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Year One
Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed movies.
Kill Bill: Volume 1

Generally favorable reviews
Based on 43 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 398 votes
Read user comments
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Movie Info
Genre(s): Action | Comedy | Crime | Drama | Suspense/Thriller
Written by: Quentin Tarantino
Directed by: Quentin Tarantino
Release Date:
Theatrical: October 10, 2003
DVD: April 13, 2004
Running Time: 96 minutes, Color
Origin: USA
Summary
RATING: R for strong bloody violence, language and some sexual content
Starring Uma Thurman, David Carradine, Daryl Hannah, Michael Madsen, Vivica A. Fox, Lucy Liu, Michael Jai White, and Chia Hui Liu
An epic tale of one woman's quest for justice presented in two installments. (Miramax)
Also On Metacritic
FILM: Grindhouse Jackie Brown Kill Bill: Volume 2 Pulp Fiction Reservoir Dogs
Also On The Web: Internet Movie Database View The Trailer Official Studio Site Official Japanese Site
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert
Kill Bill: Volume 1 shows Quentin Tarantino so effortlessly and brilliantly in command of his technique that he reminds me of a virtuoso violinist racing through "Flight of the Bumble Bee" -- or maybe an accordion prodigy setting a speed record for "Lady of Spain."
Read Full Review >Boston Globe Wesley Morris
The worst thing about the first Quentin Tarantino picture in five years is that after 93 minutes of some of the most luscious violence and spellbinding storytelling you're likely to see this year, Kill Bill ends.
Read Full Review >Washington Post Stephen Hunter
Delivered with such high panache and brio, it's mesmerizing.
Read Full Review >Premiere Glenn Kenny
Although this installment is a beautiful stand-alone thang (check out how its chronology-juggling storyline creates a perfect circle, structure-wise).
Read Full Review >Time Richard Corliss
By next semester, some grad student will be writing a thesis on the B-movie influences on this A+ film.
Read Full Review >Baltimore Sun Chris Kaltenbach
"His eye is incredibly sharp and amazing, in regard to visceral cinema," says Uma Thurman, who has worked with Tarantino on both Pulp Fiction and Kill Bill. "He's a great storyteller. He's very seductive as a filmmaker."
Read Full Review >Entertainment Weekly Owen Gleiberman
The film may be bloody, but it's also bloody gorgeous: a grandly fetishized epic of cinematic aggression. It's a tale of vengeance that hinges on Tarantino's love of ferocity as spectacle -- his immersion in action and exploitation, his addiction to the jazzy catharsis of junk-film kicks.
Read Full Review >Washington Post Desson Thomson
Reconfirms Tarantino's status as the master of pop cinema and puts a sense of excitement into the year. He has matched, if not eclipsed, the power and scope of 1994's "Pulp Fiction," though not its human charm.
Austin Chronicle Marc Savlov
Don’t leave until the final credits finish rolling or you’ll miss what many are considering Kill Bill: Vol. 1’s best bit. Trust us on this one.
Read Full Review >USA Today Mike Clark
Bill re-establishes that Tarantino ranks with "Boogie Nights'" Paul Thomas Anderson as one of the few Hollywood filmmakers of the past 25 years with the stuff to win a lifetime achievement award.
Read Full Review >The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Rick Groen
Simultaneously a spectacular act of movie-making and a slight movie. Or is that impossible: When the means are so gloriously abundant, can the end ever be merely trivial?
Read Full Review >Rolling Stone Peter Travers
In Kill Bill, Tarantino brings delicious sin back to movies -- the thrill you get from something down, dirty and dangerous.
Read Full Review >LA Weekly John Powers
At once an astonishing piece of filmmaking and, quite possibly, an Olympian folly.
Read Full Review >The Onion (A.V. Club) Scott Tobias
It remains to be seen whether Kill Bill is merely a skilled slice of juvenilia or a pastiche with real emotional and thematic underpinnings, but based on Tarantino's storytelling command in the first half, it's worth giving him the benefit of the doubt.
Read Full Review >Empire Colin Kennedy
There is much to admire in Vol. 1, not least a performance from Uma Thurman as steely as the plate in her character’s head and a knowing soundtrack that effortlessly smears the boundaries between east and west.
Read Full Review >Portland Oregonian Shawn Levy
What we've got is a mixed though certainly entertaining bag.
Read Full Review >Miami Herald Rene Rodriguez
Self-indulgent, overwrought, shallow and ridiculous. It is also brilliant, a blast of cinematic lunacy and as much of a guilty pleasure as the schlocky movies Tarantino adores, which was probably the point. Sometimes, only a Big Mac will do.
Read Full Review >Chicago Tribune Mark Caro
There's no question that Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill, Vol. 1 is a virtuoso piece of filmmaking. What's questionable is whether it's more than that.
Read Full Review >Christian Science Monitor David Sterritt
One of the most violent films this year, it's no more so than many of the Asian kung fu flicks it pays homage to. Don't be surprised if it slaughters its action-film competition in this overcrowded movie season.
Read Full Review >New York Post Lou Lumenick
An overstuffed menu from a master chef who's trying way too hard to please himself.
Read Full Review >TV Guide Maitland McDonagh
His epic reworking of their lurid conventions proved so long that it was divided into two parts, and this one ends on a hell of a cliff-hanger.
Read Full Review >Film Threat Michael Dequina
Without a doubt, making the most substantial impact is Thurman. While she has proven her versatility over the years, her work as The Bride shows that her talent is matched by her fearlessness.
