Top 10 Quentin Tarantino Movies
Top 10 Quentin Tarantino Movies
Direct Answer
The Best Overall Quentin Tarantino movie is Pulp Fiction (1994), his Palme d'Or winner and Best Original Screenplay Oscar champion, a fractured-timeline crime mosaic that reshaped American independent film and remains his most quoted, most rewatched work. The Best Value pick — the most rewatchable, easiest-to-stream gateway into his catalog — is Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003), a kinetic revenge spectacle that needs no setup to enjoy on a Friday night.
This list is for film fans ranking Tarantino's own directorial filmography (not films he merely wrote or produced), weighing screenplay, direction, performances, rewatchability, and cultural footprint. Every pick is a real Tarantino-directed feature with verified director, year, runtime, rating, and lead cast.
How We Ranked the Top 10
We weighted each film against what makes Tarantino's work endure, leaning on Rotten Tomatoes, Metacritic, IMDb, Letterboxd, Roger Ebert's archive, and Academy Award records. The weighting:
- Story and screenplay — 25%
- Direction and craft — 20%
- Performances — 20%
- Rewatchability — 15%
- Cultural impact — 10%
- Where-to-watch access — 10%
A film that dazzles visually but sags in the script drops fast; the winners balance all six. Only features Tarantino directed are eligible, so *True Romance* and *Natural Born Killers* (which he wrote but did not direct) sit out.
1. Pulp Fiction (1994) 🏆 BEST OVERALL
Director: Quentin Tarantino | Year: 1994 | Runtime: 154 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Rent/buy on Prime Video, Apple TV
The film that made Tarantino a household name, Pulp Fiction interweaves three Los Angeles crime stories — two hitmen, a boxer who won't take a dive, and a mob boss's wife — into a nonlinear puzzle that rewards every rewatch. John Travolta, Samuel L. Jackson, Uma Thurman, and Bruce Willis anchor a cast firing on diner-philosophy dialogue and sudden violence.
It won the 1994 Palme d'Or at Cannes and the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay, earned seven Oscar nominations total, and sits near the top of nearly every "greatest of the 1990s" poll with a 92% Rotten Tomatoes critics score.
Pros:
- Career-defining nonlinear screenplay that rewards rewatching
- Iconic Travolta-and-Jackson chemistry and dialogue
- Palme d'Or winner and Best Original Screenplay Oscar
- Endlessly quotable, culturally permanent
Cons:
- Graphic violence and language are not for everyone
- The fractured timeline can confuse first-time viewers
Verdict: The complete Tarantino package — the smartest script, the best ensemble, and the deepest cultural mark.
2. Inglourious Basterds (2009)
Director: Quentin Tarantino | Year: 2009 | Runtime: 153 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Stream on Netflix; rent on Prime Video
A WWII revenge fantasy split between a Jewish-American commando unit and a French cinema owner plotting to burn down the Nazi high command, Inglourious Basterds opens with one of the most suspenseful scenes Tarantino has ever staged. Christoph Waltz won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor as the chillingly polite "Jew Hunter" Hans Landa, opposite Brad Pitt, Mélanie Laurent, and Diane Kruger.
The film earned eight Oscar nominations including Best Picture and holds an 89% Rotten Tomatoes score for its tension, multilingual dialogue, and audacious alternate-history finale.
Pros:
- Christoph Waltz's Oscar-winning, era-defining villain
- A masterclass opening-tavern scene in sustained suspense
- Bold alternate-history premise executed with confidence
- Multilingual script that plays with language as a weapon
Cons:
- The deliberate, talky pacing tests some viewers
- Brutal violence in its climactic act
Verdict: Tarantino's most controlled tension and his single best villain — a war film unlike any other.
3. Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003) 💎 BEST VALUE
Director: Quentin Tarantino | Year: 2003 | Runtime: 111 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Stream on Prime Video; rent on Apple TV
The purest adrenaline shot in the catalog, Kill Bill: Vol. 1 follows the Bride (Uma Thurman) waking from a coma to hunt the assassination squad that left her for dead. A genre blender of samurai cinema, spaghetti western, and anime, it climaxes in the House of Blue Leaves showdown — one of the most ambitious action set pieces of the 2000s.
Lucy Liu, David Carradine, and Daryl Hannah co-star. At 111 minutes with a 85% Rotten Tomatoes score, it is the most accessible and rewatchable entry point — no prior knowledge required, instant payoff.
Pros:
- Nonstop, stylish action that needs no setup
- Uma Thurman's iconic, physical lead performance
- Shortest runtime of his major films at 111 minutes
- Genre-mashup craft that rewards casual and serious fans alike
Cons:
- It's only half a story — Vol. 2 is required for closure
- Cartoonish gore can be off-putting
Verdict: The best value pick — maximum Tarantino style and fun in the least time, perfect for any movie night.
4. Reservoir Dogs (1992)
Director: Quentin Tarantino | Year: 1992 | Runtime: 99 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Stream on Max; rent on Prime Video
Tarantino's lean, ferocious debut, Reservoir Dogs unfolds almost entirely in a warehouse after a diamond heist goes wrong, as color-coded thieves try to root out the rat among them. Shot on a modest budget, it announced his voice fully formed — circular dialogue, sudden brutality, a killer needle-drop soundtrack.
