2004 Kill Bill vol. 2

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  • Forum gestartet am: Samstag 08.01.2005
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  • Link zum Originaltopic: 2004 Kill Bill vol. 2
  • Letzte Antwort: vor 17 Jahren, 2 Monaten, 31 Tagen, 20 Stunden, 58 Minuten
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    Re: 2004 Kill Bill vol. 2

    yeshe.dolma - 15.01.2005, 16:46

    2004 Kill Bill vol. 2
    ich habe versucht einige informationen und bilder
    über diesen film zusammenzutragen, leider zur zeit nur in deutsch



    I have gathered some information and pictures
    about this film, unfortunately, at the moment it is available only in German.



    Re: 2004 Kill Bill vol. 2

    sabine_1304 - 15.01.2005, 17:04

    D.C.
    :D Na das hast du prima gemacht. Hat mich doch sehr gefreut, Danke!

    :)



    Re: 2004 Kill Bill vol. 2

    Shotokan - 16.01.2005, 19:59


    *hächlhächlhächl* :D :D

    Ne quatsch - viele viele fantastische Bilder!!!
    ________________________________________________________________

    WOW - many many very fantastic picturs!



    Re: 2004 Kill Bill vol. 2

    sabine_1304 - 16.01.2005, 23:35

    D.C.
    Schön zu lesen das sie dir gefallen. Das war mein Werk, nicht das ich mich selber Loben will, aber es freut mich das sie an kommen. Es wird noch mehr davon geben. Wenn mir jetzt noch einer verraten könnte wie Mpeg Dateien brennen kann, gäbe es noch viel mehr Bildchen zum Abhecheln :)


    Denn die meisten Filme von David habe ich auf Video, leider!



    Re: 2004 Kill Bill vol. 2

    tigerauge.ah - 18.01.2005, 11:06


    wow, wirklich lauter tolle bilder. - danke -
    sehr gut gefallen mir die s/w bilder - die haben irgendwie was ganz besonderes.
    und diese hier sind meine persönlichen favoriten:

    wow, lots of really nice pics. - thanks -
    I like the black/white pics very much - they've a very special atmosphere.
    the following pics are my favorite ones:





    Re: 2004 Kill Bill vol. 2

    yeshe.dolma - 18.01.2005, 17:28


    dann gefällt dir sicher dieses bild :)



    Re: 2004 Kill Bill vol. 2

    yeshe.dolma - 07.05.2005, 06:23


    und hier ist die slideshow zu den bildern...



    and here is the slide show to the pictures...



    Re: 2004 Kill Bill vol. 2

    dagibu - 07.08.2005, 00:30

    Interview mit David über Kill Bill 2
    Hallo,

    ich habe dieses Interview (deutsch) beim surfen entdeckt. Ist gut.



    2004 Comeback der Kung-Fu-Ikone

    Interview mit David Carradine zum furiosen Finale von »Kill Bill Vol. 2«

    Click

    Dieser Mann hat über 120 Filme gedreht, mit Ingmar Bergman und Martin Scorsese gearbeitet. Aber bekannt wurde er nur durch die TV-Serie »Kung Fu«. Nun hat Regisseur Quentin Tarantino die abgelegte Legende wie einst schon John Travolta wiederbelebt. In »Kill Bill Vol. 1« war von Carradine zwar nichts zu sehen – dafür kommt er im zweiten Teil umso gewaltiger auf die Leinwand.

    Was sind die drei häufigsten Fragen, die Ihnen gestellt werden?
    Ich weiß nicht. Die Leute auf der Straße kommen jedenfalls nie mit Fragen auf mich zu. Sie kommen immer nur, um mir Dinge zu erzählen. Am häufigsten sagen sie mir, dass ich ihr Leben verändert hätte. Mehr noch: Dass ich ihr Leben gerettet hätte! Das ist doch cool.

