Conversations regarding the upcoming picture that director Quentin Tarantino might make have been raging ever since viewers first encountered his distinctive aesthetic in 1994's Reservoir Dogs. The alternatives at the moment include Kill Bill 3, an R-rated Star Trek movie, and most recently, a humorous Western. Given that Quentin Tarantino has said he wants to write the screenplay for his final movie, it seems exceedingly unlikely that he would ever take on the role of director.
Of course, Hollywood Producers, approached Tarantino with a variety of projects after the success of Reservoir Dogs, including Speed (1994) and Men In Black (1997), but he chose to retreat to Amsterdam to work on his screenplay for Pulp Fiction. The neo-noir criminal thriller Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs, which he wrote, produced, and starred in as Mr. Brown, was released in 1992 and received positive reviews soon after. Pulp Fiction (1992), which built on the fusion of Hong Kong filmmaking and American cool, rejuvenated Travolta's stagnant career and developed the Tarantino brand of shock violence, endlessly quotable, and bizarre genre-middle-ground.
The "naughty" enfant prodige, stablished himself as a genuine cultural phenomenon with the release of Reservoir Dogs in 1992 and Pulp Fiction in 1994, as well as his screenplays for True Romance in 1993, Natural Born Killers in 1994, and From Dusk Till Dawn in 1996. His screenplays were also a sensation in print due to their widespread printing. Fans of Quentin Tarantino should see this epic action film, which also appears in a cameo in his more recent film Once Once a Time...in Hollywood and served as inspiration for a significant portion of Inglourious Basterds.
You might want to start with Jackie Brown, work your way through the Kill Bill movies, then take on Inglourious Basterds, before going onto more male-dominated entertainment like Reservoir Dogs. Although, Tarantino adores a strong female lead.