomato Meter Rating of 'Four Rooms'" (http:/ / www. rottentomatoes. com/ m/ four_rooms/ ). Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2 May 2013. [80] "IMDB Four Rooms" (http:/ / www. imdb. com/ title/ tt0113101/ ). IMDB. Retrieved 2 May 2013. [81] "Tomato Meter Rating of 'Jackie Brown'" (http:/ / www. rottentomatoes. com/ m/ jackie_brown). Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved December 7, 2012. [82] Jackie Brown (http:/ / www. metacritic. com/ movie/ jackie-brown). Metacritic. Retrieved November 27, 2011. [83] "IMDB Jackie Brown" (http:/ / www. imdb. com/ title/ tt0119396/ ). IMDB. Retrieved April 24, 2013. [84] "Tomato Meter Rating of 'Kill Bill: Volume One'" (http:/ / www. rottentomatoes. com/ m/ kill_bill_vol_1/ ). Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved December 7, 2012. [85] Kill Bill Volume 1 (http:/ / www. metacritic. com/ movie/ kill-bill-vol-1). Metacritic. Retrieved November 27, 2011. [86] "IMDB Kill Bill I" (http:/ / www. imdb. com/ title/ tt0266697/ ). IMDB. Retrieved April 24, 2013. [87] "Tomato Meter Rating of 'Kill Bill: Volume 2'" (http:/ / www. rottentomatoes. com/ m/ kill_bill_vol_2). Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved December 7, 2012. [88] Kill Bill: Vol. 2 (http:/ / www. metacritic. com/ movie/ kill-bill-vol-2). Metacritic. Retrieved November 27, 2011. [89] "IMDB Kill Bill II" (http:/ / www. imdb. com/ title/ tt0378194/ ). IMDB. Retrieved April 24, 2013. [90] "Tomato Meter Rating of 'Grindhouse'" (http:/ / www. rottentomatoes. com/ m/ grindhouse/ ). Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved December 7, 2012. [91] Grindhouse (http:/ / www. metacritic. com/ movie/ grindhouse). Metacritic. Retrieved November 27, 2011. [92] "Grindhouse" (http:/ / www. imdb. com/ title/ tt0462322/ ). IMDB. Retrieved April 24, 2013.

Quentin Tarantino
[93] "Tomato Meter Rating of 'Inglourious Basterds'" (http:/ / www. rottentomatoes. com/ m/ inglourious_basterds/ ). Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved December 7, 2012. [94] Inglourious Basterds (http:/ / www. metacritic. com/ movie/ inglourious-basterds). Metacritic. Retrieved November 27, 2011. [95] "Inglorious Basterds" (http:/ / www. imdb. com/ title/ tt0361748/ ). IMDB. Retrieved April 24, 2013. [96] "Tomato Meter Rating of 'Django Unchained'" (http:/ / www. rottentomatoes. com/ m/ django_unchained_2012/ ). Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved December 18, 2012. [97] Django Unchained (http:/ / www. metacritic. com/ movie/ django-unchained). Metacritic. Retrieved December 18, 2012. [98] "Django Unchained" (http:/ / www. imdb. com/ title/ tt1853728/ ). IMDB. Retrieved April 24, 2013.

48

Further reading
Greene, Richard; Mohammad, K. Silem, eds. (2007). Quentin Tarantino and Philosophy. Chicago: Open Court Books. ISBN0-8126-9634-4. Waxman, Sharon, ed. (2005). Rebels on the Backlot: Six Maverick Directors and How They Conquered the Hollywood Studio System. HarperEntertainment.

External links
Quentin Tarantino (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000233/) at the Internet Movie Database Quentin Tarantino (http://www.rottentomatoes.com/celebrity/quentin_tarantino) at Rotten Tomatoes Quentin Tarantino (https://www.facebook.com/QuentinTarantino) on Facebook Quentin Tarantino (http://www.allmusic.com/artist/quentin-tarantino-mn0000318777) at Allmusic Quentin Tarantino (http://www.allrovi.com/name/p113658) at AllRovi

Uma Thurman

49

Uma Thurman
Uma Thurman

Thurman attending the Fashion Week in New York City, September 15, 2011 Born Uma Karuna Thurman April 29, 1970 Boston, Massachusetts, U.S. Actress, model 1987present Gary Oldman (19901992) Ethan Hawke (19982004) Arpad Busson (2007present) 3

Occupation Years active Spouse(s)

Partner(s) Children

Uma Karuna Thurman (born April 29, 1970) is an American actress and model. She has performed in leading roles in a variety of films, ranging from romantic comedies and dramas to science fiction and action movies. Following early roles in films such as Dangerous Liaisons (1988), she rose to international prominence in 1994 following her role in Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction for which she was nominated for an Academy Award, a BAFTA Award and a Golden Globe Award. She starred in several more films throughout the 1990's such as The Truth About Cats & Dogs, Batman & Robin, Gattaca and Les Misrables. She won a Golden Globe Award for the miniseries Hysterical Blindness (2002). Her career was revitalised when she reunited with director Quentin Tarantino to play the central role in two Kill Bill films (2003/2004) which brought her an additional two Golden Globe Award nominations and a BAFTA Award nomination.

