Studio executives are pissed off with Quentin Tarantino’s appearance at the anti-police brutality rally in New York City.
According to Page Six, Harvey Weinstein is reportedly upset at Quentin Tarantino for calling cops “murders”.
Now police unions are now calling for a boycott of the director’s The Hateful Eight and studio executives want the director to apologize.
From Page Six:
“The last thing Harvey needs is a boycott that will scare off Oscar voters and hurt the box office,” said one insider.
“Harvey is desperate to find a solution,” said my source. “He’s angry that Tarantino needlessly created a controversy that has nothing to do with the movie. It’s so pointless and unnecessary.” And bad for business.
Quentin Tarantino began his career as an independent filmmaker with the release ofReservoir Dogs in 1992. Quentin Tarantino’s work on Reservoir Dogs is regarded as a classic and cult hit, it was called the “Greatest Independent Film of All Time” by Empire. Its popularity was boosted by the release in 1994 of his second film, Pulp Fiction, a crime film that became a major critical and commercial success and judged the greatest film of the past 25 years by Entertainment Weekly.
Quentin Tarantino’s new movie, The Hateful Eight centers around a post-Civil War Wyoming, where bounty hunters try to find shelter during a blizzard but get involved in a plot of betrayal and deception. The Hateful Eight features Channing Tatum, WaltonGoggins, Jennifer Jason Leigh and Samuel L. Jackson.
Recent Quentin Tarantino news:
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Quentin Tarantino: Chicago, Houston Philadelphia, LAPD, NYPD Unions Boycott ‘Hateful Eight’
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Sameul L. Jackson Reveals What Quentin Tarantino Did To Keep ‘The Hateful Eight’ Actors in Character
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How to Audition for Quentin Tarantino’s ‘The Hateful Eight’
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Samuel L. Jackson Leaks The Hateful Eight Photos
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