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Pulp Fiction is a 1994 film directed by Quentin Tarantino who also co-wrote it with Roger Avary. It was released to critical and public acclaim and is regarded by many as a milestone in movie history, helping to establish an ascendant independent film movement in the United States. Its fragmented storyline, eclectic dialogue, irony and camp influences, unorthodox camerawork, and numerous pop culture references have since colored countless movies. Tarantino and Avary won Academy Awards for Best Original Screenplay and the film was nominated for seven Oscars in total, including Best Picture. It also won the best picture at the Cannes Film Festival.

The ensemble cast includes John Travolta, Samuel L. Jackson, Uma Thurman, Harvey Keitel, Tim Roth, Amanda Plummer, Maria de Medeiros, Ving Rhames, Eric Stoltz, Rosanna Arquette, Christopher Walken and Bruce Willis.

The film runs in nonlinear order, as almost all of Tarantino's films do. This became a popular film trend that was widely mimicked in the late 1990s.

The film's title refers to the pulp magazines popular during the mid–20th century, known for their strongly graphic nature.

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Reception and influence

Pulp Fiction is found both on critics' lists (such as the AFI's One Hundred Years, 100 Movies List) and in popular rankings, placing consistently in the top 10 on the IMDB Top 250 List. In 2000, readers of Total Film magazine voted it the 18th greatest comedy film of all time. In Britain (2001), it was voted as the 4th greatest film of all time in a nationwide poll for Channel 4, beaten only by The Shawshank Redemption, The Godfather and . In 2005, Time.com named it one of the 100 best movies of the last 80 years. It won the 1994 Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival and the Oscar for Best Original Screenplay. It was named Best Picture by the [Los Angeles Film Critics Association|L.A. Film Critics Association] and the National Society of Film Critics. Many critics, including Siskel and Ebert, have compared Tarantino's success with Pulp Fiction to that of Orson Welles after the release of his Citizen Kane.

The movie was moderately controversial at the time of its release, partly due to the graphic violence and partly due to its perceived racism, as Jackson and Travolta played moderately sympathetic characters, the former of which freely used the words "motherfucker" and "nigger", along with variations of the words. Also, white characters were repeatedly shown harming black characters (ie, the pawnshop rape, Vincent shooting Marvin, Butch running Marcellus over with a car).

The success of Pulp Fiction spurred studios to release a slew of "copycat" films that tried to duplicate the film's formula of witty and offbeat dialogue, an elliptical/non-chronological plot and unconventional storyline, and gritty subject matter. Most of these films fared poorly at the box office and were dismissed by critics as inferior and derivative, though the raver film Go did receive critical acclaim, as did Guy Ritchie's Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels; the latter being a particularly successful transplant of Pulp Fiction's basic premise into the underworld of London.

The unconventional attitude of the movie, in particular its lack of a standard chronological structure, has often led the film to be cited as an example of a postmodernist film.

The film had a significant impact on the lives of its cast members. It revived the fortunes of John Travolta who was going through a career slump at the time, and Bruce Willis solidified his career as a leading man. It got Uma Thurman onto the Hollywood A-list and led to more work for character actors such as Ving Rhames and Harvey Keitel. Eric Stoltz also profited. The actor who gained the most from Pulp Fiction was Samuel L. Jackson, who wowed critics and audiences in a part Quentin Tarantino wrote especially for him. Once relegated to supporting roles, Jackson soon became one of the world's most popular film stars.

Storylines

Using many elements of a black comedy with many stylistic and pop culture touches, Pulp Fiction weaves through the intersecting storylines of Los Angeles gangsters, fringe characters, petty thieves and a mysterious attaché case. Following Quentin Tarantino's more traditional crime movie, Reservoir Dogs, the storyline is chopped up, rearranged and shown out of sequence.

