|
Pulp Fiction
(1994)
In co-writer/director and B-movie fanatic Quentin Tarantino's
great second feature - he delivered this non-formulaic and inventive
hit - - an 'independent' film distributed by Miramax,
that featured guns, femmes
fatales, deadly hit-men, and drugs. The great tri-story classic,
a stylish, immensely-popular, violent, off-beat, B-movie cult classic
with witty dialogue and heart-stopping violence - skillfully presented
a revolutionary script structure with its three interwoven (and fragmented)
stories or vignettes told in non-linear order. The unpredictably
shuffled, post-modern film, winner of Cannes' prestigious Palme d'Or,
shocked with its hip combination of violence, sex, drugs, and profanity
(including 269 F-words). The film brought new fame and a revived
career to star John Travolta (in an ensemble cast).
The film's plot told about corruption and temptation
in LA's sleazy underworld among low-life criminals, thugs, drug-dealers,
hitmen, a washed-up crooked boxer, and restaurant-robbing lovers.
- the opening credits sequence was set in the Hawthorne
Grill - a coffee shop, where a pair of hold-up artists were plotting
to rob patrons:
"Pumpkin"/Ringo (Tim Roth) and "Honey Bunny"/Yolanda
(Amanda Plummer)
- meanwhile, a casual conversation
was held between two low-life, black-clad, contract hit men Vincent
Vega (Oscar-nominated John Travolta) and Jules Winnfield (Samuel
L. Jackson) about the strange names given to Parisian McDonald's
menu items such as a QuarterPounder with cheese ("a Royale
with cheese") and a Big Mac ("Le Big Mac")
- they continued to discuss their gangster
boss Marsellus Wallace's (Ving Rhames) jealous attitude toward
anyone giving his moll-wife Mia (Oscar-nominated Uma Thurman) a
foot massage: (Jules: "Ain't no f--kin' ballpark neither.
Now look, maybe your method of massage differs from mine, but,
you know, touchin' his wife's feet and stickin' your tongue in
the Holiest of Holies ain't the same f--kin' ballpark; it ain't
the same league; it ain't even the same f--kin' sport. Look, foot
massages don't mean s--t.")
Two Discussions
|
Parisian McDonald's
Menu Items
|
Foot Massages
|
- they were on their way to San Fernando Valley to
conduct a hit (or execution) on Brett
(Frank Whaley), who had betrayed his business partner Marsellus
Wallace by taking a briefcase; before the brutal murder, Jules
recited a crazed, oft-repeated, paraphrased Bible quote from Ezekiel
25:17: ("Ezekiel 25:17. 'The path of the righteous man is beset
on all sides by the inequities of the selfish and the tyranny of
evil men. Blessed is he who, in the name of charity and good will,
shepherds the weak through the valley of darkness, for he is truly his
brother's keeper and the finder of lost children. And I will strike
down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger
those who attempt to poison and destroy My brothers. And you will
know My name is the Lord when I lay My vengeance upon thee!'")
- Vincent entertained Wallace's irresponsible moll
wife Mia one evening - they visited a retro-fifties era diner Jack
Rabbit Slims (with the MC impersonating Ed Sullivan) - during a
dance-off contest, they performed a hip-swiveling twist dance known
as the Batusi (a dance invented for the campy mid-60s Batman TV
series and made famous by Adam West) to the Chuck Berry tune You
Never Can Tell; Vincent made a horizontal V-sign with his
index and middle fingers of both hands, and drew them across
in front of his eyes, one hand at a time, with the eyes roughly
between the fingers; they also performed versions of the Hitchhiker
and the Swim
- afterwards in the Wallace home, while Vincent was
in the bathroom (talking to himself about being loyal to his boss
and not messing around with Mia), Mia was in the living room where
she discovered his stash of heroin in his coat pocket. Mistaking
it for cocaine, she snorted it and immediately overdosed. Vincent
hurriedly drove her over to reluctant drug-dealing friend Lance's
(Eric Stoltz) house for help, as he entreated: "Don't f--kin'
die on me, Mia!"; Lance bluntly stated what needed to be done: "We're
giving her a shot in the heart so I guess it's gotta be f--kin'
exact." Vega demanded
a "big fat magic marker" and drew a red target above Mia's
heart, after the two had argued over who would administer the shot.
Lance described the procedure: "It's gotta be hard enough to
get through her breastplate into her heart." She was revived
when Vega (on the count of three) directly shot her with adrenaline
from a large hypodermic syringe plunged directly into her chest "in
a stabbing motion." She woke with gasps and coughs, with the
syringe stuck there and protruding from her heart.
