Samuel L. Jackson, Michael Madsen, and James Parks have each appeared in at least four Quentin Tarantino films, as the director is famous for often reusing his favourite actors in the cast of his films.
This practice allows the acclaimed filmmaker to work with familiar faces when creating his cinematic masterpieces.
Tarantino is known for crafting roles with specific actors in mind.
A renowned film buff, Tarantino possesses an extensive knowledge of his craft. With a portfolio that includes Django Unchained, Jackie Brown, Pulp Fiction, Kill Bill, and Reservoir Dogs, the American director has consistently produced box office hits.
While he frequently collaborates with the same actors across multiple films – such as Uma Thurman, who starred in three of his movies, and Tim Roth, who also appeared in three Tarantino classics – not all actors have been asked to return.
Several stars have had only one stint with the iconic director, including some big names, and despite rumours some never even made the cut. Here are some of the actors who have had limited contact with the legendary director.
Will Smith
Will Smith never actually shared screen time with the esteemed director, but he was once seriously considered for the lead role in Django Unchained. Despite being approached for the part, the casting ultimately fell through.
The partnership reportedly collapsed due to conflicting creative visions between the actor and filmmaker. According to the YouTube channel Backstage Whispers, both individuals envisioned Django differently.
Jamie Foxx ultimately secured the role with a powerful performance after the official explanation for Smith’s departure cited scheduling conflicts.
The channel said: “Tarantino wanted discomfort, violence, and moral ambiguity. Smith wanted a redemptive arc, but neither man was willing to compromise, and the deal died right there.”
Bruce Willis
During the 1990s, Bruce Willis reigned as Hollywood’s quintessential action star and major celebrity thanks to the Die Hard series. The action icon demanded clear character motivations and direct explanations while filming 1994’s Pulp Fiction.
Willis allegedly insisted on understanding his character’s mindset at every turn but Tarantino refuses to over-explain things to performers.
Willis admired Reservoir Dogs and, following a meeting with producer Harvey Weinstein, showed interest in collaborating with Tarantino.
However, circumstances shifted. Farout magazine documented Willis’s comments during a 2012 interview about The Expendables 2: “Few people will work with him now, and I know I will never work with him again. It was a great crew, but a screaming director does not make for a pleasant set experience. But look, we were all big boys, and we got through it”.
Willis had confrontations with the director during Pulp Fiction’s production and tensions escalated at various points, according to Willis. They succeeded in completing a film that would become a cinematic masterpiece, but the duo haven’t collaborated since.
George Clooney
The From Dusk Till Dawn production featured George Clooney, coming straight from his ER television success, in the 1996 hit, which Robert Rodriguez directed and Tarantino wrote. Their partnership began amicably, with Tarantino playing Clooney’s sibling in the movie.
The duo collaborated just once, and subsequent years brought comments indicating tension between them. Tarantino made statements during an interview suggesting Clooney wasn’t a genuine movie star.
Clooney fired back in a GQ interview, saying he felt “a little irritated” by Tarantino’s comments and added: “So now I’m like, all right, dude, ****off. I don’t mind giving him ****. He gave me ****.”
Robert DeNiro
Cinema legend DeNiro appeared in the 1997 success, Jackie Brown, which Tarantino helmed and also featured Pam Greer. Tarantino has expressed tremendous respect and praise for De Niro’s performance skills, yet they’ve only partnered once.
Multiple unconfirmed explanations have been suggested for their single collaboration, including disputes over the actor’s compensation.
John Travolta
Like Willis, screen stalwart John Travolta only worked with Tarantino on the set of Pulp Fiction where he played hitman Vincent Vega. The film maker was credited for revitalising Travolta’s career back in the 1990s by casting him in the powerful role.
According to Far Out magazine, Travolta was one of the biggest stars of his era, but a string of poor choices and bad movies had seen his stock plummet drastically by the early 1990s, around the time Tarantino was getting Pulp Fiction off the ground.
While a reunion hasn’t happened yet, Travolta has expressed interest in working with Tarantino again, and the two have reportedly remained in contact.