In Vol. 2 of Kill Bill, there’s an iconic black and white sequence where Uma Thurman’s Beatrix Kiddo looks into the camera ...
The following article contains significant spoilers for "Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair." If you have not yet seen the ...
Quentin Tarantino may insist he is retiring from live-action filmmaking after ten movies, but everything happening around Kill Bill right now tells a very different story. This video dives into the ...
The Whole Bloody Affair, the complete version with over 4 hours of footage, additional anime sequences, and even Fortnite ...
Watching Kill Bill for the first time in a theatre felt like the right way to meet a movie that’s built intentionally around ...
The Whole Bloody Affair examines Quentin Tarantino’s extended revenge epic, its excess, added footage, and whether it earns ...
Kill Bill's two-film split reveals surprising strengths and weaknesses, offering fresh insight into Quentin Tarantino’s bold ...
Two Sundays ago, I booted up my PlayStation 5 excited to watch a new, previously unreleased chapter from Quentin Tarantino’s “Kill Bill” saga. But instead of opening up Amazon, Netflix, YouTube or any ...
This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here. Credits at the end of “Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair” attribute the creation of the Bride assassin to “Q & U” ...
“Yellow-haired warrior, go!” The command is one of many lines in the two “Kill Bill” movies (2003 and 2004) that sound like the directives of ancient myth, as though repeated down the centuries. Or at ...
Ross Bonaime is the Senior Film Editor at Collider. He is a Virginia-based critic, writer, and editor who has written about all forms of entertainment for Paste Magazine, Brightest Young Things, ...