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Tarantino turns his lens on Hollywood. Nostalgia and good casting ensue.

The paradox of the Tarantino oeuvre, notes film critic Peter Rainer, is that it is highly derivative and yet the films seem distinctly his.

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Andrew Cooper/Sony-Columbia Pictures/AP
Leonardo DiCaprio stars as a fading TV actor in 鈥淥nce Upon a Time ... in Hollywood.鈥

When I heard Quentin Tarantino was making a movie about the Charles Manson murders, I flinched. Gifted as he is, I鈥檝e always found the violence in his movies to be cringe-worthy because so often what we get are flagrant fantasias without any comprehension of what violence can actually do to both victims and perpetrators. Missing from Tarantino鈥檚 mindscape is the psychological consequence of violence.聽

His new film, 鈥淥nce Upon a Time in ... Hollywood,鈥 is a multilayered narrative that draws on the Manson murders while primarily focusing on the relationship between Rick Dalton (Leonardo DiCaprio) 鈥 a fading TV Western star whose career has been reduced to guest villain appearances and the occasional starring role in low-grade spaghetti Westerns 鈥 and Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt), Dalton鈥檚 longtime stunt double and best buddy. A Vietnam veteran, Booth is rumored to have killed his wife years before and gotten away with it.

Taking a cue from its title, the movie is pitched as a species of fairy tale. The re-creation of Los Angeles circa 1969 is both scrupulous and dreamlike, but because we know the Manson murders are in the offing, the atmosphere has a noxious charge. We are supposed to regard the Hollywood we see as the era鈥檚 last stand of innocence before the lights went out.聽

Considering that the year depicted was not long after both Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr. were shot, with the Vietnam War raging, this swan song to innocence comes across as a bit air-headed. Likewise, Tarantino鈥檚 take on the alcoholic Rick 鈥 that he was a casualty of the increasing impersonality of the entertainment industry 鈥 is directly at odds with the reality of a time when the vastly money-losing studio system first opened its doors to a new generation of personal filmmakers like Martin Scorsese, Francis Ford Coppola, Brian De Palma, and many others, directors who had a large influence on Tarantino.聽

In terms of creative influences, though, Tarantino鈥檚 abiding love is for schlock, especially chopsocky movies and spaghetti Westerns, both of which are amply referenced in the latest film. Most of what is referenced, however, are low-grade TV shows like 鈥淢annix.鈥 聽

The fact that Tarantino was only 6 when the movie鈥檚 events take place underscores the unreality of his nostalgia. What鈥檚 more, he appears to value schlock as aesthetically invigorating. He celebrates it and bemoans its passing. When Rick cries that he鈥檚 鈥渘ot the best anymore,鈥 the implication is that he once was.聽

The paradox of Tarantino鈥檚 oeuvre is that it is highly derivative of other movies, mostly genre pulp, and yet the films seem distinctly his. He is the most influential director of his generation because he ranges promiscuously through pop culture and brings to his borrowings an incendiary force. But the transformations he wreaks on pop culture 鈥 like his antebellum blood bath 鈥淒jango Unchained,鈥 or his World War II actioner 鈥淚nglourious Basterds,鈥 鈥 are fairly simpleminded. Compared to how, say, Jean-Luc Godard or Fran莽ois Truffaut transmogrified their pulp sources, it鈥檚 child鈥檚 play.聽

鈥淥nce Upon a Time in ... Hollywood鈥 does have much to recommend it: Although DiCaprio seems miscast as an aging, washed-up actor (mostly because he never seems to age), Pitt, in a rangy, lived-in performance, is marvelous. As Sharon Tate, Margot Robbie is quite touching as the film鈥檚 golden emblem of innocence. In a wonderful scene, she sits in a public theater playing one of her movies and beams at the audience鈥檚 enjoyment.

Few directors can draw out tension in a scene with as much brio as Tarantino. What鈥檚 missing, for want of a better term, is a sense of aesthetic responsibility. In 鈥淚nglourious Basterds,鈥 Tarantino turned the Holocaust into a pulpy revenge fantasy and in his new film, he does the same thing with the Manson murders. For all his stylistic sophistication, he remains Hollywood鈥檚 reigning adolescent.聽

Rated R for language throughout, some strong graphic violence, drug use, and sexual references.聽聽

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