Early life
Thurman was born in Boston, to model Nena von Schlebrgge and professor Robert Thurman. She and her siblings spent time in Almora, Uttarakhand, India, during childhood, and the Dalai Lama sometimes visited their home.[1] She grew up mostly in Amherst, Massachusetts, where she went to Amherst Regional Middle School and then moved to Woodstock, New York. While her father gave his children a Buddhist upbringing, she has the same name as one of the Hindu goddess Parvati's alternate names, "Uma", which means "Light" in Sanskrit.[2][3] Regarding religion, she now calls herself agnostic.[4] She has three brothers, Ganden (b. 1968), Dechen (b. 1973), and Mipam

Uma Thurman (b. 1978), and a half-sister named Taya (b. 1960), from her father's previous marriage. She is described as having been an awkward and introverted girl who was teased for her tall frame, angular bone structure, enormous feet and unusual name (sometimes using the name Uma Karen instead of her birth name). When she was 10 years old, a friend's mother suggested a nose job.[1] As a child, she suffered bouts of body dysmorphic disorder, which she discussed in an interview with Talk magazine in 2001.[5] She attended Amherst Public Schools. In the 8th grade she discovered her love for acting. Talent scouts noticed her performance as Abigail in a production of The Crucible[6] and offered her the chance to act professionally. Thurman attended Northfield Mount Hermon School, a preparatory school in Massachusetts, before dropping out to pursue a career in acting.[1][]

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Family background
Thurman's father, Robert Alexander Farrar Thurman (b. August 3, 1941), was born in New York City, to Elizabeth Dean (Farrar), a stage actress, and Beverly Reid Thurman, Jr., an Associated Press editor and United Nations translator.[7] Robert Thurman was professor of religion at Amherst College from 1973 to 1988, when he accepted a position at Columbia University, where he was a professor of Tibetan Buddhism.[8] Robert is of English, Scottish, and Irish ancestry.[7] Uma Thurman's mother, Nena von Schlebrgge, was a model born in Mexico City, Mexico, in 1941. Uma's maternal grandfather was Colonel Baron Friedrich Karl Johannes von Schlebrgge, a German cavalry officer in the first World War, in business in Berlin during the '20s and '30s; he left for Mexico when the Nazis were seeking to jail him, after he refused to continue in the army to train younger soldiers.[9] Uma's maternal grandmother was Swedish-born Birgit Holmquist, from Trelleborg, who in 1930 modelled for a nude statue that overlooks the harbor of Smygehuk, Sweden (Birgit's father was of Swedish descent and Birgit's mother was of German and Danish descent).[10] Thurman's mother was previously married to LSD guru Timothy Leary.

Career
Early work (19871989)
Thurman began her career as a fashion model at age 15,[11] and signed with the agency Click Models. Her modeling credits included Glamour, the December 1985 supplement cover of Vogue and the May 1985 cover of British Vogue when she was only 15 years old.[12] She made her movie debut in 1988, appearing in four films that year. Her first two were the high school comedy Johnny Be Good and teen thriller Kiss Daddy Goodnight. She had a small role in The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, playing the goddess Venus alongside Oliver Reed's Vulcan; during her entrance she briefly appears nude, in a homage to Botticelli's The Birth of Venus. The most acclaimed of these first four films was Oscar-winning drama Dangerous Liaisons, in which Thurman's character of Cecile de Volanges is seduced by the manipulative Vicomte de Valmont (John Malkovich). At the time, insecure about her appearance, she spent roughly a year in London, during which she often wore loose, baggy clothing.[12] Malkovich said of her "there is nothing twitchy teenager-ish about her, I havent met anyone like her at that age. Her intelligence and poise stand out. But there's something else. She's more than a little haunted."[13]

Career prominence (19901993)


In 1990, Thurman appeared with Fred Ward and Maria de Medeiros in sexually provocative drama Henry & June, the first film to receive an NC-17 rating. Partly because many American newspapers refused to advertise films with the new rating, it did not get wide release in the United States, but the film won her some good notices. The New York Times wrote: "Thurman, as the Brooklyn-accented June, takes a larger-than-life character and makes her even bigger, though the performance is often as curious as it is commanding".[14] In 1993 she was for the first time the main star, in Gus Van Sant's 1993 adaptation of Tom Robbins' novel Even Cowgirls Get the Blues. It was a critical and financial disappointment; Thurman was nominated for a Worst Actress

Uma Thurman Razzie. The Washington Post described her acting as shallow, writing that, "Thurman's strangely passive characterization doesn't go much deeper than drawling and flexing her prosthetic thumbs".[15] She also starred opposite Robert De Niro in the drama Mad Dog and Glory, another box office disappointment. Later that year she auditioned for Stanley Kubrick while he was casting for unmade film Wartime Lies. Her agent said she described working with Kubrick as a "really bad experience."[16]

