La mariée doit tuer son ex-patron et amant Bill qui l'a trahie lors de sa cérémonie de mariage, lui a tiré une balle dans la tête et lui a enlevé sa fille à naître. Mais d'abord, elle doit f... Tout lireLa mariée doit tuer son ex-patron et amant Bill qui l'a trahie lors de sa cérémonie de mariage, lui a tiré une balle dans la tête et lui a enlevé sa fille à naître. Mais d'abord, elle doit faire souffrir les quatre autres membres de l'escouade d'assassinat des vipères mortelles.La mariée doit tuer son ex-patron et amant Bill qui l'a trahie lors de sa cérémonie de mariage, lui a tiré une balle dans la tête et lui a enlevé sa fille à naître. Mais d'abord, elle doit faire souffrir les quatre autres membres de l'escouade d'assassinat des vipères mortelles.
- Réalisation
- Scénaristes
- Stars
- The Bride
- (images d'archives)
- …
- Hattori Hanzo
- (as Sonny Chiba)
- Johnny Mo
- (as Gordon Liu)
- …
- Bald Guy (Sushi Shop)
- (as Kenji Oba)
Avis à la une
I finally found another version of this, The actual version of this IMDb listing. It was exceedingly difficult to find. But now I have the actual film as described in this IMDb entry.
One Reviewer talks about the way that "the clan of the White Lotus" was clipped into the scene where David Carradine as Bill is describing Pei Mei's five point exploding heart technique to Beatrice Kiddo. This is not a negative thing, it actually connects this newer Quentin Tarantino film to the old kung fu movies. It is totally appropriate.
The actor playing Pei Mei was actually the same actor who was the leader of the crazy 88's. And he does look a lot like the original actor from the kung fu film.
In my version, the resolution of the older film was bumped up, so that it's not noticeably degraded from the rest of the Tarantino film in HD. But there are so many versions of this fan, edit that are not quite the right version floating around, which might have had a totally DVD resolution of that scene clipped in, done that way, it would look kind of bogus. But the version that I have is not like that at all, it is 100% high definition all the way through.
There are also many other alternate scenes. I don't know where the fan who edited this acquired those, but they are all very good material.
This is the proper way to watch this film, I saw both films in the theater when they came out and I had to wait an excruciatingly long time between parts one and two.
Now, I can watch both parts in one sitting, and I don't even have to change video files, it's all right there.
Somebody should try to get this cut legally distributed because it is simply too good to be a mysterious and difficult to find much less stream fan edit. Previously, I had come across a version of True Romance that was cut the way Tarantino had written it, it may have been edited by the same person because editing wise you could not tell between a regular movie and the fan edit. But the story of that one was a lot more negative than the theatrical release, it is very difficult to watch, especially the ending. Which was typical of early Tarantino work. When you get all the way back toward reservoir dogs, well, nobody gets out alive. It wasn't until later when he decided to have a couple characters actually escape by the skin of their teeth, he started becoming more popular. Pulp fiction era, possibly. Actually, his latest movies have gone toward the complete opposite extreme, all kinds of people escape.
Seeing it like this has altered my opinion on the film and makes me appreciate it more.
There is no denying that visually, This Q entry is by far the greatest "Looking" film in his catalogue. Each scene is a stunning feast for the eyes that recalls the cinematography work seen in the films of Brian Dipalma, Sergio Leone, Martin Scorsese and Orson Welles.
The storytelling and dialogue are superb, the music selections and sound design are legendary. The Ennio Morricone scores, re-used from the the classic "Dollars Trillogy." are some of the greatest movie scores of all time and they perfectly heighten the experience.
I personally feel this should be edited down to 3 hours 40 minutes. Creating the world's greatest piece of cinema. By somehow reworking the nonlinear editing of the storyline to build the climax of the film towards the end of the picture instead of in the middle... To me this still remains the film's greatest flaw. However, despite this major flaw the collective of everything else still puts this movie in the 8 1/2 to 9 star range.
It's just an amazing spectacle to witness. IT MUST BE SEEN AS ONE FILM!
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe fight scene with the Crazy 88 is shown entirely in color, compared to the standard version of Kill Bill Vol. 1 which cuts to black-and-white to keep the film from receiving a harsh NC-17 rating. The all color version of this scene was also released in the original Kill Bill Vol. 1 in some international markets, specifically Japan and Hong Kong, though only the Japanese DVD would have this uncensored version of the fight for the home markets (even the Japanese blu-ray of Vol. 1 ended up using the standard US cut).
- Versions alternativesWhile the 2006 Cannes cut of this film has had various special screenings throughout the past two decades, Lionsgate's 2025 theatrical release is the first time this unified version of Kill Bill: Volume I (2003) and Kill Bill: Volume II (2004) has become accessible to a wider audience. There may have been minor alterations made from the Cannes cut to Lionsgate's cut, but here are some notable differences that separate THE WHOLE BLOODY AFFAIR from VOLUME 1 and VOLUME 2.
- Modern Lionsgate logo plays before VOLUME 1's original Miramax logo. [*2025 only]
- The "Kill Bill" title card during the opening credits contains the subtitle "The Whole Bloody Affair".
- The uncensored Japanese version of VOLUME 1 is used for ACT 1.
- In Chapter 3, an additional 7.5 minutes of content is added to VOLUME 1's anime sequence in which a 13-year-old O-Ren attempts to kill Pretty Riki in an elevator.
- At the end of Chapter 5, every shot after the Bride's final exchange with Sofie from VOLUME 1 is omitted (from airplane to end credits).
- Between Chapters 5 and 6, a static "INTERMISSION" title card (white text, black background) stays on screen for 15 minutes. "Lonely Shepard" plays over the first few minutes of the intermission with the remainder being silent.
- Everything from the opening of VOLUME 2 that precedes Chapter 6 is omitted (from Miramax logo to "Vol. 2" title card).
- In Chapter 6, the Bride's opening narration at the Two Pines chapel from VOLUME 2 is omitted.
- Entire cast, crew and song list from VOLUME 1 is integrated into VOLUME 2's end credits.
- The uncensored version of Yuki's Revenge (2025) plays after the credits, front-loaded with an animated lobby jingle. [*2025 only]
- ConnexionsEdited from Kill Bill: Volume I (2003)
- Bandes originalesBang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)
Music by Sonny Bono
Lyrics by Sonny Bono
Performed by Nancy Sinatra
Courtesy of Boots Enterprises, Inc.
By Arrangement with Celebrity Licensing
Meilleurs choix
The Year in Posters
The Year in Posters
- How long is Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 6 002 538 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 3 429 889 $US
- 7 déc. 2025
- Montant brut mondial
- 6 313 232 $US
- Durée
- 4h 35min(275 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1