    Die meisten Leute auf der Straße werden allerdings kaum wissen, dass Sie mit Ingmar Bergman und Martin Scorsese gearbeitet haben. Sind Sie für die nicht eher der Mister Kung Fu?
    Das stimmt so nicht ganz. Natürlich kennen mich viele aus »Kung Fu«. Gleichzeitig kennen aber genügend Leute meine anderen Arbeiten. Wenn ich etwa in New York bin, werde ich dort meist als Broadway-Schauspieler erkannt. Das einzige, worauf ich leider nie angesprochen werde, ist meine Vergangenheit als Shakespeare-Darsteller.

    Bereuen Sie, dass Sie zu früh eine TV-Karriere eingeschlagen haben?
    Eigentlich nicht. Es gab Zeiten in meinem Leben, in denen ich dachte, dass diese TV-Karriere ein Fehler war. Inzwischen bin ich jedoch absolut stolz auf diese »Kung Fu«-Serie und ihre enorme Bekanntheit auf der ganzen Welt – von solchen Wirkungen kann ein Schauspieler doch nur träumen.

    Wird »Kill Bill Vol. 2« eine Art David Carradine reloaded?
    Reloaded? Ha! Daran besteht absolut kein Zweifel. Schon allein deshalb, weil ich hier vermutlich die beste Leistung meiner Karriere zeige. Ich musste hier mehr Schauspiel-Arbeit leisten, als in dreißig Filmen zusammen. Zudem ist dieser Film einfach grandios. Er ist sehr viel besser als der erste Teil – und das will ja wohl etwas heißen!

    Wie haben Sie sich gefühlt, als Quentin Ihnen die Rolle anbot? Willkommen im Recycling-Club der Kino-Ikonen?
    Quentin und ich haben ja schon seit Jahren davon gesprochen, einmal gemeinsam zu arbeiten. Bislang hatte es sich nur einfach nicht ergeben. Als ich dann dieses fantastische Drehbuch von »Kill Bill« las, war ich wie hypnotisiert. Ich wollte unbedingt dabei sein. Zumal ich mich mit Quentin schon immer bestens verstanden habe.

    Wie weit ist der Mister Cool ein Diktator bei den Dreharbeiten?
    Quentin ist ein Diktator. Zugleich jedoch hat er immer ein offenes Ohr für alle Vorschläge. Ein gutes Beispiel ist dieses japanische Cartoon-Projekt, das die Geschichte von Bills Training erzählen soll. Ich fragte ihn also, ob ich nicht ein Mitspracherecht hätte, wie ich als Trickfigur aussehen würde. Er dachte kurz nach und meinte: „Klar, wenn du meiner Meinung bist!“. So arbeitet dieser Typ: Er macht alles, was du möchtest – solange er es selbst auch möchte. Dann hast du die totale Freiheit. Zudem ist er nie im Stress. Er nimmt sich alle Zeit der Welt, bis die Dinge so perfekt sind, wie er sich das vorstellt.

    Es gibt einige spektakuläre Kampfszenen. Wie viele davon haben Sie tatsächlich selbst bestritten?
    Ich habe alle Kampfszenen gemacht! So wie ich es immer getan habe!

    Wie neurotisch ist Ihr Beruf?
    Ich verstehe die Frage nicht. Mein Leben ist ziemlich unkompliziert. Ich mache immer nur genau das, was als nächstes zu tun ist. Ich glaube nicht, dass der Job für mich neurotisch ist.

    Sind Sie nervös vor der Kamera?
    Ich war noch nie nervös vor einer Kamera. Als ich das erste Mal auf der Bühne stand, war ich nervös. Damals, bei »Romeo und Julia«. Da musste ich zehn Minuten auf der Bühne stehen, bevor ich meinen ersten Dialog hatte. Ich weiß noch wie heute, wie mir damals bei der Premiere die Knie zitterten. Wenn man Stumpfhosen trägt, ist das umso schlimmer: Du denkst, jeder sieht, wie deine Knie schlottern. Aber als ich dann meinen ersten Satz sagte, war die Nervosität verschwunden – und sie kam seitdem nie wieder zurück.

    War die Gewalt im Film eigentlich nie ein Problem für Sie?
    Nein. Ich liebe Gewalt im Kino. Sex und Gewalt. Sexy Gewaltfilme sind der totale Spaß. Darin liegt der Schlüssel: insbesondere bei Quentins Stil der Gewaltdarstellung. Du siehst ein brutales Blutbad – und kannst dich dennoch totlachen. Das geht nur bei einem Tarantino-Film!

