May 13, 2025

Inglourious Basterds (2009)

Inglourious Basterds (2009)
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Inglourious Basterds (2009)

This week on Born to Watch , the team takes aim at one of Quentin Tarantino’s most audacious creations with their Inglourious Basterds (2009) Review . Set in Nazi-occupied France during World War II, Tarantino weaves together a brutal tale of revenge, propaganda, and pure cinematic spectacle. Brad Pitt leads the charge as Lieutenant Aldo Raine, a grizzled American soldier commanding a team of Jewish fighters with one simple mission, kill Nazis and collect their scalps.

It’s a deliciously violent premise, executed with Tarantino's signature flair for dialogue, tension, and shock value. Whitey, Damo, G-Man, and special guest Dan break down the movie's unforgettable moments, from the iconic opening sequence in the French countryside to the explosive showdown in Shoshanna’s Parisian cinema.

The crew dives deep into the brilliance of Christoph Waltz as Colonel Hans Landa, the “Jew Hunter” whose multilingual charm and chilling brutality won him an Academy Award. Whitey recounts his jaw-dropping experience attending the Inglourious Basterds premiere at the State Theatre in Sydney, where he not only watched the film in stunning 70mm but bumped into Tarantino himself, earning a nod and a “Thanks, mate” from the director. It’s a full-circle fanboy moment that the crew can’t help but roast him for.

Damo, true to form, is sceptical of the film’s pacing and violence, admitting that it took him three separate tries to get through it. He hilariously recalls turning it off twice during the Bear Jew scene — the sound of the bat making contact just too much to handle. Meanwhile, G-Man shines with trivia gold, revealing Tarantino’s decade-long script process and the last-minute discovery of Christoph Waltz, who stole the role from Leonardo DiCaprio. His ability to seamlessly switch between German, French, Italian, and English during his audition left Tarantino and producer Lawrence Bender high-fiving in disbelief.

The team also dissects the infamous basement bar scene — a masterclass in tension and dialogue that only Tarantino could deliver. Michael Fassbender's suave but doomed performance as Lieutenant Archie Hicox gets high praise, while Damo can’t help but admire his old-timey English gentleman look. Whitey and Dan debate whether this is the best opening scene of all time, putting it up against classics like Raiders of the Lost Ark and The Dark Knight .

Of course, it wouldn’t be Born to Watch without a deep dive. Damo declares the movie a “masterpiece of tension,” while G-Man drops the trivia bomb that Tarantino nearly abandoned the script after failing to find the right actor for Landa. It wasn’t until Waltz walked in and blew them away with his quad-lingual performance that the movie finally came together.


IN THIS EPISODE:

  • Quentin Tarantino’s mastery of dialogue and pacing
  • Brad Pitt’s Southern drawl and why Aldo Raine might be his coolest role
  • Christoph Waltz’s Oscar-winning turn as Hans Landa
  • Why the basement bar scene is Tarantino at his best
  • Whitey’s surreal run-in with Tarantino after the Sydney premiere

Inglourious Basterds is the movie where history gets rewritten, Nazis get what’s coming to them, and Tarantino crafts his most ambitious narrative yet. It’s violent, sharp, and endlessly quotable. The team at Born to Watch spares no detail, no roast, and no punchline in their breakdown of this modern classic.

Listen now on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your movie fix.
Join the conversation:

  • Is Inglourious Basterds Tarantino's best work?
  • Can you handle the Bear Jew scene?
  • Where does Hans Landa rank among the all-time great villains?

Drop us a voicemail at BornToWatch.com.au and be part of the show!

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