There are four main storylines in Pulp Fiction: Vincent and Jules; Mia Wallace; Butch Coolidge; and Pumpkin and Honey Bunny. All four are intertwined, although Vincent is the only one of these six characters to meet all of the five others during the film.

 
The order of events as shown in the film:
  1. The Diner (first half)
  2. Vince and Jules
  3. "Mia Wallace"
  4. "The Gold Watch"
  5. "The Bonnie Situation"
  6. The Diner (second half)

 
The actual chronological order of events:
  1. Vince and Jules
  2. "The Bonnie Situation"
  3. The Diner (both halves)
  4. "Mia Wallace"
  5. "The Gold Watch"

 

Vincent & Jules

John Travolta (left) and Samuel L. Jackson as Vincent Vega and Jules Winnfield, respectively. Here, they are depicted in Tarantino's signature trunk shot.
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John Travolta (left) and Samuel L. Jackson as Vincent Vega and Jules Winnfield, respectively. Here, they are depicted in Tarantino's signature trunk shot.

Hitmen Jules Winnfield (Samuel L. Jackson) and Vincent Vega (John Travolta) head to a Los Angeles apartment to retrieve a briefcase that was involved in a failed deal for their boss, gangster Marsellus Wallace (Ving Rhames). They also have to kill Brett (Frank Whaley), the one who was supposed to have set up the deal, and his cohorts. The briefcase is a classic MacGuffin, whose contents are never revealed except indirectly as a glowing yellow light.

After a long and bizarre conversation led by the scripture-spouting Jules (Ezekiel 25:17, 'The path of the righteous man'), the pair shoot and kill Brett and two of his accomplices, quickly departing with the last of the gang, who in fact is Jules' informant, Marvin. Shortly afterward, while in Jules' car, Vincent accidentally shoots Marvin in the head, killing him, and the two hitmen quickly try to find a place to hide and clean up the mess in the car with the aid of snotty suburbanite Jimmie Dimmick (Quentin Tarantino) and the associate/henchman of Marsellus, the dapper and mysterious Winston Wolfe (Harvey Keitel). They do this quickly so as to hide everything from Jimmie's wife Bonnie and in doing so, they are forced to change into clean clothes, leading Jimmie to remark on how they look like "dorks". As Jules points out, however, the clothes are Jimmie's.

During the encounter in Brett's apartment, one of the accomplices emerges from the bathroom and sends a hail of bullets towards Jules and Vincent, both of whom sustain no impact. Jules interprets this as divine intervention, which causes him deep reflection. He recognizes he has been "redeemed" and he will ultimately decide to renounce his gangster life and devote his life to serving God. He makes this decision at The Diner and in so doing, he decides not to kill Pumpkin. The redemption of Jules paved the way for the redemption of Pumpkin and, by extension, Honey Bunny. The redemption of Jules also subsequently leads to the death of his fellow gangster Vincent in the chapter “The Watch.” Jules' self-realization gives way to Marsellus as back-up with Vincent; however, Marsellus is busy getting refreshments, which in turn leads the story to the Butch/Marsellus scene in the pawn-shop.

Mia Wallace

Uma Thurman plays Mia Wallace.
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Uma Thurman plays Mia Wallace.

At Marsellus' request, Vincent Vega shows his wife Mia (Uma Thurman) a good time while Marsellus is out of town. Vinnie shows up at Mia's house and while waiting for her to get ready, she plays "Son of a Preacher Man", by Dusty Springfield on the sound system. They head to the fictional restaurant Jack Rabbit Slim's, a slick 1950s-themed restaurant with lookalikes of the decade's top pop culture icons as staff (e.g., television impresario Ed Sullivan as the maître d', and servers such as singer Buddy Holly and actresses Marilyn Monroe and Mamie van Doren), an option for patrons to eat at a booth or a classic car refitted as a booth, and the famous "Five-Dollar Milkshake".