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19941998
After Mad Dog and Glory, Thurman auditioned for Quentin Tarantino ensemble movie Pulp Fiction, which grossed over $107 million on a budget of only $8 million.[17] The Washington Post wrote that Thurman was "serenely unrecognizable in a black wig, [and] is marvelous as a zoned-out gangster's girlfriend."[18] Thurman was nominated for the Best Supporting Actress Oscar the following year. She became one of Tarantino's favorite actresses to cast; he told Time magazine in 2003 that she was "up there with Garbo and Dietrich in goddess territory."[19] 1996 would see Thurman in two moderately successful films, the first of which was Beautiful Girls, where she played the female lead and love interest of Timothy Hutton and was supported with a high-profile cast (for that time) of Mira Sorvino, Martha Plimpton, and Natalie Portman. The film was well received by the critics for the script and acting, particularly that of Hutton and Portman. It performed moderately well at the box office. Thurman also starred opposite Janeane Garofalo in the moderately successful 1996 romantic comedy The Truth About Cats & Dogs as a ditzy blonde model. In 1997, she starred opposite her future husband Ethan Hawke in the science fiction film Gattaca. Although Gattaca was not a success at the box office, it drew many positive reviews and became successful on the home video market.[20] Some critics were not as impressed with Thurman, such as The Los Angeles Times, which wrote that she was "as emotionally uninvolved as ever."[21] Her next role was Poison Ivy in Batman & Robin, the fourth of the series. Her performance received mixed reviews, and critics compared her to Mae West. The New York Times wrote, "like Mae West, she mixes true femininity with the winking womanliness of a drag queen."[22] A similar comparison was made by the Houston Chronicle: "Thurman, to arrive at a '40s femme fatale, sometimes seems to be doing Mae West by way of Jessica Rabbit."[23] The next year brought The Avengers, another major financial and critical flop. CNN described her as "so distanced you feel like youre watching her through the wrong end of a telescope."[24] She received Razzie Award nominations for both films. She closed out 1998 with Les Misrables, a film version of Victor Hugo's novel of the same name, directed by Bille August, in which she played Fantine.

Hiatus (19982002)
After the birth of her first baby in 1998, Thurman took a rest from major roles to concentrate on motherhood. Her next roles were in low-budget and television films, including Vatel, Tape, in which she appeared with then husband Ethan Hawke, and Chelsea Walls, directed by Hawke. She would win a Golden Globe award for her acting in HBO cable movie Hysterical Blindness; she was also one of the executive producers. Thurman played a New Jersey woman in the 1980s searching for romance. The San Francisco Chronicle review said, Thurman at Cannes, 2000 "Thurman so commits herself to the role, eyes blazing and body akimbo, that you start to believe that such a creature could existan exquisite-looking woman so spastic and needy that she repulses regular Joes. Thurman has bent the role to her will."[25] In 2000, she narrated John Moran opera Book of the Dead (2nd Avenue) at New York's Public Theater.

Uma Thurman

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2003present
In 2003 Thurman co-starred in John Woo's Paycheck, which was only moderately successful with critics and at the box office. It would be Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill which relaunched her career. She played assassin Beatrix Kiddo, out for revenge against her former lover. Tarantino wrote the part specifically for her. He cited Thurman as his muse while writing the film, and gave her joint credit for the character, whom the two conceived on the set of Pulp Fiction from the sole image of a bride covered in blood. Production was delayed for several months after Thurman became pregnant, as Tarantino refused to recast the part.[26] The film took nine months to shoot, and was filmed in five different countries. The role was also her most demanding, and she spent three months training in martial arts, swordsmanship, and Japanese.[27] Originally designed to be one film, Kill Bill was ultimately released in two parts and would become a cult classic[28] and scored highly with critics. Thurman earned was nominated for a Golden Globe for both entries, plus three MTV Movie Awards for Best Female Performance and two for Best Fight. Rolling Stone likened her to "an avenging angel out of a 1940s Hollywood melodrama".[29] The inspirations for The Bride were several B-movie action heroines. Thurman's main inspiration for the role was the title character of Coffy (played by Pam Grier) and the character of Gloria Swenson from Gloria (played by Gena Rowlands). She said that the two characters are "two of the only women I've ever seen be truly women [while] holding a weapon".[30] Coffy was screened for Thurman by Tarantino prior to beginning production on the film, to help her model the character.[26] By 2005, Thurman was commanding a salary of $12.5 million per film. Her first film of the year was Be Cool, the sequel to 1995's Get Shorty, which reunited her with her Pulp Fiction castmate John Travolta. In the film, she played the widow of a deceased music business executive. The film received poor reviews, and came in below expectations at the box office. In 2005, she starred in Prime with Meryl Streep, playing a woman in her late thirties romancing a man in his early At the 2009 Tribeca Film Festival twenties. Thurman's last film of the year was a remake of The Producers in which she played Ulla, a Swedish stage actress hoping to win a part in a new Broadway musical. Originally, the producers of the film planned to have another singer dub in Thurman's musical numbers, but she was eager to do her own vocals.[31] She is credited for her songs in the credits. The film was considered a bomb at the box office, but many praised Thurman's efforts, including A. O. Scott of The New York Times who said: "Uma Thurman as a would-be actress is the one bit of genuine radiance in this aggressively and pointlessly shiny, noisy spectacle."[32] With a successful film career, Thurman once again became a desired model. Cosmetics company Lancme selected her as its spokeswoman. It also named several shades of lipstick after her, though they were sold only in Asia. In 2005, Thurman became a spokeswoman for the French fashion house Louis Vuitton. On February 7, 2006, she was also named a knight of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres of France for outstanding achievement in the field of art and literature. In May 2006, Thurman bought the film rights to the Frank Schtzing novel The Swarm, which is in development and due for release in 2015.[33] When the film remake The Women was in pre-production in 2006, Thurman was cast as Crystal Allen, alongside Annette Bening, Julia Roberts, Meg Ryan, Sandra Bullock, Ashley Judd, Lisa Kudrow and Anne Hathaway, being directed by James L. Brooks, but the director was changed and Thurman was no longer part of the cast.[citation needed] In July 2006, she starred opposite Luke Wilson in My Super Ex-Girlfriend. Thurman portrayed a super-heroine named "G-Girl" who is dumped by her boyfriend and then takes her revenge upon him. She received a reported $14 million for the role, but the film flopped. Once again she was well-received, but the film was not.

