Quentin Tarantino’s Final Movie Title Revealed
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Quentin Tarantino is still adamant that he will retire after directing ten stand-alone movies, so that he won’t be making movies when he’s gotten so old that he’s out of touch with the movie industry.
His final movie, therefore, now has a working title.
Quentin Tarantino – To Make A Female Led Movie As His Self-proclaimed Final Project
On Tuesday, the Hollywood Reporter shared that Tarantino, 59, has written a female led movie titled “The Movie Critic” that will round out his movie-making days. According to sources, Tarantino will begin directing the movie in the fall, even though further details of the plot and premise are currently under wraps.
Set in the 1970s in Los Angeles, the movie centers around a female lead. As a result of the name, THR surmised that the movie could well be about the late movie critic Pauline Kael, whom Tarantino “is known to have a deep respect for,” and worked together with when she worked as a consultant for Paramount Pictures. Kael passed away in 2001.
However, this prediction could well be bust as no news about the plot details have been shared. At the moment, no studio has been associated with the project and it could be auctioned for potential buyers as early as this week.
The filmmaker’s last movie, “Once Upon A Time… in Hollywood,” was distributed by Sony.
Quentin Tarantino – On Why He’s Only Making Ten Movies
For many years, Tarantino has continued to steadfastly claim that he’ll only be making ten standaone movies throughout his career. After releasing nine standalone movies – not including 2007’s Death Proof, which served as half of the double feature Grindhouse alongside Robert Rodriguez’s Planet Terror – he told CNN’s Chris Wallace that he fully intends to keep to his word.
“I’ve been doing it for a long time; I’ve been doing it for 30 years. And it’s time to wrap up the show,” Tarantino told Wallace, 75 of his wish to leave behind his successful career that kicked off in 1992 with “Reservoir Dogs”. “I’m an entertainer. I want to leave you wanting more.”
Throughout his career, Tarantino has won two Academy Awards for screenwriting: for 1994’s Pulp Fiction and 2012’s Django Unchained, both of which he also directed.
He also told Wallace that he does not want his career to be one of diminishing returns, explaining: “I don’t want to become this old man who’s out of touch when, already, I’m feeling a bit like an old man out of touch when it comes to the current movies that are out right now.”
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