How Quentin Tarantino Has Influenced Cinema (Part 1) (creativescreenwriting.com)
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How Quentin Tarantino Has Influenced Cinema (Part 1)
- By Michael Lee Simpson
- .August 19, 2021
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This entry is part 1 of 1 in the series Quentin Tarantino
- How Quentin Tarantino Has Influenced Cinema (Part 1)
In the mid-1980s, a video rental store in Manhattan Beach, California blended in with the traffic on North Sepulveda Blvd. It was called Video Archives, owned by film fanatics Lance Lawson and Rick Humbert. VHS and Betamax tapes lined the shelves, the aisles stacked with Westerns like Shane and The Searchers, classics from the Golden Era— Casablanca and Citizen Kane — horror slashers like Halloween and The Evil Dead, and more modern movies — Stand by Me and The Breakfast Club. Unpredictable at the time, they were running a breeding ground for Hollywood success stories. Frequent customers were Jeff Maguire, who would later pen the screenplay for Clint Eastwood’s In the Line of Fire, Josh Olson, who would write A History of Violence and Batman: Gotham Knight and John Langley, who would create COPS and revolutionize television. READ FULL ARTICLE.
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