Quentin Tarantino Dealt with Hitler, But Can He Deal with the Holocaust Museum?

Last night, Quentin Tarantino attended a top secret, pre-screening of Inglourious Basterds at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in lower Manhattan. Playing his alt-history WWII extravaganza for a crowd of Jews at what is ostensibly a Holocaust museum dedicated to preserving that memory created a context for high drama. In attendance were children of Holocaust survivors and even Holocaust survivors themselves. Sitting on stage with the film’s star, French actress Mélanie Laurent, in front of the 400 or so occupying virtually every seat in the auditorium, Tarantino acknowledged the irony: "I’m a little more nervous and a little bit more sensitive than my normal irreverent self."

The audience’s reaction to both the director and the film was, by in large, positive with the notable exception of the yenta behind Partisans of Vilna who did her best to get Tarantino to lose his cool with a series of inane questions and plugs for her own two-plus-decade-old Holocaust documentary ("Oy, will she shut up already?", cringed the 75-year-old Museum docent sitting next to me.)

Anyway, here are some of my favorite moments from the evening. Beware: spoilers ahead.

On the Jewish Basterds’ mission to blow up a movie theater filled with Nazis and themselves in the process:

"I actually like the parallels that the Basterds are, for all intents and purposes, suicide bombers going into the theater to blow up the premiere and the fact that it is a military-slash-civilian endeavor that they are blowing up."

On writing:

"That’s my thing, my dialogue. It’s not poetry, but it kinda is. It’s not music, but it kinda is. It’s not rap, but it kinda is, it’s not standup comedy, but it kinda is. It’s all those all together."

 

On the film’s fantastical premise:

"I stop short of calling it a fantasy. I present it in this fairytale kind of thing as far as for the masses to take in, but that’s not where I’m coming from. Where I’m coming from is my characters changed the course of the war. Now that didn’t happen, because my characters didn’t exist, but if they had existed, everything that happens in the movie is possible."

On the climax of the film:

"I set up scenes and I jerk you off to have a climax. And in this movie I jerked you off and I fucked with the climax… At some point those Nazi uniforms went away and they were people being burned alive. I think that’s part of the thing that fucks with the catharsis. And that’s a good thing."

On the Basterds:

"The reason that [Basterds leader Lt. Aldo Raine] wants to create a group of Jewish soldiers is that it’s a holy war. You can point at the gentiles and say, ‘Hey they have the luxury of being soldiers, you have a duty to be warriors.You’re fighting a holy war against an enemy that want to wipe your race off the face of this fucking earth and you have no obligation other than to be a warrior.’"

 

Check out Heeb‘s cover story on Inglourious Basterds in the Germany Issue by subscribing today.

What do you think?

About The Author

Heeb

The international media conspiracy and/or the new Jew review. Take your pick.

66 Responses

  1. MichaelLiss

    It is true. As the mom or grandmother of anyone who reads Heeb can tell you, we do all have a “duty to be worriers.”

    Freudian slip?

    Reply
  2. bobbycotter1

    @norman lol

    this film looks like it is going to be pretty wild and NOTHING like history..

    Reply
  3. Anonymous

    Quentin Jerome Tarantino (pronounced /ˌtærənˈtiːnoʊ/; born March 27, 1963) is an American film director, screenwriter, producer, cinematographer and actor. In the early 1990s he was an independent filmmaker whose films used nonlinear storylines and

    Reply
  4. Anonymous

    There is a certain authenticity behind an identify
    mbt shoes , it knows best. There is a certain authenticity behind an mbt that lodge

    Reply
  5. Anonymous

    i like the words You’re fighting a holy war against an enemy that want to wipe your race off the face of this fucking earth and you have no obligation other than to be a warrior.
    alt om spil

    Reply
  6. Anonymous

    I am looking to get one for my son as a present. I bought him one when he was younger, but you could only really see the moon through it. I guess I will need to go up market this time.. move ipod music |

    Reply
  7. Anonymous

    It’s almost as bad when you ask tag heuer watches voters how the law will affect them personally. There is lots of doubt and some considerable belief or hope that the new law won’t affect them

    Reply
  8. minimize

    Where I’m coming from is my characters changed the course of the war. Now that didn’t happen, because my characters didn’t exist, but if they had existed, everything that happens in the movie is possible.
    tryk

    Reply
  9. Anonymous

    Make that a long, deep breath. It could be at cartier watches least five months to nearly a year before a Verizon version of the iPhone is available. The original Journal cartier watches article reported that production of a CDMA version of the iPhone wou

    Reply

Leave a Reply to MichaelLiss Cancel Reply

Your email address will not be published.

This will close in 0 seconds