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“It was too much like the last one,โ he explained, referencing Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, which takes place in 1969 Los Angeles. “I wasnโt really excited about dramatizing what I wrote when I was in pre-production, partly because Iโm using the skill set that I learned from Once Upon a Time in Hollywood [of] โHow are we going to turn Los Angeles into the Hollywood of 1969 without using CGI?’โ

Many of Tarantino’s films have sweeping period settings such as World War II Germany in Inglorious Basterds and the antebellum South in Django Unchained. But returning to previously charted territory ultimately compelled Tarantino to scrap the project. โThe Movie Critic there was nothing to figure out. I already kind of knew, more or less, how to turn L.A. into an older time.”
While there may have been a lack of filmmaking challenge with The Movie Critic, the story itself and its subject seemed to be a nut Tarantino struggled with cracking.
โThe thing about The Movie Critic is I really, really like it. But there was a challenge that I gave to myself when I did it. โCan I take the most boring profession in the world and make it an interesting movie?’โ Tarantino said. โWho wants to see a TV show about a fucking movie critic? Who wants to see a movie called The Movie Critic?”
What’s Next for Quentin Tarantino?

The filmmaker has famously said that he would direct a total of ten films, making his next project his final one. Even though The Movie Critic may not be moving forward, Tarantino is still keeping busy. He’s writing and producing a Once Upon a Time in Hollywood spinoff film The Adventures of Cliff Booth for Netflix. However, fellow legendary director David Fincher is helming the project, and Brad Pitt is reprising his Academy Award-winning role as the Hollywood stuntman and fixer Booth.








