Pulp Fiction
United States
1994
Outrageously violent, time-twisting, and in love with language, Pulp Fiction was widely considered the most influential American movie of the 1990s. Director and co-screenwriter Quentin Tarantino synthesized such seemingly disparate traditions as the syncopated language of David Mamet; the serious violence of American gangster movies, crime movies, and films noirs mixed up with the wacky violence of cartoons, video games, and Japanese animation; and the fragmented story-telling structures of such experimental classics as Citizen Kane, Rashomon, and La jetée. The Oscar-winning script by Tarantino and Roger Avary intertwines three stories, featuring Samuel L. Jackson and John Travolta, in the role that single-handedly reignited his career, as hit men who have philosophical interchanges on such topics as the French names for American fast food products; Bruce Willis as a boxer out of a 1940s B-movie; and such other stalwarts as Harvey Keitel, Tim Roth, Christopher Walken, Eric Stoltz, Ving Rhames, and Uma Thurman, whose dance sequence with Travolta proved an instant classic.
(From http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll)
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

Once again, I put in my PULP FICTION Collector’s Edition DVD and, once again, I was completely fixated on every frame of this brilliant film. Having seen it so many times, I thought I might just watch… read review
Forced, Contrived, those words alone cannot even explain how unnatural this film is, the film has no flow at all, it comes off as a bunch of junk put together, I agree with Pauline Kael that it is… read review
Now that we’ve grown accustomed to his style, Tarantino has been derided by some as a hack who is more of a mash-up artist, stealing imagery, tone and plot details from other sources, than a true filmmaker… read review
Throughout film history, there have been directors that have become staples in time; holding up a standard of filmmaking for their successors to attempt to achieve. Whether it is Akira Kurosawa’s Seven… read review