Photo: Pulp Fiction / Miramax Films

Things We Learned About Our Favorite Tarantino Movies

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Vote up the cool Tarantino movie facts that surprised you the most.

Quentin Tarantino is something of a moviemaking genius. The guy got into the business simply because he loved movies and wanted to make his own - his way. He's certainly done that over the years. Since directing his first film, Reservoir Dogs, in 1992, he's consistently released one hit after another. The man knows movies, and he's proven himself time and time again.

Whether you're a fan of just one of his flicks or all of them, odds are you know a lot about Tarantino's movies. Most of his fans have rewatched their favorites time and time again, but everybody misses something. There's a good chance there are details found in Tarantino movies you may have missed. This list features some of the more fascinating aspects of Tarantino movies from Reservoir Dogs to Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood. Don't forget to vote up the most interesting facts in the bunch.

Photo: Pulp Fiction / Miramax Films

  • 1
    377 VOTES

    The Glove Guns In 'Inglourious Basterds' Are A Real Thing

    When the Basterds make their way into the cinema and begin their onslaught on the Nazis on their big night, there's a moment in which two of them use guns fastened to the back of their gloves, which they set off by punching their targets. If this looks a bit too unreal in a movie that doesn't exactly follow history as it actually happened, you might be surprised to learn that those things were real and developed for use in WWII.

    They were manufactured for the US Navy by the RF Sedgley company and are known as Sedgley Guns. The guns are single-shot .38 Smith & Wesson barrels mounted alongside a plunger. The plunger extends beyond the muzzle, and when the user makes a fist and punches someone or something, the plunger is depressed, and the bullet is fired. Only about 50 to 200 were made, and while there is no record of their being used in combat, they were likely used by covert operatives in the Office of Strategic Services (OSS).

    377 votes
  • 2
    760 VOTES

    Leonardo DiCaprio Was Injured While Filming 'Django Unchained'

    While filming the tense dinner table scene in Django Unchained, Leonardo DiCaprio's Calvin Candie was supposed to repeatedly slam his hand onto the table. In the final cut, he only hit the table once, breaking a crystal glass in the process, which cut his hand. The cut on his hand was real, and the breaking of the glass was entirely accidental.

    If you watch the scene closely but focus on the man to Candie's right (the left side of the screen), he's taken aback momentarily when he sees the extent of his co-star's injury. DiCaprio, being the professional he is, continued the scene in character, and that's the cut that made it into the film. He even picked some of the glass out of his hand, but otherwise, he didn't really acknowledge the injury.

    Stacey Sher, the film's producer, described the incident, saying, "Leo had slammed his hand on the table countless times, and he moved his hand further, and he crushed a crystal cordial glass. Blood was dripping down his hand. He never broke character. He kept going. He was in such a zone. It was very intense. He required stitches."

    760 votes
  • 3
    641 VOTES

    Leonardo DiCaprio Had Trouble Getting Through His Character's Choice Of Words In 'Django Unchained'

    If you've seen a Tarantino movie, you know the man doesn't censor himself in any way. He writes every conceivable type of profanity into his scripts, and the actors dutifully deliver those lines. While most don't have a problem saying your standard set of cuss words (you know what they are), it's not easy to use words that have a more harmful historical connotation.

    Leonardo DiCaprio had trouble with the N-word, which his character - a vile, entitled plantation owner -  has to say a lot throughout the movie. Behind the scenes, it wasn't quite as easy as it was for the fictional character, as DiCaprio had some hesitations about the dialogue. While filming one scene, he stopped himself and explained that he was having a difficult time using so many racial slurs. Samuel L. Jackson simply looked at his co-star and said, "Hey, motherf**ker, this is just another Tuesday for us. Let's go."

    Jamie Foxx also chimed in at the time, explaining that others would "resent the hell out of you" if the scene didn't play out just right. Since a slave owner like Calvin Candie would have no problem saying hateful slurs, DiCaprio got back on track and finished his work on the movie.

