<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss
version="2.0"
xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
xmlns:series="http://unfoldingneurons.com/"
> <channel><title>Comments on: Narrative, Framing, and Props in the Opening of Inglourious Basterds</title> <atom:link href="http://www.kellimarshall.net/unmuzzledthoughts/popculture/film/inglourious-basterds-narrative/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" /><link>http://www.kellimarshall.net/film/inglourious-basterds-narrative/</link> <description></description> <lastBuildDate>Sat, 04 Feb 2012 20:37:44 +0000</lastBuildDate> <sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod> <sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency> <generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=3.3.1</generator> <item><title>By: Kelli</title><link>http://www.kellimarshall.net/film/inglourious-basterds-narrative/#comment-5945</link> <dc:creator>Kelli</dc:creator> <pubDate>Tue, 01 Nov 2011 00:31:55 +0000</pubDate> <guid
isPermaLink="false">http://kellirmarshall.wordpress.com/?p=426#comment-5945</guid> <description>Yes, yes, yes. Thanks for pointing that out!</description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Yes, yes, yes. Thanks for pointing that out!</p> ]]></content:encoded> </item> <item><title>By: theoncominghope</title><link>http://www.kellimarshall.net/film/inglourious-basterds-narrative/#comment-5944</link> <dc:creator>theoncominghope</dc:creator> <pubDate>Tue, 01 Nov 2011 00:20:59 +0000</pubDate> <guid
isPermaLink="false">http://kellirmarshall.wordpress.com/?p=426#comment-5944</guid> <description>The bit when Shoshanna runs away reminds me of the Andrew Wyeth painting, Christina&#039;s World: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Christinasworld.jpg</description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The bit when Shoshanna runs away reminds me of the Andrew Wyeth painting, Christina&#8217;s World: <a
href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Christinasworld.jpg" rel="nofollow">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Christinasworld.jpg</a></p> ]]></content:encoded> </item> <item><title>By: Steven North</title><link>http://www.kellimarshall.net/film/inglourious-basterds-narrative/#comment-1309</link> <dc:creator>Steven North</dc:creator> <pubDate>Thu, 31 Mar 2011 22:00:13 +0000</pubDate> <guid
isPermaLink="false">http://kellirmarshall.wordpress.com/?p=426#comment-1309</guid> <description>Watch it. It&#039;s one of his best. I&#039;m not sure where you are seeing the bad reviews because there wasn&#039;t many. It was, after all, up for best picture as well as best director. </description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Watch it. It&#039;s one of his best. I&#039;m not sure where you are seeing the bad reviews because there wasn&#039;t many. It was, after all, up for best picture as well as best director.</p> ]]></content:encoded> </item> <item><title>By: Liz</title><link>http://www.kellimarshall.net/film/inglourious-basterds-narrative/#comment-1307</link> <dc:creator>Liz</dc:creator> <pubDate>Tue, 06 Apr 2010 11:14:21 +0000</pubDate> <guid
isPermaLink="false">http://kellirmarshall.wordpress.com/?p=426#comment-1307</guid> <description>The opening chapter is wonderfully shot, ingrosing and messmerizing. Also, it is a very quite and subtile brillance that feels very comfortable to the audiance.
The scene at the beginning of the film&#039;s finalchapter is, I feel, just as, if not more, flawless and brillently shot as the one you describe here. This scene is far from the quite intrigue of the first, but it still has that same brillence that the film maker does not (and need not) over emphasize.
The scene opens with the incredibly striking view of Shoshanna at the window. The near shilloutte light, the red dress, the movie poster half visable beyond her come together with a blarring bowie song. Its followed by the sequence of her before her vanity mirror, where she, the one no one suspects, perpares for hermoment,her revenge. Tarintino skillful mixes the props and symbols around Shoshanna,to convey both her feminenan and sterotypical womanly apparence that is her cover and her defence, and the deadly and strong person that she truly is. There is the lipstick, seen first in close up on just her profiled lips, and then in that brillent Tarantino moment, as her war paint. The theres the hat with the lace vail she slowly unroles before her face; a symbol of feminine modesty, is her disguse, hiding the &quot;giant face&quot; that is going to have its revenge. There the fast close upon her brillently red fingernails as she loads the gold bullets into the hand gun, they are shot and lit in a way that make them seem almost as if theywere her jewels for that night, and, in a way, thats exactly what they are.