Vincent and Mia make small talk, wherein she recounts her experience as an actress in a failed television pilot, "Fox Force Five". The show followed the exploits of an all-female team of secret agents, each having a particular specialty. Mia's character, Raven McCoy, was raised by circus performers and, according to the show, was "...the deadliest woman in the world with a knife." She also knew a zillion old jokes her grandfather, an old vaudevillian, taught her, though she refuses to share with Vincent the joke Raven tells in the pilot out of fear of being embarrassed.

In Mia's words, the rest of the troupe had other formidable abilities:

"Fox, as in we're a bunch of foxy chicks. Force, as in we're a force to be reckoned with. Five, as in there's one... two... three... four... five of us. There was a blonde one, Sommerset O'Neal from that show "Baton Rouge", she was the leader. A Japanese one, a black one, a French one and a brunette one, me. We all had special skills. Sommerset had a photographic memory, the Japanese fox was a kung fu master, the black girl was a demolition expert, the French fox's specialty was sex..."

Tarantino has acknowledged the similarity between Fox Force Five and the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad (DiVAS) in Kill Bill.

Mia then demands that Vincent dance with her in the Jack Rabbit Slim's twist contest and they dance to Chuck Berry's "You Never Can Tell". When they return to the Wallace house, she is seen carrying the trophy. While listening to Urge Overkill's version of Neil Diamond's "Girl, You'll Be A Woman Soon", Mia overdoses after snorting heroin. She had found the heroin in the pocket of Vince's coat, which she was wearing, and believed it to be cocaine. A fearful Vincent tries to save her life with the aid of the small-time drug dealer (Eric Stoltz) who had previously sold him the heroin. Mia is finally revived after Vincent stabs her in the heart with a syringe full of adrenaline.

Mia wakes up with a howl and when asked to say something, says "something". The drug dealer's dysfunctional wife (Rosanna Arquette) remarks "That was fuckin' trippy".

Upon arriving back at the Wallace residence, Mia finally reveals her corny joke: "So there's Papa Tomato, Momma Tomato and Baby Tomato walking along the street. Baby Tomato starts lagging behind, and Papa Tomato starts getting really angry. So, he turns around and squishes Baby Tomato and says, 'Ketchup.' (Catch Up) "

In their last conversation, they agree not to tell Marsellus of the overdosing incident, both fearing what he might do to either of them.

Butch Coolidge

Butch Coolidge (Bruce Willis) in the pawnshop.
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Butch Coolidge (Bruce Willis) in the pawnshop.

Aging prizefighter Butch Coolidge (Bruce Willis) accepts a large sum of money from Marsellus, agreeing to "take a dive" (deliberately lose a fight) by allowing himself to be knocked out in the fifth round of his upcoming match. However, Butch double-crosses Marsellus, instead betting the money he received from Marsellus on himself (with, due to the fight's being fixed, presumably very favorable odds) and winning the bout, accidentally killing his opponent in the process. Although now flush with cash, Butch must quickly leave town, as a vengeful Marsellus is hot on his trail.

There is a flashback at the beginning of the "The Gold Watch" storyline (Butch's story), in which the child Butch Coolidge (Chandler Lindauer) receives his watch from a buddy of his father's (Christopher Walken), his father having died in a Vietnam War prison camp. This gold watch, which has been passed down from father to son since his great-grandfather fought in World War I, is of great sentimental value to Butch.

Butch is compelled to return to his apartment to retrieve the wristwatch after he discovers his girlfriend Fabienne (Maria de Medeiros) has forgotten to pack it. Satisfied no one awaits to kill him in his apartment, he grabs a pack of toaster pastries, an imitation of Pop-Tarts, in his kitchen and puts them in the toaster on the counter. While waiting for the pastries to pop out, Butch finally notices a silenced MAC-10 submachine gun on the kitchen counter. Upon hearing his toilet flush, he readies himself in time to encounter Vincent coming out of the bathroom. The toaster pastries pop and Butch fires the gun, killing Vincent.

