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Bill Vol. 2 Movie Review
last November that Kill Bill:
Vol. 1 was like listening to Yo-Yo Ma play 41 different
variations on the old Batman television theme. Kill
Bill Vol. 2 is much the same, only this time, he's playing
the theme from Bonanza.
Now, I like the theme
from "Bonanza" but I obviously don't like
it in the same way that Quentin Tarantino likes it.
There is such a thing as too much and Tarantino's grand
excess for the love of film burbles over in Vol. 2.
It reminds me of Janeane Garofalo's line from The Truth
About Cats and Dogs to the person who admitted to giving
their cat a tongue-bath: "We can love our pets,
we just can't luuuuuuvvvvv our pets.
Cats and Dogs also starred
the tall, Valkyrian Uma Thurman, who is the centerpiece
of Vol. 2, as she was with Vol. 1. She's as impossibly
gorgeous as ever, with facile delivery and charm when
she wants to (I'm still in love with her character from
Beautiful Girls). It's easy to see why Tarantino is
so puppy-dog smitten.
Thurman continues her
role as Black Mamba (aka, the Bride) who was shot in
the head and left for dead by her former partners. Having
dispensed with Cottonmouth (aka O-ren Ishi, played by
Lucy Liu) and Copperhead (aka Vernita Green, played
by Vivica Fox in the first installment of Kill, the
Bride now has three more to cross out on her revenge
list: California Mountain Snake (aka Elle Driver, played
by Daryl Hannah), Sidewinder (aka Budd, played by Michael
Madsen) and, of course, Bill (David Carradine). Thrown
into the mix to complicate things is the Bride's daughter,
who is living under Bill's roof.
And, there's no denying
that if you're going to listen to 41 variations on the
"Bonanza" theme that Tarantino is one of the
few people working today who can make a good portion
of it worthwhile. There is a scene, where the Bride
is preparing to kill Budd, and in ninja garb outside
of his trailer—and Budd hears something and looks
out the window--that is so simple and so elegant and
so composed and so damn good that I wish someone would
make this son-a-bitch work harder. Make him direct Open
Range (with his tweaks, of course) and you've got a
film for the ages. Given his near unlimited resources
Tarantino makes his 8-1/2, all self-indulgence and unfettered.
Yes, he's the only one out there doing something like
this. No, I don't particularly want any more of it.
Also blissfully absent
from Vol. 2 are scenes like the "Pussy-wagon"
hospital scene or the kiddie-porn anime sequence from
the first installment. Tarantino had seemed to promise
in Vol. 1 a more tragic tale, hewing closer to spaghetti
westerns. He promised that with the mournful, regret-laden
presence of Budd, who seemed to believe that the non-comatose
members of the Viper Squad have got what's coming to
them from their victim. Tarantino turns that on its
head but not in the way you expect it, leading up to
a scene straight out of the original Vanishing and finally
There Was a Crooked Man (see? it's impossible not to
be drawn to the director's film references, it's like
getting a cookie for recognizing the inspiration of
the scene).
What Tarantino does
not do is deliver on the common sense of a spaghetti
western. In "Massacre at Two Pines" we discover
that the entire Viper Squad, including the number one
yakuza boss in Japan (O-Ren), was brought in to machine-gun
a wedding part, which takes all of eight to ten seconds.
In a sequence near the end, a child who has just been
sent to bed doesn't wake up when guns are fired in the
house. You can't maintain a decent sense of drama in
a western, homage or not, without it.
There is one final
irony about all of this. Though I think Kill is largely
a masturbatory exercise I know, if it's on cable some
night, I'm going to watch it. That's a testament to
Tarantino's awesome prowess, even if it is in the service
of a video clerk's fantasies.
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