By Chris Hyde
October 21, 2003
Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill is a definitively post-VCR film, a movie that
liberally quotes from and alludes to many other works from the rich
tradition of the cinema. But is it a loving postmodern tribute or outright
celluloid larceny?
Kill Bill makes no secret of the fact that this is a film that is informed
by much of what has gone before: the director's use of the Shawscope logo
as an opening gambit states flat out that what you will see has at least
been influenced by the works of that biggest of Hong Kong studios. But the
reflections from the past hardly stop with the opening shot, as Tarantino
takes bits and pieces from the cinematic canon and tosses them into the
swirling mix. During the 90-minute run time of Kill Bill, you might
notice echoes of Hannie Caulder, Lady Snowblood, They Call Her One Eye, War
of the Gargantuas, Modesty Blaise, Black Sunday, Five Deadly Venoms and
many more. The mélange is so pervasive that a film that Tarantino claims
to never have seen -- Francois Truffaut's The Bride Wore Black -- has been
extensively cited by reviewers for its resemblance to this final product.
In its way, then, Kill Bill is more or less a cinematic assemblage of
fragments that cohere to make a whole film -- though in reality they will
eventually make two films, which in itself is somewhat telling. Tarantino
has quite obviously styled this film in a manner that allows him to model
bits and pieces of the movies that he loves from the past and to synthesize
them into a brand new work. The movie stands as a true evocation of what
film has become in the period that follows the advent of the home
videocassette player: for without the cultural effects produced by that
technological marvel a wildly postmodern piece such as this one may never
have come to fruition.
The influence of the late 20th century's technologies on the
cosmopolitanism of film audiences cannot be overstated, as first television
and later the VCR made widely available many works that previously could
only previously be viewed in spotty fashion by those who lived in areas
with a thriving repertory film circuit. Today, the rapid expansion of
globalizing trends and the appearance of the Internet have only exacerbated
this effect for film fans, but there's no denying that the marketing of a
home player was the truly watershed event for cinemaphiles. This device
made it possible for film lovers to take the initiative in seeking out
material from a wide body of work, allowing for an control over individual
viewing that was much more difficult before the 1980s.
This new access to accumulated tradition for viewers was to have many
effects on the cinema, of which some would be salutary and others
deleterious. But there's no question that among a certain core audience of
cult film lovers the invention would act as an open gateway to the viewing
of a multiplicity of movies, including such diverse areas as spaghetti
westerns, monster movies, martial arts epics, and exotica of all
kinds. With the doors to whole new worlds thrown open wide by this new
invention, it was only a matter of time before the new ability to view
movies from all over in the comfort of home began to show its own influence
in the cinema that plays at the megaplex.
The effects of the VCR on post-1980 cinema are many and varied, and it is
hardly in Tarantino's oeuvre alone that the invisible influence of
videotape can be seen. But it's also no surprise to find that the director
toiled as a clerk in a video store during some of his formative years, and
all of his work contains referential asides that make it patently obvious
that his style has been heavily influenced by what he has seen. In fact,
this filmmaker's corpus is filtered so much through the lens of other
movies that one has to wonder about the fine line between tribute and
theft, homage and ripoff, reverential obeisance and cultural
appropriation. In many ways, these films of Quentin Tarantino are but
celluloid pastiche, reflections of pieces of other work refracted through
the camera again to appear in a whole new form. Perhaps, if the late
Donald Barthelme was correct, this is simply the essence of art in the
modern world -- where the ultimate apotheosis is collage and fragments are
the only truly trustworthy form.
