So, I figured I'd do another post just now and it will be yet another revisitation of a revisitation (so to speak!) of Quentin Tarantino's 2nd film, Pulp Fiction. So, the previous post was already pretty hefty in size, so I won't be adding too much here just one or two little things and tidying up any spelling errors (yep its come to this for content lol!).
So, after 28 years, let's see how this modern crime classic stacks up...
And yep as usual...
PLOT SPOILERS WILL BE AHEAD!!!
STORY
So the plot is told in a typically non-linear fashion for writer/director Quentin Tarantino and is split
across two main stories with some subplots and the first one features
hitman Vincent Vega (Travolta) who goes
on a job with his partner Jules Winfield (Jackson) to retrieve a
briefcase from
some young associates lead by Brett (Frank Whaley) who were stupid enough to rip off their boss Marsellus
Wallace (Vingh Rhames). In the ensuing scene after they have
killed the guys, Vincent accidentally kills one of their associates,
Marvin (Phil LaMarr) by shooting him in the head while Jules is
driving. After that
Jule's calls his local friend Jimmie for help (played by Tarantino
himself) and Marsellus who sends one of his business associates Mr Wolf
(Harvey Keitel), who "solves problems" and aids in cleaning up their
mess for them.
The other story follows Vincent, who is asked by Marsellus
to take out his wife Mia (Uma Thurman) one night on the town while he is
away on business. As the two of them have a good night out, and share a
steak, burger, and take part in a twist contest, at a "wax museum with a
pulse" 1950s style diner. But when they go back to Mia's place, Mia
accidentally overdoses on Vincent's heroin baggie, thinking it to be
cocaine. At this point Vincent in a panic takes Mia over to
his drug dealer, Lance (Eric Stoltz) from whom he bought the heroin,
which leads into the infamous "needle" scene where Vincent brings Mia
round with an adrenaline shot.
The next big story is
the "Golden Watch" where a boxer Butch Coolidge (Bruce Willis) who is
coming to the end of his career and is being forced to take a dive in
his fight by Marsellus. But Butch has other ideas and ends up winning
the fight, unintentionally killing his opponent in the process and plans to flee with his girlfriend and the winnings he made
from the bookies who placed bets on him.
However as
Butch and his
girlfriend, Fabienne (Maria de Medeiros) plan their departure, Butch
notices that Fabienne neglected to pick up his precious golden watch,
which was given to him as a present from a soldier (Christopher Walken)
who was entrusted the watch given to him by Butch's dad. Enraged by
Fabienne's failure to pick up the watch, Butch decides, with little
choice, to go back to get the watch. So as Butch
goes
back to his apartment to pick up the watch he proceeds to have the
"weirdest fucking day of his life" as he rightly puts it.
And
lastly the film concludes with Vincent and Jules having breakfast in a
coffee house where they have a deep conversation about the freaky
encounter they witnessed at Brett's apartment, when a gunman fired six
bullets straight at them and they all missed. Not long after two
thieves, Pumpkin (Tim Roth) and Yolanda (Amanda Plummer) hold up the
coffee shop (whilst Vincent is in the bathroom) but as Pumpkin
approaches Jules to get his wallet, the thief gets more than he
bargained for as it leads into the film's surprising climax.
THOUGHTS
It
has to be said that Pulp Fiction remains one of the most seminal and highly entertaining films of the last 30 years, which really established
that Tarantino was not a one-trick pony and that he could continue to
craft excellent films. Tarantino's script for the most part is
wonderfully
written and is filled with rich (and very profane) dialogue which is highly
memorable as well as quotable. And its Tarantino's emphasis on the
characters is what helps Pulp Fiction work so well as they are all very
drawn out. Vincent as the main
character in the film, is both dim and smart at the same time, as he
holds a rather stubborn view of life, but at key moments isn't the
brightest of sparks (especially leaving his machine gun outside the
bathroom, in the scene where Butch faces off him with his gun).
Jules
on the other hand is much brighter, cockier and smarter, and as he and
Vincent face certain death at one point in the film, Jules is smart
enough to realise that at this point, this probably isn't the life for
him. And its most likely Jules decision after his dice with death that
would go on to save him from a similar fate than Vincent's. In the
final scene Jules also helps the two coffee shop robbers (from the
opening scene) to escape unharmed, as prior to that he would have just
killed them.
Mia
is also a really good character as she is smart enough to know
that her husband is protective of her, but she can look after herself.
And Mia's close call with death also, provides a chance for Vincent to
be the good guy and save her, although he wouldn't stand a chance in
hell if she died on him. There's almost a fine line between Mia also
flirting and going a step further with Vincent, but Quentin sensibly
doesn't let it go that far, although in a later scene its implied they
have been seeing each other behind Marsellus's back.
PERFORMANCES AND NOTABLE SCENES (Warning: this section may contain spoilers and strong language!)
