I went through the Bret Easton Ellis Podcast interview with Quentin Tarantino back in 2015 and made a list of all the movies they mention.
Their discussion included a prior interview that they had and how it was negatively received by the public, 70s crime films, the possible loss of the theater experience, personal "rules for writing," 70s film sensibilities versus the 2010s, generational differences in terms of film and television, 70s permissiveness in terms of film watching, violence in movies, Hitchcock, the social satire aspects of De Palma's films, Godard, film critic Pauline Kael's comments & criticisms, "middle range" budget movies' disappearing, Miramax, the origin of QT's creativity, the Video Archives days, 2015 films and modern horror's problem with requiring…
I went through the Bret Easton Ellis Podcast interview with Quentin Tarantino back in 2015 and made a list of all the movies they mention.
Their discussion included a prior interview that they had and how it was negatively received by the public, 70s crime films, the possible loss of the theater experience, personal "rules for writing," 70s film sensibilities versus the 2010s, generational differences in terms of film and television, 70s permissiveness in terms of film watching, violence in movies, Hitchcock, the social satire aspects of De Palma's films, Godard, film critic Pauline Kael's comments & criticisms, "middle range" budget movies' disappearing, Miramax, the origin of QT's creativity, the Video Archives days, 2015 films and modern horror's problem with requiring a "logical" conclusion among other topics.
Look in the notes for specific points Tarantino & Ellis made and what their discussion was about in regards to each film. However, films with no notes are mentioned, but not discussed.
Also, below are directors and TV shows they made reference to without mentioning a specific film of their's and what they said about them.
- True Detective S1 - QT Didn't Like
- QT's not a "big" Hitchcock fan overall, a lot "left him cold" (50s particularly), more interested in the "Hitchcock acolytes" (i.e. Brian De Palma, Richard Franklin, Curtis Hanson & René Clément).
- QT finds a lot of violence in other films funny (Ex. Takashi Miike's films)
- Schoolhouse Rock, Speed Racer & other old cartoons as well as old commercials are referred to