Grind House (Tarantino/Rodriguez)

Brian in Mesa

Advocatus Diaboli
Super Moderator
Moderator
Supporting Member
Joined
May 13, 2002
Posts
74,101
Reaction score
26,594
Location
Killjoy Central
Tarantino & Rodriguez Begin Grind
Source: Variety
February 2, 2006


The Weinstein Company's Grind -- for which Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez are each set to direct a 60-minute horror tale -- is headed into production in the coming weeks, with Rodriguez readying to shoot his segment on his home turf of Austin, Texas.

Variety says Rodriguez's part, "Planet Terror," will be a zombie movie, while Tarantino's section, "Death Proof," will a slasher film. Casting hasn't been announced for either segment.

The two filmmakers are hammering out concepts for some of the faux trailers and ads that will run between the two pics as an intermission.

Tarantino is keen this time on shooting a fake trailer for a sexploitation movie titled "Cowgirls in Sweden." Other possibilities include a blaxploitation film and a kung-fu movie.

The trade says that Grind will be shot in the tradition of the '70s exploitation films that influences both helmers.

The studio is targeting a September 22 release for Grind.
 
Last edited:

abomb

Registered User
Supporting Member
Joined
Oct 3, 2003
Posts
21,836
Reaction score
1
I am very much looking forward to this flick. RR and QT have been consistently putting out some unique stuff.

A-Bomb
 
OP
OP
Brian in Mesa

Brian in Mesa

Advocatus Diaboli
Super Moderator
Moderator
Supporting Member
Joined
May 13, 2002
Posts
74,101
Reaction score
26,594
Location
Killjoy Central
Dimension to Release Grind House on Easter
Source: Dimension Films
May 19, 2006


Dimension Films has announced that Grind House, a collaboration from directors Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez, will be released in theaters Easter weekend, 2007. The announcement was made today by Bob Weinstein, co-chairman of Dimension Films.

"The Easter holiday was a record-breaking weekend for Dimension this year with 'Scary Movie 4,' and we are confident that 'Grind House' will do extremely well in this slot," said Bob Weinstein.

Dimension Films had major box office success on April 1, 2005 with Sin City, directed by Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller, and prior to that on April 16, 2004, when the Weinsteins released Tarantino's Kill Bill Vol. 2 through Miramax Films.

Grind House will include two individually shot genre films: Rodriguez's zombie movie, Planet Terror, and Tarantino's slasher flick, Death Proof. The features will be shot in the tradition of the 70s exploitation films and will be joined by faux movie trailers.

The ensemble cast for Rodriguez's Planet Terror includes Freddy Rodriguez, Rose McGowan, Josh Brolin, Marley Shelton, Michael Biehn, Stacy Ferguson, Jeff Fahey and Michael Parks.

The ensemble cast for Tarantino's Death Proof will be announced in the coming weeks.

Sandra Condito, vice president of production and development, Shannon McIntosh, executive vice president of production and post production and Richard Saperstein, president of production, will oversee the project on behalf of Dimension, reporting to Bob Weinstein.
 
OP
OP
Brian in Mesa

Brian in Mesa

Advocatus Diaboli
Super Moderator
Moderator
Supporting Member
Joined
May 13, 2002
Posts
74,101
Reaction score
26,594
Location
Killjoy Central
Mods -

Could someone please change the thread title to reflect the movie's new name: Grind House.

Thanks in advance.

BIM
 
OP
OP
Brian in Mesa

Brian in Mesa

Advocatus Diaboli
Super Moderator
Moderator
Supporting Member
Joined
May 13, 2002
Posts
74,101
Reaction score
26,594
Location
Killjoy Central
Brian in Mesa said:
Mods -

Could someone please change the thread title to reflect the movie's new name: Grind House.

Thanks in advance.

BIM

Nevermind.

Edited it myself.

:jedi:
 

abomb

Registered User
Supporting Member
Joined
Oct 3, 2003
Posts
21,836
Reaction score
1
From ew.com'

Best friends since the early '90s, dardevil directors Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez are curently shooting Grind House (due in 2007), a tribute to the zombie romps, slasher flicks, and women-in-prison extravaganzas the two were weaned on. Each will direct a one-hour film, and the two will be bridged by a bunch of fake trailers. EW got Tarantino and Rodriguez together on a conference call and asked them about their new film and the films that inspired it.

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: How did the two of you meet?
QUENTIN TARANTINO We first met at the Toronto Film Festival, and we talked for about an hour and a half in a crowded hotel lobby.
ROBERT RODRIGUEZ He had Reservoir Dogs, and I had El Mariachi. We were on panel discussions together about violence in the movies. And when we first met, he said to me, ''My next project, you're gonna like. It's called Pulp Fiction!'' And then I got back to Sony and found we had offices next to each other. That's how we hung out. He would read me stuff from Pulp Fiction, and I would show him storyboards for Desperado.