    641 votes
  • 4
    400 VOTES

    Originally, Marvin Wasn't Supposed To Die Right Away In 'Pulp Fiction'

    One of the many rules of moviemaking is that a final film will look very different from the original script. Through the course of filming, script changes are common, so the original intent of a scene or character often turns out very differently. One of the scenes in Pulp Fiction that shifted from the original script is the moment Vincent "accidentally" shoots Marvin in the face.

    Originally, he was supposed to shoot him in the throat, which wouldn't have claimed his life right away. Instead, he was supposed to fight for life while bleeding out and gurgling. As that was happening, Jules and Vincent were to have a discussion about what to do while Marvin listened to their discussion in horror. The scene wasn't changed too much for the film, and while it certainly was gory, it could have been much worse. Phil LaMarr spoke about the scene during an appearance on Nerdist's Talkin' Toons:

    We were rehearsing, and originally my character in the back of the car is supposed to be shot twice... he was supposed to shoot me in the throat, and I was supposed to sit there gurgling while they have Tarantino-esque banter: 'So put him out of his misery.' So he was supposed to shoot me a second time. And that’s when the blood sprays all over, and everything continues as it is in the movie. And John [Travolta] said, 'I gotta kill him? Oh man, the audience is going to hate me.' And Quentin stopped and said, 'You’re right.' And he realized the slight difference between, '[a gun shot] What happened?' and aiming at this kid in the back and, 'I’m just going to put him down like a dog.' [Travolta] just had such an understanding of his relationship to the audience, and he was like, 'This will ruin everything else I have in the movie.' You don't like him if he does that. And Quentin was like, 'You’re right.' And he changed it.

    400 votes
  • 5
    391 VOTES

    Tarantino Actually Strangled Diane Kruger In 'Inglourious Basterds'

    When he made an appearance on The Graham Norton Show, Quentin Tarantino explained that it was his own hands "strangling" Diane Kruger during her final scene in Inglourious Basterds. His reasoning was that he didn't like that close-up shots of strangulation never looked real enough, so he opted to do things a bit differently.

    He went up to Kruger and asked if she would be okay with him choking her... one time... on camera. He explained his side of the conversation, saying, "What I said to her is, 'I'm going to be the hands, and I'm going to just strangle you, alright? I'm gonna cut off your air - we're going to see the reaction on your face. We're just going to do it once, and we'll never have to do it again."

    Kruger agreed, and Tarantino strangled the actress to capture a real reaction from her. It worked, and Kruger wasn't harmed, so it worked out in the end, but cutting off someone's airway like that - even for a brief shot - is still pretty dicey.

    391 votes
  • 6
    630 VOTES

    Kurt Russell Smashed A Unique And Valuable Guitar In 'The Hateful Eight'

    When Jennifer Jason Leigh's Daisy Domergue sings while playing the guitar in The Hateful Eight, the serene moment is shattered when Kurt Russell's John "The Hangman" Ruth pulls the guitar from her hands and smashes it to smithereens. The filming of the scene didn't go according to plan, and you can see Leigh's reaction, which is real and horrified because she knew just how valuable that guitar was.

    She was playing an authentic 1870s six-string guitar on loan from the Martin Guitar Museum, which, needless to say, wasn't happy about what happened. The museum had given out instruments to films numerous times in the past, but after the guitar was destroyed (especially the manner in which it was destroyed), the museum closed that door permanently. Museum director Dick Boak issued a statement about the incident:

    We were informed that it was an accident on set. We assumed that a scaffolding or something fell on it. We understand that things happen, but at the same time, we can’t take this lightly. All this about the guitar being smashed being written into the script and that somebody just didn’t tell the actor, this is all new information to us. We didn’t know anything about the script or Kurt Russell not being told that it was a priceless, irreplaceable artifact from the Martin Museum.

    630 votes