Rosanna Arquette Critiques Tarantino's Use of N-Word: 'Creepy' and 'Racist'
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Los Angeles, March 9 (NationPress) Actress Rosanna Arquette has criticized filmmaker Quentin Tarantino, who directed her in the iconic film 'Pulp Fiction'.
According to her, Tarantino has received a “hall pass” to use the N-word in his films, a practice she considers “racist and creepy,” as reported by ‘Variety’.
In an interview with The Sunday Times, she stated, “It’s an iconic film and great on many levels. However, I am personally done with the use of the N-word; I absolutely detest it.”
Arquette went on to say, “I can't tolerate that he (Tarantino) has been granted a hall pass. It's not art; it's simply racist and creepy.”
As noted by 'Variety', during a 2022 episode of ‘Who’s Talking to Chris Wallace’, a defiant Tarantino remarked that if viewers are offended by his use of the N-word or the graphic violence in his films, they should simply “watch something else.”
When Wallace asked how he responds to criticism, Tarantino replied, “Then watch something else. If my films bother you, they're clearly not for you.”
His regular collaborator Samuel L. Jackson has consistently defended Tarantino's use of the slur in his work, including 'Django Unchained', which faced severe backlash upon its release due to its frequent use of the N-word—approximately 110 times.
In the 2019 documentary “QT8: The First Eight,” which details the first 21 years of Tarantino’s directorial career, Jackson commented, “Consider ‘12 Years a Slave’, supposedly crafted by an auteur. Steve McQueen is quite different from Quentin. When a song repeats the N-word 300 times, no one raises an eyebrow.”
“So it’s acceptable for McQueen to use the N-word because he’s artistically critiquing the system and societal perceptions, but Quentin is merely scratching the blackboard with his nails. That’s simply untrue. There's no dishonesty in Quentin's writing or in how people communicate, feel, or express themselves,” he added.