- in an unforgettable speech (Butch's childhood flashback
from 1973 in Tennessee), "special
visitor" Captain Koons (Christopher Walken) talked to Butch
Coolidge as a young child (Chandler Lindauer) about an important
heirloom - a gold watch - that had been in the Coolidge family for
three generations; for five years, Koons claimed he had been with
Butch's father when he died in a Hanoi POW camp: ("This watch
was on your daddy's wrist when he was shot down over Hanoi. He was
captured, put in a Vietnamese prison camp. He knew that if the gooks
ever saw the watch, it'd be confiscated and taken away. The way your
Dad looked at it, this watch was your birthright. He'd be damned
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. Now, little man, I give the watch to you")
- by not taking a dive and throwing his last bout as
expected, boxer Butch Coolidge (Bruce Willis) fought viciously and
killed his opponent - then scammed Marsellus by betting on himself
(and winning a fortune). His plan was to skip town with his French
girlfriend, Fabienne (Maria de Medeiros), travel to his hometown
of Knoxville, TN, and then leave the country with the money. Before
leaving, he went to retrieve his cherished heirloom, a gold watch
left behind in the bedroom of his apartment; he paused
for a snack of toaster pastries from the kitchen cabinet; to his surprise,
there was a small, compact submachine gun (with silencer) carelessly
resting on the kitchen counter; Butch picked up the weapon, and then
heard the nearby toilet flush; the bathroom door opened on a startled,
unsuspecting Vincent (awaiting his arrival to execute him) - literally
caught with his pants down - he was blown away (at the same time the
tarts popped out of the toaster)
- After Butch encountered Marsellus outside, both were
injured and retreated to a pawn shop, where two
psychopathic hillbillies, shop owner Maynard (Duane Whitaker) and his
security guard cousin Zed (Peter Greene), took them prisoner, and bound
and gagged them in the basement. While Marsellus was being raped (sodomized)
in the next room, Butch escaped and was about to flee, but with a change
of heart, heroically saved and rescued Marsellus with a katana samurai
sword; Maynard was disemboweled, and Zed was shotgunned in the groin
by Marsellus before being tortured and executed with merciless "medieval"
revenge; as they parted ways, Marsellus and Butch agreed to never speak
again about the embarrassing incident or Butch's betrayal
- in an absurd scene, Vincent
accidentally shot back-seat passenger, informant Marvin (Phil LaMarr),
in the face at point-blank range; he had turned around, with his
gun in his right hand and his mispointed gun fired accidentally;
it was a sick, gruesomely funny, and blood-splattering back-seat
death for Marvin; Vincent kept saying: "I
didn't mean to shoot the son-of-a-bitch. The gun went off. I don't
know why." Jules was worried they would be discovered by the
police: "Look at this f--kin' mess, man! We're on a city street
in broad daylight here...We gotta get this car off the road. You
know, cops seem to notice s--t like you're drivin' a car drenched
in f--kin' blood."
|
|
|
Vincent's Back Seat Accidental Murder of Marvin
|
- a "clean-up" specialist Winston Wolfe
(Harvey Keitel) was called upon to deal with the immediate crisis
at the home of Jules' friend Jimmie (director Quentin Tarantino)
- in the film's epilogue - Jules was eating
breakfast in the Hawthorne Grill with partner Vincent, when
he contemplated quitting the profession (during
"a moment of clarity"); he was confronted by the two coffee-shop
robbers, Honey Bunny and Ringo, from the film's pre-credits prologue
stealing from the patrons; he held his gun on them, and reprised and
reinterpreted his Biblical Ezekiel quote speech to "Ringo";
ultimately, to redeem himself, he decided to let the two go with
$1,500 from his wallet (but not the briefcase), because he was in a "transitional
period": "But I saw some s--t this mornin' 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
protectin' 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 s--t 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 tryin' real hard to be the shepherd. Go"
|
|
Epilogue: Jules' Reinterpretation of
the Ezekiel Quote in Coffee Shop
|
|
Prologue: Opening Credits Coffee Shop Holdup by "Honey
Bunny" and Ringo
Vincent and Mia Dancing in Jack Rabbit Slims
Mia's Heroin Overdose
Captain Koons' (Christopher Walken) Gold Watch
Speech
Boxer Butch's Surprise Discovery of Vincent in
the Bathroom
Butch with Katana
Marsellus' "Medieval" Revenge on Security
Guard Zed
Zed Shot in Groin by Marsellus
|