Uma Thurman In February 2008, she starred opposite Colin Firth and Jeffrey Dean Morgan in The Accidental Husband, a romantic comedy about a woman who finds herself married while engaged to another man. It seems like archetypal Hollywood contrivance, but according to Thurman, a similar situation happened in New York.[34] Also in 2008, she starred as Elsa in the British film My Zinc Bed, in which she plays a cocaine addict, starring opposite Paddy Considine and Jonathan Pryce. In 2010, her movie Motherhood, set a record for the biggest bomb in British cinema history garnering just 88 on 11 tickets on its opening weekend.[35] In the United States it earned just $93,388 in three weeks of release.[36] In 2011, Thurman was a member of the jury for the main competition at the Cannes Film Festival.[37] In December 2011, James Hibberd of Entertainment Weekly reported Thurman had joined the cast of NBC's Smash as Rebecca Duvall.[] Thurman will appear in five episodes of the drama series.[] For her portrayal of Duvall, Thurman was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series.

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Personal life
Relationships
Thurman met English actor Gary Oldman on the set of State of Grace; they married in 1990 and divorced two years later.[38] On May 1, 1998, she married actor Ethan Hawke, whom she met on the set of Gattaca. Hawke's novel Ash Wednesday is dedicated to "Karuna", Thurman's middle name.[39] She acknowledged that they had married because she was pregnant seven months at their wedding.[40] The marriage produced two children: daughter Maya Ray, born in 1998, and son Levon, born in 2002. The couple separated in 2003.[41] When asked on The Oprah Winfrey Show whether the break-up involved betrayal, she said, "There was some stuff like that at the end. We were having a difficult time, and you know how the axe comes down and how people behave and how people express their unhappiness."[42] In a 2004 In 2011 at Cannes Rolling Stone cover story, Thurman and director Quentin Tarantino denied having had a romantic relationship, despite Tarantino once having told a reporter, "I'm not saying that we havent, and I'm not saying that we have."[16] She began dating London-based financier Arpad Busson in 2007 and became engaged to him in June 2008,[43] but the relationship ended in November 2009.[44] In 2011, the couple were back together at the Louis Vuitton spring/summer fashion show in Paris. In February 2012, it was announced that Thurman and Busson were expecting their first child together.[45] Thurman gave birth to the couple's daughter,[46] Rosalind Arusha Arkadina Altalune Florence Thurman-Busson (nickname Luna), in July 2012.[47]

Activism and charity work


Thurman has been involved in various philanthropic and activist causes. She supports the United States Democratic Party, and has given money to the campaigns of John Kerry, Hillary Clinton, and Joseph R. Driscoll.[48] She supports gun control laws, and in 2000, she participated in Marie Claires End Gun Violence Now campaign.[49] She is a member of the board of Room to Grow, a charitable organization providing aid to families and children born into poverty.[50] She serves on the board of the Tibet House.[51] In 2007, she hosted the Nobel Peace Prize Concert in Oslo, Norway with actor Kevin Spacey.[52] In 2011, Thurman was also one of a few celebrities attached to USAID and Ad Council's FWD campaign, an awareness initiative tied to that year's East Africa drought. She joined Geena Davis, Chanel Iman and Josh Hartnett in TV and internet ads to "forward the facts" about the crisis.[53]

Uma Thurman

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Filmography
Year 1987 Kiss Daddy Goodnight 1988 Johnny Be Good 1988 The Adventures of Baron Munchausen 1988 Dangerous Liaisons 1990 Where the Heart Is 1990 Henry & June 1991 Robin Hood 1992 Final Analysis 1992 Jennifer 8 1993 Mad Dog and Glory 1994 Even Cowgirls Get the Blues 1994 Pulp Fiction 1995 A Month by the Lake 1996 Beautiful Girls 1996 The Truth About Cats & Dogs 1996 Duke of Groove 1997 Batman & Robin 1997 Gattaca 1998 Les Misrables 1998 The Avengers 1999 Sweet and Lowdown 2000 Great Books 2000 Vatel 2000 The Golden Bowl 2001 Tape 2001 Chelsea Walls 2002 Hysterical Blindness 2003 Kill Bill Volume 1 2003 Paycheck 2004 Kill Bill Volume 2 2005 Be Cool 2005 Nausica of the Valley of the Wind 2005 Prime 2005 The Producers 2006 My Super Ex-Girlfriend 2007 The Naked Brothers Band: The Movie 2008 The Life Before Her Eyes Film Laura Georgia Elkans Venus/Rose Ccile de Volanges Daphne McBain June Miller Maid Marian Diana Baylor Helena Glory Sissy Hankshaw Mia Wallace Miss Beaumont Andera Noelle Maya Dr. Pamela Isley/Poison Ivy Irene Cassini Fantine Emma Peel Blanche Narrator Anne de Montausier Charlotte Stant Amy Grace Debby Miller The Bride Dr. Rachel Porter Beatrix Kiddo Edie Athens Kushana (voice) Rafi Gardet Ulla Jenny Johnson/G-Girl Herself Diana (adult) English version TV movie; also producer TV series (1 episode: "Les Miserables") TV short TV movie Role Notes