As for the performances, well the film features a star cast that are all on top form.
Starting with John Travolta who's career was totally revitalized
here as he plays the part of the hitman Vincent Vega, who
gets into hot water when he unwittingly blows the head off a business
associate and also has to try and save his boss's wife from overdosing
on his own heroin.
Travolta has numerous highlights in the film such as
his opening scene where he talks with Jules about the subtle
differences between the cultures of America, Paris and Amsterdam. And
in the scene Jules says "Do you know what they call a quarter pounder
with cheese in Paris?" and Jules asks "Don't they call it a quarter
pounder with cheese?" and Vincent says "No they've got the metric system
they wouldn't know what the fuck a quarter pounder is. They call it
the Royale with cheese". And of course when Jules asks him "What do
they call a whopper?" Vincent says "I dunno. I didn't go into Burger
King".
Then there is the scene where Vincent teases
Jules about giving
foot massages and says "Would you give a guy a foot massage? I'm little
tired I could do with a foot massage myself!". And as Jules tells
Vincent it wasn't right that Marcellus threw Tony "Rocky Horror" out of a
window for giving Mia a foot message, Vincent responds. So, Vincent
tells Jules " Now look, I've given a million ladies a million foot
massages, and they all meant something. We act like they don't, but they
do, and that's what's so fucking cool about them. There's a sensuous
thing going on where you don't talk about it, but you know it, she knows
it, fucking Marsellus knew it, and Antwon should have fucking better
known better. I mean, that's his fucking wife, man. He can't be expected
to have a sense of humor about that shit!".
And
later as he fights
the temptation to try anything on with Mia after their dinner, he talks
to himself in the bathroom mirror at her place and says "You see, this
is a real test to see if you can prove loyality, which is very
important". And then after he says to himself "So what you're
gonna do is go out there and say "I had a lovely evening" get in the
car, go home, jerk off, and that's all your gonna do!".
And later the
scene where Vincent desperately drives Mia over to Lance's place and
drags her unconscious body out the car, despite Lance's protests "you
are not to bring this fucked up bitch into my house!". And Vincent
let's her drop to the ground and says "This fucked up bitch is Marsellus
Wallace's wife! Do you know who Marsellus Wallace is??? Now if she
croaks on me I'm a fuckin grease spot! Now I will forced to tell him that you let her die on your fuckin lawn, so please help me get her up!".
And later
after they shoot the
gunman in Brett's apartment, Vincent kneels down and asks Marvin "Why
the fuck didn't you tell us about the guy in the bathroom? Did it slip
your mind? Did you forget there was someone in there with a goddamn
hand cannon?!". And as Jules insists it was "divine intervention" that
has kept them alive from being killed by the hail of bullets, Vincent
tells him "Do you wanna continue this theological discussion in the car,
or at the jailhouse with the cops?!".
Another good scene is when Jules tells Vincent what he intends to do with his life after choosing to quite being a hitman and Vincent calls him a bum. So, Vincent says "So, you decided to be a bum?" and Jules says "I'll Jules, Vincent, no more, no less" and Vincent says "No, you decided to be a bum, just like those pieces of shit that beg for change and eat what I throw away. They got a name for that, Jules and that's a bum and without a job, residence or legal tender, that's what your gonna be, man, you're gonna be a fuckin bum!".
Vincent then refers to back to their freak incident with the gunman in the bathroom missing them completely and Vincent tells Jules "Jules, what happened this morning was peculiar I agree but water into wine..." and Jules says "All shapes and sizes, Vincent" and Vincent shaken says "Don't fuckin talk to me that way man!". Jules then says "If my answers frighten you, Vincent you should cease asking scary questions!". Vincent after a pause then announces "I'm gonna take a shit" and he gets up and says to Jules "When did you make this decision? While you were sitting there eating that muffin?" and Jules says "Yeah, I played the incident in my head when I had what alcoholics refer to as a moment of clarity" and Vincent says "Fuck! To be continued" and he walks off.
And lastly one of my favourite lines from Travolta is
during the robbery of the diner and as Jules is about to give his money
to Pumpkin he warns him "Jules if you give that fuckin nimrod 1500
dollars I'm gonna shoot him on general principle!". And in the final moment when the robbery has been diffused, Jules takes his wallet back and Vincent says quietly to him "I think we should be leaving now" and Jules says "Yeah, that's probably a good idea!".
Samuel
L Jackson next up, who made his breakthrough with this role, is
simply terrific in his role as the
philosophical hitman, Jules Winfield, who decides to turn a new leaf
after his incident
at Brett's apartment when retrieving Marsellus's case. Jackson himself
was nominated for an Academy Award for his performance but he lost out
to Martin Landau's performance in Ed Wood.
