Pulp Fiction Movie Review
Pulp Fiction Review

"Pulp Fiction" Overview

Rating: R
1994
Cast and Crew
Director : Quentin TarantinoProducer : Lawrence Bender
Screenwiter : Quentin Tarantino
Starring : John Travolta,Samuel L. Jackson,Uma Thurman,Laura Lovelace,Harvey Keitel,Tim Roth,Amanda Plummer,Phil LaMarr,Frank Whaley,Maria de Medeiros,Ving Rhames,Burr Steers,Eric Stoltz,Rosanna Arquette,Paul Calderon,Christopher Walken,Bruce Willis,Bronagh Gallagher
Royale with cheese, baby, royale with cheese. The film of that single-handedly
changed the face of American -- and world -- cinema in 1994, Quentin
Tarantino's Pulp Fiction is a rare masterpiece that is unlikely to be repeated
by him, or his imitators. And believe me, many have tried, with varying levels
of success.
This set of interlocking tales involving gangsters, boxers, druggies, and plain
old joes is alternately exciting and funny -- and often both at the same time.
Whether it's John Travolta's Vincent Vega doing the twist with his gangster
boss's wife and later miraculously pulling her out of a drug overdose, Samuel
L. Jackson reciting the Bible or picking splattered brain out of his enormous
afro, Tim Roth and Amanda Plummer robbing a diner, Bruce Willis throwing a
boxing match and later ending up facing a couple of oversexed hillbilly
degenerates, or Ving Rhames overseeing the whole proceedings, the movie is
utterly brilliant, hilarious, and thrilling. Even the little things are
perfect: Tarantino has never since quite managed to recapture his masterful use
of the close-up and fantastically interesting lighting choices. It's one of
only a handful of films that gets better every time you watch it.
Put simply, few other films have ever achieved even a fraction of what Pulp
pulls off in a single sequence. Sure, the vignettes can be overly simplistic
(do Vincent and Jules really need Mr. Wolf to tell them to get clean and put
blankets down in the car to cover up all the goop?) but they get us to the fun
parts of the movie -- the surprising conclusions of the vignettes and the
crafty dialogue along the way.
Finally released as a special two-disc DVD, the new release features
much-desired deleted scenes (introduced by a manic Tarantino),
behind-the-scenes footage, trailers and TV spots, and a whole lot of junk
(acceptance speech at the Palm D'Or? a Siskel & Ebert vignette? ugh). That
said, the Jackrabbit Slim's menu insert is priceless -- they even misspelled
"cobbler." If you've got a DVD-ROM drive, you get trivia games, the
screenplay, and the option to make your own commentary track.
Ignore the chaff. Cherish the rest.
Guess which wallet is his.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





