When a filmmaker reveals what their favorite movie is from their long and iconic filmography, we can't help but listen to the filmmaker's take. And when that filmmaker is Quentin Tarantino, we drop everything we are doing to learn from the master of original and cinema-celebratory filmmaking. 

From his amateur film My Best Friend's Birthday to Kill Bill: Vol 1 and Vol 2 (my personal favorite) to the extended version of The Hateful EightTarantino has directed and written many of our favorite films that can teach us a lot about the history of cinema and how to establish our own unique visual voices in the screenplay and from the director's chair. 


When the director was asked to pick his best film during a visit to Howard Stern's SiriusXM show, he didn't hesitate to pick his favorite film that he has ever made. 

What is Tarantino's favorite movie he has made?Quentin Tarantino on set of 'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood'Credit: Sony Pictures Releasing

Tarantino Considers This His Best Film

Variety reports that Tarantino bestowed the title of his best film ever was given to the filmmaker’s latest film, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

Released in 2019, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood has one of Tarantino’s best casts, tightest stories, a tense climax with the Manson family, and more attention to detail than any other film in his filmography. 

Grossing over $374 million at the worldwide box office, these are impressive numbers for an original drama. It also helps that the film picked up 10 nominations, including best director and best picture, at the Academy Awards. 

“For years people used to ask me stuff like that,” Tarantino said about being asked to pick his best project. “And I would say something like, ‘Oh, they’re all my children.’ I really do think Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is my best movie.” 

What is Tarantino's favorite movie he has made?'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood'Credit: Sony Pictures Releasing

What’s Tarantino’s Most Misunderstood Film?

While he considers Once Upon a Time in Hollywood to be his best movie, Tarantino believes Grindhouse is his most misunderstood. The 2007 double-feature, featuring Tarantino’s Death Proof and Robert Rodriguez’s Planet Terror, was the two filmmakers’ nod to the exploitation era of filmmaking which was dominated by indie filmmakers working on shoestring budgets.  

The films bombed at the box office, grossing $25 million in the U.S.

“I think me and Robert just felt that people had a little more of a concept of the history of double features and exploitation movies,” Tarantino told Empire magazine in 2020. “They had no idea what the fuck they were watching. It meant nothing to them, all right, what we were doing. So that was a case of being a little too cool for school.” 

While most people haven’t seen either of these exploitations films, I would highly recommend checking out Death Proof simply for the great dialogue and amazing stunt car work. 

Tarantino continued to say that Hollywood is one of his most notable movies considering he views the modern movie era as being tied with the 1980s and 1950s as “the worst in Hollywood history.”

What is Tarantino's favorite movie he has made?'Death Proof'Credit: Dimension Films

Why Are We in the Worst Era in Hollywood History? 

We are currently in an era of growing pains and a new identity in Hollywood. With the endless remakes, requels, sequels, and reboots, the industry isn’t putting out a lot of interesting and new films that strike a certain spot of our imagination. While 2022 has been a fun year for new movies, there have been some box office bombs that justify Tarantino’s take. 

“Even though the ‘80s was the time that I probably saw more movies in my life than ever—at least as far as going out to the movies was concerned—I do feel that ‘80s cinema is, along with the ‘50s, the worst era in Hollywood history,” Tarantino recently revealed on his and Avary Roger’s The Video Archives Podcast (via NME). “Matched only by now, matched only by the current era!”

Tarantino did note that “the [films] that don’t conform” are “the ones that stand out from the pack” in modern cinema. Films like Top Gun: Maverick, Everything Everywhere All at Once, and Bardo: False Chronicle of a Handful of Truthsstand out among the dominance of superhero movies from Marvel and DC. 

We know that Tarantino, being “too cool for school,” will probably never work for Marvel, but who knows what the future may hold for Tarantino’s new TV career.  

What do you consider to be Tarantino’s best film? Let us know why in the comments! 

Source: Variety