Jackson has so
many highlights in the film as well as priceless dialogue its hard to
name them all but I will mention a few. The first being the scene where
Jules and Vincent arrive at Brett's apartment and he asks Brett if he
can take a bite of his burger and he does so and says "This IS a tasty
burger!" followed by "Do you know what they call a quarter pounder in
France?" and he tells Brett its a Royale with cheese and why and as
Brett says "Because of the metric system?" Jules says "Check out the big
brain on Brett!".
And later in the scene he taunts
Brett just before
he shoots him and asks "What does Marsellus Wallace look like?!" leaving
Brett a stuttering wreck who keeps saying "What?" and Jules's short
fuse is about to reach the limit and he points the gun at him saying
"Say what again?! I dare you! I double dare you, motherfucker! Say
what one more goddamn time!". And this is of course is followed by his
famous Ezekiel 25:7 passage from the bible, which he finishes by
shouting "And you will know my name is the Lord, when I lay my vengeance
upon thee!" before unloading into Brett.
Then
there are some priceless Jackson moments in the "Bonnie Situation"
story line, such as when the gunman bursts out of Brett's bathroom and
opens fire on Jules and Vincent but all the bullets miss. And Jules
looks down at the dead gunman, after they shoot him, and he says "Did
you see the size of the gun he fired at us? It was bigger than him!".
And as Jules looks at the bullet holes in the wall he says "We should be
fuckin dead, man" and Vincent says "Yeah, I know, we were lucky" and
Jules says "No, this shit wasn't luck, this was divine intervention. Do
you know what divine intervention is?". And Vincent, humouring Jules
says "I think so. It means that God came down from heaven and stopped
the bullets?" and Jules says "That's exactly what it means. God came
down from heaven and stopped these motherfuckin' bullets!".
And one of Jackson's funniest moments comes in the scene where Jules and
Vincent have to clean out the blood stained car and Jules groans in
despair as he cleans out bits of skull and blood "Oh, man! I will never
forgive your ass for this shit! This is some fucked up repugnant
shit!". And when Vincent tries to say "When a man admits all his
wrongdoings he is immediately forgiven" Jules says "Get the fuck out of
my face with that shit! The motherfucker that said that shit didn't
have to pick up ity-bity pieces of brain and skull on account of your
dumb ass!".
And when Vincent says how is "ready to
blow" this is
finally followed by "Well, I'm a mushroom cloud layin' motherfucker,
motherfucker! Every time my fingers touch brain I'm Superfly TNT! I'm
the guns of the Navarone! In fact what the fuck am I doing in the
back?! YOU'RE the motherfucker that should be on brain detail! We're
fuckin switching! I'm washin windows and you're picking this nigger's
skull!".
And
lastly when Jules grabs Pumpkin he tries to chill out Honeybunny (or
Yolanda) by saying "We're gonna be like three Fonzies! And what's
Fronzie like?" and Yolanda says "cool?" and Jules says
"Correctamundo!". And as Yolanda tells Jules to let Pumpkin go, Jules
tells her "Yolanda, I thought you were going to be cool. Now, when you
yell at me that makes me nervous and when I get nervous, I get scared.
And when motherfuckers get scared that's when motherfuckers accidentally
get shot!". Then Jules negotiates with Pumpkin and gives him money so
he doesn't have to "kill his ass" and he quotes the Ezekiel 25-17 bible
passage and explains what he thinks it means.
So, Jules
says to Pumpkin "I been sayin' that shit for years, and if you heard
it, that meant your ass. I never gave much thought to what it meant. I
just thought it was some coldblooded shit to say to a motherfucker...
before I popped a cap in his ass. But I saw some shit this morning made
me think twice. See, now I'm thinkin' maybe it means...you're the evil
man, and I'm the righteous man, and Mr. 9-millimeter here, he's the
shepherd...protecting my righteous ass in the valley of darkness. Or it
could mean... you're the righteous man, and I'm the shepherd, and it's
the world that's evil and selfish. Now, I'd like that. But that shit
ain't the truth. "The truth is...YOU'RE the weak and I'm the tyranny of
evil men. But I'm tryin, Ringo. I'm trying real hard....to be the
shepherd!" and he lowers his gun and let's Pumpkin and Honeybunny go.
And after they go, Vincent quietly walks up to Jules and says "I think
we should be leaving now" and Jules says "Yeah, I think that's probably a
good idea!" and they both leave.
Uma Thurman is also excellent
in her role as Mia Wallace, Marsellus's sultry wife who has dinner with
Vincent and their scenes together provide a nice chemistry between them
both.
Uma's notable moments all take place mainly at Jack Rabbit Slims restaurant, so I will start with the scene where Vincent at the diner with Mia, asks her about
the incident with Tony and Marsellus. And Mia asks him "So, did you
think of something to say?" and Vincent says "Actually, I did. However
you seem like a nice person and I don't want to offend you" and Mia,
surprised says "Ooohh! This doesn't sound like the usual, mindless,
boring, gettin'-to-know-you chitchat. This sounds like you actually have
somethin' to say". And when Vincent asks her if Tony ever gave Mia a
foot massage, she replies "Only thing Antwan ever touched of mine was my
hand when he shook it... at my wedding. Truth is, nobody knows why
Marsellus threw Tony out that window... except Marsellus and Tony. When
you little scamps get together, you're worse than a sewing circle!".
