logologo
 
Remember Me
ADVERTISEMENT
Uncle Yasha lost his shoe. It fell in a bog. He did too. Uncle Shmeiter grabbed his foot. He jumped in a bog and went kaput. -Slappy Squirrel
Animaniacs
logo

True Romance

Movie Summary

Released: 1993
It was directed with energetic skill by Top Gun Tony Scott, but this breathtaking 1993 thriller (think of it as an adolescent crime fantasy on steroids) has Quentin Tarantino written all over it. True Romance is really part of a loose trilogy that includes Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction, with a crackling Tarantino screenplay that rides a fine line between raucous comedy and violent excess. Christian Slater plays Clarence, the comic-book lover who meets a beguiling prostitute named Alabama (Patricia Arquette), confronts her vicious pimp (Gary Oldman), and embarks on a cross-country odyssey with $5 million worth of Mafia cocaine. Mayhem ensues, culminating in a favorite Tarantino climax--the "Mexican standoff"--in which a roomful of guys are pointing guns at each other, waiting to see who shoots first. Brutal, profane, and totally outrageous, True Romance is not for everyone, but with a supporting cast that includes Dennis Hopper, Christopher Walken, Brad Pitt, and Val Kilmer (as the ghost of Elvis!), you can be sure this movie will never be boring. --Jeff Shannon

Comments

scwahlsPosted: 01/02/2008
one of my favs! this has all kinds of people in it, even brad pitt as a couch bound stoner!
Miss IciaPosted: 03/17/2008
Oh,man! I loved this movie the first time I saw it. I didn't know it was a Tarantino movie the first time I saw it. I watched it because I LOVE Christian Slater.
leftinusPosted: 10/03/2008
Top Five? Love you Cusack, but one will always stand alone... Honeymoon requirement: Sex in a phonebooth! Do they even have those anymore? Superman's been buying Certs for a decade and a half just to use the restroom, I'm sure of it...
scrymusicPosted: 01/30/2009
The part where Gary Oldham gets shot... probably one of the most paced parts in the movie between action and dialog..

Add Comment

You must be logged in to add a comment

Sections

Summary


Login To Edit




 
 
Contact | Privacy Policy | Advertise | © Retro Junk