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Tarantino Movies Are a Vast Interlocking Parallel Reality

Every self-respecting Tarantino fan knows about the link between and ... but it turns out that the connections between his movies go much, much deeper than that.

Tarantino's foot fetish is actually a deconstruction of the human condition of having feet. In Pulp Fiction, John Travolta plays a guy called Vincent Vega. In Reservoir Dogs, most of the characters are known only by their code names -- except Mr. Blonde (), who happens to be called Vic Vega. Coincidence? Nope, Tarantino has confirmed that they are brothers, and at one point he even considered doing a prequel about the two before they died in their respective movies (though he says it's unlikely now because of the actors' ages).

Getty The amount of CGI needed would bankrupt many studios. That's just the tip of the iceberg, though. As you might recall, Tarantino's movie ends with the slightly unrealistic scene where Hitler is gunned to shit by a group of Nazi-hunting in 1944, rather than killing himself in his bunker the following year. If you ever wondered what the world would be like if World War II had really ended that way -- well, it turns out Tarantino has been showing us that reality for the past 20 years. You see, in Inglourious Basterds, plays a character called Donny "The Bear Jew" Donowitz.

And in (written by Tarantino), there's a film producer called Lee Donowitz, who has been confirmed to be Donny's son. One of the main characters in True Romance is a woman called Alabama -- the same Alabama Mr. White mentions as a former partner in Reservoir Dogs. Since we've already linked Reservoir Dogs to Pulp Fiction, this means that almost every movie Tarantino has done is set in the Inglourious Basterds timeline. We could go even further and link all the rest through Tarantino's fake brands, like those Red Apple cigarettes that appear in a lot of his movies (including Kill Bill).

One kills hundreds of people over the course of the films; the other is Uma Thurman. It makes a sort of sense when you think about it -- the world would be a very different place if Inglourious Basterds was historically accurate and everyone knew that the Nazis were defeated not through strategy and air power, but by sending a handful of pissed-off guys to do this:

"That'll teach him to Hitler." If that's what you're taught in school, it's only natural that people should become desensitized to violence -- for some, shooting someone in the face would be something you could do as you're, say, making small talk about what type of hamburgers they have in Amsterdam.

"It's 'Le shooting someone in the face' over there. See, little differences." Also, the fact that the Nazi high command was gunned down and/or burned alive during a hijacked film premiere would perhaps cause society to lend more importance to pop culture: It's no coincidence that the son of the man who killed Hitler in a movie theater went on to become an important film industry figure. If people constantly stop to talk about comic book characters or '70s rock music trivia during incongruous moments, that's because in this reality that's some important, history-changing shit.

In this universe, talking about "Like a Virgin" is the equivalent of saying grace.

Read more: http://www.cracked.com/article_19323_6-movie-tv-universes-that- overlap-in-mind-blowing-ways.html#ixzz2LFu8FG00

Fra: http://www.cracked.com/article_19323_6-movie-tv-universes-that-overlap-in-mind- blowing-ways.html