This weapon, she loads into a small feminian hand bag. It must be noted that scene is also an incredible visual examination of Shoshanna&#039;s character, and her character&#039;s femininty and identity. At all other times in the film, and spcecifically in the slpiced in shots in this scene, Shoshanna dresses like a man; slacks, newsboy cap, and she comands her self with a confidence and determination that was rare of a woman (espeacally of a hiding Jew) in the secound world war.
A great characte anf a n incredible scene </description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The opening chapter is wonderfully shot, ingrosing and messmerizing. Also, it is a very quite and subtile brillance that feels very comfortable to the audiance.<br
/> The scene at the beginning of the film&#039;s finalchapter is, I feel, just as, if not more, flawless and brillently shot as the one you describe here. This scene is far from the quite intrigue of the first, but it still has that same brillence that the film maker does not (and need not) over emphasize.<br
/> The scene opens with the incredibly striking view of Shoshanna at the window. The near shilloutte light, the red dress, the movie poster half visable beyond her come together with a blarring bowie song. Its followed by the sequence of her before her vanity mirror, where she, the one no one suspects, perpares for hermoment,her revenge. Tarintino skillful mixes the props and symbols around Shoshanna,to convey both her feminenan and sterotypical womanly apparence that is her cover and her defence, and the deadly and strong person that she truly is. There is the lipstick, seen first in close up on just her profiled lips, and then in that brillent Tarantino moment, as her war paint. The theres the hat with the lace vail she slowly unroles before her face; a symbol of feminine modesty, is her disguse, hiding the &quot;giant face&quot; that is going to have its revenge. There the fast close upon her brillently red fingernails as she loads the gold bullets into the hand gun, they are shot and lit in a way that make them seem almost as if theywere her jewels for that night, and, in a way, thats exactly what they are.<br
/> This weapon, she loads into a small feminian hand bag. It must be noted that scene is also an incredible visual examination of Shoshanna&#039;s character, and her character&#039;s femininty and identity. At all other times in the film, and spcecifically in the slpiced in shots in this scene, Shoshanna dresses like a man; slacks, newsboy cap, and she comands her self with a confidence and determination that was rare of a woman (espeacally of a hiding Jew) in the secound world war.</p><p>A great characte anf a n incredible scene</p> ]]></content:encoded> </item> <item><title>By: anonomyous</title><link>http://www.kellimarshall.net/film/inglourious-basterds-narrative/#comment-1306</link> <dc:creator>anonomyous</dc:creator> <pubDate>Fri, 05 Mar 2010 14:24:31 +0000</pubDate> <guid
isPermaLink="false">http://kellirmarshall.wordpress.com/?p=426#comment-1306</guid> <description>Kill Bill is the exception as it was his best directed film. Kill Bill was a beautifully shot movie with scenes and characterization accompanied with phenomenal music choices that will be forever remembered and copied with notable scenes as when &quot;Black Mamba&quot; hacks everyone to bloody pieces in the restaurant wearing the yellow suit and close ups of eye&#039;s as to assimilate an intended action along with numerous other area&#039;s of remembrance leading the way but with the comment I am not saying his direction is horrible by any means but the writing and characterization are more defined and beyond the level of which he is as a director. With every movie he makes his skill as a director increases as he is still learning. Rodriguez brought Tarantino on to guest direct a scene from Sin City teaching him the finer points of the green screen. Next movie he made was the notable Kill Bill but what I ask is aside from known scenes like the one in Pulp Fiction when Travolta brings back Mia with a jab to the heart with epinephrine and the as-for-mention (and unmentioned scenes) of Kill Bill, what carries on  more the dialogue (with great characterization and memorable monologues as heard in Pulp fiction with Sam Jackson&#039;s known line and Walken&#039;s monologue describing the watch for example)or his directing? </description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Kill Bill is the exception as it was his best directed film. Kill Bill was a beautifully shot movie with scenes and characterization accompanied with phenomenal music choices that will be forever remembered and copied with notable scenes as when &quot;Black Mamba&quot; hacks everyone to bloody pieces in the restaurant wearing the yellow suit and close ups of eye&#039;s as to assimilate an intended action along with numerous other area&#039;s of remembrance