Harvey Keitel, Tim Roth, Michael Madsen, and Steve Buscemi lead. It became a Sundance sensation, carries a 90% Rotten Tomatoes score, and is routinely cited among the greatest debut features ever made.
Pros:
- A perfect, contained single-location thriller
- Launched Tarantino's signature dialogue and structure
- Tight 99-minute runtime with zero filler
- Influential, much-imitated heist template
Cons:
- One torture scene is famously hard to watch
- Lower-budget look compared to later films
Verdict: A flawless debut and a great starting point — proof he arrived fully formed.
5. Django Unchained (2012)
Director: Quentin Tarantino | Year: 2012 | Runtime: 165 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Stream on Netflix; rent on Apple TV
A pre-Civil War revenge western, Django Unchained follows a freed enslaved man (Jamie Foxx) and a bounty-hunting dentist (Christoph Waltz) on a mission to rescue Django's wife from a Mississippi plantation. Leonardo DiCaprio plays the monstrous owner Calvin Candie, with **Samuel L.
Jackson in a startling supporting turn. The film won Tarantino his second Best Original Screenplay Oscar and earned Waltz a second Best Supporting Actor Oscar. It holds an 86% Rotten Tomatoes** score and was Tarantino's highest-grossing film at the time.
Pros:
- Second Best Original Screenplay Oscar for Tarantino
- Waltz's second Oscar plus DiCaprio's chilling villain
- Bold genre fusion of western and revenge drama
- Crowd-pleasing yet pointed historical reckoning
Cons:
- The longest stretch sags at 165 minutes
- Extreme violence and harrowing subject matter
Verdict: A muscular, award-winning western — his most commercially potent crowd-pleaser.
6. Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019)
Director: Quentin Tarantino | Year: 2019 | Runtime: 161 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Stream on Starz; rent on Prime Video
A wistful, sun-soaked ode to 1969 Los Angeles, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood follows a fading TV star (Leonardo DiCaprio) and his loyal stunt double (Brad Pitt) on the fringes of the industry as the Manson murders loom. Margot Robbie plays Sharon Tate. Pitt won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor and the film won Best Production Design, with a Best Picture nomination among ten total.
It holds an 85% Rotten Tomatoes score and is Tarantino's most relaxed, atmospheric work.
Pros:
- Pitt's Oscar-winning, effortlessly cool performance
- Gorgeous, immersive 1969 period recreation
- DiCaprio's funny, vulnerable fading-star turn
- A reflective, mature change of pace for the director
Cons:
- The loose, hangout structure lacks urgency
- A divisive, abruptly violent finale
Verdict: His most personal and atmospheric film — a love letter to old Hollywood with a jolt of an ending.
7. Kill Bill: Vol. 2 (2004)
Director: Quentin Tarantino | Year: 2004 | Runtime: 137 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Stream on Prime Video; rent on Apple TV
The talkier, more emotional half of the saga, Kill Bill: Vol. 2 trades wall-to-wall action for character, backstory, and the long-awaited confrontation with Bill (David Carradine). The Bride's training under cruel master Pai Mei, the buried-alive sequence, and the final living-room reckoning give the revenge tale its heart.
Uma Thurman delivers her best dramatic work of the two films. It holds an 84% Rotten Tomatoes score and completes one of cinema's great two-part epics.
Pros:
- Deepens the saga with backstory and real emotion
- Carradine's quietly menacing Bill anchors the finale
- Standout Pai Mei training and buried-alive sequences
- Thurman's strongest dramatic acting in the series
Cons:
- Slower and more dialogue-heavy than Vol. 1
- Doesn't fully stand alone without Vol. 1
Verdict: The emotional payoff of the Kill Bill saga — essential, but watch Vol. 1 first.
8. Jackie Brown (1997)
Director: Quentin Tarantino | Year: 1997 | Runtime: 154 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Stream on Starz; rent on Prime Video
Tarantino's only adaptation — of Elmore Leonard's *Rum Punch* — Jackie Brown is his most patient, grown-up film. A flight attendant (Pam Grier) caught smuggling cash plays a gun-runner (Samuel L. Jackson), the ATF, and a gentle bail bondsman (Robert Forster) against each other.
Forster earned a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination, and the film is beloved for its warmth, its soul soundtrack, and Grier's commanding lead. It carries an 87% Rotten Tomatoes score and ages better with every viewing.
Pros:
- Pam Grier's career-best, fully human lead role
- Robert Forster's Oscar-nominated, tender performance
- Tarantino's most mature, character-driven pacing
- A soulful soundtrack and rich Elmore Leonard source
Cons:
- Deliberately slow for action-seeking viewers
- Often overlooked next to his flashier hits
Verdict: His most underrated, soulful film — a slow-burn favorite for patient viewers.
