Discover the only film that shocked Quentin Tarantino to the point of forcing him to close his eyes.
Large movie buff and renowned director with titles like Pulp Fiction or the eight bastards, Quentin Tarantino saw thousands of films during his life, but only one was a problem for him, to the point that he had to close his eyes in front.
“I couldn't bear to look”
In an interview with Irish examine (via Moviepilot) The filmmaker to the two Oscars had revealed that it was the film The meaning of life, which had disgusted him. Yes, a comedy of British humorists Monty Python:
“The only time I had to look away because I couldn't bear to look, it was in the sense of life, when this big B ** Ard continues to be sick.”
“I felt really nauseous – it was too much. I was looking around and I said to myself: 'If someone here is sick and I have to feel vomit, I'm going to vomit. In the end, I managed to keep my lunch, but I still can't think of this scene without having nausea. “

Universal Pictures
Monty Python, the meaning of life is a sketches film. Lasting 1h47, it is divided into a short film followed by eight sketches interrupted by an interlude. The segment of Tarantino is called the third age (The Autumn Years in VO).
It takes place in a star restaurant where a certain M. Creosote (Terry Jones) eats a meal worthy of Gargantua and begins to vomit liters and liters, while continuing to eat. The time lasts on the screen, and can represent a challenge for emetophobes. As if that were not enough, Mr. Creosote ended up exploding in a last disgusting moment, after accepting a last berlingot when he had already “The Baigne Background Teeth”.
An extract from the scene but beware, sensitive souls abstain:
A sensitive film in many countries
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E7QG0O-O73Q
If the film is released for all audiences in France, it is prohibited under 18 in the United Kingdom, under 17s without accompanying in the United States and prohibited for 15 years in Ireland. He obtained the special Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival, and it is the last feature film by Monty Python before the death of the first of its members, Graham Chapman.
It is fun to discover that Quentin Tarantino, who seems to have no problem showing hectoliters of hemoglobin on the screen during sequences of unbridled action at Kill Bill, had a limit, vomit, and that it is the Monty Python, known for their absurd and creaky humor, who almost made him leave a cinema.