Quentin Tarantino slams 'weak sister' Paul Dano
Published in Entertainment News
Quentin Tarantino has branded Paul Dano "a weak sister".
The Pulp Fiction filmmaker named Paul Thomas Anderson's 2007 drama There Will Be Blood as his fifth-favourite movie of the 21st century and admitted it would have been higher in the list if he hadn't been so unimpressed by the actor's performance alongside Daniel Day-Lewis.
Speaking on The Bret Easton Ellis Podcast, he said: "There Will Be Blood would stand a better chance to be in number one or number two if it didn't have a big giant flaw in it, and the flaw is Paul Dano.
"Obviously, it's supposed to be a two-hander, and it's also so drastically obvious that it's not a two-hander.
"He is weak sauce, man. He's a weak sister."
Tarantino believes "another terrific actor" could have excelled in the role, suggesting his Once Upon a Time in Hollywood actor Austin Butler, despite him only being 16 when There Will Be Blood was released.
He said: "Austin Butler would have been wonderful in that role. [Dano] just such a weak, weak, uninteresting guy."
Although Bret attempted to defend Paul's performance, Quentin still argued the Swiss Army Man actor simply wasn't good enough.
The author said: "Daniel Day-Lewis also makes it impossible to make it a two-hander because there are aspects of that performance that are so gargantuan."
Tarantino replied: "So you put him with the weakest male actor in SAG? The limpest d*** in the world?...
"I'm not saying he's giving a terrible performance. I'm saying he's giving a non-entity performance."
The 62-year-old director admitted the Fabelmans actor just isn't someone he is a fan of.
Asked if he had enjoyed Paul in any of his movies, he said: "I don't care for him. I don't care for him, I don't care for Owen Wilson, and I don't care for Matthew Lillard."
During the podcast interview, Tarantino also blasted The Hunger Games and accused author Suzanne Collins - whose novels were adapted into the hugely successful film franchise - of "ripping off" Koushun Takami's 1999 novel Battle Royale, which spawned the influential 2000 Japanese movie of the same name.
He said: "I do not understand how the Japanese writer didn't sue Suzanne Collins for every f****** thing she owns.
"They just ripped off the f*****' book. Stupid book critics are not going to go watch a Japanese movie called Battle Royale so the stupid book critics never called her on it.
"They talked about how it was the most original f*****' thing they'd ever read. As soon as the film critics saw the film, they said, 'What the f***? This is just Battle Royale except PG!' "













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