Quentin Tarantino also has strong opinions about Owen Wilson after airing his grievances with Paul Dano. "I really can't stand Owen Wilson," Tarantino, 62, said while appearing on "The Bret Easton Ellis Podcast" on Tuesday, December 2. "I mean, I can't stand him." While Tarantino admitted he's not a fan of Wilson, he does enjoy his movie Midnight in Paris, which he ranked as his 10th favorite movie of the 21st century. "I spent the first time watching the movie loving it and hating him," Tarantino said of his experience with the Woody Allen film. "The second time I watched the movie, I was like, 'Ah, OK, don't be such a prick. He's not so bad. He's not so bad.' And then the third time I watched it, I found myself watching him." Actor-Director Duos Who've Worked Together Over and Over Again In Midnight in Paris, Wilson, 57, plays a screenwriter and aspiring novelist who is struggling with his relationship with his materialistic fiancée (Rachel McAdams) while on vacation in Paris. As Wilson's character is working through his struggles, he is transported back through time every night to the 1920s, where he converses with real-life artists like Ernest Hemingway (Corey Stoll) and Salvador Dalí (Adrien Brody). "The surrealists were really funny. I like the idea that he's trying to describe his time-travel thing to them, and it's the only people who completely get it," Tarantino said of the film's plot. "Well, of course you get it, you're surrealists!" Wilson received praise for his performance, which earned him a Golden Globe nomination. The film itself was nominated for four Academy Awards and took home the prize for Best Original Screenplay. Tarantino's low opinion of Wilson comes shortly after the Oscar-winning director revealed he also doesn't like Dano, 41. During the same podcast interview, Tarantino named Dano's movie There Will Be Blood as his fifth favorite movie of this era, but with a caveat. "Obviously, it's supposed to be a two-hander, and it's also so drastically obvious that it's not a two-hander," Tarantino said. "[Dano] is weak sauce, man. He's a weak sister." In There Will Be Blood, Dano played twin brothers Paul and Eli Sunday. The period drama starred Daniel Day-Lewis as a miner-turned-oilman who ventures out to California during the state's oil boom in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Which Films Got the Longest Standing Ovations at Cannes? Tarantino argued that Dano's performance was "uninteresting" and suggested that "Austin Butler would have been wonderful in that role." (When There Will Be Blood premiered in 2007, Butler would have been 16, while Dano was 23.) "[Dano is] just such a weak, weak, uninteresting guy. ... Daniel Day-Lewis shows that he doesn't need [a powerful onscreen foe]. He doesn't need anything," Tarantino complained. "The movie would've had more - there would've been more stringiness to the beef. And again, it's supposed to be a two-hander, and it's not." Tarantino acknowledged that while Dano's performance in the film was not "terrible," it just wasn't his cup of tea. "I'm saying he's giving a nonentity [performance]. I don't care for him," he said. "I don't care for Owen Wilson. I don't care for Matthew Lillard."