"Kill Bill"
Quentin Tarantino faltered his last time out of the
gate with the sub par, for him, "Jackie Brown." But,
the man who gave us "Reservoir Dogs" and "Pulp
Fiction" is back in fun form with his tale of mayhem,
vengeance and a whole lot of sword fighting in "Kill
Bill, Volume One."
Uma Thurman is the lady with no name, the sole
survivor of the brutal slaughter of a wedding party by
the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad led by Bill
(David Carradine). But, they made one mistake. They
did not make 100% sure that the bride was dead. Four
years later, she comes out of her coma and the only
thing she wants is revenge over the life, and unborn
baby, that she lost at Bill's command.
Tarantino's real "Kill Bill" is about four hours long
and he, smartly, broke it in two. "Volume One" has the
nameless warrior woman set off to dispatch those who
took her life away. In doing so, the director/writer
uses a variety of techniques with samurai sword fights
galore, wire work that makes "Crouching Tiger, Hidden
Dragon" look cheesy, and an anime sequence used to
introduce O-Ren Ishii (Lucy Lu), one of the Deadly
Vipers responsible for the slaughter and now the head
of the criminal yakuza in all of Japan. The animated
method is cleverly done and, in a short space of time,
develops the character very well. This is a good thing
as Lucy Lu is the worst thing about "Kill Bill." Sure,
she is very pretty, but she offers nothing to her
character except her blank good looks.
Uma Thurman, on the other hand, does an exemplary job
as the lady with no name. The short, tough lines she
mouths suit the character perfectly and she handles
her sword with grace. In typical spaghetti western
fashion, she must take on ever increasing numbers of
blade-wielding bad guys until the grand finale's
battle royal. I won't spoil it for Tarantino's fans
but Busby Berkeley would be proud of its choreography
and imagination, as would Roger Corman for the
splatter fest.
Production design (Yohei Tanada and David Wasco) and
art direction (Daniel Bradford) work hand in hand to
create the comic book look and feel that the helmer is
obviously striving for. Costume, too, by Kumiko Ogawa
and Catherine Marie Thomas, catches the kitch and is
over the top. Robert Richardson's lensing is in
keeping with the fast paced action and highly
choreographed sword battles.
Quentin Tarantino isn't going for serious drama here,
despite the woman's story of loss and pain. He keeps
things on a cartoon level, especially with the
extended anime sidebar. The action, too, is on the
incredible side but it is fun to watch. There are
oodles of asides to other movies (including the
helmer's own) and the film is a heartfelt homage to
B-movies, samurai and chop-sockie flicks and cult
films in general.
While it is a clever move to break "Kill Bill" up into
two parts, I found "Volume One" to be less than
satisfying. I felt a tiny bit cheated by not having
Tarantino's smorgasbord of mayhem a complete work.
This installment just whetted my appetite for the
whole enchilada. I am sure that I will want to see the
whole thing a second time just to catch all of the
film in jokes and references. I give it a B.
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