likes Quentin's movies, and I still remember the surprise when I first watched "Popular Fiction" seven or eight years ago. The "Falling Dog" that I watched later is actually Quentin's debut. "Kill Bill" doesn't have any deep feeling. Although watching foreigners play Hong Kong Kung Fu is a bit new, I still like Quentin's storytelling.
Since the media knew that Quentin had filmed "Ring Room", they have been looking forward to the release of the disc. First, I watched "Death Proof", and then waited for a while to see "Planet of Horror" again.
"Evidence of Death" didn't seem to leave a deep impression, except for the cart that could toss people alive. "Planet of Horror" is extremely sensory, fully demonstrating the enthusiasm and energy of Quentin and Rodriguez, two "fans of cult violent movies in the 1970s".
Because Quentin’s original intention was to express the best "Ring Room" movie in his mind when he made this film, so we should not at all consider whether many of the plots in it are reasonable and true.
In fact, I am more interested in the female protagonist’s thighs that have no front and back. I really want to know how Quentin turned that thigh that was originally used for dancing into a super weapon, and how they made it. , Computer special effects?
After checking some information, it is said that Quentin has been in the video store since he was a child. His favorite movies are Hong Kong martial arts films, and the movie "GRINDHOUSE" in the Hollywood Walk of Fame and Times Square in New York in the 1960s and 1970s. The kind of movies shown in theaters usually incorporate pornography, violence, and various nonsensical stories.
There is also Rodriguez who has the same hobby as Quentin, who has filmed "Sin City". He also grew up watching movies in the torture room. These two men with the same aesthetics suddenly decided to co-produce a movie called "Xingfang" to show what a good movie they thought was. So there was "Xingfang".
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