Uma Thurman

55
Emma Lloyd Elsa Quinn Joy Eliza Welsh Also producer TV movie TV movie

2008 The Accidental Husband 2008 My Zinc Bed 2008 A Muppets Christmas: Letters to Santa 2009 Motherhood

2010 Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief Medusa 2010 Ceremony 2012 Bel Ami 2012 Smash 2012 Playing for Keeps 2013 Movie 43 2013 Nymphomaniac Zoe Madeleine Forestier Rebecca Duvall Patti Lois Lane Segment "Super Hero Speed Dating" Post-production TV series (5 episodes)

Awards
Year Award Jury "Coup de Chapeau" Category Film / TV Series Jennifer 8 Result Won

1993 Cognac Festival du Film Policier 1995 Razzie Awards

Razzie Award for Worst Actress

Even Cowgirls Get the Blues Pulp Fiction Pulp Fiction Pulp Fiction Pulp Fiction Pulp Fiction Pulp Fiction

Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Won

1995 Academy Awards 1995 BAFTA Awards 1995 Chlotrudis Awards 1995 Golden Globe Awards 1995 MTV Movie Awards 1995 Screen Actors Guild Awards

Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role Chlotrudis Award for Best Supporting Actress Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress Motion Picture MTV Movie Award for Best Performance Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role Kids' Choice Award for Favorite Movie Actress Razzie Award for Worst Supporting Actress Razzie Award for Worst Actress Razzie Award for Worst Screen Couple (with Ralph Fiennes) Best Actress Independent Spirit Award for Best Supporting Female Golden Globe Award for Best Actress Miniseries or Television Film Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Miniseries or Television Movie Saturn Award for Best Actress BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role Empire Award for Best Actress Golden Globe Award for Best Actress Motion Picture Drama MTV Movie Award for Best Performance

1998 Kids' Choice Awards 1998 Razzie Awards 1999 Razzie Awards 1999 Razzie Awards 2001 Gotham Awards 2002 Independent Spirit Awards 2003 Golden Globe Awards 2003 Screen Actors Guild Awards

Batman & Robin Batman & Robin The Avengers The Avengers

Tape Hysterical Blindness Hysterical Blindness

Nominated Won Nominated Won Nominated Won Nominated Won

2004 Saturn Awards 2004 BAFTA Awards 2004 Empire Awards 2004 Golden Globe Awards 2004 MTV Movie Awards

Kill Bill Vol. 1 Kill Bill Vol. 1 Kill Bill Vol. 1 Kill Bill Vol. 1 Kill Bill Vol. 1

Uma Thurman

56
Online Film Critics Society Award for Best Actress Kill Bill Vol. 1

2004 Online Film Critics Society Awards 2004 Irish Film and Television Awards 2004 Teen Choice Awards

Nominated

Audience Award for Best International Actress

Kill Bill Vol. 2

Nominated

Teen Choice Award for Choice Movie Actress Drama/Action Adventure Saturn Award for Best Actress Critics Choice Award for Best Actress

Kill Bill Vol. 2

Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated Nominated

2005 Saturn Awards 2005 Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards 2005 Empire Awards 2005 Golden Globe Awards 2005 MTV Movie Awards 2005 Online Film Critics Society Awards 2005 Satellite Awards 2005 People's Choice Awards 2007 People's Choice Awards 2012 Primetime Emmy Award

Kill Bill Vol. 2 Kill Bill Vol. 2

Empire Award for Best Actress Golden Globe Award for Best Actress Motion Picture Drama MTV Movie Award for Best Performance Online Film Critics Society Award for Best Actress

Kill Bill Vol. 2 Kill Bill Vol. 2 Kill Bill Vol. 2 Kill Bill Vol. 2

Satellite Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Drama People's Choice Award for Favorite Female Action Movie Star People's Choice Award for Favorite Female Action Movie Star Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series

