Last week my friend Rob Motto invited me to come on his YouTube channel to talk about Once Upon A Time… In Hollywood for its fifth anniversary. Rob and I don’t agree on much, but we agree this movie is magnificent. It had been several years since I watched Tarantino’s ode to the 60’s, so over the course of three days I rewatched the long, self-indulgent, epic. I’m happy to report that my perspective hasn’t changed. OUATIH is still the fully-realized imaginary world I can fall into like a warm bath.
You can watch our discussion here.
Still, OUATIH is a bit of an oddity on my list of favorites. There is no good reason for me to love this movie as much as I do. I'm a plot and story guy, and while it's nearly three hours long I'll be darned if I could summarize what it's about. Mostly, we just follow around a few main characters as they go about their days. As in life, some moments are amusing, some infuriating, many moments are humiliating. But it’s not as if anyone is on a quest to save the princess.
Even if that’s kind of what happens, as in any good fairytale.
I love the mood it creates, from the energy provided by the music, the visuals, and attitudes of the characters. While there's no unifying story, within each vignette everyone has a clear desire with a beginning, middle, and end. However, it's also a movie that demands our participation, and not everything is explained. We're invited to fill in the gaps and make certain assumptions.
Tarantino is sincere, never allowing any snark or meta-humor to take us out of the moment.
Notably, OUATIH is an inherently conservative movie. Never forget, it's the children of the 60s currently running the country. Here they're shown at their genesis as filthy, selfish, blame-shifting, trash. They’ve put on suits as they’ve taken over academia and politics, even as they’ve grown more subtle in pushing their ideology. But Tarantino will never forgive them for what they took away from us (personified by Sharon Tate), and holds up the Cliff Booths of the world (masculine men with moral codes) as ideals. And he takes his revenge, as only he can.
I shouldn't love this movie, but I do.