A review of all Quentin Tarantino movies

Quentin Tarantino.

There are few directors who can be identified with the naked eye by looking at a few frames of their films, but Quentin Tarantino has managed over the last 30 years to forge a path only a select few can reach. So if you agree, we are going to review his works signed as a director, those who have created his legend of enfant terrible in Hollywood.

All of Quentin Tarantino's filmography in chronological order

Born in the town of Knoxville, Tennessee, the career of one of the most critically and publicly acclaimed directors has been marked by attention and devotion that began practically at the same time as his first film. Went with Reservoir Dogs in 1992 but above all with Pulp Fiction in 1994 when rose to fame and was able from that moment on to tackle any project he wanted, endorsed by the extraordinary box office figures that his films reached.

With a way of making films that is fresh, direct but above all with a thunderous rawness, Quentin Tarantino was soon the target of anger in his own country, whom they practically accused of fomenting violence due to the coldness with which he showed blood in his films. It is true that so much Reservoir Dogs as pulpfiction, or kill bill, They are an elegy to a depraved and brutal world, but no one can doubt the tremendous originality with which he dealt with themes that until then had been classics in the history of American cinema.

Quentin Tarantino.

We are not going to bore you anymore because this is not a treatise on Tarantino's cinema but rather a reminder of all we've seen of him during the last three decades. Which is not little.

These are the movies directed by Quentin Tarantino ordered chronologically:

Reservoir Dogs (1992)

Tarantino's first professional film and first smash hit. The plot tells the story of six delinquents and criminals who are hired to pull off a hit at a diamond warehouse, but the plan soon falls apart when the police show up at the scene of the robbery, causing some of the assailants to die and others to flee. But what has really happened?

Where to see it?: Prime Video

A scene from Reservoir Dogs

Pulp Fiction (1994)

This movie was an absolute cultural phenomenon at the time and elevated Tarantino to the top of Hollywood's top directors. In it they tell us the story of two thugs (John Travolta and Samuel L. Jackson), a boxer (Bruce Willis) and a couple of rather shabby robbers who find themselves involved in a spiral of violence that drags them along without them being able to avoid it.

Where to see it?: Movistar +

Pulp Fiction

Four Rooms (1995)

Film that is divided into several chapters and in which Quentin Tarantino was commissioned to direct a titled The Man from Hollywood. In all the stories there is a link, which is the presence of the bellboy, played by Tim Roth. Tarantino, in this film, once again abused those absurd dialogues that don't seem to contribute anything to the plot and that end up becoming classics… among his fans.

Where to see it?: buy or rent

Four Rooms

Jackie Brown (1997)

Tarantino changes third and returns to one of his favorite times: the 70s. And there builds a thriller in which the protagonist, a stewardess, decides to get a little more money acting as a courier for a mobster. Soon things will go wrong and he will have to help the police catch his former boss if he wants to see the charges against him reduced.

Where to see it?: buy or rent

Jackie Brown

Kill Bill Volume 1 (2003)

Tarantino returns to what he loves to do the most: explicit violence and absurdly terrifying situations. On this occasion, the protagonist is a murderer who sees how one of the most important days of her life is destroyed by hitmen from her boss's gang, Bill. Black mamba, which is the name of the protagonist, will seek revenge... at any cost.

Years later, the director himself released in some theaters Kill Bill The Whole Bloody Affair. This is the extended version of the footage and a point of view closer to what I would have originally wanted to present with Kill Bill Volume 1.

Where to see it?: Buy or rent.

Kill Bill Vol 1

Kill Bill Volume 2 (2004)

Direct continuation of the first volume of Kill Bill, Tarantino continues to tell us about the path of revenge undertaken by the Black Mamba and that leads her to continue quenching her thirst for blood with an endless string of murders. A must watch if you've seen the first movie.

Where to see it?: buy or rent

Kill Bill Vol 2

Death Proof (2007)

Kurt Russell takes on the role of Mike, a retired stuntman who decides to hit the road in search of young women to kill. A movie with the Tarantino brand that does not reach the brilliance of other of his productions but that serves to better understand the North American cinematographic universe.

