The Hateful Eight director Quentin Tarantino has some choice words for Disney two months after the Los Angeles Cinemarama Dome chose to extend Star Wars: The Force Awakens' run rather than showing The Hateful Eight, which the filmmaker claims broke an existing agreement he had with the theater.

According to NYDailyNews.com, when asked at the Costume Designers Guild Awards whether he and the House of Mouse have made peace, Tarantino replied “No, they f---ed me over,” and that he would "never work (with Disney) in any way, shape or form after what they did to me.”

Tarantino's Pulp Fiction and Kill Bill films were made for Miramax, which was then owned by Disney. “They f---ed me over and I made them a lot of money for Pulp Fiction, and that really is a bad way to treat a former employee who has worked very well for them," the director fumed.

The squabble originally came to light in an interview with Howard Stern, where Tarantino claimed Disney had threatened ArcLight Theaters, which owns the Cinemarama Dome, with pulling The Force Awakens from all their theaters if they didn't extend its run.

The Hateful Eight, which was shot in the now rarely used grand 70mm format, was supposed to shown at the venue, which boasts one of the biggest and most notable screens in Los Angeles.

"It’s vindictive, it’s mean, and it’s extortion," Tarantino said.

While some doubt the situation unfolded exactly the way Tarantino claims, the director -- who's made his career with gritty revenge flicks -- certainly doesn't seem like he's letting this vendetta go anytime soon.