Los Angeles - Quentin Tarantino has confirmed his next movie will be a Western.
The director enjoyed making his latest hit movie Django Unchained - which earned him an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay earlier this year - so much he has decided to make another film in the same genre, but it won't be a sequel to the Jamie Foxx-starring flick.
Appearing on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno on Tuesday, he said, "I haven't told anyone this publicly, but I will say the genre... it's a Western."
"I had so much fun doing Django, and I love Westerns so much that after I taught myself how to make one, it's like, 'OK! Let me make another one now that I know what I'm doing.' "
(Photo: Guy Code Blog)
Spends time writing scripts
The filmmaker, who pens his own movies, also revealed that he spends most of his day writing scripts and then relaxes in his pool while thinking about where the story will go next.
"Around the time of Inglourious Basterds [in 2009] I'd start writing at home from 10 in the morning until five, or six, or seven [o'clock]."
"[Then] I sit there [in the pool] and I think about it and all of these ideas come to me... and I kind of work it out a little bit. Then I get out of the pool and I make notes, but I don't do them. Then the next day, that's my work."
Check out the interview below:
The director enjoyed making his latest hit movie Django Unchained - which earned him an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay earlier this year - so much he has decided to make another film in the same genre, but it won't be a sequel to the Jamie Foxx-starring flick.
Appearing on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno on Tuesday, he said, "I haven't told anyone this publicly, but I will say the genre... it's a Western."
"I had so much fun doing Django, and I love Westerns so much that after I taught myself how to make one, it's like, 'OK! Let me make another one now that I know what I'm doing.' "
(Photo: Guy Code Blog)
Spends time writing scripts
The filmmaker, who pens his own movies, also revealed that he spends most of his day writing scripts and then relaxes in his pool while thinking about where the story will go next.
"Around the time of Inglourious Basterds [in 2009] I'd start writing at home from 10 in the morning until five, or six, or seven [o'clock]."
"[Then] I sit there [in the pool] and I think about it and all of these ideas come to me... and I kind of work it out a little bit. Then I get out of the pool and I make notes, but I don't do them. Then the next day, that's my work."
Check out the interview below: