There's a whole chapter that takes place in the old West and we get the character stories for his character, the girl, and the one Luke Perry plays. Written like it's a real event.
I'd watch the **** out of that movie.
marcel ledbetter said:
I learned today that the western scene is based on the real tv western show Lancer. Johnny Madrid and Boston (Luke Perry's character) were brother in the show. I've watched a lot of old western reruns over the years and have never heard of the show Lancer. I just thought it was made up for OUATIH.
marcel ledbetter said:
I learned today that the western scene is based on the real tv western show Lancer. Johnny Madrid and Boston (Luke Perry's character) were brother in the show. I've watched a lot of old western reruns over the years and have never heard of the show Lancer. I just thought it was made up for OUATIH.
Quote:
In November 1995, Stacy pleaded no contest to a charge of molesting an 11-year-old girl. On December 7, 1995, he failed to appear for sentencing in Ventura County Superior Court and was arrested the next day in a Honolulu, Hawaii hospital after he fled California. He attempted suicide by jumping off a cliff. After recovering, he waived extradition and returned to California. On March 5, 1996, he received a six-year prison sentence. The prosecutor said she believed Stacy might have been eligible for probation for the molestation, but his post-arrest behavior, coupled with two arrests in June 1995 for prowling at the homes of other girls, led her to seek a prison sentence. He served his sentence at the California Institution for Men in Chino, California.
TCTTS said:
Tarantino owns the New Beverly Cinema, which they've retrofitted for the '70s setting...David Fincher & Brad Pitt Are Back pic.twitter.com/QcDcw2pbPj
— Cinema Tweets (@CinemaTweets1) July 29, 2025First look at Brad Pitt as Cliff Booth in 'The Adventures of Cliff Booth', the sequel to 'Once Upon a Time in... Hollywood'. https://t.co/wsz7a2tE6M
— cinesthetic. (@TheCinesthetic) July 29, 2025
So no one actually LISTENED to that Tarantino podcast. It's FULL of great details, clarity, and debunks. Here's the first one. For all those keeping score, 'The Movie Critic' and The Adventures Of Cliff Booth' are two separate projects with no crossover.https://t.co/o9RyBv8Gvs
— yronlyhope.bsky.social (@YrOnlyHope) August 18, 2025
Big Kahuna Burger restaurant spotted on The Adventures of Cliff Booth set
— Quentin Tarantino News (@QTarantino_news) September 5, 2025
📷 @Todd_Spence pic.twitter.com/DYXmHZ0kcu
David Fincher’s ‘THE ADVENTURES OF CLIFF BOOTH’ will be released in Summer 2026.
— DiscussingFilm (@DiscussingFilm) October 27, 2025
Netflix is looking at a potential robust theatrical rollout for the film.
(Source: https://t.co/yQR2bpyk21) pic.twitter.com/LioGgFBKr0
Toldja. Leo wound up turning down $3 million for one day's work... pic.twitter.com/BjRLo3XaUL
— Jeff Sneider (@TheInSneider) December 3, 2025
CLIFF BOOTH SIGHTING DURING THE SUPER BOWL!!!! pic.twitter.com/5iReHcky2C
— Matt Neglia (@NextBestPicture) February 9, 2026
And away we go.
— Netflix (@netflix) February 9, 2026
The first trailer for David Fincher’s ‘THE ADVENTURES OF CLIFF BOOTH’ has been released.
— DiscussingFilm (@DiscussingFilm) February 9, 2026
Coming soon to Netflix. pic.twitter.com/E70SJrBUzB
David Fincher visuals. Quentin Tarantino dialogue and writing. I’m genuinely so onboard for this. This feels NICE GUYS coded in the best way. https://t.co/HzmF2dRDqB
— Dan Marcus (@Danimalish) February 9, 2026
TCTTS said:
I'll settle for this one being the one Super Bowl trailer that wasn't already announced/rumored. It was a huge surprise and I practically levitated out of my seat the second I realized what it was.
As for the movie itself, thankfully it's getting a theatrical release prior to its Netflix debut, and apparently a pretty big theatrical release at that, at least compared to most Netflix titles. Paying close to $10M for a single spot now pretty much guarantees as much. Rumor is this summer, likely July, which checks out as well, seeing as Super Bowl spots/trailers rarely advertise movies coming out post-summer.