Director Quentin Tarantino is not giving up on the third installment to the "Kill Bill" franchise just yet, and he truly believes that there is a lot more uncovered ground just waiting to be discovered.

"There definitely is a possibility... stop short of saying probability, but there could be! It could be. For one reason in particular. Well one, me and Uma (Thurman) would have a really good time working together again. And I wanted the character to have... I put that character - not Uma, I put Uma through a lot too - but I put that character of Beatrix Kiddo through a lot. And so I wanted her to have this much time for peace. I wanted her to have some time with her daughter and not have to be in the genre-machine. She could actually enjoy her life for a while. The whole idea was that everyone would be as old as they are," he shared during an hour long interview with Ben Mankiewicz of What the Flick?

Tarantino considers "Kill Bill" one of the crown jewels of all his movies, simply because it is a unique world where almost anything is possible, and there is nothing quite like it.

"But the other thing is I think 'Kill Bill' is pretty much hands down probably my most visionary movie, insofar as I really went beyond the 'Pulp Fiction' stuff to create this world that really doesn't exist," he said.

Before "Kill Bill" came along, Tarantino said a world "where they actually have samurai sword holders on airplanes where the cup holder would be and that's all good and everyone accepts it" is just plain ludicrous.

"That's just how it is!" he exclaimed. "Fourteen year old girls hang out in bubblegum bars and eviscerate men and get away with it. So the thing about it was that is probably my most visionary cinematic contribution. Now since then my work has taken a turn towards literary and it's gotten denser and denser... so it would be nice to go back to a visceral world that's not about the words any more."

If not a movie, Tarantino is also willing to create the same world in the small screen, given the success seen by several television shows nowadays. The director said that he would "be happy to do" a mini-series on television if that is what his audiences would prefer.