Then there is the moment where the Jack Rabbit Slim twist contest takes place and Mia wants to dance but Vincent is having none of it but Mia insists. And as Ed Sullivan look-a-like announces "Now who will be our first contestants?" Mia puts her hand and says "Right here!" And Vincent looks horrified and Mia says "Wanna dance" but Vincent quietly says "No, no, no, no, no". Mia however cuts him off and firmly says "No, no, no, no, no, no! I do believe Marsellus Wallace, my husband and your boss told you take to ME out and do whatever I wanted! Now I wanna dance, I wanna win, I want that trophy, so dance good!".
Then there is the scene just after they dance, we see that they won the trophy as they dance into Mia's place and they share a laugh and an awkward moment where Vincent asks "Is that what you call an uncomfortable silence?" and Mia says "I don't know WHAT you call it!". Mia then quickly snaps out of her reverie and says "Music! Drinks!" and Vincent smiles and says "I'm gonna take a piss" and as Mia prepares to play something on her eight track, she says "That's a littttttle bit more information then I needed, Vincent but go right ahead!".
And after
Mia has her harrowing near death experience and is saved bt Vincent she
wearily asks him if he wants to hear a joke she told on the TV pilot
she did. And in the scene Mia asks him "Vincent, do you wanna hear my Fox Force Five joke?" and Vincent says "Maybe but I'm still a little too petrified to laugh" and Mia says "No, you want laugh because its not funny but if you wanna hear it, I'll tell it" and Vincent says "I can't wait". So, Mia tells the joke "A daddy tomato, a mommy tomato and a
baby tomato cross the street. The baby tomato starts lagging behind,
the daddy tomato gets angry goes back and squishes him and says
"Ketchup!" and Vincent smiles a little. Mia then looks at Vincent and says "See you around" and she walks off and Vincent blows her a kiss.
Bruce Willis also puts in a good
performance as the troubled boxer, Butch Coolidge, who is haunted by
nightmares involving a soldier who hands Butch his late father's watch,
who died in Vietnam and later on goes on the run from Marcellus Wallace
as he ends up killing the boxer in his fight.
Willis
play the part with
his usual type of coolness combined with some hot tempered moments,
which we see in the scene where he frantically looks through his
suitcase for his father's watch, which his girlfriend Fabienne has
forgotten. And he says to Fabienne "That was my father's fucking
watch. Do you have any idea what he went through to get that watch?? I
don't have time to go into it but it was alot!". And Butch continues
"All this other shit you could've set on fire, but I specifically
reminded you not to forget the fucking watch! Now think! Did you get
it?" and Fabienne nervously says "I think so". However, Butch now angry
says "You believe so???!" What the fuck does that mean??! You either
did or didn't get it!!" and Fabienne says "Then I did" and Butch asks
again "You sure?" and Fabienne, frightened says "No".
So,
then Butch explodes in a rage, yelling "FUCK! FUCK!!! FUCK!!!
MOTHERFUCKER!!!" and he starts leaping up and down and he grabs the
motel room TV and smashes it and yells "DO YOU KNOW HOW FUCKING STUPID
YOU ARE???!!". However Butch then regains his composure and shouts "NO!
It's not your fault. You left it at the apartment. If you left it at
the apartment, it's not your fault. I had you bring a bunch of stuff. I
reminded you about it, but I didn't illustrate how personal the watch
was to me". And after he leaves and reassures Fabienne, we cut to him
in his car and he pounds the steering wheel angrily, shouting "SHIT!! OF
ALL THE FUCKING THINGS SHE COULD FUCKING FORGET, SHE FORGETS MY
FATHER'S WATCH!! I specifically reminded her! Bedside table! On the
kangaroo! I said the words "don't forget my father's watch!".
And
one of Willis's
best moments is where after he and Marsellus have been captured by the
rednecks in the pawnshop and he breaks free of his bonds and he decides
to save Marsellus. So, Butch rummages through the pawnshop for a
weapon to rescue Marcellus with and he picks up a samurai sword (a
katana) and
goes downstairs and exacts some revenge on the rednecks. And in the
scene, Butch skewers one of the rednecks and then points the katana at
the other, Z, and he notices a gun on a table near him and he says to Z
"You want that gun, don't you, Zed? Go ahead and pick it up!". And as Z
is tempted to pick it up, Butch says "Atta boy! I want you to pick it
up...Z!" but then Marsellus stands up behind Butch armed with a
shotgun.....