Read Full Review >Los Angeles Times Manohla Dargis
The movie love can make it hard to hear the human pulse beneath the noise (it's there, if faint), much less see if there's anything new going on.
Read Full Review >The New York Times Dana Stevens
Mr. Tarantino is an irrepressible showoff, recklessly flaunting his formal skills as a choreographer of high-concept violence, but he is also an unabashed cinephile, and the sincerity of his enthusiasm gives this messy, uneven spectacle an odd, feverish integrity.
Read Full Review >Dallas Observer Robert Wilonsky
Though it's a blast to watch, it becomes tiresome over the long haul--25 minutes of Thurman hacking her way through the crowd to get to a woman whose fate we're informed of early on. It's the most climactic anti-climax in recent film history, a no-d'uh coda awaiting the ending it really deserves but never gets. Not this year, anyway.
Read Full Review >Film Threat Jim Agnew
A hyper-violent, hyper-gory, kung-fu grindhouse flick. And there’s nothing at all wrong with that.
Read Full Review >The Hollywood Reporter Kirk Honeycutt
Is Kill Bill a homage to great Asian action movies? Yes. Is Tarantino trying to outdo his cherished masters (on a budget that dwarfs their films)? Of course. Is there any other point of any of this? Let's see "Vol. 2."
Read Full Review >Variety Todd McCarthy
A strange, fun and densely textured work that gets better as it goes along.
Read Full Review >Seattle Post-Intelligencer William Arnold
It's bound to be the love-it-or-hate-it movie of 2003.
Read Full Review >New York Daily News Jami Bernard
This long-awaited movie has been unwisely chopped into two pieces -- the second is due in February -- when it really needed to be one long, delirious ride.
Read Full Review >ReelViews James Berardinelli
An incomplete movie, artlessly cleft in the middle. Cinema interruptus.
Read Full Review >Village Voice J. Hoberman
Fun and smart, but undeniably thin, the first installment of Tarantino's action epic is a fanboy fever dream. The clichés are out in maximum force, tempting any critic fool enough to go one-on-one with the master. (The prize: a Ph.D. in Tarantinology.)
Read Full Review >Salon.com Stephanie Zacharek
As visually arresting as Kill Bill often is, there's a stultifying blankness about it. Despite Tarantino's obvious enthusiasms, he comes off jaded and cynical: He's seen plenty of movies, and this is his proof.
Read Full Review >Slate David Edelstein
Kill Bill is about nothing more (or less) than its director's passion for the mindless action pictures that got him through adolescence. It isn't sex without love: It's an orgy with just enough love.
Read Full Review >Chicago Reader Jonathan Rosenbaum
Quentin Tarantino's lively and show-offy tribute to Asian martial-arts flicks, bloody anime, and spaghetti westerns he soaked up as a teenager is even more gory and adolescent than its models, which explains both the fun and the unpleasantness of this globe-trotting romp.
Read Full Review >New York Magazine Peter Rainer
When French New Wave directors like Truffaut and Godard paid tribute to Hollywood pulp, they poeticized it and gave it an infusion of feeling. Tarantino’s tributes are, for the most part, far less complicated: He’s a fan, and Kill Bill is his mash note.
Read Full Review >Philadelphia Inquirer Carrie Rickey
Structurally and narratively amputated, Volume 1 retains head and guts but loses its heart and gams to the second installment. Maybe Tarantino figured that Thurman's legs, as long as the Mississippi, were sufficient to carry this half of a movie.
Read Full Review >Charlotte Observer Lawrence Toppman
The problem isn't that Tarantino's in love with death; it's that he's deadly dull. Even "Natural Born Killers" made a stab at social commentary and satire of America?s celebrity-mad media. Kill Bill merely giggles through gore and asks you to smile at its style.
Read Full Review >The New Yorker David Denby
Kill Bill is what’s formally known as decadence and commonly known as crap...Coming out of this dazzling, whirling movie, I felt nothing--not anger, not dismay, not amusement. Nothing. [13 October 2003, p. 113]
Wall Street Journal Joe Morgenstern
Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill inflicts intolerable cruelty on its characters, and on its audience -- though I'd like to believe that there is no mainstream audience for what has already been described, quite correctly, as the most violent movie ever released by an American studio.
The New Republic Stanley Kauffmann
The really relevant defect of this thriller is that it isn't scary.
Read Full Review >San Francisco Chronicle Mick LaSalle
It boggles the mind that after six years of silence, all Tarantino has to offer is this garbage.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this movie is 6.3 (out of 10) based on 398 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Mike H gave it a0:
I literally found this movie boring... what the hell happened!?
Gavin C gave it a9:
Where there isn't poetry, there's action and where there isn't action, there's poetry.
Kendo J gave it an8:
Make it a 7.6 Very cool, very violent, very sexy. The O-Ren anime scene is brilliant.
K M gave it a10:
Love the absolute brutality of the film, great revenge flick.
Eddie V. gave it a10:
The best vendetta movie ever... Great plot, sensational cast, and superb dialog. Thank you Quentin!
Jake gave it an8:
Very cool movie. Great Dialogues. Tarantino is my favourite director and even though this film has it's lengths I still enjoy watching this Movie because of the creative way it's shot and all the little details that make this film special.
Don S gave it a1:
I Absolutely Hated this movie. It's just an hour and an half of Uma killing a whole lot of people! This movie really sucks. I get angry every time I think about it. >:(
