THE HATEFUL EIGHT

Quentin Tarentino's unique storytelling technique, his eye for cinematic carnage and some thundering performances are the primary selling points of 2015's
The Hateful Eight, a bloody western saga that provides riveting entertainment that requires some patience, but patience will be rewarded.

It's the dead of winter in Wyoming shortly after the Civil War where we meet Marquis Warren (Samuel L. Jackson), a bounty hunter bound for the city of Red Rock who hitches a ride on a stagecoach which was bought by another bounty hunter named John Ruth (Kurt Russell) who's handcuffed to his bounty, a murderer named Daisy (Jennifer Jason Leigh) he likes to elbow in the mouth whenever she speaks. The stagecoach then picks up Chris Mannix (Walton Goggins), who reveals himself to be the next sheriff of Red Rock. As weather becomes intolerable, the stage does find shelter in what appears to be a large mountain cabin, populated with a group of disparate characters who we learn are all hiding secrets that are part of a much larger agenda.

As has been accustomed with Tarantino, our story is told out of sequence, but unlike
Pulp Fiction, it takes a lot longer to figure that out, primarily due to several red herrings, another Tarantino trademark, particularly Warren's possession of a letter written by Abraham Lincoln, that almost makes the viewer stray from the prize, which is the real story that eventually unfolds. But a pot of poisoned coffee at the beginning of the third act kicks this story into high gear and after that, Tarantino brings the bloody and delivers the story we've been waiting for.

Tarantino's screenplay is a little talky, which includes an unbelievably limitless use of the "N" word...I can't remember the last time I've heard this word used so much in a single film and Tarantino's possible racist leanings could find some justification in the fact that he also makes Jackson's Marquis Warren the smartest character in the story, but racist is in the eye of the beholder.
Tarantino continues to be a great actor's director and gets superb performances from his rep company including Jackson, as always, Russell, Leigh (one of the most durable female characters that I've ever seen), Tim Roth, and especially Walton Goggins, who lights up the screen as Chris Mannix. I would like to submit Kurt Russell, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Walton Goggins, and Bruce Dern for permanent membership in the Tarantino rep company.

It should be mentioned that this film features some of the most gorgeous cinematography I have ever seen...not since
The Shining has a winter landscape served a story so effectively, and Ennio Morricone's music score is properly evocative. It takes a minute to get going, but once it does, this one delivers.