And later when
Marsellus let's Butch go he takes Z's chopper (Z is played by Peter
Greene) and picks up Fabienne and he tells her "Honey, since I left you,
this has been, without a doubt, the single weirdest fuckin' day of my
life!". And as Fabienne get's on the bike, she asks him "Who's
motorcycle is this?"
and Butch says "Its a chopper baby" and she says "Who's chopper is
this?" and Butch says "Zed's?" Fabienne "Who's Zed?" and Butch says
"Zed's dead, baby. Zed's dead!" and they drive off.
Vingh Rhames is great as the crime boss, Marsellus Wallace who
sends Vincent and Jules to retrieve a case containing something of
great value (and has a golden glow) which we never see what it is and
later on has a confrontation with Butch.
Rhames also
has some good
moments such as in his first scene where Marsellus talks to Butch and
tells him "I think when this shit is all done and over, you're gonna
find yourself one smilin motherfucker" as he tells Butch to take a dive
in his fight. And in ths scene, Marsellus holds out an envelope of
money to Butch and he says to him "Are you my nigga?" and Butch takes
the envelope and says "It would certainly appear so". And Marsellus
says to him "The night of the fight you might feel a slight sting.
That's pride fucking with you. Fuck pride! Pride only hurts, it never
helps. You fight through that shit. Cause a year from now when you are
kickin it on the Caribbean you're gonna say to yourself "Marsellus
Wallace was right!".
And later in the scene where Butch, driving his car, spots Marsellus cross
the street, carrying a box of doughnuts and they look at each other and Marsellus
shouts "Motherfucker!" and Butch puts the car into gear and runs him over only to crash into another car in the process.
But
later on Butch
decides to save Marsellus during being raped by the rednecks, and
Marcellus then takes the shotgun and blasts Zed's private parts to
bits. And as Butch asks him if he is OK, Butch says "Naw, man. I'm
pretty far from OK!". And Butch asks Marsellus "What now?" and
Marsellus says "Let me tell you what now. I'm gonna call a couple of
hard, pipe-hittin' niggers...to go to work on the homes here...with a
pair of pliers and a blowtorch" And Marsellus shouts at Z, who writhes
on the floor in agony, nursing what is left of his gentialia "You hear
me talkin', hillbilly boy? I ain't through with you by a damn sight! I'm
gonna get medieval on your ass!".
So, Butch asks "I
mean what now between me and you?" and Butch says "Oh, THAT what now. I
tell you now what between me and you. There IS no me and you. Not no
more". And Butch asks "So, we cool?" and Marsellus says "Yeah, we
cool. Two things: Don't
tell nobody about this. This shit is between me, you and soon to be
living the rest of his short ass life in agonising pain, rapist here, it
nobody else's business".
And lastly there is the scene where Jules make a call to Marsellus about
the "Bonnie" situation and what can the do to resolve it. So, in the
scene Marsellus on the phone to Jules says re: Bonnie "If she comes what
do you think she'll do?" and there is a beat as Jules replies and
Marsellus "Yeah no fucking shit she'll freak. I mean how much? A lot or a
little?". And as Jules anxiously explains that if Bonnie catches them
trying to shift Marvin's body when she comes home "there aren't no
telling what she is a liable to do!".
So, Marsellus says "I know that, Jules. All I'm doing is contemplating
the ifs" which prompts Jules to snap back "I don't wanna hear about no
motherfuckin ifs! All I wanna hear from your ass is "You aint got not
problem, Jules! I'm on the motherfucker! Go back in there and chill
those niggers out and wait for the cavalry, which should be coming
directly!". So, Marsellus calmly replies "You aint got not problem,
Jules. I'm on the motherfucker. Go back in
there and chill those niggers out and wait for the Wolf, who should
be coming directly". Jules, surprised then asks "You sending the Wolf?"
and Marsellus says "You feel better, motherfucker?" and Jule smiles and
says "Shit, negro! That's all you had to say!".
Eric Stoltz is also
good in his role as Lance, the drug dealer who sells Vincent the heroin,
which Mia later overdoses on and he takes the call from Vincent when
Mia has OD'd he says to him on the phone "This is not my fuckin
problem! You fucked her up, you fuckin deal with this! Are you talking
to me on a cellular phone?! I don't know you! Prank caller, prank
caller!" and hangs up.
And later when Vincent brings
the OD'd Mia to Lance's place, the two of them squabble as Lance
prepares the needle with adrenaline to resuscitate Mia. And Lance says
"Here, I'll you what to do" but Vincent refuses, saying "You're gonna
give her the shot" and Lance insists "No, you're gonna give her the
shot!" and they continue to argue. So, Lance finally says "I never done
this either! I ain't starting now! You brought her here. You give her
the shot. The day I bring an O.D.ing bitch to your house, then I give
her the shot! Give her the shot!".
