An Quentin Tarantino projects, it was left behind. Quentin Tarantino’s 2009 film Inglourious Basterds offered a look at what could have happened in an alternate timeline where a group called “The Basterds” was tasked with killing none other than Adolf Hitler. All that, of course, with Tarantino’s signature level of violence and unique narrative.

Inglourious Basterds followed two plots to assassinate the Nazi leader: one was the Basterds’ plan, led by Aldo Raine (Brad Pitt), and the other one was Shosanna Dreyfus’ (Mélanie Laurent) plan, who wanted revenge after SS colonel Hans Landa (Christoph Waltz) killed her family. A filmmaker like Tarantino surely has to do numerous script treatments before reaching that final story, and that was the case with Inglourious Basterds, which originally featured another plot in addition to the one that made it to the big screen.

Related: Why Tarantino's Vega Brothers Movie Never Happened

Tarantino had to get rid of that part of the story because the film was “too big” and didn’t even feel like a movie, but more like a miniseries. In the end, he didn’t go back to that scrapped Inglourious Basterds material even though he teased a few years ago that he would just have to write the second half of it and it would be ready to go. So, what happened to that potential Inglourious Basterds spin-off and what was it about?

Inglourious Basterds Spin-Off Would Have Focused On Black Troops

Inglourious Basterds
Lt. Aldo Raine speaks to his comrades in Inglourious Basterds

In an interview with The Root (via Django Unchained trilogy.

Why Killer Crow Never Happened

Inglourious Basterds Hans Landa

Three years after Inglourious Basterds, Tarantino came back with Django Unchained, followed three years later by Sharon Tate’s murder as one of its stories. There’s no concrete reason as to why Killer Crow hasn’t been made (or if it will ever be), but given that Tarantino has moved on to other projects, it probably has to do with him focusing on other ideas – although it’s quite possible that he just isn’t feeling the story anymore. There’s also the issue of time: ten years have already ed since Inglourious Basterds was released, and the remaining Basterds don’t look like they did back then anymore, so that’s probably another obstacle for the project - as Tarantino wouldn't probably be on board for the current trend of de-aging visual effects.

Next: Inglourious Basterds True Story: Did ANY Of Quentin Tarantino's Movie Really Happen?