Where did the idea for Grind House come from?
RODRIGUEZ I used to go to Quentin's house and he'd show me these movies in his home theater. He'd always program the night with some really great trailers from the era and then a feature, then a few more trailers, and then another feature. And I was like, ''Man, we have to re-create these nights for the rest of the world!'' And right then, he was like, ''We have to call it Grind House!''

How did Harvey and Bob Weinstein (whose Weinstein Co. will release Grind House) react when you pitched it to them?
TARANTINO Truthfully, they're always happy whenever we want to do another movie. [Laughs]
RODRIGUEZ It's always hard for Quentin and myself to say What are we going to follow up our last movie with? Because he did Kill Bill, and I did Sin City. What was nice about this is mentally, we could get ourselves off the hook of a follow-up, because we were like, ''It's an exploitation movie, it's a double feature, it almost doesn't count. It's like a throwaway.''
TARANTINO And because we wrote it with that attitude, I was surprised, because I think it's one of the best scripts I've ever written. This isn't going to be like Twilight Zone: The Movie. This is a legitimate double feature. With the trailers we're doing, it's gonna be like an alternate film universe. Me and Robert are going to do some trailers, but also Eli Roth [Hostel] is doing a trailer, and Edgar Wright [Shaun of the Dead] is doing one.
RODRIGUEZ It's like, ''What?! We get all of that for 10 bucks!?'' It's like five movies in one.

Why do you love the exploitation movies of the '70s so much?
RODRIGUEZ A lot of these movies, when Quentin would show them, the prints would be in disrepair. So sometimes you'd miss key lines of dialogue, or you could tell whole scenes were cut out because the film broke there.
TARANTINO We were watching this Oliver Reed-Richard Widmark movie called The Sell-Out, and it was missing a reel right in the middle. And I've come to like it that way. I don't even want to know what happens in the missing reel. I like having to figure it out. Richard Widmark has this girl, and you can't tell if Oliver Reed had sex with her in the missing reel or not. Maybe he did, and that's why they're all mad at each other. It was Rick [Dazed and Confused] Linklater's idea that we do the missing reel.
RODRIGUEZ We tried to use that stuff to our favor. In my film, we have a missing reel. A sign comes up in the second-half that says ''Missing Reel.'' It's like you went on a 20-minute bathroom break and you come back and all hell's broken loose.

Tell me about each of your Grind House films...
TARANTINO Our original idea was to do a horror double feature. The genre I wanted to tackle was slasher films, because I'm a big fan of late-'70s, early-'80s slasher films. The only thing was, what makes them so good is the genre is so rigid. And I had an idea about a guy who kills girls with his car as opposed to a machete, and I put it in a slasher-film structure. Other than the big car moments, though, my thing could be a Eugene O'Neill play. These girls just talk and talk and talk. If it wasn't for the car stuff, I could do my thing on stage.

So it's like Christine meets Long Day's Journey Into Night...
TARANTINO Yeah, but with more slasher elements! [Laughs] It's called Death Proof. I'm casting right now; more than likely the killer will be Mickey Rourke.

Quentin, what's your favorite slasher movie of all time?
TARANTINO Well, since mine is a hybrid of a slasher movie and a car-chase flick, I'll give you one of each. The benchmark for this kind of car-chase flick is Vanishing Point. And as far as slasher films go, of course, I love Halloween and all those. But as time's gone on, I think My Bloody Valentine may be my favorite.

Robert, tell me about your film.
RODRIGUEZ Mine's a zombie movie called Planet Terror. It feels like a John Carpenter movie that took place between Escape From New York and The Thing. I wanted to do a zombie script a while back because there hadn't been any good zombie movies in a while. I got about 30 pages into it, and then all these zombie movies came out. So I thought, Well, I don't have to make them zombies — there could be other reasons why they're like this. They're infected people. Quentin, what's that story?
TARANTINO There was this Umberto Lenzi zombie movie in the '70s called Nightmare City, and a while ago some friends of mine were going to meet him in Rome, and I told them to tell him how much I loved Nightmare City. And they told him. And he goes, ''Zombies? What's theees zombies? They're infected people!''

Robert, since you're doing a zombie movie, what's your favorite zombie film?
RODRIGUEZ I still love Romero's Dawn of the Dead.

