My Best Friend's Birthday
My Best Friend's Birthday | |
---|---|
Directed by | Quentin Tarantino |
Written by | Quentin Tarantino Craig Hamann |
Produced by | Quentin Tarantino Craig Hamann Rand Vossler |
Starring | Quentin Tarantino Craig Hamann Crystal Shaw Allen Garfield Al Harrell Brenda Hillhouse Linda Kaye Stevo Polyi Alan Sanborn Rich Turner Rowland Wafford |
Cinematography | Roger Avary Scott McGill Roberto A. Quezada Rand Vossler |
Edited by | Quentin Tarantino |
Distributed by | Super Happy Fun |
Release date |
|
Running time | 70 minutes (original version) 36 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $5,000 (estimated) |
My Best Friend's Birthday is a partially lost black-and-white amateur short film written by Craig Hamann and Quentin Tarantino and directed by Tarantino.[1][2][3]
Plot
A young man continually tries to do something nice for his friend's birthday, only to have his efforts backfire.
Production
The film was made while Tarantino was working at the now closed Video Archives in Manhattan Beach, California.[3] The project started in 1984, when Hamann wrote a short 30–40 page script.
Tarantino became attached to the project as co-writer and director, and he and Hamann expanded the short script into an 80-page script. On an estimated budget of $5,000, they shot the film on 16mm over the course of the next four years. Hamann and Tarantino starred in the film, along with several video store and acting class buddies, and worked on the crew, which included fellow Video Archives employees Rand Vossler and Roger Avary. It is the most overtly comedic film that Tarantino has made. In an interview with Charlie Rose (available on the Region 1, Collector's Edition DVD of Pulp Fiction), he referred to it as a "Martin and Lewis kind of thing."
The original cut was about 70 minutes long but due to a film lab fire only 36 minutes of the film survived.[2] The 36 minute cut has been shown at several film festivals, and had been officially released on the 2 disc edition of Pulp Fiction, but the 70 minute version is considered lost. Several actors in this film later appeared in Tarantino's other films Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction, and Kill Bill.
See also
References
- ^ "My Best Friend's Birthday". Free Movies Cinema. Retrieved 2009-09-26.
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(help) - ^ a b Ferrari, Alex (October 14, 2015). "Quentin Tarantino's Unreleased Feature Film: My Best Friend's Birthday". Indie Film Hustle.
- ^ a b Wild, David (November 3, 1994). "Quentin Tarantino: The Madman of Movie Mayhem". Rolling Stone.
External links
- 1987 films
- Films directed by Quentin Tarantino
- Screenplays by Quentin Tarantino
- American short films
- American films
- American comedy films
- 1980s comedy films
- American black-and-white films
- Lost American films
- Unreleased films
- English-language films
- American independent films
- Comedy short films
- 1980s comedy film stubs