The Bride wakens from a four-year coma. The child she carried in her womb is gone. Now she must wreak vengeance on the team of assassins who betrayed her - a team she was once part of.
Director: Quentin Tarantino
Writers: Quentin Tarantino, Quentin Tarantino (character The Bride) (as Q) , 1 more credit »
Stars: Uma Thurman, David Carradine, Daryl Hannah | See full cast and crew »
Storyline
The lead character, called 'The Bride,' was a member of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad, led by her lover 'Bill.' Upon realizing she was pregnant with Bill's child, 'The Bride' decided to escape her life as a killer. She fled to Texas, met a young man, who, on the day of their wedding rehearsal was gunned down by an angry and jealous Bill (with the assistance of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad). Four years later, 'The Bride' wakes from a coma, and discovers her baby is gone. She, then, decides to seek revenge upon the five people who destroyed her life and killed her baby. The saga of Kill Bill Volume I begins.
Movie Reviews
It
has been six years since we have seen a movie from one of the world's
most talked about directors, Quentin Tarantino, but the wait for me, has
been worth the while. Tarantino can now add the martial arts
masterpiece 'Kill Bill' to his resume, a film that left me speechless
after I had seen it. It certainly is one intense, hateful movie,
containing some of the greatest sword fighting sequences ever filmed in a
movie. Tarantino has made KB with class, precision and close intense
attention to every detail. But, what else should we expect from a movie
freak, like Quentin Tarantino?
An entire wedding party is
slaughtered during a dress rehearsal in a rural chapel: the pregnant
woman in the blood-splattered wedding dress is Black Mamba, better known
as 'The Bride'. The assassin, Bill, and his circle known as 'The
Vipers' leave 'TB' for dead, however she was merely comatose. Four years
later, 'TB' suddenly awakes from her coma, ferociously focused on one
mission, to seek revenge on her former master. One by one, she will kill
the various assassins. She is saving Bill for last.
I am not
sure where I want to start with my review of Kill Bill. I love parts of
it, but then find other parts to be extremely difficult to watch.
Quentin Tarantino has written and directed another powerful piece of
cinema, in a way that only he could. This time we see more violence, the
action and the result of that violence, with it being a bit
over-powering in the end. But without the violence, KB would have not
been the movie it was.
This time Tarantino has not focussed on
the dialogue in this movie, when it came to writing its script, more he
wanted to show what the characters he had created, and why they were in
the position they were in. For me I can appreciate both aspects of what
Tarantino shows, as he can express himself either visually or with
dialogue.
The other part I like about KB is the way Tarantino
dedicated the movie to certain aspects of cinema history. To quote
Quentin he said Kill Bill is 'my yakuza movie, my samurai movie, my
spaghetti western movie', and it was quite clear for me how passionate
Tarantino was in showing these parts. However it was also so much more,
with one of the great sections of the movie being presented in Japanese
animation. I also believe that there was a clear reference to black and
white movies and silent movies, as KB had these sections a few times. I
also feel that Tarantino is in some way trying to show his appreciation
to Pulp Fiction, the movie that made him successful, via KB. If this is
true, I do not feel it is gloating, rather I give Tarantino great
praise, because some movie makers ignore the movies that give them
success, but not here.
While 'KB' has some interesting
characters, none are what I would call 'likeable'. 'The Bride', aka
Black Mamba (Uma Thurman) is a girl totally driven by the desire to get
revenge. Thurman really suits her part well, as she not only looks
attractive, but is really believable as this American martial arts tough
girl. Helping 'TB' on her quest is Samuri sword expert Hattori Hanzo
(Sonny Chiba). This character brings a very oriental feel to the movie,
something I liked. The bickering with his assistant was fun to see being
played out.
'The Deadly Viper Assassination Squad' are the cruel
callous people who inflict horrific harm on 'TB'. Bill (David
Carradine) is their leader, a person we only hear and see in hand
gestures, which is reminiscent of Marsellus Wallace in Pulp Fiction.
Bill still has a very strong presence in the film, even though we never
see him. Under Bill are killers like O-Ren Ishii, aka Cottonmouth (Lucy
Liu), whose introduction, via the Japanese Animation, was great. Under
Cottonmouth is her personal assistant, lawyer and translator, Sofie
Fatale (Julie Dreyfus), who was present at the slaughtering of 'TB'.
When 'TB' sees Sofie once again, she is pretty bitter about what Sofie
let have happen to her. What we hear has happened to Sofie at the hands
of 'TB', is truly unbelievable.
Another of Cottonmouth's women is
a little girl, Go Go Yubari (Chiaki Kuriyama), who is more deadly than
she looks. Her school girl sound and look is very interesting, while her
confrontation with 'TB' highly entertaining. Then there is the evil
nurse, Elle Driver, aka Californian Mountain Snake (Daryl Hannah), who
shows very little emotion towards 'TB', other than hate. Vernita Green
(Vivica A Fox) is another woman that 'TB' has on her hit list. Her
demise was highly entertaining to say the least, again reminiscent of
Pulp Fiction.
All the scenes with fighting in KB are a highlight
for me, especially the sword fighting, as they are so fun and intense,
with the last hour of the movie purely exhausting, with the final
showdown between 'TB' and Cottonmouth & co. being terrific. The
middle section of film was also great, as it tells the majority of the
KB Vol. 1 story, although parts are pretty disturbing.
Kill Bill
is another film by Quentin Tarantino, where I have to say it was
'exceptionally well made'. There is a scene in Volume 1, which reminded
me of 'Matrix Reloaded'. Now I have heard that Tarantino hates the
Matrix franchise, and you can see what he is making a stand against,
film's laden with SFX. KB is 'not guilty' of being that. The violence is
very graphic in KB, but at certain times the violence was 'laughable',
as it seemed to look deliberately fake. But perhaps I am wrong? Volume 1
ended at a good point, setting up the conclusion, Volume 2 beautifully.
So Kill Bill: Volume 2, get here, A.S.A.P.
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