<p>Quentin Tarantino, seen here in Miike's 'Sukiyaki Western Django,' may be saddling up again for a return to the Old West since it sounds like he's almost done writing his new script.</p>

Quentin Tarantino, seen here in Miike's 'Sukiyaki Western Django,' may be saddling up again for a return to the Old West since it sounds like he's almost done writing his new script.



Credit: First Look International




Are you a fan of Motion Captured?


Sign up to get the latest updates instantly.



Never miss a post - sign up now to get an e-mail alert whenever

Motion Captured is updated


Close



One thing was very clear when watching "Django Unchained" last year: Quentin Tarantino was delighted to finally be making a Western.


I don't blame him. The conditions when making a film in the genre can be difficult. I know that John Carpenter has told me several times that the whole reason he's never made a real Western is because of how much he hates horses. You're outside, you're typically on a location, and it's not easy work. Tarantino took to it, though, so much so that it looks like he might be giving it another try.


Tonight, Tarantino was a guest on "The Tonight Show With Jay Leno," and a friend of mine went to the taping to see what happened. He Tweeted from NBC's studios about a comment that Tarantino made, and it's news even if it's still somewhat vague news. He said the director was sipping moonshine during the interview and that he revealed that he is almost done writing his next film. He also revealed that it's a Western.


So now begins the speculation. Which Western is it? During the release of "Django Unchained," he talked a bit about making a follow-up film about abolitionist John Brown, treating him as a mythic hero and basically approaching it as a Western. According to John Jarratt, Tarantino also has been talking about wanting to make a film in Australia, set against the backdrop of the Outback, and I've heard someone else close to Tarantino describe that as whatever the Aussie equivalent of a Western would be.


There are also the Elmore Leonard novels that Tarantino has spoken about in the past, including "Forty Lashes Less One," that could be in the mix. That book deals with an Apache indian and a disgraced black Union soldier who meet on death row before they are sent on a suicide mission to find and kill the five worst outlaws in the West.


Here's BenDavid's orginal Tweet that tipped us off, and if we end up with a great embed of the actual moment once the show airs, we'll try to include that here, too:





Whatever it turns out to be, we'll be looking forward to it, and hopefully if he's feeling chatty, new information about his plans for the immediate future will become clear sooner rather than later.



The HitFix Weekly Fix

Get the 10+ biggest stories of the week every Friday

SUBSCRIBE


Subscribe to HitFix Weekly Fix and get the best of HitFix in your inbox every week.


Close


SUBSCRIBE



Drew-mcweeny-sm


A respected critic and commentator for fifteen years, Drew McWeeny helped create the online film community as "Moriarty" at Ain't It Cool News, and now proudly leads two budding Film Nerds in their ongoing movie education.



0 comments:

Post a Comment

 
Top