Kill Bill, Volume 1 (2003) USA
Kill Bill, Volume 1 Image Cover
Additional Images
Director:Quentin Tarantino
Studio:Miramax
Producer:Bob Weinstein, Dede Nickerson, E. Bennett Walsh, Erica Steinberg, Harvey Weinstein
Writer:Quentin Tarantino, Uma Thurman
Rating:4
Rated:R
Date Added:2007-03-06
Purchased On:2007-06-03
ASIN:B00005JMEW
UPC:0786936226997
Price:$19.99
Awards:Nominated for Golden Globe. Another 12 wins & 41 nominations
Genre:Thrillers
Release:2004-04-12
IMDb:0266697
Duration:111
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:2.35:1
Sound:Dolby
Languages:English, Japanese, French
Subtitles:Spanish, Japanese, Georgian, Chinese
Features:Anamorphic
DTS
Quentin Tarantino  ...  (Director)
Quentin Tarantino, Uma Thurman  ...  (Writer)
 
Uma Thurman  ...  The Bride
Lucy Liu  ...  O-Ren Ishii
Vivica A. Fox  ...  Vernita Green
Daryl Hannah  ...  Elle Driver
David Carradine  ...  Bill
Michael Madsen  ...  Budd
Julie Dreyfus  ...  Sofie Fatale
Chiaki Kuriyama  ...  Gogo Yubari
Sonny Chiba  ...  Hattori Hanzo
Chia Hui Liu  ...  Johnny Mo
Michael Parks  ...  Earl McGraw
Michael Bowen  ...  Buck
Jun Kunimura  ...  Boss Tanaka
Kenji Ohba  ...  Bald Guy (Sushi Shop) (as Kenji Oba)
Yuki Kazamatsuri  ...  Proprietor
James Parks  ...  
Sakichi Satô  ...  
Jonathan Loughran  ...  
Yoshiyuki Morishita  ...  
Tetsuro Shimaguchi  ...  
Shin'ichi Chiba  ...  Hattori Hanzo (as Sonny Chiba)
Chia-Hui Liu  ...  Johnny Mo (as Gordon Liu)
Comments: In the year 2003, Uma Thurman will kill Bill

Summary: Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill, Vol. 1 is trash for connoisseurs. From his opening gambit (including a "Shaw-Scope" logo and gaudy '70s-vintage "Our Feature Presentation" title card) to his cliffhanger finale (a teasing lead-in to 2004's Vol. 2), Tarantino pays loving tribute to grindhouse cinema, specifically the Hong Kong action flicks and spaghetti Westerns that fill his fervent brain--and this frequently breathtaking movie--with enough cinematic references and cleverly pilfered soundtrack cues to send cinephiles running for their reference books. Everything old is new again in Tarantino's humor-laced vision: he steals from the best while injecting his own oft-copied, never-duplicated style into what is, quite simply, a revenge flick, beginning with the near-murder of the Bride (Uma Thurman), pregnant on her wedding day and left for dead by the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad (or DiVAS)--including Lucy Liu and the unseen David Carradine (as Bill)--who become targets for the Bride's lethal vengeance. Culminating in an ultraviolent, ultra-stylized tour-de-force showdown, Tarantino's fourth film is either brilliantly (and brutally) innovative or one of the most blatant acts of plagiarism ever conceived. Either way, it's hyperkinetic eye-candy from a passionate film-lover who clearly knows what he's doing. --Jeff Shannon