Why the Tavern Scene in Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds Is a Master Class in Filmmaking

Ide­al­ly, a view­er should be able to iden­ti­fy the work of a par­tic­u­lar auteur from any one scene that the auteur has direct­ed. In real­i­ty, it’s not always pos­si­ble to do so, even in the work of film­mak­ers with high­ly idio­syn­crat­ic styles. But in the case of Quentin Taran­ti­no, it would prob­a­bly be more dif­fi­cult not to rec­og­nize his scenes. Some of them have prop­a­gat­ed so far through pop­u­lar cul­ture that they have a life apart from the films them­selves: the dance in Pulp Fic­tion, say, or more recent­ly, the open­ing of Inglou­ri­ous Bas­ter­ds, a pic­ture that, to video essay­ists look­ing to expli­cate Taran­ti­no’s dis­tinc­tive genius, offers a par­tic­u­lar abun­dance of mate­r­i­al.

In the new video above, YouTu­ber Lan­cel­loti selects a dif­fer­ent scene from Inglou­ri­ous Bas­ter­ds to declare a “mod­ern mas­ter­piece” in itself. It takes place in a base­ment tav­ern in Nazi-occu­pied north­ern France, where three of the tit­u­lar black-ops “Bas­ter­ds,” dis­guised as Ger­man offi­cers, meet Brid­get von Ham­mers­mark, a Ger­man movie star turned under­cov­er Allied agent.

As one might expect, the ten­sion starts high, gets high­er, and even­tu­al­ly explodes in a chaot­ic blood­bath: not an easy sequence to pull off effec­tive­ly, but one that Taran­ti­no and his col­lab­o­ra­tors arrange with con­sum­mate skill, using a host of tech­niques not nec­es­sar­i­ly vis­i­ble on the first view­ing — or even the first few view­ings.

Lan­cel­loti high­lights how the scene grad­u­al­ly reveals its tight space and the many fig­ures who occu­py it; uses dia­logue to reflect core themes of iden­ti­ty and nation­al­i­ty; cre­ates sym­pa­thy even for vil­lain-cod­ed Ger­man sol­diers; keeps shift­ing the bal­ance of pow­er; injects unpre­dictabil­i­ty into the action; fore­shad­ows the ways in which events will even­tu­al­ly go wrong; and hints in many ways at the pres­ence of the char­ac­ter who will light up the tin­der box. Of course, no direc­tor could make all this hap­pen sin­gle-hand­ed­ly, and few direc­tors would be con­scious of all these ele­ments at work in the first place. But giv­en all we’ve learned about Taran­ti­no over the years, he’s sure­ly one of them.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

A Deep Study of the Open­ing Scene of Quentin Tarantino’s Inglou­ri­ous Bas­ter­ds

An Analy­sis of Quentin Tarantino’s Films Nar­rat­ed (Most­ly) by Quentin Taran­ti­no

How Quentin Taran­ti­no Cre­ates Sus­pense in His Favorite Scene, the Ten­sion-Filled Open­ing Moments of Inglou­ri­ous Bas­ter­ds

Quentin Tarantino’s Copy­cat Cin­e­ma: How the Post­mod­ern Film­mak­er Per­fect­ed the Art of the Steal

How Quentin Taran­ti­no Remix­es His­to­ry: A Brief Study of Once Upon a Time… in Hol­ly­wood

Quentin Tarantino’s World War II Read­ing List

Based in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. His projects include the Sub­stack newslet­ter Books on Cities and the book The State­less City: a Walk through 21st-Cen­tu­ry Los Ange­les. Fol­low him on the social net­work for­mer­ly known as Twit­ter at @colinmarshall.


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  • Terry B says:

    I don’t under­stand why the first sen­tence here is true. Direc­tors have styles, like oth­er artists, but. I hon­est­ly don’t under­stand why they can’t try some­thing new, or not have a scene so thor­ough­ly soaked with their rec­og­niz­able ways. I’m hon­est­ly befud­dled.

  • Gordon Hastie says:

    Why should a great direc­tor be any dif­fer­ent from a great musi­cian, visu­al artist etc, whose tropes are usu­al­ly wel­comed, pro­vid­ed the work itself is up to scratch. Are you say­ing the open­ing scene in IB is not very good, or indeed that scene in the tav­ern?

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