Quentin Tarantino on What Makes ‘Dunkirk’ a Masterpiece | The Rewatchables | The Ringer

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Published 2020-01-06
‘The Rewatchables’ podcast is joined by very special guest Quentin Tarantino to discuss Christopher Nolan’s 2017 war film, ‘Dunkirk,’ and what makes it an underappreciated masterpiece.

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All Comments (21)
  • @jonmichael3280
    Movies like Dunkirk are shot so well you can almost smell the air
  • @polypeptide
    Really nice to hear Tarantino admiring another director’s work. Especially one as recent as this. I want to hear more about what he thinks about Nolan and others.
  • @j0nnyism
    I like the way Dunkirk portrays the bravery of ordinary people living through extraordinary experiences. These men were our grandfathers.
  • @wolfstar675
    I remember I watched Dunkirk at the last show of the day in an empty theater. What I loved the most about it was the fact that the movie never lets you pause and breathe. It just keeps moving and moving and moving until the very last 5 minutes. The characters are always in a rush. Almost no movies do that today.
  • Now I wanna hear Nolan pick a Tarantino film and nerd out over it
  • @braeduin
    The part that impressed me the most was the sound. In particular how Nolan reinvented the sound of the Stuka's dive. A lot of people criticized it and we're like "That's not how the Stuka sounded". However, the siren's wail has been used so many times in film to represent a plane falling and crashing, film goers have been desensitised to it. Nolan changed it up because I think he wanted to recreate the feeling of hearing that sound for the first time and the numbing terror it inspired.
  • The part of the movie that stayed with me is how he showed how those people died on the ship slowly. It's haunting and sad, you can see the desperation on their eyes, and it's so horrific thinking how it feels to be there and Nolan made you felt that
  • @Jedi_Are_Scum
    The best part of the film is that we never really see the enemy. Even when they are near by shooting. It adds a horror film element.
  • @roloug95
    That final oil sequence where the music crescendos and the three different timelines finally converge together is like what pure cinema feels like. It literally why I go to the movies.
  • He mentions elsewhere that the film changed in his mind when he saw a London audience crying when the civilian boats arrived on the rescue mission. Incredible scene.
  • @jonkeau5155
    Something that must be understood about Dunkirk is it’s told like a memory of an experience from each persons perspective. You forget most of what people said in your memories, just vivid pictures and scenes, strong emotions, not many extra sounds, they feel like they’re being relived through rose colored glasses in a way.
  • @mattkemerait
    Dunkirk was a atmosphere soaked, 90 min. anxiety attack and it was glorious.
  • @danielllll521
    Christopher Nolan doesn't have an apex mountain, he has a whole damn range.
  • In addition to everything else being said, the Sound, not necessarily the soundtrack, the Sounds of the movie is phenomenal. The planes, the small boat engine, the gunfire, the explosions, the natural sounds
  • I rewatched Dunkirk over 7 times. They had a veteran from the war that as there and he said watching that made him feel like he was actually back in France that day, that’s how well this was produced. It’s not often you can rewatch a newly made film these days. This movie deserved a golden globe.
  • @Zack-xv2yc
    Dunkirk, a film criticised by many to be lacking in focus, dialogue and character. And then there's Quentin Tarantino, a filmmaking master at all three, says that this is Christopher Nolan's best work. Really shows that perspective DOES matter.
  • @gohumberto
    I can't comprehend the pressure involved in making a movie like Dunkirk. Directors of big-budget Hollywood movies must have project management skills of the very highest order.
  • @Folap
    I have had the privilege of seeing Dunkirk at one of the few real Imax theaters format three times. It is hard to describe how good this movie looks and sounds in the large format.