leading the way but with the comment I am not saying his direction is horrible by any means but the writing and characterization are more defined and beyond the level of which he is as a director. With every movie he makes his skill as a director increases as he is still learning. Rodriguez brought Tarantino on to guest direct a scene from Sin City teaching him the finer points of the green screen. Next movie he made was the notable Kill Bill but what I ask is aside from known scenes like the one in Pulp Fiction when Travolta brings back Mia with a jab to the heart with epinephrine and the as-for-mention (and unmentioned scenes) of Kill Bill, what carries on  more the dialogue (with great characterization and memorable monologues as heard in Pulp fiction with Sam Jackson&#039;s known line and Walken&#039;s monologue describing the watch for example)or his directing?</p> ]]></content:encoded> </item> <item><title>By: Kelli Marshall</title><link>http://www.kellimarshall.net/film/inglourious-basterds-narrative/#comment-1305</link> <dc:creator>Kelli Marshall</dc:creator> <pubDate>Fri, 05 Mar 2010 12:21:37 +0000</pubDate> <guid
isPermaLink="false">http://kellirmarshall.wordpress.com/?p=426#comment-1305</guid> <description>Ahh, you write, &quot;While Tarantino has directed some great films I feel as if he is a better writer than director.&quot; Even so with the KILL BILL films? (By the way, whom am I talking to?) </description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ahh, you write, &quot;While Tarantino has directed some great films I feel as if he is a better writer than director.&quot; Even so with the KILL BILL films? (By the way, whom am I talking to?)</p> ]]></content:encoded> </item> <item><title>By: Anonymous</title><link>http://www.kellimarshall.net/film/inglourious-basterds-narrative/#comment-1304</link> <dc:creator>Anonymous</dc:creator> <pubDate>Fri, 05 Mar 2010 11:54:43 +0000</pubDate> <guid
isPermaLink="false">http://kellirmarshall.wordpress.com/?p=426#comment-1304</guid> <description>The opening scene to Inglorious Basterds was phenomenally shot with exquisite cinematography, colors, and acting. Along with the as-for-mentioned scene the other scene sticking out in my mind is the one in which the Basterds are meeting up with the German actress Hamersschmidt (I am really bad at spelling so this prob came out wrong) in the bar when due to spur of the moment preparation, shit goes wrong and aside from the last scene which, while proposing and alternate to WWII, had slipped on cinematography. I felt as though the cinematography, unlike Grand Illusion in its essence constantly employing beautifully shots scenes with remarkable cinematography,  had faded on most scenes only trying to re-capture what had been lost as a whole. While Tarantino has directed some great films I feel as if he is a better writer than director. </description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The opening scene to Inglorious Basterds was phenomenally shot with exquisite cinematography, colors, and acting. Along with the as-for-mentioned scene the other scene sticking out in my mind is the one in which the Basterds are meeting up with the German actress Hamersschmidt (I am really bad at spelling so this prob came out wrong) in the bar when due to spur of the moment preparation, shit goes wrong and aside from the last scene which, while proposing and alternate to WWII, had slipped on cinematography. I felt as though the cinematography, unlike Grand Illusion in its essence constantly employing beautifully shots scenes with remarkable cinematography,  had faded on most scenes only trying to re-capture what had been lost as a whole. While Tarantino has directed some great films I feel as if he is a better writer than director.</p> ]]></content:encoded> </item> <item><title>By: princesscowboy</title><link>http://www.kellimarshall.net/film/inglourious-basterds-narrative/#comment-1303</link> <dc:creator>princesscowboy</dc:creator> <pubDate>Fri, 28 Aug 2009 13:08:27 +0000</pubDate> <guid
isPermaLink="false">http://kellirmarshall.wordpress.com/?p=426#comment-1303</guid> <description>I&#039;ve been avoiding this film since I can only go out to so many films and it hasn&#039;t gotten the greatest reviews. But this post has intrigued me. Perhaps I&#039;ll go now? </description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#039;ve been avoiding this film since I can only go out to so many films and it hasn&#039;t gotten the greatest reviews. But this post has intrigued me. Perhaps I&#039;ll go now?</p> ]]></content:encoded> </item> </channel> </rss>
<!-- This Quick Cache file was built for (  www.kellimarshall.net/unmuzzledthoughts/popculture/film/inglourious-basterds-narrative/feed/ ) in 0.37300 seconds, on Feb 8th, 2012 at 3:20 am UTC. -->
<!-- This Quick Cache file will automatically expire ( and be re-built automatically ) on Feb 8th, 2012 at 4:20 am UTC -->
