Quentin Tarantino consistently creates polarizing films. However, whether you appreciate them for their artistic qualities or despise them for their grotesquely liberal use of fake blood there is no denying that they deserve all the praise they are given, and Inglorious Bastards is no different. This film has created stars out of previously unknown performers and created an insanely satisfying alternate ending to the second World War. The film takes place in Nazi-occupied France during WWII. Lt. Aldo Raine (Brad Pitt) recruits a team of ruthless American soldiers, known as “The Bastards”, to strike fear into the heart of Adolf Hitler by brutally murdering or disfiguring as many Nazis as possible. They soon hatch a plan to kill several high-ranking German officers at the premier of a Nazi propaganda film, but their plan must be reevaluated once they learn that Hitler himself will be attending the premier. While this all unfolds, Shosanna Dreyfus (Mélanie Laurent), a vengeful French Jew whose family was murdered by Col. Hans Landa, convinces the party to let her host the premier at her own beloved theater so she can murder many key German figures at once, including the man who killed her family. Inglorious Bastards has a very talented cast, but before this film many of them hadn’t acted in any major American pictures. Quentin Tarantino has a knack for discovering new talent and for keeping those talented individuals under his wing. For example, Christoph Waltz (Col. Hans Landa in the film) had not performed in an American film until Inglorious Bastards, but for his role he received an Academy Award for “Best Supporting Actor” and has since performed in 13 major American films. Daniel Brühl is another great example of great talent discovered for this film. Unlike Waltz, Brühl had acted in American movies before, but his portrayal of Fredrick Zoller in this film resulted in his first critical success as a leading film performe