While driving back to the motel from the apartment complex, Butch sees Marsellus crossing in front of him, they recognize each other and Butch accelerates into him. He then runs over a fire hydrant. Following a scuffle replete with car collisions, gunplay and , Butch and Marsellus are captured and tied up by a couple of hicks, a pawnshop owner and his friend Zed, a security guard, who turn out to be sexual predators and sadists. They take Marsellus into the back room and rape him; Butch escapes his bonds and is faced with the choice of saving himself or aiding Marsellus. Knowing Marsellus wanted him dead, he could easily have left Marsellus in the hands of the odd-ball assailants. Butch, on the other hand, makes a choice to release Marsellus, risking that he might fail or that Marsellus might not accept his overture.

Butch looks around the shop, finding a hammer, a baseball bat, a chainsaw and finally a katana on a top shelf and attacks the rapists with it, allowing Marsellus to free himself. Marsellus then shoots Zed in the crotch with a shotgun. Butch asks "what now?" and awaits Marsellus' decision. Marsellus, who originally intended to hunt Butch down and exact his revenge for the botched boxing fix, now must realize that Butch has both saved his life and submitted to him: he decides that Butch is free as long as he never tells anyone about the incident of his rape, and never returns to LA. Butch agrees, and quickly leaves town on the security guard's chopper with his girlfriend.

Pumpkin & Honey Bunny

Pumpkin (Tim Roth, right) and Honey Bunny (Amanda Plummer) hold up the diner.
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Pumpkin (Tim Roth, right) and Honey Bunny (Amanda Plummer) hold up the diner.

Over a late breakfast in a diner, a pair of petty thieves, Pumpkin ("Ringo") (Tim Roth) and Honey Bunny/Yolanda (Amanda Plummer), discuss the merits of robbing restaurants instead of their usual targets, liquor stores. After establishing that restaurants are far easier and more lucrative to rob (the employees are less invested in the business, and there are plenty of customers with fat wallets), they spontaneously decide to hold up the diner. They jump up with revolvers and scream obscenities, demanding all the patrons' money and valuables. Vincent and Jules (fresh from Jimmie's house, wearing a couple of "dorky" borrowed T-shirts) happen to be among the diner patrons. When Pumpkin demands that Jules hand over the case, Jules holds him at gunpoint in a semi-Mexican standoff with Yolanda and Vincent, who emerges from the restroom with gun drawn and pointed at Yolanda; in this standoff, not everyone will die, because no one has a gun pointed at Vincent. Jules explains his ambivalence toward his life of crime, takes his wallet back from Ringo (sans the cash inside because Jules "bought Ringo's life"), and lets the pair go free. Vincent suggests that they should leave now, they put their guns in their pants, and walk out of the diner. "Surf Rider" by Dick Dale plays during the credits.

Plot devices

The mysterious briefcase

The code for the briefcase: 6-6-6.
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The code for the briefcase: 6-6-6.

The only indisputable observations about the stolen attaché case recovered by Jules and Vincent are that its latch lock combination is "666", the "number of the Beast" as given in the Biblical Book of Revelation, and that the contents of the case either glow or are highly reflective. Whenever asked, director Tarantino has replied that there is no explanation for the case's contents: it is simply a MacGuffin. The case is most likely a nod to Robert Aldrich's 1955 film noir Kiss Me Deadly, in which a similar briefcase glows because it contains a small nuclear device. Originally, the Pulp Fiction case was to contain diamonds (stolen in the film Reservoir Dogs), but this was seen as too mundane. For filming purposes, the briefcase contained an orange lightbulb with a battery.