    Interview: Dieter Oßwald
    Foto: Buena Vista

    Na zuviel versprochen?????

    Tschüss
    Dagibu[/b]



    Re: 2004 Kill Bill vol. 2

    sabine_1304 - 07.08.2005, 10:50


    Hey, toll ! Endlich mal ein Interview auf Deutsch



    Re: 2004 Kill Bill vol. 2

    tigerauge.ah - 07.08.2005, 12:21


    Super, Dagibu, danke für's posten. Das Interview ist klasse. :freude:



    Re: 2004 Kill Bill vol. 2

    dagibu - 20.08.2005, 20:27

    2004 04 30 David Carradine Interview
    Hallo,

    ich habe wieder durch Zufall ein David Interview gefunden. Leider ist es englisch, aber ich hoffe es gefällt Euch trotzdem.

    Hello,
    I have found a new David interview. It is not in german, sorry. I hope you will like it.

    Tschüss
    Dagibu

    Kill Bill - Vol. 2 Interview with David Carradine
    www.themoviechicks.com/mid2004/mctkillbill2.html
    April 30, 2004

    David Carradine enjoys a good Cuban cigar and telling stories. He talked about superheroes, his meeting with Milton Berle, his appreciation for Bridget Fonda's talent - and in between he talked about the movie and working with Quentin Tarantino.

    Question: How was the Tarantino experience?

    David: Awesome. Tarantino is the coolest damn guy; he's just so much fun to work with. He might be the best director I've ever worked with. He just seems to know how to do it and he knows how to make you feel good about it. He's having so much fun you start having fun. You can't help it. Everybody. Not just the actors, the whole crew had the greatest time. And he's constantly surprising you. I mean, the script that I was presented with was literature; it was so perfectly worked out. Then all through the picture he kept continuing to write it. Changing according to what he sees people doing or what the locations are like - he's constantly adapting himself.

    Anyway, he was nothing but fun and I get along with him. We have a lot of things in common. Some of our conversations became part of the movie. We were in a cigar bar in Beijing. We're still in pre-production and I'm training. At the end of the day, I get a call from him and he says, "Do you smoke cigars? There's a cigar bar in this hotel. Do you want to meet me up there?" We go up there and we sit there for three hours. [We're talking] and he says, "God, all I had to do is write down things that you say and people think I was a genius." And I said, "Well Quentin, you are... but feel free."

    Then six days later there's a re-write of the script and pretty much our entire conversation, that whole Superman thing, that was actually a conversation we had. He wasn't just writing down things that I said; it was our conversation, his input, my input. That became a big important part of the movie that wasn't even in the original script; that's really the heart of my performance.

    Question: How did you and Tarantino get talking about Superman in the first place to have that put in the script?

    David: Well, because we talk about everything. Quentin and I were constantly finding something new that we had in common and comic books were one of them. I think we were talking about comic books much earlier in our relationship, before I had the part. We talked about mostly movies, because that's what Tarantino is interested in, but also about Rodan's sculpture, all kinds of things.

    It's not exactly true what he says, that Superman is not unique in the respect [that he's the only superhero whose alter ego is the pretend character). There are a lot of them, but I figured for the movie it's okay. That's what we were talking about that night and that's what went in; it seemed to work for him. And you notice how he manages to feed it in. But I don't think that was the point, I think the point really was just he wanted to have his rap about Superman cause I think he knows that people go to his movies to hear that non-sequitur rap - Samuel L. Jackson talking about hamburgers.

    I think there's also something that Quentin wants to tell us - they are comic book characters, the people in Kill Bill, but that they are sort of superheroes, or super villains, or super something. They are beyond the problems of humanity, beyond the day-to-day stuff. The things that they are dealing with are stuff that we wouldn't dream about. They are ready to actually just go out and die - and say f**k you while they're doing it. That's Tarantino's people.

    I loved the movie. I wasn't prepared for the quality of the second movie. I don't mean the quality like how good it was, but the kind of movie; that it's so emotional. When you're dealing with that stuff with the kid, I've seen girls cry. You don't cry in a Tarantino movie. It turns out it's a chick flick.

