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Inglourious Basterds
EMAILPRINTUniversal Pictures, The Weinstein Company

Generally favorable reviews
Based on 36 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 366 votes
Read user comments
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Movie Info
Genre(s): Adventure | Drama | War
Written by: Quentin Tarantino
Directed by: Quentin Tarantino
Release Date:
Theatrical: August 21, 2009
Running Time: 153 minutes, Color
Origin: USA | Germany | France
Language(s): English | German | French | Italian
Summary
RATING: R for strong graphic violence, language and brief sexuality
Starring Brad Pitt, Diane Kruger, Til Schweiger, Eli Roth, Michael Fassbender, Mike Myers, Cloris Leachman, and Samuel L. Jackson
In the first year of the German occupation of France, Shosanna Dreyfus witnesses the execution of her family at the hand of Nazi Colonel Hans Landa. Shosanna narrowly escapes and flees to Paris where she forges a new identity as the owner and operator of a cinema. Elsewhere in Europe, lieutenant Aldo Raine organizes a group of Jewish American soldiers to perform swift, shocking acts of retribution. Later known to their enemy as "the basterds," Raine's squad joins German actress and undercover agent Bridget von Hammersmark on a mission to take down the leaders of the Third Reich. Fates converge under a cinema marquis, where Shosanna is poised to carry out a revenge plan of her own. (The Weinstein Company)
Also On The Web: Internet Movie Database Official Studio Site
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
ReelViews James Berardinelli
With Inglourious Basterds, Quentin Tarantino has made his best movie since "Pulp Fiction." He has also made what could arguably be considered the most audacious World War II movie of all-time.
Read Full Review >Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert
A big, bold, audacious war movie that will annoy some, startle others and demonstrate once again that he’s (Tarantino) the real thing, a director of quixotic delights.
Read Full Review >Miami Herald Rene Rodriguez
Basterds isn't so revolutionary or so finely crafted as "Pulp Fiction" was, but it crackles with the same energy and imagination and chutzpah.
Read Full Review >Time Richard Corliss
It's just possible that Tarantino, having played a trick on history, is also fooling his fans. They think they're in for a Hollywood-style war movie starring Brad Pitt. What they're really getting is the cagiest, craziest, grandest European film of the year.
Read Full Review >San Francisco Chronicle Mick LaSalle
It's not enough to say that Inglourious Basterds is Quentin Tarantino's best movie. It's the first movie of his artistic maturity, the film his talent has been promising for more than 15 years.
Read Full Review >Village Voice J. Hoberman
Energetic, inventive, swaggering fun, Quentin Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds is a consummate Hollywood entertainment--rich in fantasy and blithely amoral.
Read Full Review >St. Louis Post-Dispatch Joe Williams
With its exploded notions of heroism, torture-rack dramatics and kamikaze gusto, it's a fiendishly entertaining flick.
Read Full Review >New York Post Lou Lumenick
May be the most fun you'll have at the movies this summer.
Read Full Review >USA Today Claudia Puig
Tarantino exercises both his obsession with vengeance and his fascination with the movies.
Read Full Review >Time Out New York Keith Uhlich
Spelling may not be Quentin Tarantino’s forte, but his grasp of language (both verbal and visual) is peerless.
Read Full Review >New York Daily News Elizabeth Weitzman
A fairy tale about the infinite power of film, it boasts all his swaggering trademarks: rapid-fire dialogue, gleeful violence, endless cultural references. But it's the sharp-eyed deliberation that makes the greatest impact.
Read Full Review >Variety Todd McCarthy
A violent fairy tale, an increasingly entertaining fantasia in which the history of World War II is wildly reimagined so that the cinema can play the decisive role in destroying the Third Reich.
Read Full Review >Empire Chris Hewitt
With a confidence typical of its director, the last line of Inglourious Basterds is, "This might just be my masterpiece." While that may not be true, this is an often dazzling movie that sees QT back on exhilarating form.
Read Full Review >New York Magazine David Edelstein
Even more than his other genre mash-ups, this is a switchback journey through Tarantino’s twisted inner landscape, where cinema and history, misogyny and feminism, sadism and romanticism collide and split and re-bond in bizarre new hybrids. The movie is an ungainly pastiche, yet on some wacked-out Jungian level it’s all of a piece.
Read Full Review >Entertainment Weekly Lisa Schwarzbaum
In Tarantino's besotted historical reverie, real-life villains Adolf Hitler and Joseph Goebbels are played as grotesque jokes. The Basterds are played as exaggeratedly tough Jews. The women are femmes fatales.
Read Full Review >Portland Oregonian Shawn Levy
It's a film with many strengths, but it's not a knockout. And that's Tarantino's own fault, though not in the first way you might imagine.
Read Full Review >Rolling Stone Peter Travers
For anyone professing true movie love, there's no resisting it.
Read Full Review >Slate Dana Stevens
Tarantino's radical rewriting of the war's ending is audacious and perversely enthralling. But if Inglorious Basterds were about something more than the cinematic thrill of watching Nazis suffer, it could have been a revelation.
Read Full Review >Film Threat Nick Antosca
The biggest, weirdest, ugliest cartoon in Inglourious Basterds is Aldo Raine, the Nazi-killing American Lieutenant played by Brad Pitt.
Read Full Review >Chicago Reader J.R. Jones
Tarantino has already caught some flack for daring to use the Holocaust as material for another of his bloody live-action cartoons, but of course the generation that experienced it for real has mostly faded away. In that sense Inglourious Basterds is a social marker as startling as "Easy Rider" was in its day.