While the tendency towards allusion and cinematic reworking shows up in all
of Tarantino's films, it is nowhere more manifest than in Kill Bill. Its
debt to the films of the Shaw Brothers is completely overt, from the
aforementioned intro shot right on through the climactic battle between Uma
Thurman and Lucy Liu that takes place on a set that is quite consciously
modeled after the Shaw's atmospheric style of design (and, more
specifically, after the big fight from the studio's Chinese Boxer). The
idea of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad also appears to be a take on
The Venoms, a crew of martial arts actors who worked for the Shaws during
their heyday. Additionally, the nods to that great Hong Kong outfit are
not necessarily visual in form, as the musical theme from Master of the
Flying Guillotine is used as a cue during the running of Kill
Bill. (Aside: this bit is not Chinese in origin, as it is actually "Super
16" by the German kraut rockers Neu).
But the cultural detritus being picked over in Kill Bill is certainly not
limited to the films of the Shaw Brothers. Tarantino's cinematic
archaeology pulls shards from varying times and locations, citing
references from both television and motion pictures. Here is a bit that
seems inspired by Fukasaku's Black Lizard; over there is something that
seems to echo Suzuki's Branded to Kill; here again are the tattered sonic
shreds of The Green Hornet and Ironside. Production IG, one of Japan's
most historic producers of animation, did the anime sequences. Uma
Thurman's outfit is undoubtedly meant to reference the great Bruce Lee's
signature fashion suit, and Daryl Hannah's eye patch is straight off of
Christina Lindberg. Tarantino also does better than simply citing past
work, however, as he is even good enough to give jobs to actors such as
Sonny Chiba, Gordon Liu and Kenji Ohba, all of who have been involved with
classic Asian films in the past.
There are in fact so many moments that are suggestive of other films in
Kill Bill that it's a bit of a fool's errand to attempt to catalogue them
all. So let's allow the spaghetti western and eurocult nods to lie fallow
and instead take on a bit of blaxploitation, which seems to be the most
controversial of Tarantino's appropriations. There has been some press on
how the part of Vivica Fox (whose housewife screen name -- Jeannie Bell -- is identical to a
wonderful star of these self-same movies) is an example of the way that the
director has stolen the form of the low-budget black films of the '70s
without understanding or expressing their true essence. This is more or
less a variation on the theme of a very old argument, as it seems to me to
be essentially a rehash of the 1960s fight over rock and rollers using the
blues as the basis for songs and making far more money than the black
originators of the music. When the Rolling Stones covered Howling Wolf, Bo
Diddley, Willie Dixon and Muddy Waters during the hippy years, were they in
fact exploiting these musicians or simply creating their own variation of
songs they loved? Is it possible for white artists to do their own
versions of art that arose out of a black culture, make money off it, and
not be accused of calculating racial profiteering? Would it be better for
mainstream artists to not make this sort of appropriation at all, or is the
trade off of wider recognition in the marketplace for the pioneers of the
art worth the resultant thievery by the dominant culture? I suspect that
the viewer's feelings on Tarantino's borrowing from blaxploitation will of
necessity be filtered through a prism of class and market politics, with
some accepting his use of the form as simply a quite heartfelt tribute to
material the director loves and others decrying it as a blatant ripoff of
authenticity that results in nothing more than ersatz crap.
Whether or not there exist easy answers to the many questions that
Tarantino's directorial style poses, the fact remains that Kill Bill is
utterly representative of the zeitgeist of the current era. Exemplifying
the dislocations of time and place that our technological devices have
thrust upon us, the film profusely regurgitates previous culture with
24 times a second's worth of flashy visuals and sonic cues. This
movie is nothing if not a post-VCR document, a work that cannot possibly
have existed in a world before viewers could reach across the globe and
pluck whatever product they wished to view from a teeming international
market of near boundless choice. By taking the varied influences from his
past and weaving them together into a whole new form, Tarantino has managed
here to create on celluloid a work of art that exists not just as
exploitation but as meta-exploitation. Kill Bill may be just an
over-the-top testimonial from a devoted fan now behind the camera, or
perhaps it is instead rapacious cultural piracy of the highest
order. Final assessment on this point must of necessity lie directly with
the viewer, and this bit of truth only serves to underline the tumultuous
postmodernism that Tarantino's new megaplex film typifies. Speaking only
for myself, I can't hardly wait for Part Two.