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Quentin Tarantino reveals his favourite scene from 'Once Upon A Time in Hollywood' didn't make it to the final cut

WION Web Team
New Delhi, IndiaUpdated: Jul 09, 2021, 05:09 PM IST
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Quentin Tarantino's favourite scene from 'Once Upon A Time in Hollywood' did not make it to the final cut of the film but here's how you can watch it


Quentin Tarantino had a favourite scene in his last film ‘Once Upon A Time In Hollywood’ but unfortunately it did not make the final cut. Revealing this in a podcast where he appeared to promote his novelization of the 2019 Sony film starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Brad Pitt, the Oscar-winning writer-director admitted giving his favourite scene a cut in the final version. 

The scene will, however, feature in the novelization. 

He also explained the scene and said that it was a scene between Leonardo DiCaprio’s Rick Dalton and Julia Butters’ Trudi Fraser. They share an evening phone conversation after their first day on set, which is in the movie. Basically, the two share a moving conversation about how lucky they are to be in the business before they do a line reading of their following day’s scene. The moment is poignant, but also heartfelt, giving more insight into the Dalton character.

Quentin Tarantino said, “That was my favorite scene in the script. So the idea that that wouldn’t be in the movie was unfathomable. That was my favorite scene in the script. I think it was probably Leo’s favorite scene that he shot. We were in tears. It was the only time— I’ve gotten misty-eyed every once in a while shooting this scene versus that scene. But that scene, I mean, Julia and I were in tears every time we finished every take. We were just really proud of that sequence.”

Tarantino further explained, “The reason it’s not in the film is — it’s a two-fold reason. It seems like an ending to the movie, which, actually was OK in the script, because in the script, I looked at everything that happens in February as part of a three-act structure — and then the stuff that happens on the night of the murder as an epilogue. But that was the wrong way to think about it. Once we started putting the movie together, the stuff that happens in August isn’t an epilogue, it’s the third act. We’ve got to look at it that way. And so, they pulled off the scene. The scene is terrific. It’s not about them. But when we really worked on assembly … we realized that after the Spahn Ranch, that ends the February section. There’s no coming back from that. That is the ending of that. And now we can’t just end it with the Spahn Ranch. So the idea is, after Spahn Ranch, we have to wrap up February as soon as we possibly can. And then once we do, then we go into August. And that happens a lot in movies. You drop scenes that are really terrific, but a timeline imposes itself on the cut.”