Chicago Reader

You searched for:

Search for…

Narrow Search

  • Author

  • Rating

  • Show only

Film Search
Quentin Tarantino's second feature (1994), a chronologically scrambled collection of interlocking crime stories, extracts most of its kicks from other movies and TV shows. Despite all its thematic nudges about redemption and second chances its true agenda is the flip side of Forrest Gump: to make the media-savvy viewer the real hero of the story. A wet dream for 14-year-old male closet queens (or, perhaps more accurately, the 14-year-old male closet queen in each of us), this smart-alecky movie sparkles with canny twists and turns. John Travolta, Samuel L. Jackson, Bruce Willis, and Harvey Keitel vibrate with high-voltage star power, while Uma Thurman, Ving Rhames, Maria de Medeiros, Tim Roth, and Amanda Plummer amply fill out the remaining scenery. The overall project is evident: to evict real life and real people from the art film and replace them with generic teases and assorted hommages. Don't expect any of the life experiences of the old movie sources to leak through; punchy, flamboyant surface is all. R, 154 min.

Director: Quentin Tarantino
Writer: Quentin Tarantino and Roger Avary
Producer: Lawrence Bender
Cast: Tim Roth, John Travolta, Samuel L. Jackson, Bruce Willis and Ving Rhames

Sorry there are no showtimes for Pulp Fiction on Tuesday, February 9.

Reviews/comments (0)

Add a review


Roll over stars and click to rate.


©2010 Creative Loafing Media
All Rights Reserved.