    Question: How did you get involved with this film? Did Quentin write this character with you in mind?

    David: That's what he tells me. It's complicated, because he did originally offer it to Warren Beatty, but apparently he was always writing it for me and about me.

    We had met at the Toronto Film Festival in 1996 - okay, it's a weird story. I talked to this psychic on the telephone - the psychic is in Minnesota. And she told me I should work with an X-generation director. I said, "What's that?" "Like Quentin Tarantino." I knew Quentin was at the festival, so I called up the Four Seasons and said, "Let me talk to Quentin Tarantino" and they connected me right up. I said, "This psychic says we should meet." So he came over to my hotel and we met. I was playing the piano in a piano bar and we started talking about music and this, that and the other thing and it sort of seemed like we should work together.

    Then I ran into him a few other times. [At the cast party of Jackie Brown,] he says, "We've gotta do something together, but it's got to be the right thing. It has to be a home run." I realize now that what Quentin meant was he couldn't just stick me in; it had to be a thing that showcased me or he didn't want to do it at all. He's a big fan, it turns out he has 16mm prints of the Kung Fu series. He's seen most of the movies I've made. So it was kind of bound to happen. When he finally said here's your script, he handed me the thing and I read it, and went "God, it's tremendous. Lucky me."

    Question: Was it going to be one film at that time?

    David: Oh yeah. It wasn't until we had already shot the whole movie before that decision to split it up was made.

    Question: Where there any re-shoots after that decision?

    David: No - there was just the regular stuff called pickups. For instance, you know in the first movie, the conversation I have on the telephone with Daryl where all you see is my hand on the sword. In the original script, my side of the conversation doesn't even exist, you just see Daryl standing in the hospital and he thought it would be cool, an homage thing, so he wrote this whole extra part for me without ever pointing a damn camera in my face. And I'm acting the whole thing out with my ring.

    It was really funny because theoretically it's finished, the movie's finished, I've already been told I'm wrapped then they bring me back. Then Daryl's wrapped and they called her up on a cell phone, at home, and had her do the other side of the conversation so I was actually having a phone conversation with Daryl Hannah. That was pretty cool.

    Question: It had to be your hand? Couldn't it be a stand-in?

    David: Quentin is very organic; there was no way that he was going to put someone else's hand in there and anyway, my hands are kind of famous. It seemed right.

    He always was trying to make the character as much like me as possible. He didn't make me take off any of my rings. They were afraid of doubling, so they had to find a watch that looks like this cause he said, "That's so cool, we can't beat that."

    He sent his wardrobe people to my house and they went and raided my closet for the clothes that Bill wears. Those are all my clothes. I was pretty much naked before the movie. It was the best experience I have ever had. I don't know how the hell I'm going to top it.

    Question: You were mentioning the training earlier, was the training you had to do for this film different than the stuff you've done in the past and how extensive was it?

    David: It was pretty extensive - we worked out 8 hours a day, 5 days a week, for 3 months, which I think is more than anybody in the Olympics. I thought well I don't need this, the girls need it, but it was a gift. Because you know how you say I've got to really get down and really do some training and then of course, you never do or you do it for a couple of weeks and slough it back off again but I'm being forced to do something that I really want to do and I loved it.

    It turned out that this stuff that the Chinese guys do is not really kung fu. It's very different and I did need to learn how to do that. And the other thing was the Samurai, which I had no experience with; and then the wirework which I got really good at. You've seen the second movie; you notice they don't do any. I got this kind of stuff down and then he came to a decision, "I don't want to see you on the wire. I want to see you flat-footed. I want everybody to know you're really doing this stuff." I think somewhere in the middle we all saw Matrix 2 and he said, "I'm tired of this sh*t." I think we all were.

    My big fight is not in the movie and I don't understand that decision but I know he's right about it, whatever it is. Quentin did not hire me because I'm a kung fu expert; he hired me because he liked to listen to me talk. And that's what I feel is better for me to stress at this point. I don't need to convince anybody that I know kung fu, but maybe somebody needs to know that I really can act, without doing a Chinese accent or a funny walk.