When did you develop your love of these movies?
TARANTINO When I was little they'd have TV ads for these movies on Saturday mornings. You'd be watching Soul Train and then a commercial would come on for a blaxploitation movie like Three the Hard Way or Brotherhood of Death. And as soon as I got old enough to look like I could get into an R-rated movie, I'd go to the ghetto theater in my neighborhood — the Carson Twin Cinema in Carson, Calif. — and I saw every kung-fu movie that came out from '76 on, every Italian horror film, pom-pom girl films. I would sit through movies I didn't even care for three times. Even as a kid I knew I would get things from The Girl From Starship Venus that I wouldn't get from the Hollywood films.
RODRIGUEZ What made these exploitation movies great is that they were low-budget, they were trying to compete with major studios, they couldn't afford big stars. So they had what you would call ''exploitable elements'' like sex and violence. And then you would see it in this grind-house setting where they'd have two or three movies showing at once. The people going to those theaters got a whole different sense of American filmmaking because they were seeing things that weren't in the mainstream. And Quentin, of course, saw all of them.

So is the point of Grind House for the two of you to make the best ''crappy'' movie you can?
TARANTINO You're bringing all the judgment there. That's your adjective. I never use the term crap. Ever! These are not so-bad-they're-good movies. I love this stuff! And that's what we want to re-create. For lack of a better word, we want Grind House to be a ride. I think we could both go out with our movies and have them stand on their own. But what's so good about this is it's two movies, and trailers, and bad prints, and if a little bit of gang violence breaks out in the theater, all the better! It just makes the whole experience more interactive!

Are you working on each other's Grind House films at all?
RODRIGUEZ Quentin's directing second unit on mine and I'm going to be his DP.

The two of you have collaborated in the past — Quentin directed a sequence in Sin City and acted in From Dusk Till Dawn and Desperado, and I know you show each other the scripts you're working on. How important is it to have a friend and collaborator like that?
RODRIGUEZ We're really great friends first and we just happen to make movies second.
TARANTINO One of the things that's really nice about it is we're great audience members for each other's movies.
RODRIGUEZ I almost just make movies now so I can see them at Quentin's house.

Do you give each other criticism? Are you honest and ever say, ''This sucks''?
RODRIGUEZ I probably would have to be honest with him if that ever came up.
TARANTINO If I ever said that to Robert, he'd go, ''Great, rewrite it!''
RODRIGUEZ When Quentin read my script for Four Rooms, he added a bunch of lines and was like, ''I hope you don't mind.'' And then it became expected after that. Now, I'm like, ''Hey, when you read my script, if you have any ideas, pry them in there!'' There was one big speech in Planet Terror that I was trying to write to lure an actor for the part, and I just wrote in the script ''To be rewritten by QT.''
[Both crack up]
 
OP
OP
Brian in Mesa

Brian in Mesa

Advocatus Diaboli
Super Moderator
Moderator
Supporting Member
Joined
May 13, 2002
Posts
74,101
Reaction score
26,594
Location
Killjoy Central
Grindhouse (aka Grind House)

Release Date: April 6, 2007
Studio: Dimension Films (The Weinstein Company)
Director: Quentin Tarantino, Robert Rodriguez
Screenwriter: Quentin Tarantino, Robert Rodriguez
Genre: Horror
MPAA Rating: Not Available
Website: Grindhousemovie.net

Starring: "Death Proof" - Kurt Russell, Zoe Bell, Rosario Dawson, Vanessa Ferlito, Jordan Ladd, Rose McGowan, Sydney Tamiia Poitier, Marley Shelton, Tracie Thoms, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Michael Bacall, Eli Roth, Omar Doom; "Planet Terror" - Rose McGowan, Freddy Rodriguez, Jeff Fahey, Michael Parks, Josh Brolin, Michael Biehn, Carlos Gallardo, Tom Savini, Naveen Andrews, Marley Shelton, The Crazy Babysitter Twins, Stacy Ferguson

Plot Summary: "Grindhouse" – noun – A downtown movie theater - in disrepair since its glory days as a movie palace of the '30s and '40s - known for "grinding out" non-stop double-bill programs of B-movies. From groundbreaking directors Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez comes the ultimate film experience: a double-bill of thrillers that will recall both filmmakers' favorite exploitation films. "Grindhouse" will be presented as one full-length feature comprised of two individual films helmed separately by each director. Tarantino's film, Death Proof, is a rip-roaring slasher flick where the killer pursues his victims with a car rather than a knife, while Rodriguez's film explores an alien world eerily familiar to ours in Planet Terror. Welcome to the grind house - it'll tear you in two.
 

Attachments

  • grindhouseos.jpg
    grindhouseos.jpg
    54.5 KB · Views: 197

Zeno

Ancient
Joined
Sep 24, 2002
Posts
15,605
Reaction score
5,479
Location
Fort Myers
I went and saw Grindhouse tonight. I enjoyed it but you have to go in knowing that it is tongue and cheek and not expected to be taken 100% seriously. Its entertainment don't expect high drama or a believable story.

