Kill Bill
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Kill Bill
Summary
Kill Bill is a film duology[1]. It draws 29 Wikipedia views per month (film_duology category, ranking #6 of 6).[2]
Key Facts
- Kill Bill's instance of is recorded as film duology[3].
- Kill Bill was directed by Quentin Tarantino[4].
- Quentin Tarantino wrote the screenplay for Kill Bill[5].
- Uma Thurman wrote the screenplay for Kill Bill[6].
- Kill Bill's composer is recorded as RZA[7].
- Kill Bill's genre is flashback film[8].
- Kill Bill's genre is action film[9].
- Kill Bill's genre is rape and revenge film[10].
- Kill Bill's genre is martial arts film[11].
- Kill Bill's genre is splatter film[12].
- A cast member of Kill Bill was Uma Thurman[13].
- A cast member of Kill Bill was Q187038[14].
- A cast member of Kill Bill was Lucy Liu[15].
- A cast member of Kill Bill was Vivica A. Fox[16].
- A cast member of Kill Bill was Q220584[17].
- A cast member of Kill Bill was Daryl Hannah[18].
- A cast member of Kill Bill was Gordon Liu[19].
- A cast member of Kill Bill was Julie Dreyfus[20].
- A cast member of Kill Bill was Ambrosia Kelley[21].
- A cast member of Kill Bill was Sonny Chiba[22].
- Kill Bill was produced by Lawrence Bender[23].
- Kill Bill's production company is recorded as Miramax[24].
- Kill Bill's director of photography is recorded as Robert Richardson[25].
- The original language of Kill Bill was English[26].
- Kill Bill's Commons category is recorded as Kill Bill[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Kill Bill was produced by Lawrence Bender[23]. It was directed by Quentin Tarantino[4]. Screenwriters include Quentin Tarantino[5] and Uma Thurman[6]. Cast members include Uma Thurman[13], Q187038[14], Lucy Liu[15], Vivica A. Fox[16], Q220584[17], and Daryl Hannah[18].
Publication
The original language of Kill Bill was English[26]. Genres include flashback film[8], action film[9], rape and revenge film[10], martial arts film[11], and splatter film[12].
Cultural Impact
Things named for Kill Bill include Kill Gil, Volumes I & II[28], a television series episode[29], directed by Bob Anderson[30].
Why It Matters
Kill Bill draws 29 Wikipedia views per month (film_duology category, ranking #6 of 6).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 18 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[31] It is known by 11 alternative names across languages and contexts.[32]
Entities named for it include Kill Gil, Volumes I & II[28], a television series episode[29], directed by Bob Anderson[30].