So, Vincent relents
and takes the needle and uses a black marker to mark the point on Mia's
chest where he is to inject the needle. And Vincent says "All right,
tell me what to do" and Lance says "Okay, you're giving her an injection
of adrenalin straight to her heart. But she's got a breastplate... You
gotta pierce through that. You gotta bring the needle down in a stabbing
motion!" and Lance indicates a stabbing motion three times. So,
Vincent asks "So, I've got to stab her three times?" and Lance shouts
"No, just stab her once! But it's gotta be hard enough to get through
her breastplate into her heart. Once you do that, you p-press down on
the p-plunger". And Vincent asks "OK, then what happens?" and Lance
shrugs and says "I'm kinda curious about that myself" and Vincent
angrily says "This is ain't no fuckin joke! Am I gonna kill her?!" and
Lance says "She's supposed to come out, just like that!".
And after
Vincent injects the needle in Mia, she suddenly is brought to life and
screams out loud and Lance nervously asks her "If you're alright, then
say something" and Mia looks a bit needle embedded in her chest and says
"Something...." and Vincent and Lance sigh in relief.
Harvey Keitel also provides an amusing
performance as Winston Wolf, the problem solver who turns and sorts out
the "Bonnie Situation" which refers to Jule's friend, Jimmy's wife,
Bonnie who will come home from work any time. The character of Winston
would of course later appear in a series of parody television adverts
for Directline.com
And
Harvey's best scene comes when Vincent disputes Winston's straight
talking no-nonsense
manner and says to him "A please would be nice" and Winston, taken aback
asks "Come again?" and Vincent says "A please would be nice". So,
Winston tells Vincent "Get it straight, buster. I'm not here to say
please. I'm here to tell you what to do. And if self-preservation is an
instinct you possess, you'd better fuckin' do it and do it quick. I'm
here to help. If my help's not appreciated, lotsa luck, gentlemen!".
So, Jules tries to step in to diffuse the tension and says "No, it ain't
like that, Mr Wolf, you're help is definitely appreciated!" and Vincent
says to Winston "Mr. Wolf, listen. I don't mean disrespect, okay? I
respect you. I just don't like people barkin' orders at me that's all".
So, Winston says "If I'm curt with you, its because time is a
factor. I think fast, I talk fast and I need you guys to act fast if
you want to get out of this. So pretty please, with sugar on top, clean
the fuckin car!".
Another good scene is when Winston gets Jimmie to get a bunch of
blankets together to cover over the bloodied seats of Jules's car and
Jimmie explains his concerns about his bedset being used as it belong to
his Aunt Jenny. So, Winston in the scene asks "Let me ask you a
question, Jimmie. Was your Aunt Jenny a millionaire?" and Jimmie says
"No" and Winston tells him "Well, your Uncle Marsellus is and I'm
positive he will furnish you with a whole new set". So, Winston takes
out a wad of dollar bills and says to Jimmie "I like oak myself. How
about you, Jimmie? Are you an oak man?" and Jimmie with little choice
says "Oak's nice" and Winston starts counting out the money.
And last of all is the scene where Winston, Jules and Vincent
successfully dispose of Marvin and the tainted car and they meet his
girlfriend, Raquel. So, in the scene Winston offers them a ride but when
they tell them where the live, Winston looks to the skies and says "Its
your future...I see...a cab ride! Way out of the sticks, fellas!" and
he says to Raquel "Say good night, Raquel" and she sarcastically repeats
"Goodnight, Raquel!". Jules and Vincent then both thank Winston saying
it was a pleasure to watch him work and Winston smiles and says "Call me
Winston" and then he heads to his car with Raquel and says to her "You
see young lady! That's respect! Respect shows character" and Raquel
protests "I HAVE character!" and he tells her "Just because you ARE a
character doesn't mean you HAVE character!".
Christopher Walken who makes a
cameo appearance in the film as the solider who gives Butch as a child,
his father's watch, is also great and his long speech is nicely written
and also pretty funny.
And of course there is funny moment where he
tells the young Butch "The way your dad looked at it, this watch was
your birthright. He'd be damned (in Walken's unique style!) if any slope's gonna put their greasy,
yellow hands on his boy's birthright, so he hid it in one place he knew
he could hide something... his ass! Five long years he wore this watch
up his ass. Then he died of dysentery...He give me the watch. I hid this
uncomfortable hunk of metal up my ass two years. Then...after seven
years, I was sent home to my family and...now...little man, I give the
watch to you!".
Maria de Medeiros is also good
in the film as Butch's girlfriend, Fabienne although it has to be said
that she get's the worst of Tarantino's dialogue given that she has to
say lines such as "Pot bellies are sexy!" and "I'm gonna order a big
plate of blueberry pancakes... with maple syrup, eggs over easy and five
sausages!". So in all honesty I'm not going to bother quoting any of
her scenes here just for the sake of time (sorry!).