Kill Bill Vol. 2

Smash

Nominated

References
[1] Tiscali Uma Thurman biography (http:/ / www. tiscali. co. uk/ entertainment/ film/ biographies/ uma_thurman_biog. html), Tiscali, accessed January 5, 2006. [2] http:/ / www. sanskrit-lexicon. uni-koeln. de/ mwquery/ "Monier Williams Sanskrit-English Dictionary (online) Line Number(L=) 37165 (Uma) [3] http:/ / www. hellomagazine. com/ profiles/ uma-thurman [4] Price, Richard. "Uma Thurman has had an Elle of a time in love rivalry" (http:/ / www. news. com. au/ couriermail/ story/ 0,23739,24008124-5007191,00. html), The Courier-Mail, July 12, 2008. [5] Kahn, Sherry. "Golden Girl Uma admits to having Body Dysmorphic Disorder" (http:/ / web. archive. org/ web/ 20080622171159/ http:/ / canoe. talksurgery. com/ consumer/ new/ new00000056_1. html), Talksurgery, May 15, 2001, accessed August 16, 2010. [6] Schoumatoff, Alex. "The life and career of Uma Thurman" (http:/ / www. angelfire. com/ nd/ umathurman/ artvanity. html), Vanity Fair, January 1996. [7] "Ancestry of Uma Thurman" (http:/ / www. wargs. com/ other/ thurman. html), Wargs, accessed August 16, 2010. [8] Kamanetz, Rodger. "Robert Thurman Doesn't Look Buddhist" (http:/ / partners. nytimes. com/ books/ 98/ 07/ 12/ specials/ thurman-profile. html), The New York Times, May 5, 1995. [9] unofficial transcription, accessed February 24, 2011 (http:/ / www. angelfire. com/ nd/ umathurman/ artvanity. html) [10] Uma Thurmans mormor staty i Trelleborg (http:/ / sydsvenskan. se/ nojen/ article173376. ece), Sydsvenskan, July 30, 2006. [11] "Uma on Men, Movies and Motherhood", Harper's Bazaar, March 1998. [12] "Uma Thurman Biography" (http:/ / www. thebiographychannel. co. uk/ biography_story/ 882:1170/ 1/ Uma_Thurman. htm), Biography Channel, Retrieved October 18, 2011. [13] Dangerous Liaisons' violated beauty, Uma Thurman, 18, is a little risky herself", People Weekly, February 6, 1989. [14] Maslin, Janet. "A Writers Awakening to the Erotic," The New York Times, October 5, 1990. [15] Brown, Joe. "Even Cowgirls Get the Blues" (http:/ / www. washingtonpost. com/ wp-srv/ style/ longterm/ movies/ videos/ evencowgirlsgetthebluesrbrown_a0ae18. htm), The Washington Post, May 20, 1994. [16] Hedegaard, Erik. "A Magnificent Obsession" (http:/ / web. archive. org/ web/ 20080129011539rn_1/ www. rollingstone. com/ news/ story/ 5939241/ a_magnificent_obsession), Rolling Stone, April 29, 2004. [17] Pulp Fiction (http:/ / boxofficemojo. com/ movies/ ?id=pulpfiction. htm), Box Office Mojo, accessed August 16, 2010. [18] Desson Howe. "Pulp Fiction" (http:/ / www. washingtonpost. com/ wp-srv/ style/ longterm/ movies/ videos/ pulpfictionrhowe_a01b66. htm), The Washington Post, October 14, 1994. [19] Tyrangiel, Josh. The Tao of Uma (http:/ / www. time. com/ time/ magazine/ article/ 0,9171,1101030929-488846,00. html), Time, September 22, 2003.

