Monday, May 25, 2020

Analysis Of Quentin Tarantino s The World Of...

In his interview, Quentin Tarantino describes Inglourious Basterds as a product of his imagination (Gilby 175). If one had watched the film, he can see that the film is based on the real World War II setting as it portrays actual key figures - Hitler, Goebbels, and Churchill - and events around that time, such as German occupation in Paris and the Holocaust. Even though the film uses actual World War II setting, the story as a whole is a pure fiction. The film is a fictional alternate history of two different, but intertwined plots to assassinate Hitler. In reality, Hitler was not assassinated by the Jews, nor by Americans because he committed suicide. But, in the world of Inglourious Basterds, Tarantino twists the actual history by creating a fictional story of Hitler’s assassination, which is effectively achieved by Shoshanna, a French Jewish cinema proprietor, and two Jewish-American soldiers from the Basterds, a team of Jewish-American soldiers led by Lt. Aldo Raine. What Tarantino wants to imply through this film is that in the world of film, anything can be made possible, even altering history, at the filmmaker’s discretion. Tarantino has let his imagination run wild and satisfied the â€Å"what if† questions that not only he but also others might have: What if Jews retaliated back and fight the Nazis? What if Americans have killed Hitler and dismantled Third Reich? Through Inglourious Basterds, Quentin Tarantino recognizes cinema as a medium that has the power to deviate

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