And lastly Quentin Tarantino also can't resist
putting himself in the film in his small role as Jimmy who through
little choice has to help out Jules and Vincent with their problem and his performance in all honesty isn't that great but he does what he can. However some of his delivery feels like he is trying to remember some of his lines particularly when says how Bonnie is working "the graveyard shift at the hospital!" it just feels weird and unnatural. Basically Quentin, stick to the directing and writing, that's what your good at!
And
Tarantino's most noteworthy scene comes when Jules compliments Jimmy on
how good his coffee is and asks what flavour it is and Jimmy says
"Knock it off, Julie!". And Jules asks "What?" and Jimmy angrily tells
him "I don't need you to tell me how fuckin' good my coffee is. I'm the
one who buys it. I know how good it is. When Bonnie goes shopping, she
buys shit! I buy the gourmet expensive stuff 'cause when I drink it, I
wanna taste it. But you know what's on my mind right now? It ain't the
coffee in my kitchen. It's the dead nigger in my garage!".
So,
as Jules tries to calm Jimmy, Jimmy interrupts him and asks "When you
came pulling in here, did you notice the sign on the front of my house
that said, "Dead Nigger Storage"?". And as Jules is about to reply,
Jimmy asks louder "Did you notice the sign on the front of my house that
said, "Dead Nigger Storage"?!!". And Jules says No, I didn't" and
Jimmy asks him "You know why you didn't see that sign?" and Jules asks
"Why?" and Jimmy yells "Cause it ain't there, 'cause storing dead
niggers ain't my fucking business, that's why!".
And Jimmy then tells Jules "Now, look, you know, she comes home from work in
about an hour and a half. The graveyard shift at the hospital. You
gotta make some phone calls? You gotta call some people? Well, then, do
it, and then get the fuck out of my house before she gets here!". And
as Jules tries to reassure Jimmy that "We don't wanna fuck your shit up"
Jimmy angrily yells "You're fucking my shit up right now! You're gonna
fuck my shit up BIG TIME if Bonnie comes home! Do me that favor, all
right? The phone is in my bedroom. I suggest you get going!".
DIRECTION AND MUSIC
As for the director himself, Quentin Tarantino does a great job
here of course and technically
it is also pretty good film and as he did with Reservoir
Dogs he employs the use of long takes in certain scenes and even has a
little nod to Brian De Palma with the scene where we see Butch on the
right edge of the frame, exhausted on the run from a groggy Marcellus
who went see in the distance on the left of the shot. He also makes
good
use of visual creativity, such as in the scene with Fabienne's
reflection standing inside the motel room TV while an action film is
playing. Perhaps time wise the film does feel a bit flabby in places
with certain scenes overrunning but for the most part this is certainly
one of Tarantino's very best efforts.
As for the music in the film it features a memorable soundtrack made up of tracks such as Dick
Dale's "Miserlou", and Kool n the Gang's "Jungle
Boogie", Aretha Franklin's "Son of a preacher man" as well as other
songs like "Countin flowers on the wall" by the Statler Brothers,
"Comache" by The Revels, used during the hillbilly rape scene and Chuck
Berry's "You never can tell" used during Vincent and Mia's dance.
FLAWS (Warning: this section may also contain spoilers!)
As for flaws....yeah well as good as Pulp Fiction is, it still has some worth mentioning.
And
for starters, I do think that the film could be a little shorter as
certain scenes do feel a bit panned out. And for examples sake the
scenes between Butch and Fabienne do drag on a bit, and are the only
fairly tedious scenes in the film, especially with Fabienne
wittering on, about wishing she had a pot belly like "Madonna did when
she did Lucky Star!". At this point you want to just hit the fast
forward button as the dialogue starts to get a bit cringe worthy! Further
to this, I think its also a bit fair to say that Fabienne is a bit too
cutesy a character for the film itself as she is quite a contrast to the
rest of the hard boiled gangsters and molls we get but maybe that's the
point I guess.
And
one of the few things that does leave me
slightly uncomfortable about Pulp Fiction is the somewhat racist element
on the dialogue, especially in the scenes such as Lance the drug dealer
saying to Vincent about his deals "Am I a nigger? Are we in
Inglewood??" as well as Jimmie saying to Jules "when you pulled in here,
did you see a sign on the front of my house saying dead nigger
storage??". It does show the film has an uncomfortable mix of humour blended in with
racism, and it was the same in Reservoir Dogs where e.g. Harvey Keitel's character, Mr White, talks
about "How is it every nigger I know treats their women like a piece of
shit?".
I also though that in the redneck scene where
Marsellus is raped by one of
the
good ol boys, it does appear very stereotypical in its depiction of
these characters and it almost like Quentin threw in the sodomy scene
for shock effect more than anything else. Its almost like Tarantino is
doing a nod to the classic 1970's thriller "Deliverance" where Ned
Beatty's character is also sexually assaulted by hillbillies.
