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Debe ser la cuarta vez que veo Kill Bill II, cuando Uma se carga a Guillermito, y a otro montón más...
No me había fijado yo en el Daytona que lleva la nena que sale en primera plana, estaba emocionado viéndola poner posturitas y sacar culo y pegarse todo junto, y ahora sí...una falsificación...con la pasta que ganan los asesinos esos, lo que vale la katana de Hatori Hanson, y los coches que lucen (mola el Karmann de la nena descapotable) y sueltan una mierrrrrrrrrrda de fake!
A ver, adjunto enlace de más gente cabreada, aunque no sé si ya había
Y el reloj de mierda (no me sale otra palabra)
Así lo pongo para no poner los enlaces a las falsificaciones, que estaba mal hecho...y sin afotos
Rolex in the Movies #4, Kill Bill 2
Posted by Clyde Roper on 10/28/2010 to Miscellaneous
This is a bit of a departure, but since I have spent some time in previous installments of “Rolex in the Movies” talking about how a watch can enhance character development in a film, I thought we’d tackle that Tarantino Magnum Opus Sequel, Kill Bill 2.
Now anyone who has seen this movie will understand me when I say this isn’t your usual action movie. Director Quentin Tarantino made the Kill Bill saga into a satirical examination of the Martial Arts movies he clearly loves and pays homage to in this film. The Kill Bill movies, in all their gory glory, are carried by their fetching female lead star, that Uber-blonde Vixen-with-the-Mostest: Uma Thurman.
Thurman plays Beatrixx Kiddo, a professional killer or hit-person who has been “done wrong” and seeks vengeance on anyone who had anything to do with the betrayal. From our perspective here at the watch blog it is especially interesting that Thurman wears a Rolex Daytona Cosmograph in the film. It is especially noticeable in the scene when she times her pregnancy test. If you look closely, the watch isn’t a real Rolex. It’s a fake! What gives? Couldn’t the movie company afford the real deal?
Of course they could. The in-joke here is that actress Thurman as Kiddo is wearing a “fake Rolex” in a “fake martial arts movie.” Who would trouble themselves to go to such extraordinary lengths to make such an esoteric point? Leave it to Quentin Tarantino to make exactly that kind of subtle statement. In a movie generally lauded for its hip, artsy touches—Roger Ebert called it, “a masterful saga that celebrates the martial arts genre while kidding it”—we’re left with a sense that Mr. Tarantino doesn’t leave much to chance when making his films. And you just thought they were action flicks? For shame!
Like the vaunted Director, Rolex doesn’t leave much to chance when making their product. Taratino makes good movies, Rolex makes good watches. That’s a Yin and Yang that even Mr. Tarantino could appreciate
Espero que el coche no sea de broma...
No me había fijado yo en el Daytona que lleva la nena que sale en primera plana, estaba emocionado viéndola poner posturitas y sacar culo y pegarse todo junto, y ahora sí...una falsificación...con la pasta que ganan los asesinos esos, lo que vale la katana de Hatori Hanson, y los coches que lucen (mola el Karmann de la nena descapotable) y sueltan una mierrrrrrrrrrda de fake!
A ver, adjunto enlace de más gente cabreada, aunque no sé si ya había
Y el reloj de mierda (no me sale otra palabra)
Así lo pongo para no poner los enlaces a las falsificaciones, que estaba mal hecho...y sin afotos
Rolex in the Movies #4, Kill Bill 2
Posted by Clyde Roper on 10/28/2010 to Miscellaneous
This is a bit of a departure, but since I have spent some time in previous installments of “Rolex in the Movies” talking about how a watch can enhance character development in a film, I thought we’d tackle that Tarantino Magnum Opus Sequel, Kill Bill 2.
Now anyone who has seen this movie will understand me when I say this isn’t your usual action movie. Director Quentin Tarantino made the Kill Bill saga into a satirical examination of the Martial Arts movies he clearly loves and pays homage to in this film. The Kill Bill movies, in all their gory glory, are carried by their fetching female lead star, that Uber-blonde Vixen-with-the-Mostest: Uma Thurman.
Thurman plays Beatrixx Kiddo, a professional killer or hit-person who has been “done wrong” and seeks vengeance on anyone who had anything to do with the betrayal. From our perspective here at the watch blog it is especially interesting that Thurman wears a Rolex Daytona Cosmograph in the film. It is especially noticeable in the scene when she times her pregnancy test. If you look closely, the watch isn’t a real Rolex. It’s a fake! What gives? Couldn’t the movie company afford the real deal?
Of course they could. The in-joke here is that actress Thurman as Kiddo is wearing a “fake Rolex” in a “fake martial arts movie.” Who would trouble themselves to go to such extraordinary lengths to make such an esoteric point? Leave it to Quentin Tarantino to make exactly that kind of subtle statement. In a movie generally lauded for its hip, artsy touches—Roger Ebert called it, “a masterful saga that celebrates the martial arts genre while kidding it”—we’re left with a sense that Mr. Tarantino doesn’t leave much to chance when making his films. And you just thought they were action flicks? For shame!
Like the vaunted Director, Rolex doesn’t leave much to chance when making their product. Taratino makes good movies, Rolex makes good watches. That’s a Yin and Yang that even Mr. Tarantino could appreciate
Espero que el coche no sea de broma...
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