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View Full Version : 20 Years of Pulp Fiction


_____V_____
05-23-2014, 07:08 AM
I know ours is a horror forum, but this is one of those eternal classics which made a very, very deep impact on me and dozens of genre lovers of my time. And I know at least 50% of you folks love Pulp Fiction to bits as well. Why won't you, because arguably, Tarantino's masterpiece is the single most influential film made in the past 40-50 years.

On May 23 1994, an unique film called Pulp Fiction won the Palme D'or at the Cannes film festival. And that started it's journey to it's cult status.

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51QFawzCtSL.jpg

Whether it be the ass-kicking pre-opening credits sequence ("pumpkin", "honey bunny") which cuts to that extremely tappy Miserlou music, Travolta & Thurman's Twist-ing moves on the dance floor, Samuel L.'s Ezekiel misquote and Hulk-esque anger behind his words, the Katana, the red herring briefcase, the "mistake" which blows someone's brains out, Willis and Keitel sharing some really sharp and witty lines between them, the completely wonky screenplay which defied traditional pacing, Tarantino's brilliantly witty directional skills, Pulp Fiction is an undeniable milestone in contemporary cinema. It remains unparalleled to this day, and even Tarantino himself would admit this with a passion - he cannot surpass Pulp Fiction himself!

To have a glimpse of how witty the screenplay is, just go through these quotes from the film (those who have seen it will feel nostalgic) - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0110912/quotes

In fact, none of his subsequent films caught the same delirious craziness of this cult classic. I dare say, none will.

BTW, do you speak English?

ENGLISH, MOTHERF***ER! DO YOU SPEAK IT?! ::mad::

a0x6vIAtFcI

Straker
05-23-2014, 03:20 PM
I think probably Reservoir Dogs had a bigger impact on me than Pulp Fiction, but both were a massive part of my teen years. I probably first saw Pulp Fiction when I was around 15 or so and was blown away by how insanely badass it was. Harvey Keitel as Winston Wolf and Sam Jackson as Jules were the personification of cool.

Sculpt
05-24-2014, 12:57 AM
There's just something about Pulp Fiction. It hits the right notes, maybe subconsciously. Certainly set Quinton as one of the best dialogue writers in film.

To me, Reservoir Dogs hit some of those nerves, and does "the heist genre" quiet well, but it doesn't have the life of it's own Pulp does.