[quote=“SteveZissou”]
Bill & Budd’s loathe for each other was spawned from Elle Driver. Budd was in love with her, but she was in love with Bill.
[/quote]
How’d you find that out? It definetly wasn’t in the film. Well, maybe the Elle loving Bill part.
2. He confirmed that the sequel is a definitely serious idea and that Sofie Fatale raises Coppertop’s daughter, Nikki (who’s name i believed since my first viewing as inspired by NIKITA) who eventually seeks her vengeance on Bea.
Maybe I’m crazy or just looking too deeply into this or perhaps this has already been discussed to death OR its already a known fact and I’m an idiot, BUT, does anyone else think the guy in the white suit in The Origin of O-Ren is a young Bill? They seem to focus on him a lot in the scene where her parents are killed.
Rikki Tikki Tavi… familiar with the story? Rikki-Tikki-Tavi is a short story in The Jungle Book (1894) by Rudyard Kipling. It deals with an English family in India who discover a mongoose half drowned from a storm and decide to keep it. The mongoose, Rikki-tikki, soon finds himself confronted by two cobras, Nag and Nagaina, who have plans to kill Rikki-tikki’s new family.
The story is a favorite of Kipling fans and is notable for its frightening and serious tone. Some epic features (heightened prosaic style; songs to the hero) add to the standard typology of hero defeating villain. It has often been anthologised and has also been published more than once as a short book in its own right.
A short animated version released in 1975 was directed by Chuck Jones and narrated by Orson Welles. Maybe a reference to that whole thing…
[quote=“Galaxyofsoup”]
A short animated version released in 1975 was directed by Chuck Jones and narrated by Orson Welles. Maybe a reference to that whole thing…
— ;D
First time poster, be gentle.
[/quote]
Did that have a song that goes “Rikki The Tikki’s Alive”?
[quote=“Galaxyofsoup”]
Rikki Tikki Tavi… familiar with the story? Rikki-Tikki-Tavi is a short story in The Jungle Book (1894) by Rudyard Kipling. It deals with an English family in India who discover a mongoose half drowned from a storm and decide to keep it. The mongoose, Rikki-tikki, soon finds himself confronted by two cobras, Nag and Nagaina, who have plans to kill Rikki-tikki’s new family.
The story is a favorite of Kipling fans and is notable for its frightening and serious tone. Some epic features (heightened prosaic style; songs to the hero) add to the standard typology of hero defeating villain. It has often been anthologised and has also been published more than once as a short book in its own right.
A short animated version released in 1975 was directed by Chuck Jones and narrated by Orson Welles. Maybe a reference to that whole thing…
— ;D
First time poster, be gentle.
[/quote]
wow, remember the car bill is driving?
it’s a De Tomaso Mangusta. - “mangusta” in english means “mongoose”! apparently the only animal not to fear snakes.