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[20] "Gattaca" (http:/ / web. archive. org/ web/ 20080408081621/ http:/ / www. crazy4cinema. com/ Review/ FilmsG/ f_gattaca. html), Crazy for Cinema, accessed August 16, 2010. [21] Mathews, Jack. "Cautionary Tale in Genetically Pure 'Gattaca'" (http:/ / www. calendarlive. com/ movies/ reviews/ cl-movie971111-26,0,7913577. story), The Los Angeles Times, October 24, 1997. [22] Maslin, Janet. Batman and Robin (http:/ / www. nytimes. com/ library/ film/ batman-film-review. html), The New York Times, June 20, 1997. [23] Millar, Jeff. "If you like them busy, this 'Batman' is for you" (http:/ / web. archive. org/ web/ 20080327075450/ http:/ / www. chron. com/ cgi-bin/ auth/ story/ content/ chronicle/ features/ 97/ 06/ 20/ batman-1. 0-1. html), Houston Chronicle, June 19, 1997. [24] Tatara, Paul. "Review: 'The Avengers' is retro-boring" (http:/ / www. cnn. com/ SHOWBIZ/ Movies/ 9808/ 21/ review. avengers/ index. html), CNN, August 21, 1998. [25] "A repulsive beauty in '80s Jersey Thurman's histrionics fit 'Hysterical Blindness' well" (http:/ / www. sfgate. com/ cgi-bin/ article. cgi?f=/ c/ a/ 2002/ 08/ 23/ DD7591. DTL), San Francisco Chronicle, August 23, 2002. [26] Kill Bill Vol. 1, DVD bonus featurette [27] Malanowski, Jamie. "Catching up with Uma Thurman," USA Today, October 5, 2003. [28] "Kill Bill" (http:/ / www. boxofficemojo. com/ movies/ ?id=killbill. htm), Boxofficemojo.com, accessed August 16, 2010. [29] Dana, Will. "Kill Bill Vol. 2 review" (http:/ / web. archive. org/ web/ 20080130074538rn_1/ www. rollingstone. com/ reviews/ movie/ 5948643/ kill_bill_vol_2), Rolling Stone, July 28, 2004. [30] Downey, Ryan J. "What Made Kill Bill" (http:/ / www. mtv. com/ movies/ news/ articles/ 1488333/ 06102004/ story. jhtml), MTV News, June 11, 2004. [31] WENN daily news (http:/ / www. imdb. com/ news/ wenn/ 2005-04-01#celeb8), IMDb, April 1, 2005. [32] Scott, A.O. The Producers', Again (This Time With Uma)" (http:/ / movies. nytimes. com/ 2005/ 12/ 16/ movies/ 16prod. html?_r=1& oref=slogin), The New York Times, December 16, 2005. [33] "The Swarm (2011)" (http:/ / imdb. com/ title/ tt0808491/ ), IMDb, April 25, 2010. [34] "Uma Thurman: A Decent Proposal" (http:/ / web. archive. org/ web/ 20080304035715/ http:/ / www. stv. tv/ content/ out/ film/ videointerviews/ display. html?id=opencms:/ out/ films/ video_interviews/ uma_thurman_accidental_husband_interview), STV, February 27, 2008. [35] Hill, Anita. "The Uma Thurman film so bad it made 88 on opening weekend" (http:/ / www. guardian. co. uk/ film/ 2010/ mar/ 26/ uma-thurman-motherhood-flop), The Guardian, March 26, 2010. [36] "Motherhood" (http:/ / www. boxofficemojo. com/ movies/ ?id=motherhood. htm), BoxOfficeMojo, August 16, 2010. [38] "Uma Thurman to wed again" (http:/ / seattletimes. nwsource. com/ html/ entertainment/ 2008022481_eye28. html), The Seattle Times, June 28, 2008. [40] "Uma Thurman Worried About Marriage" (http:/ / www. cinema. com/ news/ item/ 5074/ uma-thurman-worried-about-marriage. phtml), WENN, August 29, 2001. [42] Silverman, Stephen M. "Uma Calls Split from Ethan 'Excruciating (http:/ / www. people. com/ people/ article/ 0,,1115532,00. html), People, October 7, 2005. [44] "Kill Bill actress Uma Thurman locks lips with millionaire boyfriend on park bench" (http:/ / www. dailymail. co. uk/ tvshowbiz/ article-1021779/ Kill-Bill-actress-Uma-Thurman-locks-lips-millionaire-boyfriend-park-bench. html), Daily Mail (London), May 25, 2005; Hamm, Liza. "Uma Thurman Calls Off Engagement" (http:/ / www. people. com/ people/ article/ 0,,20320113,00. html), People, December 8, 2009. [45] "Uma Thurman Expecting Third Child" (http:/ / www. people. com/ people/ article/ 0,,20574089,00. html), People, February 27, 2012. [48] "Uma Thurman" (http:/ / www. newsmeat. com/ celebrity_political_donations/ Uma_Thurman. php), News Meat, Retrieved August 16, 2010. [49] "Stars Join Forces To Ban Guns" (http:/ / www. imdb. com/ news/ wenn/ 2000-12-04#celeb8), World Entertainment News Network, December 4, 2000. [50] "Room To Grow board and staff page" (http:/ / web. archive. org/ web/ 20071011211441/ http:/ / roomtogrow. org/ board. html), Room to Grow, Retrieved August 16, 2010. [51] Tibet House Board (http:/ / www. tibethouse. org/ Content/ About_Us/ TIBET_HOUSE_BOARD/ |archiveurl=http:/ / web. archive. org/ web/ 20070704162853/ http:/ / www. tibethouse. org/ Content/ About_Us/ TIBET_HOUSE_BOARD/ ), Tibet House, Retrieved August 16, 2010. [52] "Nobel Peace Prize Concert 2007" (http:/ / nobelpeaceprize. org/ concert/ ), nobelpeaceprize.org, Retrieved August 16, 2010. [53] "Dr. Jill Biden Joins USAID and Ad Council to Debut FWD Campaign for the Crisis in the Horn of Africa" (http:/ / www. prnewswire. com/ news-releases/ dr-jill-biden-joins-usaid-and-ad-council-to-debut-fwd-campaign-for-the-crisis-in-the-horn-of-africa-132605078. html). PR Newswire. October 26, 2011.

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58

Further reading
Bina, Roxanna. " Interview with Uma Thurman. (http://www.independentfilmquarterly.com/ifq/interviews/ umathurman.htm)" Independent Film Quarterly. December 8, 2003, accessed January 5, 2006. Biography (http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/contributor/1800013025/bio) Uma Thurman biography, accessed January 5, 2006. Brett, Anwar. Uma Thurman interview Kill Bill Vol. 2 (http://www.bbc.co.uk/films/2004/04/27/ uma_thurman_kill_bill_volume_2_interview.shtml). April 2004, accessed January 5, 2006. Chavel, Sean. " Uma Thurman interview. (http://www.ugo.com/channels/filmtv/features/killbill/ umathurman.asp)" UGO. October 2003, accessed January 6, 2006. Felperin, Leslie. Uma Thurman: Pulp friction" (http://enjoyment.independent.co.uk/film/interviews/ article56177.ece), The Independent, April 16, 2004. Fischer, Paul. " For Ms. Thurman, Life is More than Just a Paycheck. (http://www.filmmonthly.com/Profiles/ Articles/UThurmanPaycheck/UThurmanPaycheck.html)" Film Monthly. September 22, 2003, accessed January 5, 2006. Hedegaard, Erik. " A Magnificent Obsession. (http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/_/id/ 5939241?rnd=1136580280652&has-player=unknown)Wikipedia:Link rot" Rolling Stone. April 29, 2004, accessed January 6, 2005. Russell, Jamie. Uma Thurman interview Kill Bill Vol. 1 (http://www.bbc.co.uk/films/2003/10/06/ uma_thurman_kill_bill_volume1_interview.shtml). October 2003, accessed January 5, 2006. Sutherland, Bryon, Ellis, Lucy. Uma Thurman, The Biography". Aurum Press, 2004.

