music in the park san jose

.On the Flip Side

The Bride is back for blood, this time without the mess.

music in the park san jose

The six-month intermission is over. Those of you left in the lobby, wondering if Uma Thurman ever did kill Bill, may now return to your seats and unbuckle your belts and resume your gorging. Rest assured that Kill Bill Vol. 2, the final half of Quentin Tarantino’s fifth movie, offers just what you expect it to, with minor alterations to merit its existence as part of two films rather than one. It’s a continuation bereft of real revelation, a finale withheld from you for no other reason than Miramax wanted to double its receipts and the number of times you had to go see Uma Thurman mete out vengeance upon those who put her in a coma for four years and took her baby. Thurman’s Bride, shot in the head and left for dead by David Carradine’s Bill at the opening of the first “volume,” has resumed her “roaring rampage of revenge.”

Would Kill Bill have been better as one movie? It certainly would have been a longer one. Vol. 2 alone, with its scenes of endless chitting and chatting between Thurman and Carradine and Thurman and Madsen and Madsen and Hannah, feels bottomless all by its lonesome, even before you get to the two rounds of end credits. The first film, with its protracted fight sequences and gallons of gore, was exhausting; its successor, in which everyone left alive explains what happened to the intended and actually dead, is exhaustive. Together, they could make you a little groggy.

But they need each other to survive, like the two Captain Kirks in that Star Trek episode where the transporter splits him in half. One Kirk is soft and incapable of commanding; the other lusts for blood and is incapable of rational thought. Separated, they’re useless; united, they’re the best commanding officer in Starfleet. (Lest you think this comparison a bit, oh, geeky, consider that Tarantino credits the epigram for both Kill Bills — “Revenge is a dish best served cold” — to an “old Klingon proverb,” from Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. Then again, what are Tarantino movies if not geek pornography?) The first Kill Bill was nothing but violence — swordfight upon swordfight until the clanking of steel blades drowned out anything anyone said. The second is its emotional counterpart, the heart without all the blood drained from it and poured onto the floor for you to step and slip in.

The opening scene, set at the El Paso chapel where the Bride and her wedding party were massacred by Bill and his Deadly Viper Assassination Squad, sets the tone. We see, in black-and-white flashback, the events that set the movie(s) into motion: The Bride and her husband-to-be (Chris Nelson) and their small group of friends are chatting with the minister (Bo Svenson, speaking of flashbacks) about the next day’s ceremony. Samuel L. Jackson is there, too, behind the piano; it’s a nifty cameo, since it was Jackson who referenced Carradine’s Kung Fu Caine in Pulp Fiction. Then Bill shows up to confront the Bride about her decision to leave him and a life of death for a gig in a used-record store, and during their brief, tender tête-à-tête you feel their history together. Their small talk has big consequences, not least because you know what’s about to happen — he’s going to shoot her in the head — and the conversation has the tension of a confrontation. Tarantino, bless him, even has the restraint to pull out of the chapel before the shooting starts; he’s less concerned with the carnage than the aftermath for a change.

Then we meet Michael Madsen’s Budd, who is Bill’s brother and a man very much resigned to his fate. “That woman deserves her revenge,” he explains to Bill, “and we deserve to die.” Budd is probably the most complex character in the two films: an assassin now working as a bouncer at a topless bar who will take shit from the owner and even clean it up when it spills out of an overflowing toilet. But he does not go quietly; neither does Daryl Hannah’s eye-patched Elle Driver, with whom Thurman crosses swords in a scene reminiscent of the Winnebago fight sequence from Raising Arizona.

Then we’re left only with Bill and the Bride, for whom love and hate have become the same thing. Carradine, portraying Bill as a calm and charming killer, could just as easily kiss this woman as kill her. Perhaps theirs will end up as an inevitable union, bound by the daughter he has raised in the Bride’s absence. Or perhaps not. Carradine, heard but not seen in the first movie, gives Kill Bill Vol. 2 a warmth and dignity its predecessor lacked. We come to understand his motives as well as we comprehend the Bride’s. Their destinies are intertwined, like these two movies that can’t exist without each other and shouldn’t have had to.

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