Not to stoke the flames but Tarantino might not be an out and out feminist director (and given the wake of the whole Weinstein thing his methods are kinda...questionable at [i]best[/i]) but several of his movies have clear feminist and female empowering themes and that goes as far back to Jackie Brown and even post Kill Bill with Death Proof and the A plot of Inglorious Basterds. To deny Kill Bill as having feminist themes is like denying I Spit On Your Grave because the lead character gets raped. Women seeking independence and a break from typical norms is as much part of feminist film as revenge or violence. As far back as La Souriante Madame Beudet, a short film where a woman plots to have her husband kill himself, women seeking revenge on the men/women who have slighted them has been part of feminist film. Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore is a feminist film just as much as Thelma and Louise. A feminist film is not the same thing as a film about feminism. The argument can and still is made that typical 'female is wronged, seeks revenge' isn't a feminist film because it's not in line with feminist values and at that point it's like fighting over calling it a shovel or a spade. Feminist movies don't just mean "the main character is a woman" otherwise every romcom is a feminist movie. Ghostbusters 2016 was only a 'feminist movie' because the filmmakers rode that train hard to their detriment, the movie itself wasn't dealing with overtly feminist themes and the reason people in the movie didn't take the characters seriously wasn't because of their gender. Just as an example.