Did Brad Pittās stuntman really kill his wife? If you didnāt appreciate Quentin Tarantinoās filmās ambiguity, then read on.
Spoilers for Once Upon A Time In Hollywood lie ahead.
Despite weighing in at a whopping two hours and 41 minutes, Quentin Tarantinoās
Once Upon A Time In Hollywood still left some interesting plot threads on the cutting room floor. Perhaps the most tantalising of these was the possibility that Brad Pittās likeable stuntman character, Cliff Booth, had killed his wife on a boat some years before, a key reason why many figures in the movie industry were reluctant to hire him.
For reasons unknown, the film elected to play this story beat in an ambiguous fashion, giving the audience nothing to go on and therefore leaving us to make our own minds up. In fact, with an actor of Brad Pittās talent and charisma in the role (he would go on to win the Best Supporting Actor Oscar in fact,) weād argue that the viewer would probably give Booth the benefit of the doubt.
Well, that would be a mistake. Tarantino himself has penned the novelisation of the film, and made plain what really happened on that boat. In typical Tarantino fashion, itās pretty graphic, but if you want to know, read onā¦
āThe minute Cliff shot his wife with the shark gun, he knew it was a bad idea.” The bloody detailed description of the poor woman’s death tells us the spear “hit her a little below the belly button, tearing her in half, both pieces hitting the deck of the boat with a splash.”
Cliff is deeply shocked by the event, as “the moment he saw her ripped in two…years of ill will and resentment evaporated in an instant.”
Whilst Cliff does try to save his wife by then holding the two halves of her body together for seven hours (allowing them to talk and apparently sort out all of their differences), by the time the emergency services arrive, it is too late.
Tarantino also explains how Cliff got away with the crime. In the novelisation, Tarantino states Cliff’s accident story āwas plausible and it couldn’t be disproven. Cliff felt really bad about what he did to Billie. But as much regret and remorse, as he felt, it never occurred to him
not to try to get away with murder.ā
So there you go. Crikey.
Tarantinoās next film is still set to be his last, at which point he has often talked about becoming āa man of lettersā. Perhaps we can look forward to him going back and adding key scenes to all of his films. Next up Quentin, why donāt you write us a new
Pulp Fiction chapter telling us whatās in that flippinā briefcaseā¦?
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