What Kill Bill The Whole Bloody Affair Changes About The Movies

What Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair Changes About The Movies

Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair merged the two volumes together, but here are some of the other differences it brings to The Bride’s story.

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What Kill Bill The Whole Bloody Affair Changes About The Movies

Here’s what Kill Bill: The Whole Blood Affair changed about The Bride’s roaring rampage of revenge. Kill Bill is Quentin Tarantino’s revenge epic involving The Bride (Uma Thurman), an ex-assassin who seeks revenge on former boss/lover Bill (David Carradine) and his Deadly Viper Assassination Squad after they tried to kill her on her wedding day. She awakens from a coma, acquires a lethal sword and cuts a very bloody path on her way to kill Bill. Quentin Tarantino isn’t one for making short films and Kill Bill was no different.

While it was originally designed to be one movie, producers decided to split Kill Bill into different volumes. Kill Bill: Volume 1 charts The Bride taking down Vernita Green and O-Ren Ishii while Volume 2 deals with Bill’s brother Budd, Elle Driver and finally Bill himself. The split is somewhat natural as Volume 1 is more action-packed and stylized while Volume 2 is more emotional and introspective. Still, debates rage about whether Kill Bill should be considered one movie or not. While Tarantino himself feels it is, the fact audiences had to buy two tickets to see the movies suggests otherwise.

Quentin Tarantino has screened the full original cut of the movie, dubbed Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair, a few times over the years, which runs at 215 minutes total. While not dramatically different from Volumes 1 and 2, it does feature some notable differences. First up, the opening Klingon proverb about revenge is gone and is replaced with a dedication to the late director Kinji Fukasaku (Battle Royale). Most of the Volume 1 portion of Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair plays out the same way, aside from occasional alternate angles or inserts.

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The first major difference of Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair comes with the O-Ren anime sequence, which was already pretty gory. Her murder of yakuza boss Matsumoto is even bloodier, with a close-up of his stomach and intestines spilling out after she slices him open. The most famous change is The House Of Blue Leaves sword fight against the Crazy 88, which went to black and white in the original edit after The Bride rips out a henchman’s eye. Instead, the whole thing is in glorious color, which really sells the wanton carnage. There are also additional inserts of limbs being severed.

Towards the end of the Volume 1 side of Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair, it’s revealed The Bride does sever the other arm of Bill’s lawyer Sofie Fatale, which happens on-camera. What’s missing is Bill’s cliffhanger line “Is she aware her daughter is still alive?” Missing from the Volume 2 side of things is The Bride providing a recap of her mission, though this portion is essentially the same aside from the occasionally insert.

That said, when The Bride enters Bill’s house to find her daughter is still alive, its a much better reveal since Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair hadn’t hinted at it before. Sadly, this version has yet to be made available, but with Tarantino’s recent confirmation of a Once Upon A Time In Hollywood four hour cut being prepped and his tinkering with The Hateful Eight for Netflix, maybe there’s a chance it will find its way into the world sometime soon.

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Link Source : https://screenrant.com/kill-bill-whole-bloody-affair-movie-changes/

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