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Jackie Brown

United States

1997

154 Min
Color
English
  • Currently 3.7/5 Stars.
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DIR Quentin Tarantino

PROD Lawrence Bender

SCR Quentin Tarantino, Elmore Leonard

DP Guillermo Navarro

CAST Pam Grier, Samuel L. Jackson, Robert Forster, Bridget Fonda, Michael Keaton, Robert De Niro, Chris Tucker

ED Sally Menke

Synopsis

Quentin Tarantino wrote and directed this adaptation of Elmore Leonard’s 1995 Rum Punch, switching the action from Miami to LA, and altering the central character from white to black. Ruthless arms dealer Ordell Robbie (Samuel L. Jackson), who lives with perpetually stoned beach-babe Melanie (Bridget Fonda), teams with his old buddy Louis Gara (Robert De Niro), just released from prison after serving four years for armed robbery. ATF agent Ray Nicolette (Michael Keaton) and cop Mark Dargus (Michael Bowen) bust stewardess Jackie Brown (Pam Grier), who was smuggling money into the country for Ordell. Ordell springs Jackie, but when middle-aged bail bondsman Max Cherry (Robert Forster) picks her up at the jail, he’s attracted to her, and they choose a romantic route with detours. Mistrust and suspicions surface after Jackie pits Ordell and the cops against each other, convincing Ordell that she’s going to double-cross the cops. Tarantino commented on the film’s budget: “Jackie Brown only cost $12 million. You can’t lose. You absolutely, positively can’t lose. And you don’t have to compromise.”

(Source: http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:158843)

Director

Quentin_tarantino

Quentin Tarantino

Director/screenwriter/actor/producer Quentin Tarantino was perhaps the most distinctive and volatile talent to emerge in American film in the early ‘90s, who learned his craft first as a video clerk and then as an actor. During his time at Video Archives, the fledgling filmmaker began writing screenplays, completing his first, True Romance, in 1987. After years of negotiations, he decided to sell the script to the director Tony Scott. During this time, Tarantino wrote the screenplay for Natural Born Killers, and gave the script to his partner, Rand Vossler. Tarantino then with the money from True Romance, he begin pre-production on Reservoir Dogs. Word-of-mouth at the 1992 Sundance Film Festival,led to scores of glowing reviews, making the film a cult hit. While many critics and fans were praising Tarantino, he developed a sizable number of detractors. During 1993, Tarantino wrote and directed his next feature, Pulp Fiction, which won the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival that… read more

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Daniel

31Jan10

JACKIE BROWN was the first Tarantino movie with just the right amount of words. I mean by this remark that the auto-referential and rather pointless logorrhea that characterized RESERVOIR DOGS and PULP FICTION was quasi-absent of this film. JACKIE BROWN is the adult movie of the little genius of American cinema. Maybe because the Elmore Leonard novel was a skeleton solid enough to support Quentin's beef. Masterpiece.  
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Jim W

17Jan10

I wish this was a TV series. I got really attached to characters, and I was really sad that it had to end. The acting all around was great, the script was great, and the directing made for some tense moments. It doesn't have the originality of Pulp Fiction, but it sure is fine cinema.  
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paulo.sales

3Jan10

style!  
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Vincent Bergeron

28Dec09

After Pulp Fiction, it is a bit of deception, but seeing it back, it is marvellous, often lo-key movie. Simple, more conventional in form, less showy, but great directors never make movies just for form like Japanese directors that love to imitate Tarantino with zero content that comes from their personalities.   

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090809tarantino184

The Auteurs Daily: Tarantino auf Deutsch

By David Hudson on August 9, 2009
Calling Leni Riefenstahl "the best film director who ever lived" is certainly one way of drawing attention to your movie. Particularly if you stake the claim in Germany. When Quentin Tarantino premiered
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Untitled

By Todd Kushige​machi on May 24, 2009

(Originally written November 22, 2006)

The problem with Quentin Tarantino’s first two films is that they are knowingly “hip.” The monologue about Madonna’s “Like a Virgin” at the beginning of…  read review

Untitled

By Adam Suraf on December 14, 2008

A bit overlooked in its day, despite critical praise, Quentin Tarantino’s much anticipated third film doesn’t have the complex narrative tricks of “Reservoir Dogs” or “Pulp Fiction”, but what it does…  read review

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