Quentin Tarantino 's movies famously feature a lot of femalefeet .- Margot Robbie,
Uma Thurman , and Diane Kruger have all had bare feet scenes in his movies. - Tarantino defended showing so many feet, saying other directors like Alfred Hitchcock did it, too.
Quentin Tarantino's movies are filled with Tarantino-isms that instantly signify whose film you are watched: crackling, pop-culture filled dialogue, eclectic soundtracks, cartoonish uber violence, and feet.
The Oscar-winning director of "
Now, Tarantino has defended his penchant for showing feet in his film's, comparing his habit to directors like Luis Buñuel and Alfred Hitchcock.
In an interview with GQ, Tarantino said: "I don't take it seriously. There's a lot of feet in a lot of good directors' movies. That's just good direction. Like, before me, the person foot fetishism was defined by was Luis Buñuel, another film director. And Hitchcock was accused of it and Sofia Coppola has been accused of it."
Nearly every Tarantino movie features feet in some capacity, beginning with Uma Thurman's barefoot walk and dance scene in "Pulp Fiction" and continuing through to an over-abundance of shots of Margot Robbie and Margaret Qualley's bare feet in "
Those scenes were so noticeable that the star of that movie, Brad Pitt, jokingly thanked Robbie and Qualley's feet in his SAG acceptance speech for best supporting actor.
In between those movies, "Kill Bill: Vol 1" featured an entire scene of Uma Thurman trying to wiggle her big toe, while "Inglourious Basterds" had a scene of Christoph Waltz slipping a shoe onto Diane Kruger's foot in what seemed like a nod to "Cinderella."
Tarantino also got in on the foot action himself: in 1996's "From Dusk Till Dawn," Tarantino appears in a scene where he licks the feet of Salma Hayek's character.
Some actresses have spoken about having their feet displayed so much in Tarantino's movies. Robbie said that she enjoyed walking around barefoot, while Kruger said that Tarantino made sure she got a pedicure before her scene, and Qualley was very reluctant to get her feet out for the camera.
"I genuinely was like, 'Quentin, this is a bad idea. I don't have good feet,'" Qualley told IndieWire. "We had a big debate about it, me, Quentin, and Brad, with them trying to be like, 'You're fine,' and me being like, 'No, guys, really, look, these are not good.'"