Death Proof
Death Proof: Tarantino’s Ode to the Women Who Survive Quentin Tarantino’s Death Proof is often treated as the forgotten half of the Grindhouse experiment. Overshadowed by its companion film and misunderstood by audiences expecting constant carnage, it stands instead as one of Tarantino’s most slyly constructed works. Beneath the long barroom conversations, beneath the retro scratches and reel burns, beneath the fetishistic attention to chrome bumpers and spinning tires, lies a simple but radical idea: the slasher film turned inside out. At first glance, Death Proof appears to be a love letter to exploitation cinema — the cheap, lurid, midnight movies that once populated American grindhouse theaters. The grainy film stock, the missing reels, the outrageous premise of a killer with a "death proof" car — everything screams homage. But Tarantino is never content with mere imitation. Like a DJ sampling forgotten vinyl, he loops the past and then scratches it until s...