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Pulp Fiction, (Written & Dir. Quentin Tarantino) Review by Case Wright

March 27, 2025 17:18


“Pulp Fiction” was as peak 1990s as much as these two:

Or this Archie’s Comic live action show

While “X-Files” attracted big audiences 60-40% male and the reverse for “90210”, “Pulp Fiction” captured 1994: Jocks, Nerds, Guys, Women, Girls, Boys, Boomers, X-ers, Older Millennials, you name it – Everyone was into Pulp Fiction. Tarantino described this art as a number of cliches: the mobster attracted to the mob wife, the boxer who tricks the mobsters into giving him money and NOT throwing the fight, and the killer who finds God. The cliches dig into DNA. WHY? Because they have the same motivations as our caveman ancestors: the unobtainable mate, a sense of honor, and redemption. These themes are the basic building blocks of what make us human beings and why these stories echo through the millennia – our ancestors fears are the same as ours today. Some might claim that “Reservoir Dogs’ was better- they are incorrect– Pulp Fiction was WAY more entertaining.

Even though this was released and written in the 1990s, it had an older feel to it. First, everyone smoked indoors. I remember the 1990s, smoking was on the OUTS big time! Second, man did he like to use a certain racial slur. OOF. But then again, I’m not from Los Angeles. Maybe, it’s like Alabama there? I have no idea! I can say that the film did hold up as re-watched it today. It was still relevant and maybe that’s because it was difficult to pin down the time period; in fact, the music was mostly from the 1970s and the story time jumped- A LOT! The Miramax producer who worked on the show also jumps a lot, but mostly in the shower.

The story begins with two mobsters Vincent Vega and Jules Winnfield murdering two guys to get a magical briefcase back to their boss Marsellus Wallace, which feeds into the next storyline of Butch an aging fighter who’s about to rip off the mob, which feeds into Mia Wallace – Marsellus Wallace’s wife overdosing on heroin, which feeds into Butch on a quest to retrieve his great-grandfather’s watch, which feeds into a pretty graphic man on man scene of sexual violence and revenge, which feeds into Jules finding God, which feeds into cleaning brains out of a car, and finally ending in a diner being robbed by Tim Roth. Yes, the film requires attention. It’s not “Dazed and Confused”. You gotta pay attention.

I recently watched a show with Lisa Marie that time jumped – oh no, were their Germans around who got too close at a family reunion off camera?!

I still believe this is Quentin’s Opus and you cannot convince me otherwise because it connected to everyone and launched and re-launched A LOT of careers. Pulp Fiction’s legacy was that it empowered a 1990s writers to work in humor with their grittiness like in Halloween H20, which I reviewed here

https://unobtainium13.com/2016/10/29/halloween-h20-alt-title-they-stab-baby-boomers-dont-they/
: Pulp Fiction, (Written & Dir. Quentin Tarantino) Review by Case Wright

I recommend to going on Hulu and checking Pulp Fiction out again.

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6 Responses to “Pulp Fiction, (Written & Dir. Quentin Tarantino) Review by Case Wright”

  1. Such a perfect film a rare 10/10 on my scale! Repeat viewing is

    a must pleasure!

    Liked by 1 person

    By Jake Moore on March 27, 2025 at 19:03

  2. […] Case reviewed Pulp Fiction! […]

    Like

    By Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 3/24/25 — 3/30/25 | Through the Shattered Lens on March 30, 2025 at 21:02

  3. […] also in King of New York as the untrustworthy Joey D. and he played the bartender, English Bob, in Pulp Fiction.  Reportedly, Calderon was the second choice for the role of Jules Winnfield.)  Mikey’s […]

    Like

    By Retro Television Review: Miami Vice 3.23 “Everybody’s In Show Business” | Through the Shattered Lens on April 7, 2025 at 14:32

  4. […] make a movie out of Hubbard’s science fiction epic and, on a hot streak following films like Pulp Fiction and Get Shorty, he finally did so in 2000.  He played Terl, a member of a giant alien race called […]

    Like

    By Film Review: Battlefield Earth (dir by Roger Christian) | Through the Shattered Lens on July 15, 2025 at 17:45

  5. […] Pulp Fiction […]

    Like

    By The Best Picture Race: The 1990s | Through the Shattered Lens on March 15, 2026 at 16:31

  6. […] Today is Christopher Walken’s 83rd birthday so it seems appropriate to share a Walken scene that I love.  Without further ado, here is the classic gold watch speech from the 1994 film, Pulp Fiction: […]

    Like

    By Scenes That I Love: Christopher Walken in Pulp Fiction | Through the Shattered Lens on March 31, 2026 at 04:30

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