Officially? Two. But if you dig into Tarantino’s universe, there’s this fun theory that 'Kill Bill' exists within his larger filmography—like, the Bride’s story is a movie-within-a-movie in 'Pulp Fiction'. Mind-blowing, right? Vol. 1’s anime sequence (produced by Production I.G., who also did 'Ghost in the Shell') is still one of my favorite stylistic choices. It adds this surreal layer to O-Ren Ishii’s backstory. And don’t get me started on the soundtrack; Nancy Sinatra’s 'Bang Bang' sets the mood perfectly for the whole bloody fairytale.
Two! Well, technically one story chopped in half, but yeah—two movies. I love how Tarantino plays with genre in each: Vol. 1 feels like a grindhouse flick meets Japanese chanbara, while Vol. 2 leans into martial arts philosophy and those tense, dialogue-heavy scenes (Pai Mei’s training lives rent-free in my head). Fun fact: Uma Thurman’s sword-fighting choreography was so intense, she actually broke bones during filming. Makes the payoff when she finally confronts Bill even sweeter.
Man, the 'Kill Bill' saga is such a wild ride—I still get chills thinking about that yellow jumpsuit and the Bride's relentless quest for revenge! Officially, there are two films: 'Kill Bill: Vol. 1' (2003) and 'Kill Bill: Vol. 2' (2004). Tarantino originally envisioned it as one epic, but the runtime ballooned, so he split it. Vol. 1 is all about that kinetic, anime-inspired action (remember the Crazy 88 fight?), while Vol. 2 slows things down with deeper character beats, like the heartbreaking reveal about Beatrix’s daughter.
Rumors about a 'Vol. 3' have swirled for years—Tarantino even teased it might follow Vernita Green’s daughter seeking revenge. But with his '10-film retirement' plan, who knows? For now, the duology stands as this perfect yin-yang of violence and heart. I sometimes marathon both back-to-back; the shift in tone feels like flipping from a samurai manga to a spaghetti western.
Just two, but they pack a punch! Vol. 1’s hospital escape and House of Blue Leaves fight are iconic, while Vol. 2’s buried alive scene had me holding my breath. Tarantino’s genius is how he makes revenge feel personal—you cheer for the Bride even when she’s carving through dozens. That final confrontation? Chef’s kiss.
2026-07-07 11:20:24
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Twelve years as the perfect adopted daughter... All was erased the moment the Vaughn family’s real daughter returned.
Overnight, Elara Vaughn became a thief in their eyes. Everything she had was suddenly someone else’s.
Love turned to hatred, and home turned into a cage.
To atone for a life she never stole, Elara was forced into a marriage that destroyed her... Humiliated, broken, and discarded until death finally claimed her.
But fate gives her a second chance.
Reborn one day before the wedding, Elara woke up with every memory of her past life intact, and a heart that refuses to break again... VENGEANCE!
This time, she will pretend to submit.
This time, she will control every move.
And this time, she reaches out to the one man she rejected in her past life... the only person who once offered her salvation and love... Lucien Hale, the most powerful and ruthless man in the country.
As secrets unravel and the Vaughn family’s hypocrisy is exposed, Elara learns that revenge doesn’t only require truth, but it also requires cruelty.
They wanted a sacrifice...
Instead, they created a monster, who will bring their downfall.
Getting pregnant was supposed to be the most beautiful thing to happen to a woman.
Vivian Colbert just got the good news and wanted to gingerly share it with her husband, only to meet him in bed with another woman. As if that wasn't enough pain, she was injected with cocaine by the side chick.
Two years later, Vivian is the best skilled assassin and got a mission to murder the well known billionaire-her ex husband.
Behind the pretty smile and polished heels, lies a woman with blood on her hands and vengeance in her heart.
Twelve years ago, she watched his family destroy hers, she survived, she trained and returned. With new names, forged identities and a single mission; Bring them all down. The plan was simple: get close, destroy him and walk away. But Leonardo Moretti is nothing she expected, underneath his brutal exterior is a man scarred by the same monster she vowed to kill. What happens when the man she comes to ruin ends up saving her?
I've chosen to participate in a death game. As long as I can escape from the murderer's killing spree in ten time loops, I'll be able to win at least 100 billion dollars.
In the first loop, I have my apartment refurbished into a bank vault. Still, the killer is able to bust down my front door.
In the second loop, I hide in the ceiling crawlspace. Yet, the killer is quick to locate me immediately, as though he knew where I was, to begin with.
In the third loop, I finally realize that something's definitely fishy…
Getting a good job that pays is kind of difficult and an offer came to her to commit a crime when she is no killer but for the money, she had no choice.
She never planned to love but planned to be the billionaire hit woman, what happens when the table turns?
BLADE
The story revolves around a woman who got married to a mafia. She lived with her husband and his family in the house where she was maltreated and almost killed. She finds out that it was this same family who killed her beloved father. She struggles to live amidst them but they made life impossible for her to live. Her husband wasn't helping matters as well. She wasn't allowed to leave the house. Whenever she attempted to escape, she would always get caught.
But one day, she finds her way and she escaped but she promised to revenge for her father's death and make their life miserable. She became rich and powerful but by the time she sets her eyes on her abusive husband again, she fell in love deeply with him. She tried to control herself but destiny prevailed over revenge.
Man, the 'Death Wish' series is such a wild ride! There are actually five main movies in the franchise, starting with the original 1974 classic starring Charles Bronson. That one set the tone for the whole vigilante justice genre—brutal, gritty, and unapologetic. The sequels followed in '82, '85, '87, and '94, each ramping up the action while keeping Bronson's iconic Paul Kersey at the center. I love how the later films leaned into the over-the-top action, almost becoming self-aware parodies by 'Death Wish 4: The Crackdown.' The 2018 Bruce Willis reboot tried to modernize it, but honestly, it didn’t capture the same raw energy of the originals. Those old-school revenge flicks just hit different.
Funny enough, the series kind of mirrors the evolution of action movies over the decades. The first film had this bleak, almost philosophical take on violence, while the sequels just went full throttle with explosions and one-liners. If you’re into vintage action, the whole series is a time capsule of machismo and 80s excess. The fifth one, 'Death Wish V: The Face of Death,' is hilariously dated now, but it’s a guilty pleasure of mine—especially that ridiculous final showdown in a mannequin factory.