“What does Marsellus Wallace
look like?”
A black comedy crime which was the 2nd film from director Quentin Tarantino, PULP FICTION was a highly stylized film which connected different storylines of Los Angeles mobsters, small-time criminals, and the mystery behind the contents of a briefcase. With a plot which was presented out of chronological sequence and considerable screen-time devoted to conversations and monologues which reveal the true nature of its characters, PULP FICTION reached into many different film genres; from black comedy to neo-noir, Tarantino dipped his toes in many influential waters.
The very first element of PULP FICTION was written by
screenwriter Roger Avery. The original idea was to film a short, but that idea
soon blossomed into a trilogy of films…and as the writing continued, that first
element written became Tarantino’s RESERVOIR DOGS in 1992. When that film
wrapped, Tarantino turned his attention back to the notion of a trilogy, which
would eventual evolve into separate, interconnecting storylines under one film.
Drawing influences from many films and genres, PULP FICTION would become like a
single house where many families of movies would live.
With a generous cast of stars which included John Travolta,
Samuel L. Jackson, Uma Thurman, Bruce Willis, Harvey Keitel, Tim Roth, Ving Rhames,
Eric Stoltz, Rosanna Arquette, and Christopher Walken, PULP FICTION was an easy
draw for the box office. With a limited release in September leading to a wider release in October, it was the top-grossing film in its first weekend of
wide release; beating out the Sylvester Stallone action flick THE SPECIALIST,
which was in its second week and playing at more than twice as many theatres.
PULP FICTION would become the first “indie” film to surpass $100 million, and
its sharp dialogue and mystery surrounding the briefcase would become subjects
of movie discussions for the next two decades.
The film would electrify and rejuvenate the career of John
Travolta, and launch the long-time working relationship Tarantino would have
with Uma Thurman and Samuel L. Jackson. PULP FICTION would be nominated for
seven Academy Awards; (Best Actor, Picture, Supporting Actor, Supporting
Actress, Director, Film Editing, and Original Screenplay), winning one…Best
Original Screenplay. It would also dominate nominations at the BAFTA and Golden
Globes, and win the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival. In 2013, PULP
FICTION was selected for preservation in the United States National Film
Registry by the Library of Congress.
*
To be honest, this Blogger has never been the biggest fan of
PULP FICTION. The biggest trick the film pulls is making everyone believe that
it is the most original film ever made…when the truth is farthest from. PULP
FICTION is like a giant castle made up of a billion Lego bricks from a hundred
different playsets. It essentially borrows characters and plots and filming
techniques from several different films and re-purposes them. Effective, yes.
But not wholly original. Quentin Tarantino has always been like a good cover
band; very entertaining but never presenting an original tune. BUT…if
one-hundred years from now, a newcomer stumbles upon PULP FICTION without
having knowledge of all the different genres and films that the film is made up
of, the film will work for them…and will work very well. Looking at PULP
FICTION objectively (which is what we all should do anyway), and staying within
the moment will yield some great cinema…made up of the best cinema has to
offer.
“Just because you are
a character doesn’t mean that you have character.”
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