Another
issue is to do with the idea of Winston driving the tainted car with
Marvin's dead body in it as he tells Jules and Vincent that he will
drive that car and he gives Vincent the keys to his own Acura sports
car. So in the scene Winston tells Vincent "I drive real fuckin fast,
so keep up" but if he does that then surely they will get pulled over by
the police! So, in this instance wouldn't it be better for Winston to
exercise a little care when he is driving a car containing a dead body
rather than belt it out at 90 miles an hour and risk being pulled over
and arrested!
Then
of course there is the continuity flaw in the scene where the guy in
the bathroom bursts out and unloads his magnum at Jules and Vincent only
to miss them both and the bullets go into the wall instead. However if
you look carefully before this scene, the bullet holes are already in
the wall! This however is already a well noted continuity flaw in the
film itself, so I guess its nothing new but still worth pointing out all
the same.
And further to this point, its surprising that the cops aren't alerted
at all in any of the scenes involving gunfire in this film, not even
where Marsellus shoots at Butch on the streets in broad daylight! I mean
Jules and Vincent unload on Brett and his associates in an apartment
with loud 9mm guns but NOTHING is heard or done about it, so no one
calls the cops! I guess it was just a very apathetic neighborhood I
guess where gun crime is so rife no one can be bothered to call the
police! And even further to this, why DIDN'T Jules and Vincent use guns
with silencers instead to keep things quiet?! I mean they even talk about using shotguns and that would be even worse! Ah well, we're not talking
about real life here as it is a Tarantino film after all.
Another problem I had with the film was to
do with Butch's choice when he went back to his apartment to get his
watch and THEN go in and make himself some pop tarts in the kitchen! I
mean what hell???! Surely to God he should have just got his watch and
left the apartment straight away! However I guess the flipside is that
by killing Vincent that's one other problem dealt with but on the other
hand even though Butch saves Marsellus's life, he does also kill one of
his main henchmen, so wouldn't that also cancel out Marsellus's new
found faith in Butch??! Just maybe In short, Butch really should have
just left the apartment straight away than hang about to make breakfast
for himself.
I also though it was strange how Butch appears to have the same dream about being a kid and receiving the gold watch and that he wakes up startled. It begs the question: is this the only dream Butch has? If so then I'm kind of surprised that Fabienne wouldn't be used to him having this dream by now when she said she was startled by him and she even asks "Did you have a bad dream?". Then again maybe he only has the dream when he is under stress and there is a lot on his mind and there certainly was in this film! And to be fair Butch does refuse to tell Fabienne as he says "its rare that I remember my dreams".
There are also another couple of oddities in the story such as the scene
where Vincent tells Jules that he doesn't watch TV and he later on asks
Jules if he watched a show called "cops" which totally negates what he
said to Jules earlier! Now, you could argue that Vincent was being
sarcastic in his response that he doesn't watch TV earlier in the film
but it is still a bit bizarre how Tarantino doesn't refer back to it in
the script at that point although clearly Jules's mind is elsewhere
after their near death experience.
Also was it really a good idea for Vincent to shoot up heroin
just BEFORE he is due to go off and pick up his boss's wife for a
dinner date?! I mean what if he crashed the car enroute or worse
crashed it while he was driving her to dinner?! I guess its OK for Mia
to get all coked up since she won't be driving but not so much for
Vincent surely! But again it is a Quentin Tarantino film where gangsters
can shoot up people in neighbourhoods, scream and shouts as they do it
as well as get pissed up on drugs and booze and drive cars at the same
time!
And last of all is the change of dialogue in the scene where Honey Bunny says in the opening scene "Any of you fucking pricks MOVE and I'll execute every single last motherfucking one of ya!" and later on the dialogue changes during the robbery finale itself. And it changes to "Any of you fucking pricks move and I'll execute everyone one of you motherfuckers!". It always bugged me this change as it feels mainly pointless even if Tarantino himself argued that its from a different perspective but even so I think he could easily have kept the dialogue the same as it works much better than the changed version.
Anyway that's it for the flaws.
SUM UP
So, to sum up, Pulp Fiction remains easily as one of Quentin Tarantino's very best films and its script and cast are both top notch and direction is by large terrific and sharp and he even makes good use of panning shots and fills frame at times in a creative way (where we see Lance's reflection in the mirror of his bedroom as he lays out on it being one). The film also has a very memorable soundtrack with the unforgettable "Miserlou" at the beginning and the use of other tracks such as "Jungle Boogie" by Kool n the Gang.
And yes it does have some minor flaws and some plot holes and yes even some of the dialogue is a bit cringey at times and yes it does come across as being quite racist in places. However if you forgive it all that, Pulp Fiction is still one of the best films of its era and of the 1990's.
So, I will rate Pulp Fiction...
9.5 out of 10
So, that's it for now and I will be back soon with another post or two hopefully before Christmas.
Until the next one bye for now!
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