That scene had no depth. Tarantino did not show who Sharon was. What Robbie played was a caricature of who Tarantino thought Sharon was. He talked to Debra Tate, who didn't know her sister for crap. Most of Sharon's life from 1966-1969 was spent abroad and even her youngest sister Patti, and mother Doris said they only saw her sporadically. The one Tarantino should have been speaking to was the one person who knew her best: Her husband Roman Polanski. Polanski begged Tarantino not to do this. I don't care what one thinks of Polanski, Tarantino had the professional courtesy to show Polanski the script. But then Tarantino knew he was going to depict Sharon in the most stupid way possible, therefore no allowing Polanski to see the script for input. The same with Jay Sebring, Voytek Frykowski, and Abigail Folger. And that scene never happened in real life and Sharon was not that vacuous. Sharon was more than just the sum of big glasses (Sharon never wore), micro-mini skirts, and go-go boots. So there was no depth to that scene. There was no meaning other than to show he couldn't have cared less.
reply
share