Why did he use slow motion so much? It came off as very amateurish like something you'd see in your first year of film school.
>>67049846
Comedic effect
People seem to forget this was a comedy as well as a potboiler mystery.
>>67049900
It wasn't funny at all though. It was jarring.
>>67049931
Everyone laughed in my theatre. Even at the woman-beating, which was surprising considering my city is libcuck territory.
>>67049931
It was hilarious. Everyone was laughing the whole time.
>>67049931
Are you trying to say the "diabolical bitch" line wasn't fucking hilarious?
I love seeing Madsen as a psychopath
>>67049931
it's ok to be a pleb
>>67050150
He wasn't really a psychopath. Just a gangster doing his job.
>>67050336
He was laughing and clearly enjoying himself when he followed the nigger's bloodtrail
>>67049846
he explains it in his interview with Elvis Mitchell
http://www.podcastone.com/pg/jsp/program/episode.jsp?programID=564&pid=1633079
unsurprisingly, he saw the slow-mo cutaway in an old action movie and wanted to see if it could translate as a dramatic moment. Apparently it hasn't been done before.
>>67050911
oh the old action movie is actually The Getaway. He talks about it 12 minutes in.
>>67049931
If you didn't laugh, you're beyond help.
>>67050150
It was cool seeing him in a movie that wasn't shite
>I thought The Hateful Eight was a fantastic feature and genius for Tarantino to use the 70mm film, he used that to the full extent
>>67049846
The only itch I had about the slo-mo is whenJoe Gage said he doesn't have a gun.
Apart from that the slo-mo was well executed as with every other aspect of the movie.