Some theories on what's inside the briefcase include: Marsellus Wallace's soul, the ear from Reservoir Dogs, a severed head, or just an orange lightbulb. A popular Internet theory, especially around the release date, was that it contains Elvis's famous gold jumpsuit, as it would be a valuable gold object, light and instantly recognizable, and would fit in with the frequent nods to 1950s nostalgia found throughout the film. Supporting this initially was Mia's cryptic reference to Vincent as an "Elvis man", however the video release made it clear this was actually a reference to a deleted scene between the two characters, although some argue that the reference was left in to hint at the briefcase's contents. As a true MacGuffin, though, what the suitcase contains is not important; it may even be empty. What makes it important is how desperately Marsellus and everyone who encounters it seems to desire it, but more importantly, Jules and Vincent's willingness to kill and risk their own lives to get it for Marsellus. This provides a striking demonstration of how strong their loyalty is. A new theory gaining prominence is that the briefcase contains a golden gun. The roots of this rumor come from the 1966 Spaghetti Western "Ringo and his Golden Pistol", Jules calling Tim Roth's character "Ringo" and Quentin Tarantino's love of Italian Westerns.

The Boxing Double Cross

This is most likely in homage to the 1929 Dashiell Hammett crime novel, Red Harvest, wherein the story's protagonist exerts pressure on organized crime by blackmailing a boxer into "unfixing" a fixed fight. Indeed, such early Twentieth Century crime novels were Tarantino's inspiration for the movie. [[Citing sources citation needed]]

Toilet motif

Tarantino uses the toilet or bathroom as a plot device. When Jules and Vincent are shooting Brett & his companions, a fourth man is hiding by the toilet, waiting to fire. When Mia comes back from 'powdering' her nose at Jackrabbit Slim's, their quiet dinner turns into them competing in a dance contest and they start being more and more attracted to each other. When Vincent goes to the toilet, things are about to change drastically. A fun and romantic evening out with Mia turns into a nightmare when Mia mistakes Vincent's heroin as cocaine and overdoses. Vincent goes to the toilet on a quiet morning, during a stake-out at Butch’s apartment, when he comes out Butch is there pointing a MAC-10 at him and eventually killing him. After Vincent and Jules wipe their hands in Jimmie's bathroom after a wash to remove blood stains, Vincent's towel is saturated with blood whereas Jules' isn't. Vincent and Jules’ breakfast and ethical conversation in the diner turns into an armed robbery while Vincent is in the bathroom.

Soul Theory

The soul theory is widespread among Pulp Fiction fans. Knowing that in Tarantino’s movies, almost nothing is purely coincidental, many fans therefore don’t believe the MacGuffin story. In short, the soul theory states that Marsellus had sold his soul to the Devil and the briefcase now contains Marsellus’ soul. Vincent and Jules are then sent to retrieve the soul from Devil’s associates. There are a number of things in the movie which, if interpreted in a specific way, can be seen as proof of the soul story.

The Band-aid

In the bar scene where Marsellus is talking with Butch, we mostly see his neck with a large band-aid on it. It could be the spot where the Devil removed Marsellus' soul, however nowhere in the Bible it is stated that the Devil would take the soul from the back of the head[link]. The band-aid has no specific purpose in the movie and the audience never sees why it’s there or how Marsellus got it. The band-aid is gone when we see Marsellus looking for Butch after the boxing match; this is the first time we see Marsellus after the briefcase has been retrieved. The main reason for the band-aid theory is the fact it’s so prominent when we see him for the first time and that it’s gone when Marsellus gets the briefcase back. However, the actor who plays Marsellus, Ving Rhames, has since said that the reason for the band-aid is simply that he had a cut on his neck.

Sun Glasses

It is often said that eyes are the windows to the soul. Marsellus is shown at all times wearing pitch black sun glasses before he receives his briefcase and, connecting to the band-aid notion, he no longer wears the glasses later.

The Number of the Beast

We see that the combination is "666", the "Number of the Beast" as given in the Biblical Book of Revelation. The code is also featured quite prominently, and many fans of the movie see the specific number as a clue that the briefcase belongs to Satan.

