Tarantino's Best Costumes
Friday, January 24, 2020 at 9:00AM
Cláudio Alves in Anna B. Sheppard, Arianne Phillips, Best Costume Design, Costume Design, Django Unchained, Inglourious Basterds, Jackie Brown, Kill Bill, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, Quentin Tarantino, Reservoir Dogs, The Hateful Eight

by Cláudio Alves

Despite some misgivings regarding this year’s highly unimaginative Best Costume Design line-up, there's much to rejoice about that Oscar category. One of the biggest reasons to celebrate is Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood's deserved nod for Arianne Phillips’ designs. As it happens, this is the first time any Quentin Tarantino film has been nominated for this particular award. Considering the director's ability to create memorable images and influential bits of cinematic iconography, this is somewhat preposterous. Better late than never.

Still, to shed light on the many costume delights of Tarantino's colorful oeuvre, here's a list of the ten best costumes in this director's films…

Honorable Mentions: The intelligent recycling of tired archetypes is a Tarantino specialty, as we can attest by the schoolgirl uniform of Kill Bill's Gogo Yubari or the Colonel Sanders cosplay of Django Unchained's Big Daddy. There's also a great collection of T-shirts in this filmography, ranging from Jules and Vincent's comedic second-hand duds in Pulp Fiction to the suave coolness of Brad Pitt's Cliff Booth.

 

10. MAJOR MARQUIS WARREN'S STYLE
from The Hateful Eight
costumes designed by Courtney Hoffman

It's as if someone threw the best elements of spaghetti western iconography into a blender and then served us this sartorial cocktail with an unexpected pop of color. Samuel L. Jackson looks awesome.

 

9. ELLE DRIVER'S CARTOONY CLOTHES
from Kill Bill: Vol. 1
costumes designed by Kumiko Ogawa and Catherine Thomas

When she first appears onscreen, Elle Driver looks like she jumped right out of a cartoon and is still adapting to a tridimensional reality. What better way to dress a character that's as bigger than life as she is deadly? 

 

8. SHARON TATES' PLAYBOY PARTY LOOK
from Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood
costumes designed by Arianne Phillips

This is almost two costumes in one, both encapsulating some of the best, silliest and most iconic features of 1969's Hollywood style. Sharon looks like a fashion plate and like a movie star, an icon and a woman, ridiculous and sexy, all at the same time.

 

7. SHOSANNA'S BLOOD-RED FROCK
from Inglourious Basterds
costumes designed by Anna B. Sheppard

Red is the color of love, passion, sex and blood, violence, revenge and the Nazi flag. To kill Hitler, Shosanna dresses in his colors, reclaiming them for her mission of Jewish retribution on a mass scale. Plus, she looks beautiful.

 

6. JACKIE BROWN'S FLIGHT ATTENDANT UNIFORM
from Jackie Brown
costumes designed by Mary Claire Hannan

That vibrant blue and retro cut both evoke the blaxploitation cinema that made Pam Grier famous as well as the 40s noir that serves as inspiration for the picture. It's a great piece of costuming that is believable within the story, but also highlights its star's inherent glamour and magnetism.

 

5. O-REN ISHII'S WHITE KIMONO
from Kill Bill: Vol. 1
costumes designed by Kumiko Ogawa and Catherine Thomas

Lady Snowblood is reborn as a character that seems to have walked straight out of a stylized anime. Simple, but memorable, this is one iconic costume whose pristine textiles serve as a perfect canvas for the bloodshed to come.

 

4. BRIDGET VON HAMMERSMARK'S SUIT
from Inglourious Basterds
costumes designed by Anna B. Sheppard

Anna B. Sheppard is an expert when it comes to the recreation of 1940s fashion and that expertise is beautifully shown in Diane Kruger's wardrobe for Inglourious Basterds. Her Bridget is a dream of wartime elegance peppered with hints of movie star glamour and even a pinch of absurdity. From the tip of the feathered hat to the elegant shoes, this outfit is exquisite perfection.

 

3. DJANGO'S BLUE COSTUME
from Django Unchained
costumes designed by Sharen Davis

This outfit, inspired by Gainsborough's Boy in Blue, is a delightfully oddball choice for a revenge western. Jammie Foxx looks both ridiculous and fearsome, wearing this electric blue confection with the confidence of a man capable of turning even the wackiest outfit into an icon of deadly coolness.

 

2. THE RESERVOIR DOG'S ICONIC OUTFITS
from Reservoir Dogs
costumes designed by Betsy Heimann

This collective costume is brilliant both because of its simplicity as well as its variations. Few of this movie's characters are actually wearing black suits, most are outfitted in a mix match of formal pants and disparate blazers, black jeans, and cheap shirts. Each choice reveals character detail while keeping with the instantly recognizable style of this group of criminals.

 

1. THE BRIDE'S BRUCE LEE HOMAGE
from Kill Bill: Vol. 1
costumes designed by Kumiko Ogawa and Catherine Thomas

Bruce Lee's yellow and black jumpsuit from 1978's Game of Death is reinvented, first as biker leathers and then as a tracksuit. Like her enemy's white kimono, The Bride's bright yellow costume is a great canvas for the blood splatters that come from the carnage. After she's done with the Crazy 88s and arrives at a showdown in the snow, buttery shades are dyed red. Instantly, we have an icon of bloody revenge and Tarantino's most memorable heroine.

 

What's your favorite costume from Quentin Tarantino's filmography?

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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