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- <text id=94TT1380>
- <title>
- Oct. 10, 1994: Show Business:A Blast to the Heart
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 10, 1994 Black Renaissance
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA/SHOW BUSINESS, Page 76
- A Blast to the Heart
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> With his vast, enthralling Pulp Fiction, director Quentin Tarantino
- gives Hollywood a welcome jolt
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Corliss--Reported by Elizabeth L. Bland and Jeffrey Ressner/New York
- </p>
- <p> Onscreen, John Travolta had just raised an Adrenalin-filled
- hypodermic needle above the comatose body of Uma Thurman and,
- with desperate force, plunged it straight into her heart. In
- the audience at New York City's Lincoln Center, where Quentin
- Tarantino's Pulp Fiction was being shown, a young man watched
- this scene and passed out. "Is there a doctor in the house?"
- someone actually asked. The film was stopped for nine anxious
- minutes before the announcement came: "The victim is just fine."
- </p>
- <p> A Tarantino movie has this effect on people. There's an ear-slicing
- scene in Reservoir Dogs, the 1992 heist movie he wrote and directed,
- that revolts some folks who have never even seen it. In True
- Romance and Natural Born Killers, two Tarantino scripts with
- identical itineraries (Bonnie and Clyde going to hell in a hot
- rod), knives skate across faces and guns blow fishbowl holes
- in stomachs. When a tough wants to leave his mark on someone,
- he does it with a mutilating flourish. Tarantino's films allow
- for no idle bystanders; you either get with the pogrom or get
- out of the way. Thus does he make the viewer a co-conspirator--and sometimes, as at Lincoln Center, a victim.
- </p>
- <p> Here we go again--another gore gourmand acting out fantasies
- of aggression for the grind-house trade. Well, no. For a start,
- Tarantino's films are energized not so much by violence as by
- its threat; it's in the air like a balloon ready to explode.
- More important, Tarantino, 31, sees movie violence as a vivid
- visual correlative for the internal agitation of urban America,
- for all those people who believe their lives are a pitched battle
- for self-preservation. If he romanticizes his gunmen, he also
- anchors them in vulnerability, stupidity and the blinkered loyalty
- of men to men. But damn, they're good company. Tarantino knows
- them inside out, even if most of his gangland wisdom came from
- a life of movie watching (he worked for five years in a video
- store). "I've seen what I've seen, and I've met the people I've
- met," he says flirtatiously. "I've been in weird situations.
- I'm not a hood, but I've seen fringe things here and there."
- And what he sees, he translates into sharp words, telling gestures,
- explosive images.
- </p>
- <p> Tarantino's movies are smartly intoxicating cocktails of rampage
- and meditation; they're in-your-face, with a mac-10 machine
- pistol and a quote from the Old Testament. They blend U.S. and
- European styles of filmmaking; they bring novelistic devices
- to the movie mall. And in Pulp Fiction, a multipart tribute
- to the hard-boiled books and films of American mid-century,
- he has devised a sprawling, sturdy canvas that accommodates
- the high-octane and the highbrow.
- </p>
- <p> Just ask Bruce Willis, one of a half-dozen actors (along with
- Travolta, Thurman, Samuel L. Jackson, Ving Rhames and Harvey
- Keitel) who found some of the juiciest roles of their careers
- here: "You can say the most intellectual thing about Pulp Fiction
- and be right. But it also works for the trailer-park kids."
- It surely ought to work for those viewers lulled these many
- years by cinema soporifics. For 2 1/2 teeming hours it hits
- you like a shot of Adrenalin straight to the heart.
- </p>
- <p> Here's some of what happens:
- </p>
- <p> Vincent (Travolta) and Jules (Jackson), henchmen of Los Angeles
- crime lord Marsellus Wallace (Rhames), retrieve a briefcase
- from some cheating kids. Three people die there, and a fourth
- in a getaway car. A specialist (Keitel) drops by to supervise
- the cleanup. At a diner, the henchmen's breakfast is interrupted
- by a thrill-crazy young couple (Tim Roth and Amanda Plummer)
- staging a holdup. He and Vincent go to see Marsellus, who is
- telling an aging boxer named Butch (Willis) to throw his next
- fight. Later, Vincent buys some potent heroin, then escorts
- the boss' sexy wife Mia (Thurman) for a toxic night on the town.
- Vincent gets out the needle. Butch double-crosses his boss,
- wins the fight and plans to skip town, but soon must decide
- whether to save Marsellus' life at the sure risk of his own.