The Divine Intervention

The fourth man fails to kill or even hit Jules and Vincent at point blank with a high-caliber handgun. Jules recognizes this as a miracle and is therefore redeemed; Vincent dies a short while later. The question is why God would protect two gangsters who just killed two people. The popular answer which fits in the soul-theory is that the four young men in the apartment were actually associates of the Devil, and therefore Jules and Vincent were (unintentionally) doing God’s work.

Brett’s Death

When Brett is shot by Jules and Vincent, we see a strange yellow glow coming from the direction of his (out of screen) body. This could be the glow of his soul exiting his body, the same as the glow of Marsellus’ soul inside the briefcase. There is no similar glow during any other of the deaths in the movie, though.

However, it can be argued that these "glows" are merely the muzzle flashes of Vincent and Jules' pistols, which were inserted during the editing process but were poorly synchronized.

Marvin’s Death

When Marvin is asked whether he believes that they witnessed an act of God, he says he doesn’t have an opinion. This doesn’t mean he does or doesn’t believe in God, but could mean he in fact is an associate of the Devil and therefore is either afraid of God or doesn’t want to say anything about it. The gun accidentally goes off and shoots Marvin in the head. This again could be a freak occurrence, but Vincent seems to be certain that he didn’t pull the trigger (look close and you see him pull the trigger). It’s also a coincidence that the gun hit Marvin precisely in the head. Again, the people who favor the soul theory see this as another act of God, as He imposes His judgment on all four associates of the Devil.

Ringo’s Reaction

When Ringo (Pumpkin) finally sees the contents of the briefcase, he asks whether it’s what he thinks it is. If the case contained mere gold or diamonds or anything of recognizable value, he wouldn’t be asking that question. This sequence was also key to the "Elvis jumpsuit" theory; something which most people would recognize, but need to ask about its authenticity. In addition, Jules first tells Ringo that it contains his "boss's dirty laundry", hinting it may contain clothing. At any rate, the object in the case is something rare or unusual. Ringo also says that the content of the case is beautiful. He also keeps looking at the case in an amazed or even hypnotized way, as if he’s seeing something amazing or supernatural. This can be interpreted as Ringo seeing the eternal soul and being amazed by its beauty and radiance. The question in this interpretation is how he recognizes the fact that it’s a soul.

Vincent’s Staring

When Vincent finds the case in the lower right cupboard in the kitchen, he seems to stare at its contents. His level of amazement is nowhere near that of Ringo’s, but he still fails to react when Jules asks him: “Vincent, we happy?” Only after Jules asks the same question again, in a louder voice, does Vincent seem to ‘snap out of it’ and responds. The script clearly states “Vincent just stares at it, transfixed.”

Zed's Motorcycle

It should be noted that as Butch escapes from the pawn shop, he immediately steals Zed's chopper, named "Grace". This could be interpreted as a final redemption for aiding Marsellus' returned soul. It also adds to the supposed biblical underlying theme of the movie, though some claim it is nothing merely than a tip of the hat to an acquaintance of Quentin Tarantino.

Other details

Jules' Bible passage

"And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger those who attempt to poison and destroy my brothers."
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"And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger those who attempt to poison and destroy my brothers."

As explained by Jules in the final scene in the diner, he recites a passage from the BibleEzekiel 25:17 — each time he kills someone. The passage reads as follows:

The path of the righteous man is beset on all sides by the inequities of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men. Blessed is he who in the name of charity and good will shepherds the weak through the valley of darkness, for he is truly his brother's keeper and the finder of lost children. And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger those who attempt to poison and destroy my brothers. And you will know my name is the Lord when I lay my vengeance upon thee.