    Question: So that explains the ending.

    David: You know how it's going to end and then he fools you. I never knew until the last minute what he was going to do there. He manages to surprise you constantly; you're never prepared. Anything can happen.

    Question: At least you don't have to worry about taking your sword onto the airplane the way Uma did in the movie.

    David: Quentin wanted to create this special world in which everybody walks around with a samurai sword, extras in the airport, a special little place in the airplane to stick your samurai sword.

    I had to talk them into putting my sword in front of the door. I said, "You ought to see the sword someplace." The first thing she sees when she walks in… perfect. And I happened to have that stand; they didn't have a stand for it. That stand was my own thing - I never got it back.

    Question: At least they returned your clothes.

    David: Yeah, they did and I got doubles because they made copies of it.



    Re: 2004 Kill Bill vol. 2

    tigerauge.ah - 26.08.2005, 14:48


    Ich habe den Film gestern gesehen und war positiv überrascht. Ich hatte eigentlich viel mehr Gewaltszenen und weniger Dialoge erwartet. So kann man sich irren. :D :roll:

    Wenn man mal das Grundthema "Rache" außen vor läßt (dem kann ich grundsätzlich nichts abgewinnen), fand ich ihn wirklich gut. Die Schauspieler waren klasse, allen voran natürlich David, und die filmische Qualität auch 1a.

    Die besten Szenen waren natürlich die mit David. Die Anfangsszene vor der Kirche fand ich spitze. In sw wirkte das gleich doppelt intensiv.
    Und die Schlußszene war auch nicht ohne, vor allem als er aufsteht und sie fragt, wie er aussieht und sie antwortet "Bereit!". Wow, das gab 'ne Gänsehaut. Und dann fällt er sang- und klanglos um. :cry:

    Was mir auch noch gut gefallen hat, waren die Szenen mit dem Mädchen. Da sieht man ihn so richtig frei und unbekümmert lachen. Man merkt direkt, wieviel Spaß er hat mit der Kleinen zu interagieren. :razz:

    I watched this movie yesterday and got surprised in a positiv way. I had expected more violence and less dialogues. :D :roll:

    Leaving aside the main subject which is "revange" (which I don't accept and like at all) the movie is really great. Great actors, in first row of course David, and excelent cinematic quality.

    The best scenes of course where those with David. I liked that scene in front of the chappel a lot. And been filmed in black and white made it twice as intensive.
    And then the final sequence, when he gets up and asks her how he looks like and she answers "You look ready!." Wow, this gave me the creeps. And then he just starts walking and falls to the floor. :cry:

    Also I liked the scenes he played with the little girl. He's laughing in such an unconcerned and free way. You can feel he's having much fun acting with the girl. :razz:



    Re: 2004 Kill Bill vol. 2

    yeshe.dolma - 15.12.2005, 13:52


    ich habe die bilder von "Kill Bill 2" überarbeitet




    I have overworked the pictures of " Kill Bill 2 "



    Re: 2004 Kill Bill vol. 2

    Shotokan - 16.12.2005, 00:20


    Ich kann die Bilder echt nur empfehlen! Die sind total klasse geworden!

    I can only recomend this pictures! They worked out really great.



    Re: 2004 Kill Bill vol. 2

    dagibu - 27.12.2005, 00:31

    Tarantino bringt KILL BILL zusammen
    Hallo,

    Tarantino will KILL BILL als einen Film zurück in die Kinos bringen

    Hier ist der Link dazu.
    http://www.contactmusic.com/new/xmlfeed.nsf/mndwebpages/tarantino%20brings%20kill%20bills%20together

    Dank an Paula für die Information (David Carradine Yahoo Site).

    Na das ist doch was, David mal wieder auf der grossen Leinwand zu sehen.

    +++++++++++

    Tarantiono brings KILL BILL together and back to the movie theaters

    The Link
    http://www.contactmusic.com/new/xmlfeed.nsf/mndwebpages/tarantino%20brings%20kill%20bills%20together

    Thanks to Paula for the information (David Carradine Yahoo Site)

    This sounds good, David come back on the big screen.

    Tschüss
    Dagmar



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