Pulp Fiction Style.

Ever have a Big Kahuna Burger?

The year is 1994 many films have come out that year like Forrest Gump, The Lion King, Speed, The Shawshank Redemption and many others but one really sticks out. And I think you know what im about to say otherwise you wouldnt be here two words Pulp Fiction. The true classic of the 90's.



One of the early scenes in "Pulp Fiction" features two hit-men discussing what a Big Mac is called in other countries. Their dialogue is witty and entertaining, and it's also disarming, because it makes these two thugs seem all too normal. If you didn't know better, you might assume these were regular guys having chit-chat on their way to work. Other than the comic payoff at the end of the scene, in which they use parts of this conversation to taunt their victims, their talk has no relevance to anything in the film, or to anything else, for that matter. Yet without such scenes, "Pulp Fiction" wouldn't be "Pulp Fiction." I get the sense that Tarantino put into the film whatever struck his fancy, and somehow the final product is not only coherent but wonderfully textured.

(For the record that's not a real Butterfly on his shoulder but a sticker on the window)

Ok I am going to go into the story but not in hugh detail most of you already most know but for the people who havent lived yet im going to tell the story in small detail.

Vincent Vega and Jules Winnfield are two hitmen on the hunt for a briefcase whose contents were stolen from their boss, Marsellus Wallace. They run into a few unexpected detours along the road. Marsellus is out of town, and he's gotten Vincent to take care of his wife, Mia. That is, take her out for a night on the town. Things go smoothly until one of them makes a huge error. Butch Coolidge is a boxer who's been approached by Marsellus and been told to throw his latest fight. When Butch ends up killing the other boxer, he must escape Marsellus. Pumpkin and Honey Bunny (not their real names) are two lovebirds/thieves who have decided to rob the restaurant they're currently eating at. But the restaurant doesn't turn out to be as easy as the other places they've robbed.

To travle into the mind of Quentin Tarantino you have to see his movies and how he makes the actors pull everything off in such a natural way it's truely amazing.

There's the slick stylish man.

The whole movie is mixed up so the beginning is the end and the end is the beginning. But you have to really focus on this movie because if you blink you will miss out something.

Everything about this movie is iconic from the talk about bugers to the conversation about how someone stuck a watch up there ass for a couple of years. And even these cigarettes are iconic.



So that about wraps it up from the world of pulp fiction but I think whats on everybody's mind is:

Whats in the briefcase?










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Comments
    Robert Long Posted 4 years 21 days ago
    When I was in Iraq, one of my soldiers and I were on guard duty and kept everyone amused by doing the dialogue from Pulp Fiction all night. 8 AM came around and a carload of guys from our HQ came out and informed us that a truck would be coming by to pick up some dead Iraqis.
    ME: Did you happen to see the sign that says 'dead hadji storage? Know why you didn't see that sign?"
    OTHER GUY: "BECAUSE THERE ISN'T A F****ING SIGN!!!!"

    thetwilightgamer Posted 4 years 21 days ago
    One of my favorite films. The witty humor and ton of classic moments make this one of the greats of the 90s if not all time. The gimp was one of the funniest things in movie history, also. My favorite part was from the time Travolta accidentally shot the guy in the head in the back of the car to the part where the Wolf leaves. That whole part, with the WOLFs smooth talking and cool attitude inspires me to a great extent. Especially when theyre trying to kiss the owner of the houses butt by complimenting his coffee. You know, that one part actually has made me buy gourmet coffee from that point on?
    whippletheduck Posted 4 years 21 days ago
    I still don't understand what the GIMP was.......
    chokeslam Posted 4 years 23 days ago
    How is it that Tarentino was able to produce such a masterpiece when most of his other movies are complete and utter crap. Resevour Dogs is amost as good, but everthing else he's done is just awful. When I first saw Pulp Fiction I thought "This Tarentino guy is gonna be the the next Spielburg" but unfortunatly he has spent the past 15 year disapointing me time and time again.
    LuckyHawk Posted 4 years 24 days ago
    damn Jango... blow hards? Really?
    MAMABEAN Posted 4 years 24 days ago
    FROM IMDB:
    Speculation abounds as to the nature of the mysterious glowing contents of the case: - Could it be Elvis's gold suit, seen worn by Val Kilmer (as Elvis) in True Romance (1993)? - The most persistent theory (most usually attributed to a friend of a friend who saw it posted on a message board by someone whose brother had read a report of a radio interview with Tarantino himself) is that it is Marcellus Wallace's soul. The story goes that when the Devil takes a person's soul, it is removed through the back of the head (this isn't part of any known religion, but this is what the message board posters say). When we see the back of Marcellus's head he has a Band-Aid covering the precise spot indicated by tradition for soul removal. Perhaps Marcellus sold his soul to the devil which would also explain why the combination to open the briefcase is 666. - Quentin Tarantino has said that the band-aid on the back of Marsellus Wallace's neck had nothing to do with an allusion to the Devil stealing Marsellus's soul... but that the actor Ving Rhames had a scar on the back of his neck he wanted to cover up. - Or could it be simply a 20-watt light bulb? - According to Roger Avary, who co-wrote the script with Quentin Tarantino, the original plan was to have the briefcase contain diamonds. This seemed neither exciting nor original, so Avary and Tarantino decided to have the briefcase's contents never appear on screen; this way each filmgoer could mentally "fill in the blank" with whatever struck his or her imagination as best fitting the description "so beautiful". The orange light bulb (projecting shimmering light onto the actors' faces) was a last-minute decision and added a completely unintended fantastic element. - In a radio interview with 'Howard Stern' in late 2003, Quentin Tarantino was asked by a caller the contents of the briefcase, and he answered, "It's whatever the viewer wants it to be."
    Heinzy82 Posted 4 years 24 days ago
    Top film,
    "whos bike is this?"
    "its not a bike its a chopper"
    "whos chopper is this?"
    "its zeds"
    "whos zed?"
    "said dead baby, zeds dead"

    As for the brief case, surley its gold to have that sort of reflection?!?!?
    jango52577 Posted 4 years 25 days ago
    I'm still wondering to this day what is in the briefcase. I know it's just a light effect all you blow hards...but for real guys.
    Riphard Posted 4 years 25 days ago
    pass me my wallet.
    which one is it?
    the one that says bad mutha fucka on it!
    Lil Penny Posted 4 years 25 days ago
    Yeah that was a great year for movies. And Pulp Fiction had some great characters. If there is one thing Tarantino does well, it is characters.
    What does Marsellus Wallace look like??!
    LuckyHawk Posted 4 years 25 days ago
    A lightbulb's in the case.
    ProphetSword Posted 4 years 25 days ago
    Weren't they discussing the "Quarter Pounder with Cheese," and not the "Big Mac" in the movie?
    slasherfan Posted 4 years 25 days ago
    I think it's Marsellus Wallaces soul, or the winning lotto numbers,lol.
    Score:
    7
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