Where to see it?: buy or rent

Death Proof

Inglourious Basterds (2009)

Quentin Tarantino finds the path of his cinema again with a movie damn good that takes us to the Second World War, where a group of Jewish soldiers begin a rampant hunt for officers and soldiers of the Nazi army. As stark as violent and fun in equal measure. A real joy.

Where to see it?: Prime Video and Movistar+

Damn bastards

Django Unchained (2012)

Quentin Tarantino goes to the Wild West, another of the times he fell in love with thanks to the spaghetti western by Sergio Leone with music by Ennio Morricone. On this occasion we will know the story of a slave (Django, played by Jamie Foxx) who is freed by a German bounty hunter and, together, They will travel through the south of the country hunting down criminals more dangerous.

Where to see it?: Movistar +

Django Unchained

The Hateful Eight (2015)

Tarantino liked the experience of traveling to the Wild West so much that he his next film also placed him in that historical era in the United States. On this occasion, a few years after the Civil War and with a bounty hunter traveling with a fugitive that he must deliver to justice. The problem is that along the way they will meet other characters who will take the story down an increasingly violent path.

Where to see it?: Netflix and HBOMax

Los odiosos ocho

Once Upon a Time in… Hollywood (2019)

Quentin Tarantino completely changes register and creates a genre film that is based on some real events and that takes us to the heart of Hollywood in the late 60s, when the industry is revolutionized with new and innovative directors and technologies that will cause the great change of the next decade. For this film we will see a superb cast of actors parade, with Brad Pitt, Leonardo Di Caprio, Margot Robbie, Luke Perry, Damian Lewis, Al Pacino or Kurt Russell himself among others.

Where to see it?: Prime Video and HBO Max

Once upon a time in...Hollywood

Quentin Tarantino's movies from worst to best

If you want to marathon Quentin Tarantino movies, you can do it in two ways: either following the chronological order of release that we indicate above, or by quality, according to the valuation that each one has right now on IMDb, the main reference website in the world of cinema, television and audiovisual products. Of course, if you opt for this second criterion, we do not advise you to change the order of each volume of Kill Bill for obvious reasons.

This is the classification of Quentin Tarantino's movies ordered from worst to best, according to the rating that each one has on IMDb:

  • Four Rooms (6,7)
  • Death Proof (7,0)
  • Jackie Brown (7,5)
  • Once upon a time in… Hollywood (7,6)
  • The Hateful Eight (7,8)
  • Kill Bill Volume 2 (8,0)
  • Kill Bill Volume 1 (8,2)
  • Damn bastards (8,3)
  • Reservoir Dogs (8,3)
  • Django Unchained (8,4)
  • Pulp Fiction8,9)

What will be Tarantino's next movie?

From Once upon a time in ... Hollywood There are many fans who are getting impatient and waiting for the director to reveal what his next work will be. It has been four years since we have had any of his offerings in movie theaters and his touch at the box office is (very) missed.

An image of Quentin Tarantino in Reservoir Dogs

The truth is that to go see it with popcorn and Coca-Cola in hand, you will still have to wait. And Quentin confessed in a recent interview that his next big project is not a movie but a TV series. What you are reading. It will have a short format, with only eight episodes, and everything indicates that it will premiere on some streaming platform, although there are no details about it yet.

It is not the first proposal of this type that the director has embarked on: this same 2023 he launched a 4-episode miniseries of The Hateful Eight, with unpublished material never seen before, although in Spain we have not even smelled it.


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  1.   greenfrankie said

    So why does the hateful 8 start with "the 8th film of tarantino"?
    I know that here in Spain kill bill was split in 2 to earn more money in theaters, dvd's, etc. but still according to this chronological list it would be the ninth, what is wrong
    I also saw in a documentary that the success of kill bill was such that they wanted to do the same with death proof, but since the 1st part was not very popular, they did not show us the 2nd, the truth is that when I saw it it seemed short and without a clear ending , but I still don't understand the 8th movie »the hateful 8». It was said that the movie "killing Zoe" was his too
    Everything is very doubtful and I will try to find out why, thanks