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Hell to pay

Eli Roth talks about playing a Nazi killer in Inglourious Basterds.

Eli Roth talks about playing a Nazi killer in Inglourious Basterds

Eli Roth, left, co-stars with Brad Pitt in Quentin Tarantino's Second World War movie Inglourious Basterds. ((Francois Duhamel/TWC/Alliance Films))

Best known for writing and directing the profitable horror flicks Cabin Fever and the Hostel series, Eli Roth has created some of the goriest visions ever captured on film. He continues that streak with his acting role in Quentin Tarantinos latest picture, Inglourious Basterds.

'I grew up with fantasies of killing Nazis, because we grew up with the knowledge of what my parents would say: "Count your blessings you were born here, because if you werent, we all wouldve been killed."' Eli Roth

In it, Roth plays Sgt. Donny Donowitz a.k.a. "The Bear Jew" a key player on a team of American soldiers who traipse across Nazi-occupied France seeking vengeance against the enemy.

Taking his cue from head "basterd" Lt. Aldo Raine (Brad Pitt) and channelling the spirit of his idol, Boston Red Sox slugger Ted Williams Donowitz metes out justice by swinging a baseball bat against countless Nazi skulls. CBCNews.ca spoke to Roth while he was in Toronto last week.

Q: How did you meet Tarantino in the first place?

A: Six years ago, he came to see Cabin Fever at the L.A. Film Festival, and really loved it and invited me to his house to watch movies, and we just became really close friends. And we did the Hostel movies together.

Q: Inglourious Basterds is a mash-up of so many different styles: war epic, spaghetti western, revenge fantasy, with elements of comedy and terror thrown in. How do you describe it?

A: The only way to describe it is its Tarantino at a level that hes never reached before. Its vintage Tarantino. Its impossible to describe and thats what so great about it. Id say its got the tension of Reservoir Dogs, the style of Pulp Fiction, the characters of Jackie Brown, the action of Kill Bill and the adrenaline of Death Proof. Its the culmination of all of Quentins years as a director. I think its his masterpiece and I dont feel like Im over-hyping it.

Q: What did playing this role mean to you personally, in terms of your family history?

Quentin Tarantino, left, and Roth arrive at the premiere of Inglourious Basterds in Hollywood. ((Kevin Winter/Getty Images) )

A: Oh, everything. Several things. On a very basic level, being Jewish and from Boston [like the character], I felt like I was representing my people. And Quentin wanted to cast authentic. It was very important to me to play the part, because my grandparents got out of Kiev, Poland and Austria. And all their relatives who didnt get out were killed. There are entire branches of my family that were wiped out in the Holocaust. So, this character is fighting on behalf of all the Jews who cant go over and fight, and the ones in the camps. I grew up with fantasies of killing Nazis, because we grew up with the knowledge of what my parents would say: "Count your blessings you were born here, because if you werent, we all wouldve been killed." And I remember reading Elie Wiesels Night when I was 10, and trying to imagine why didnt everybody fight back I couldnt understand it.

On another level, I hate bad Boston accents in movies. It tortures me. In Good Will Hunting, Matt Damon and Ben Affleck, people who are from there, do it right. But in The Departed, other than Mark Wahlberg and Matt Damon, I cant take it. And so I had these fantasies of correcting the Boston accent.

And being in a Tarantino film, I mean we dressed up as the Reservoir Dogs in college, and just to be a character in a Tarantino movie which I got to do briefly in Death Proof is a whole other level.

Q: Has your family seen the film?

A: Yeah, they saw it for the first time last night.

Q: What was their reaction?

A: They were in tears. My father was crying when I was wiping out the Nazis. It was so satisfying they were so proud of me that I did this film. When you see the look on my face in the movie, its very real and its very personal. I allowed myself to tap into the most painful, upsetting experiences in my life. I was in anguish when I was shooting those scenes.

Q: I read that you became Tarantinos unofficial advisor on Jewish matters. What did that involve?

A: Well, this is me as a friend, talking to Quentin, in the way hed be an advisor when Im writing a screenplay. He called me up and hed ask, you know, "Would you be able to forgive the Nazis if it meant ending the war?" Wed have philosophical discussions. And my answer was, No way, Id kill all of them, theres no questions asked. Theres no forgiveness. I said absolution is a Christian concept. Jews, we dont forget anything. We collect interest, we get more angry about stuff. And I think if you want a good example of Jewish psychology, you should come to my familys Passover seder."

Hed never been to a seder. He came over and it was a really moving experience. We talked about the Jews who were enslaved, telling the story of how we were slaves in Egypt and how we never forget that. We always talk about the Holocaust. My father read letters from Holocaust survivors. My father was a psychoanalyst at Harvard, hes recently retired. He gave papers in Israel about the Holocaust. I was trying to explain to Quentin that they tried to exterminate us. So, theres no negotiating with people like that. Theyve lost their humanity. When there are people that are successfully wiping you out, you want to kill them. And that, I think, helped confirm certain creative instincts Quentin had about creating the ending.

Inglourious Basterds opensAug. 21.

Greig Dymond writes about the arts for CBCNews.ca.