Read Full Review >Austin Chronicle Marc Savlov
For all its stylistic flourishes and interlocking storylines, Inglourious Basterds is, at its bullet-riddled core, a bloody good war movie, twisting and twisted and full of wordy shrapnel but no less kickass for it.
Read Full Review >NPR Scott Tobias
The film on the whole feels unusually labored and conventional by Tarantino standards. Reducing World War II to juvenilia isn't the problem; the problem is that juvenilia needs to pop.
Read Full Review >Christian Science Monitor Peter Rainer
No one else in Inglourious Basterds comes close to Landa for sheer charisma.
Read Full Review >The Onion (A.V. Club) Keith Phipps
its moments of greatness--and there are more than a couple--feel weirdly disconnected, stuck in a movie that doesn’t know how to put them together, or find a good way to move from one to the next.
Read Full Review >Boston Globe Ty Burr
A manically playful revenge fantasia made from the spare parts of Sergio Leone spaghetti westerns and strapping World War II action flicks.
Read Full Review >Chicago Tribune Michael Phillips
The result is a Jewish “Death Wish,” to borrow Pauline Kael’s description of “Marathon Man,” amped up to epoch-changing proportions, made by a gentile writer-director with an unlimited appetite for celluloid, right down to its highly flammable properties.
Read Full Review >The Hollywood Reporter Kirk Honeycutt
The film is by no means terrible -- its two hours and 32 minutes running time races by -- but those things we think of as being Tarantino-esque, the long stretches of wickedly funny dialogue, the humor in the violence and outsized characters strutting across the screen, are largely missing.
Read Full Review >Salon.com Stephanie Zacharek
Unwieldy, long-winded, self-indulgently nutso and, in places, very, very boring. It also caps off its two-and-a-half-hour run time with an extended finale – partially orchestrated to David Bowie's "Cat People" theme song, no less – that I could watch again and again with pleasure
Read Full Review >Washington Post Ann Hornaday
Isn't about history or war, or people and their problems, or anything of substance or meaning. It's a movie about other movies. For all its visual bravura and occasional bursts of antic inspiration, it feels trivial, the work of a kid who can't stop grabbing his favorite shiny plaything.
Read Full Review >The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Rick Groen
Let's start with this certainty: No one but Quentin Tarantino could possibly have made Inglourious Basterds . Now add another: No one but his most ardent fans will be entirely glad that Quentin Tarantino did make Inglourious Basterds .
Read Full Review >Los Angeles Times Kenneth Turan
Clocking in at 2 hours and 32 minutes, it is unforgivably leisurely, almost glacial, a film that loses its way in the thickets of alternative history and manages to be violent without the start-to-finish energy that violence on screen usually guarantees.
Read Full Review >Wall Street Journal Joanne Kaufman
Nothing about the emotionally unmoored Inglourious Basterds adds up. Whether it's parody, farce or a fever dream is anyone's guess.
Read Full Review >The New York Times Manohla Dargis
Mostly, though, there is Landa, whose unctuous charm, beautifully modulated by Mr. Waltz, gives this unwieldy, dragging movie a much-needed periodic jolt.
Read Full Review >The New Yorker David Denby
Inglourious Basterds is not boring, but it’s ridiculous and appallingly insensitive.
Read Full Review >Philadelphia Inquirer Steven Rea
Less a Holocaust retribution fantasy than a messy homage to war movies, and to movies, period.
Read Full Review >Baltimore Sun Michael Sragow
The only hope for Inglourious Basterds is that audiences will embrace it the way the Broadway crowd did "Springtime for Hitler": because it's so bad they think it's good.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this movie is 7.5 (out of 10) based on 366 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Rafael L. gave it a9:
Incredible, fun and extremely revolutionary. The best Tarantino's movie since "Pulp Fiction".
Clif C gave it a10:
Well... "District 9" and "Inglourious Basterds" are the best movies of the year. "Inglorious" is a masterpiece: it's mature, artsy, visually stunning (the scene with the theater screen burning, for example; that gave me shivers), action-packed, with exquisite dialogues, amazing actings (Waltz deserves an Academy Award for it), ... The only thing that somebody who really appreciates good films (because a lot still don't understand Quentin Tarantino's art) could regret is the lack of complexity in the film. There was no temporal "destruction" this time and no real character developpement. But in my opinion, it didn't matter, it was obvious that it was useless. Anyway... Quentin Tarantino made it again! Bravo.
miguel g gave it an8:
I liked this movie, could be a little less violent, but there are very interesting things with these movie, the most interesting is mr Waltz's performance.
Chris M gave it a1:
This movie suffers from a flimsy script, boring dialogue, and a fantasy that is not even entertaining. The violence is over done and is not artistic and it rather comes across as cheesy. Many of the characters was not properly introduced. Brad Pitt fake southern accent is the most annoying and irritating part about this movie. Tarantino cannot even get a southern accent right. Many of the major characters were poorly introduced which makes for a weak story/plot. Soshanna was the only compelling character in the movie but we do not see her pain. The entire 2 and half hour movie comes accross as one of Tarantino's wet dreams.
steve gave it a0:
Could be used as a clinical test for diagnosing brain atrophy.
David T. gave it an8:
I enjoyed this movie - though at some parts, it was somewhat dull due to boring dialogue.
James R gave it a1:
QT still proving he's got the subtlety of a bull with a chainsaw and the ability to turn promising subject matter into dross. Even taking into account the offensive subject matter the film could have at least had a cartoon appeal; instead it just angers and alienates the viewer. The only film I've ever walked out of at a cinema.
