Bounty Hunter John Ruth (Kurt Russell) is escorting his $10K
bounty, Daisy Domergue (Jennifer Jason Leigh) via horse-drawn carriage to Red
Rock, Wyoming with an impending blizzard on the horizon. En route, they meet a fellow bounty hunter,
Major Marquis Warren (Samuel L. Jackson), stranded on the road with three
corpses in tow. They agree, after some
debate, to travel together to Red Rock.
They pick up one more lone soul on the road, Chris Mannix (Walton
Goggins), who claims that he is going to Red Rock to become its new
sheriff. With the blizzard quickly
approaching, the group holes up at Minnie’s Haberdashery and encounter a
Mexican named Bob (Demián Bichir) who is running the locale in the stead of
Minnie, allegedly away visiting relatives.
Inside is Englishman, Oswaldo Mobray (Tim Roth), who claims to be the
Hangman at Red Rock, Joe Gage (Michael Madsen), a traveler in Mobray’s
stagecoach, and an old Confederate general, Sandy Smithers (Bruce Dern). It immediately appears that the group will
have to spend two to three days together in the small locale to weather the
storm. However, it is also immediately
apparent that none really trust the other, and cabin fever is about to set in…
The Hateful Eight
has to be Tarantino’s weirdest film to date.
To me, that’s a good thing. I
expected this film to be traditional like Basterds
and Django, but Tarantino really
eschews all audience expectations with this one. Interesting to note, I perused the IMDb via
my smartphone after viewing the film, and in their Trivia section for this
film, John Carpenter’s The Thing (1982) was a major influence on
Tarantino during his writing of the screenplay.
I actually thought during the opening twenty minutes or so, Hateful Eight was going to play out like Howard Hawks’ Rio Bravo (1959) which
inspired John Carpenter to make Assault
on Precinct 13 (1976).
The pacing of The
Hateful Eight, at a runtime of nearly three hours, is the divisive factor
among audience members. The gruesome
violence in the film, of which there is quite a bit, will not deter anyone—it’s
commonplace in cinema, now. (Although
Tarantino’s violence has now reached the point of absurdity. It’s almost as if he views the human body as
one big balloon filled with blood that spews geysers when punctured). Even the film’s more audacious scenes, like
Major Warren’s narrative about how he killed General Smithers’s son, are old
hat for Tarantino—he’s already filmed a forced homosexual, sexual act with
interracial partners before, for example.
With an almost glacial pace,
Tarantino forces his viewers to figuratively rub shoulders with his characters
during the film’s runtime while its characters very uncomfortably rub shoulders
together before an inevitable showdown.
The triumph of The
Hateful Eight, like Death Proof, is
its subversion. From the outset of when
Samuel Jackson and Kurt Russell’s characters first meet, the tension and the
suspicion between the two is apparent.
(The tension between the members of the two sides of the Civil War only
heighten the immediate tension between the characters.) The film’s dialogue (Tarantino’s most lauded
attribute) is cryptic. For example,
Mobray gives a speech in the first act about how the act of hanging represents
justice in civilized society as opposed to a posse killing a wanted criminal
after hunting him down. Intuitively, one
would think that his speech is clever character exposition. (It is.)
His speech also plays out in powerful irony in the final scene of the
film, its resonance really felt after you exit the theatre. The best scene with the use of dialogue,
which really represents the film’s ethos, is when Daisy sings a song while
playing the guitar. The first verse of
the song is rather sweet and poetic.
Ruth asks Daisy to sing another verse, and the second one is amazing—it
prompts Ruth to snatch the guitar out of her hand and smash it to bits.
Visually, The Hateful
Eight has a lot of stuff hidden in its compositions, and when the
compositions aren’t being crafty their showing their stunning 70mm
ability. (Robert Richardson gets an
Oscar nomination for his cinematography.)
There is a bleakness and hopelessness to Westerns filmed in the snow,
like Sergio Corbucci’s masterful Il
grande silenzio (The Great Silence)
(1968), and The Hateful Eight is able
to replicate those sentiments. Minnie’s
Haberdashery looks like a meticulously composed trap for its inhabitants. The wilderness is perfectly captured.
The Hateful Eight
is a weird film. A truly dark comedy
about brutal subjects like murder, the Bounty trade, the Civil War, and
plain-old human existence. All the
performances are tops with especial note to Jackson who plays the lead in the
film. He plays a complex character who constantly
reveals another side to the audience as the film plays out. The humor is beyond dark—blowing off
someone’s head isn’t funny, and it is even less funny to particular characters
when a twelve-thousand-dollar bounty depended on its identity. Leigh receives an Oscar nomination for her
portrayal as Daisy, and she’s incredible—she looks like such a bad-ass in the
film, a proper villain. (I’m a true
fanboy for Leigh. She is one of my
favorite actresses, and I love nearly everything she does. Like most guys, I fell in love with her when
I first saw Fast Times at Ridgemont High
(1982).) I think what I especially love
about The Hateful Eight, although I am still digesting it,
is that Tarantino is not going to garner any new fans with this film. This type of daring and creativity is what I
long for in cinema. Quentin Tarantino is
officially back on my radar.
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