There are plenty of references in the movie to other Tarantino films and films of some of the actors in it. For instance the tank top Kurt Russell wore in Big Trouble in Little China is on the wall in one of the bars in "Death Proof"--they make references to Big Kahuna Burger and you see Red Apple Cigarettes.
 

O

LD @ F.O.H.
LEGACY MEMBER
Joined
Aug 2, 2002
Posts
13,905
Reaction score
5
Location
The Vortex!
I went and saw Grindhouse tonight. I enjoyed it but you have to go in knowing that it is tongue and cheek and not expected to be taken 100% seriously. Its entertainment don't expect high drama or a believable story.

There are plenty of references in the movie to other Tarantino films and films of some of the actors in it. For instance the tank top Kurt Russell wore in Big Trouble in Little China is on the wall in one of the bars in "Death Proof"--they make references to Big Kahuna Burger and you see Red Apple Cigarettes.


I grew up in the day when that is what was done.
My parents would drop me off at the theatre. literally the Grindhouse, on Saturday around 11am and pick me up around 4:30 or 5.
It was all about sexual inuendo and violence.
The movies were so bad yet so good it was great.
It was a social thing.

I haven't seen Grindhouse yet but I believe this was the spirit in which the
movie was made.
Don't take it seriously.

I haven't seen Grindhouse yet
 

UncleChris

Shocking, I tell you!
Supporting Member
Joined
Mar 24, 2003
Posts
31,813
Reaction score
16,277
Location
Prescott, AZ
More mindless drivel from Tarentino, under the guise of "parody" or "homage" or "send up."

A rose by any other name would still smell as sweet.

Road apples by any other name would still smell like horse doots.


I am weary with Hollywood's love affair with this Peckinpah wannabee... Pulp fiction is the only film of any quality this guy has put out. I swear..... Tarentino could put out a 100 minute film of nothing but a guy wiping his backside with a corncob, and the critics would love it. :thumbdown:

I just don't get it, you might ask??? If so, then good!
 

Stout

Hold onto the ball, Murray!
Joined
Dec 30, 2002
Posts
40,690
Reaction score
25,532
Location
Pittsburgh, PA--Enemy territory!
More mindless drivel from Tarentino, under the guise of "parody" or "homage" or "send up."

A rose by any other name would still smell as sweet.

Road apples by any other name would still smell like horse doots.


I am weary with Hollywood's love affair with this Peckinpah wannabee... Pulp fiction is the only film of any quality this guy has put out. I swear..... Tarentino could put out a 100 minute film of nothing but a guy wiping his backside with a corncob, and the critics would love it. :thumbdown:

I just don't get it, you might ask??? If so, then good!

Then stop watching it or reading about it, bro. I love his stuff, but I won't try to force it on anybody.
 

Zeno

Ancient
Joined
Sep 24, 2002
Posts
15,605
Reaction score
5,479
Location
Fort Myers
KBII was very good. KBI was ok.

I felt the opposite. I really liked Vol 1 was so-so about Vol 2.

As for Tarantino, some like him some don't, I happen to like most of his movies. The only one I really didn't care about was Jackie Brown.
 

Chaplin

Better off silent
Joined
May 13, 2002
Posts
46,651
Reaction score
17,299
Location
Round Rock, TX
Not a fan of Pulp Fiction, but Reservoir Dogs is a superior movie, and taken as a whole, Kill Bill is QT's best film, and one of the better action films of the last 10 years.
 

D-Dogg

A Whole New World
Supporting Member
Joined
Sep 10, 2003
Posts
45,194
Reaction score
1,477
Location
In The End Zone
I felt the opposite. I really liked Vol 1 was so-so about Vol 2.

Funny...I didn't really care for the way over the top violence/action of KB1 but I thought the storyline of KBII was far superior and really put the story together.

Taken together (which I have never done and probably should) I bet it would stand very strong.
 

schutd

ASFN Addict
Joined
Oct 15, 2002
Posts
6,260
Reaction score
2,221
Location
Charleston, SC
If theres one thing thats inarguable about tarantino is that he's always managed to make films on his terms, critics be damned. His final product, I believe is always something he signs off on, not some watered down, re cut version of his original vision. Sure, concessions most likely have to be made. But whether you love his work or hate it, (there doesnt seem to be in between) you HAVE to respect that his films are always what he wants them to be, so from that standpoint, they are hard to effectively praise or criticize. Tarantino makes films he wants to see and the rest of us can go to hell. Thats why I love his movies.

The missing piece in this thread is Rodriguez, who made the brilliantly over the top mariachi series, family'd out with Spy Kids and also does his own thing from his own privately built movie lot outside of Austin. these two guys work outside the big hollywood system, and its very commendable.
 
Top