9. The Hateful Eight (2015)
Director: Quentin Tarantino | Year: 2015 | Runtime: 168 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Stream on Netflix; rent on Apple TV
A snowbound chamber western, The Hateful Eight traps eight strangers — bounty hunters, a prisoner, a hangman — in a stagecoach stopover as a blizzard rages and paranoia curdles into bloodshed. Samuel L. Jackson, Kurt Russell, Jennifer Jason Leigh, and Walton Goggins lead.
Shot in 70mm Ultra Panavision, it won composer Ennio Morricone the Academy Award for Best Original Score — his first competitive Oscar. It holds a 75% Rotten Tomatoes score and shines as a tense, theatrical single-room thriller.
Pros:
- Morricone's Oscar-winning, ominous original score
- Stunning 70mm cinematography and roadshow presentation
- A taut Agatha-Christie-style whodunit structure
- Jennifer Jason Leigh's fearless, Oscar-nominated turn
Cons:
- Among his most extreme for gore and length
- The three-hour roadshow runtime tests patience
Verdict: A gorgeous, vicious closed-room western — divisive but gripping for fans of slow-burn tension.
10. Death Proof (2007)
Director: Quentin Tarantino | Year: 2007 | Runtime: 113 min | Rated: R | Where to watch: Rent/buy on Prime Video, Apple TV
The most divisive entry, Death Proof began as Tarantino's half of the *Grindhouse* double feature: a misogynistic stuntman (Kurt Russell) stalks women with his "death-proof" muscle car until a group of stuntwomen turns the tables. The car chases — performed largely practically by stunt legend Zoë Bell playing herself — are genuinely thrilling.
Rosario Dawson and Tracie Thoms co-star. It holds a 64% Rotten Tomatoes score; lesser Tarantino, but its practical-stunt finale is a real high.
Pros:
- Spectacular, practical car-chase climax
- Zoë Bell's jaw-dropping real stunt work
- Kurt Russell's menacing, fun villain
- A loving homage to 1970s grindhouse cinema
Cons:
- Long, talky stretches drag before the action
- His weakest-reviewed feature overall
Verdict: The completist's pick — uneven, but the practical stunt finale earns its place at number ten.
Which One Should You Watch Tonight?
What Makes a Great Tarantino Movie
- Dialogue that crackles — His characters talk in long, looping, pop-culture-laced exchanges that build tension and character before any gun is drawn.
- Nonlinear, chapter-based structure — Reordered timelines and titled segments turn plot into a puzzle the audience helps assemble.
- Genre worship turned personal — He fuses spaghetti westerns, samurai films, blaxploitation, and war movies into something unmistakably his own.
- Needle-drop soundtracks — Curated, often obscure tracks become permanently fused to their scenes.
- Sudden, stylized violence — Long calm stretches snap into shocking bursts, making the violence land harder.
- Career-best performances — He repeatedly resurrects or elevates actors, from Travolta to Pam Grier to Christoph Waltz.
What matters less than the hype: the foot shots, the cameos, and the running references. They're fun signatures, but the writing and the actors are what make the films last.
FAQ
What is the best Quentin Tarantino movie? Pulp Fiction (1994) is widely considered his best — it won the Palme d'Or and the Best Original Screenplay Oscar and remains his most influential, most quoted film.
What order should I watch Tarantino's films in? Start with Pulp Fiction or Reservoir Dogs, then explore by mood. Watch Kill Bill Vol. 1 before Vol. 2, as they form one continuous story.
How many movies has Quentin Tarantino directed? Counting *Kill Bill* as one film, Tarantino considers his filmography to be nine features; counted separately, it is ten — all ranked here.
Did Quentin Tarantino win any Oscars? Yes — he won Best Original Screenplay twice, for Pulp Fiction (1994) and Django Unchained (2012).
Which Tarantino movie is the most rewatchable? Kill Bill: Vol. 1 is the most rewatchable for its short runtime and nonstop action, while Pulp Fiction rewards repeat viewings for its structure and dialogue.
Are these the films Tarantino directed or also wrote? This list ranks only films Tarantino directed. Movies he wrote but did not direct, like *True Romance* and *Natural Born Killers*, are excluded.
Bottom Line
The Best Overall Quentin Tarantino movie is Pulp Fiction (1994) — a Palme d'Or and Best Original Screenplay Oscar winner that defines his voice and remains his most rewatched work. The Best Value pick is Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003), the most accessible, most fun, and shortest of his major films.
If you want war-film tension reach for Inglourious Basterds, for a soulful slow burn try Jackie Brown, and use the decision tree above to match a film to tonight's mood. Watch for the writing and the performances, not the references, and his catalog only gets richer with every viewing.
Sources
- IMDb — Quentin Tarantino filmography
- Rotten Tomatoes — Quentin Tarantino movies ranked
- Metacritic — Quentin Tarantino films
- Letterboxd — Quentin Tarantino
- Roger Ebert — reviews archive
- Variety — Tarantino coverage and rankings
- The Criterion Collection
- Academy Awards database (Oscars.org)
- The Cannes Film Festival — Palme d'Or winners
*Quentin Tarantino movies review — best Tarantino films ranked, ratings, where to stream, and a review of the director's top picks.*