Thread:Godzillafan93/@comment-6052796-20140913230734/@comment-397235-20150122011048

It's not so much they thought they were photosensitive as they were photosensitive before they died. The head housekeeper, whose name eludes me, even more or less says so ("That was before...when they were young. Maybe they've grown out of it?"; basically, she's trying to show their mother they're dead and therefore no longer need to worry about physical ailments).

See, if I don't like Romero, I despise Tarantino. I've not seen Pulp Fiction, but I watched From Dusk Till Dawn and Inglorious Basterds and they're two of the worst pieces of film I've ever seen (Dusk Till Dawn at least gets points for only staring the little creep, killing him early on, and also featuring Tom Savini).

My standard response to Tarantino is this: "If your art takes longer for you to justify than it did to make, then it isn't art." I enjoy how fans of his films make excuses for how awful Basterds is by saying "Well, it's a Tarantino film, so it's supposed to not make any sense." I actually had someone tell me a WWII didn't need to be historically accurate at all, and that furthermore I was immature and not qualified to have an opinion because I wasn't a fan of his work. Being the one telling everyone the Emperor really has no clothes doesn't make you especially popular.

Granted, I think Tarantino has decent taste in movies (he's an avowed fan of GMK, the finest Godzilla film to date; granted, he also liked Battle Royale which is utter exploitationist garbage; Stephen King at least had the decency to read the novel and recommend that). Granted, Brad Pitt has said he's a fan of War of the Gargantuas but that doesn't make it any easier to sit through any of his films.