- </p>
- <p> That is the story. (Tarantino wrote everything except the Butch
- episode, which was created by the director's occasional collaborator,
- Roger Avary.) But it is presented out of chronology, so as to
- alternate fierce melodrama with behavioral comedy, and vengeance
- with revelation. Tarantino pulls the string around one story
- while setting up the next in the bustling background. He played
- neat tricks of a similar sort in Reservoir Dogs. "It's not like
- I'm on this major crusade against linear narrative," he says.
- "What I am against is saying it's the only game in town."
- </p>
- <p> And while keeping things tightly wound, he gives his actors
- plenty of room to breathe the heady air of his dialogue, with
- all its wit and thoughtfulness punctuated by obscenity. Says
- producer Lawrence Bender, who for a miserly $8.2 million mounted
- this glossy production (including a '50s-style restaurant set
- so cool that some backers want to franchise it): "It's the kind
- of dialogue that's so organic, you can chew, eat and digest
- it."
- </p>
- <p> Tarantino's and Bender's company is called A Band Apart, after
- Bande a Part (Band of Outsiders), the 1964 film about two hoods
- and a femme fatale that Jean-Luc Godard based on an American
- paperback novel. But where Godard used pulp fiction as an excuse
- to discuss the philosophy of the boulevards and the boudoir,
- Tarantino is true to the genre's moral muscularity; he's interested
- in the philosophy of the abattoir. His tough guys chat about
- life's iniquities and inequities, about hamburgers, the Bible,
- the ethics of foot massage, the perfidy of women.
- </p>
- <p> Sometimes they sound like catty old fishwives. But this is a
- very male form of gossip--verbal machismo. With their edgy
- patter, the guys test themselves, their friends, their victims;
- every conversation is a pop quiz with life on the line. And
- when they do shut up, it's often to blow someone away, or do
- drugs, or sink into edgy pensiveness. In Tarantino's film there
- are no comfortable silences.
- </p>
- <p> There's never silence when Tarantino is in the room. This engaging,
- nonstop performer--named by his half-Cherokee mother for the
- hero of Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury as well as for the
- half-breed (Quint) played by Burt Reynolds in Gunsmoke--was
- born in Knoxville, Tennessee, and moved to Southern California
- when he was two. Since then, it's been a movie-mad life. His
- folks took him to all sorts of films, then he went on his own.
- He seems to have remembered--and understood--everything
- he's seen. "He's probably the best video-store clerk there ever
- was," says Avary, who worked with him at Video Archives. "The
- world of video clerks will sadly miss him."
- </p>
- <p> And now those films are memorialized in Tarantino's own. "People
- ask if my love of movies can be too much," he says. "What annoys
- me about the question is the snobbery; it treats movies like
- a bastard art form. Could a novelist ever read too many books,
- or a musician listen to too much music? Well, I totally love
- movies."
- </p>
- <p> He loves acting too. Tarantino has small roles in his two features
- (and a hilarious turn in the new comedy Sleep With Me). He knows
- what actors need and how to keep them percolating. "Quentin
- is a great collaborator," says Thurman, a creepy delight in
- Pulp Fiction as a woman convinced she's in control of her life
- and her men. "He is extremely clear about what he wants, but
- he's not close minded; he's no bully." Travolta says Tarantino
- trusts actors: "He lets you put all the icing on the cake. For
- Vincent, I could mock up the hair, the accent, the walk, the
- talk." The result is a deft portrait of a guy who moves warily
- and at his own slo-mo pace, as if he needed all his concentration
- just to stay alive.
- </p>
- <p> There are plenty of subsidiary characters worth their own movie,
- like the suburban drug dealer (Eric Stoltz) and his trippy wife
- (Rosanna Arquette)--a married couple for the strung-out '90s.
- Part of Pulp Fiction's fun is that memorable weirdos keep popping
- up in the second and third hour. Part of the movie's skill is
- that familiar characters reveal new depths. By the end, Jackson's
- Jules--in a "transitional period" from L.A.'s baddest malefactor
- to Tarantino's idea of masculine sanctity--has commandeered
- the film. But even Jackson, brilliant in the role, knows that
- all good films, like the Scriptures, begin with the Word."Films
- are a show-me medium," says Jackson, "and Quentin makes tell-me
- movies."
- </p>
- <p> Pulp Fiction is Tarantino's show-and-tell extravaganza. It towers
- over the year's other movies as majestically and menacingly
- as a gang lord at a preschool. It dares Hollywood films to be
- this smart about going this far. If good directors accept Tarantino's
- implicit challenge, the movie theater could again be a great
- place to live in.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-