Pulp Fiction
I don't feel that way about this movie. It's always been fashionable to join the backlash against something so popular. Especially something that at one time was so hip and cool and maybe even underground, soon to become mainstream and quoted even by the likes of sensitive grandmas. Well, maybe not much of Samuel Jackson's dialogue, or what his wallet says on it. I revisit this movie every few years and it retains the same explosive power it ever had. What is so remarkable is how fresh and original it all seems even with the knowledge that every single moment has been lifted from somewhere else. Not just from decades worth of films, but apparently even stories relayed by famous directors during interviews. QT certainly took that famous adage to heart - "Good artists borrow, great artists steal."
What a cast. Joining Jackson in hitman garb is John Travolta, ready for his big comeback. Bruce Willis plays the boxer who refuses to take a dive and suffers an eventful odyssey in the aftermath. Uma Thurman is iconic as anything in her black pixie wig, staring across the table at Travolta before they dance to Chuck Berry and do heroin. Ving Rhames as the imposing gangster who learns the boxer he paid off didn't go down in the fifth. Christopher Walken as a man who tells a serpentine story about a watch, with a helluva punchline. Also on view are Eric Stoltz, Amanda Plummer, Tim Roth, and Rosanna Arquette. Oh, and QT himself, who's the only odd man out on that side of the camera. His performance is legendarily awful, so much so I always wondered if it was intentional. "Okaaaaay?"
But his direction is divine. A whiplash, in-love-with-every-shot style he continues to employ today. Showy and shameless. Bids taken from Godard and Scorsese. Largely stolen, rarely borrowed. His plagiarism never bothered me one bit. PULP FICTION set Hollywood and the indie film world on fire, for better or worse, and it will always be a one-of-a-kind entertainment whose DNA includes just about everything you may have seen before. It is the ultimate example of why the "how" and not the "what" is what really matters in cinema appreciation.
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