This is, in fact, not an actual passage from the Bible, but a collage of several passages. Ezekiel 25:17 in the King James Version reads:

And I will execute great vengeance upon thee with furious rebukes; and they shall know that I am the LORD, when I shall lay my vengeance upon them.
This is actually a typically obscure reference to Karate Kiba / Chiba the Bodyguard, a 1976 film starring Sonny Chiba (whom Tarantino has hailed as "the greatest actor to ever work in martial arts films"), which opens with a nearly identical misquote, likewise attributed to Ezekiel 25:17:

The path of the righteous man and defender is beset on all sides by the iniquity of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men. Blessed is he, who in the name of charity and good will, shepherds the weak through the valley of darkness, for he is truly his brother's keeper, and the finder of lost children. And I will execute great vengeance upon them with furious anger, who poison and destroy my brothers; and they shall know that I am Chiba the Bodyguard when I lay my love upon them! (Ezekiel 25:17)

Connections to Reservoir Dogs

In Tarantino's 1992 mainstream directorial debut Reservoir Dogs, Michael Madsen plays a character named "Vic Vega," whom Tarantino has said is brother to Travolta's "Vincent Vega."

There are some who think that the briefcase contains the diamonds from Reservoir Dogs. Tarantino, however, confirms that Reservoir Dogs is meant to end with Mr. Pink's capture by the police.

Steve Buscemi is later seen playing a waiter in Jack Rabbit Slim's. The fact that Buscemi is playing a waiter is ironic, since in Reservoir Dogs his character, Mr. Pink, doesn't believe in tipping waiters. Even more so when Vincent says that "[He] doesn't seem to be much of a waiter". However, this cannot be the Mr Pink character. In Reservoir Dogs, Mr. Pink says that when he worked minimum-wage, "I wasn't lucky enough to have a job that society deemed tip-worthy." Therefore Mr. Pink was never a waiter.

On the radio in Reservoir Dogs, a commercial for Jack Rabbit Slim's can be heard in a car.

Also, in a deleted scene from Reservoir Dogs, Nice-Guy Eddie is telling Mr. White and Mr. Pink that he called Bonnie, a nurse that he knows. In Pulp Fiction, Jimmie's wife, Bonnie, is a nurse. She is also African-American, which the guys in the car imply her to be. At one point, Mr. White even refers to what they're talking about as the "Bonnie Situation", which was the title of the last chapter of Pulp Fiction.

Time setting

Set in early-1990s Los Angeles, Pulp Fiction nevertheless lends itself a timeless quality by drawing on themes from various eras of the 20th century:

Influences

Pulp Fiction features many direct references to other films. Tarantino (a former video store clerk) is well-known for having watched nearly every movie in the store before going off to make his first mainstream film, Reservoir Dogs. The influence of this broad viewing remains prominent in Pulp Fiction.

Trivia

Cast

Actor/Actress Role
John Travolta Vincent Vega
Samuel L. Jackson Jules Winnfield
Bruce Willis Butch Coolidge
Uma Thurman Mia Wallace
Ving Rhames Marsellus Wallace
Harvey Keitel Winston Wolfe
Tim Roth Pumpkin ("Ringo")
Amanda Plummer Honey Bunny (Yolanda)
Maria de Medeiros Fabienne
Eric Stoltz Lance
Rosanna Arquette Jody
Christopher Walken Captain Koons
Angela Jones Esmeralda Villalobos
Quentin Tarantino Jimmie Dimmick
Phil LaMarr Marvin
Frank Whaley Brett
Bronagh Gallagher Trudi
Duane Whitaker Maynard
Peter Greene Zed
Julia Sweeney Rachel
Steve Buscemi Surly Buddy Holly Waiter
Paul Calderon
  • English Bob, AKA Paul
  • (In the script, the character of Paul the bartender (played by Paul Calderon) is referred to as "English Bob" (Jules even refers to English Bob, saying "Yeah, [Winston Wolf] is about as European as fucking English Bob"), but his line "My name's Paul, and this is between y'all" apparently stuck, as he is credited as 'Paul' in the credits.)
Alexis Arquette Fourth man
Lawrence Bender Long Hair Yuppie Scum
Stephen Hibbert The Gimp
Chandler Lindauer Young Butch

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