External links
Uma Thurman (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm235/) at the Internet Movie Database Uma Thurman (http://www.rottentomatoes.com/celebrity/uma_thurman) at Rotten Tomatoes TV.com Uma Thurman (http://www.tv.com/uma-thurman/person/118085/summary.html?q=Uma Thurman&tag=search_results;title;0)

Article Sources and Contributors

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Kill Bill films Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=556376628 Contributors: 2602:306:CCF5:5680:216:CBFF:FEB5:3CBE, Agnosticraccoon, Aranea Mortem, Batman194, Bearcat, Bgwhite, Brightgalrs, CommonsDelinker, Danimalizer, Erik, Errix, Ezzex, GoShow, Goldenman4, Gurabidon, Harold, Hyliad, Ictlogist, JaGa, JackD523, Jackal09, Jeanacoa, Jennie--x, Joel7687, Klow, Koavf, Lucas, Lugnuts, Malcolma, Michaelwuzthere, Millahnna, Munin75, Neptune's Trident, Norgizfox5041, One man band live, Only in death, Oollie2, Pavel.nps, Pjoef, R'n'B, Rsrikanth05, Scientific29, Thane, TheOldJacobite, Theopolisme, Twinsday, WhisperToMe, Woohookitty, Yoenit, 44 anonymous edits List of Kill Bill characters Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=556055628 Contributors: 6afraidof7, 79times, A Nobody, Aboutnici, Ace Class Shadow, Aguador, Aiczka, AirdishStraus, Aksnitd, Alanmjohnson, Aliggriffiths, Altruistic1, Andy Dingley, AnotherNitPicker, Archaeology, Arenlor, Assarbad, Ayaueto101, 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AngelofMusic07, Antmusic, AznBurger, Bsadowski1, Cavie78, Chivesontheweb, Chupon, Ciphergoth, DJ1AM, Dlrohrer2003, DrKiernan, Dragonfly888, Drmies, E-Kartoffel, Ed Cormany, Epolk, Error, Evolutionselene, Father McKenzie, Fritz Saalfeld, George Ho, GregorB, Hotdoglives, IronGargoyle, Jason Quinn, JeffreyBeauchamp, Jevon Tompkins, Jhsounds, Jogers, Jordangirardin, Koavf, LonerXL, Lupin, Moeron, MuzikJunky, Nahald, Nqnpipnr, Ob4cl, Papa November, Phlegmmy, Poulsen, Prosperosity, Rich Farmbrough, Rickie-d, Rjwilmsi, Rupert Pupkin, Starcheerspeaksnewslostwars, Sugar Bear, Superlast, Tarnas, TenPoundHammer, Treybien, Trivialist, Vaitork, VincentXP38, WikHead, Wisekwai, Zevin64, 76 anonymous edits Kill Bill Vol. 2 Original Soundtrack Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=553777190 Contributors: Adamanttt, Ajshm, Alcuin, AngelofMusic07, Annexwoond, BlackTerror, Chivesontheweb, Chupon, Connor5612, Doh286, DrDevin, E-Kartoffel, Everyking, Evolutionselene, Gah117, GregorB, Haukurth, 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Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors

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Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors


File:Kill Bill svg logo.svg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Kill_Bill_svg_logo.svg License: Public Domain Contributors: Michaelwuzthere File:Flag of the United States.svg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Flag_of_the_United_States.svg License: Public Domain Contributors: Anomie File:Star full.svg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Star_full.svg License: Public Domain Contributors: User:Conti from the original images by User:RedHotHeat File:Star half.svg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Star_half.svg License: Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 2.5 Contributors: User:Conti File:Star empty.svg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Star_empty.svg License: Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 2.5 Contributors: Cathy Richards, Conti, Juiced lemon, Magasjukur2, Rocket000, Sarang, Tiptoety, 7 anonymous edits File:Quentin Tarantino Csars 2011.jpg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Quentin_Tarantino_Csars_2011.jpg License: Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0 Contributors: Georges Biard File:Rodriguez and Tarantino, 2007.jpg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Rodriguez_and_Tarantino,_2007.jpg License: Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Contributors: pinguino k from North Hollywood, USA File:Quentin Tarantino Django 1.jpg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Quentin_Tarantino_Django_1.jpg License: Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0 Contributors: JJ Georges, PierreSelim Image:Black x.svg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Black_x.svg License: Public Domain Contributors: File:X mark.svg by User:Gmaxwell This derivative by User:Howcheng File:Uma Thurman photographed by Jiyang Chen.jpg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Uma_Thurman_photographed_by_Jiyang_Chen.jpg License: Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0 Contributors: Jiyang Chen Image:Uma Thurman - Cannes 2000.jpg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Uma_Thurman_-_Cannes_2000.jpg License: Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 2.5 Contributors: Rita Molnr File:File-Uma Thurman at the Tribeca Film Festival 4.jpg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:File-Uma_Thurman_at_the_Tribeca_Film_Festival_4.jpg License: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Contributors: David Shankbone File:Uma Thurman Cannes 2011.jpg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Uma_Thurman_Cannes_2011.jpg License: Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0 Contributors: Georges Biard

License

63

License
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