Pulp Fiction - Review
If you have impressed the audience with a movie once, then what you have done is allowed invariably high expectation towards your other movies by the same audience. This can prove dangerous for your reputation that you built with such difficulty. Quentin Tarantino must have been aware of this to have managed the most dreaded. He improved upon his earlier film showing that extraordinary is possible when talent reaches its apex.
Yes, we are talking about Pulp fiction, it s one wild ride. It is the saga of three interconnected stories that happen in the modern- day Los Angeles. The film is impressive to its core and as hard hitting as Coppola s Godfather, only this is rooted in the 90s decade.
The film s three interconnected stories are shown in such a way that they intersect at some key points. The story may not be in chronological order but the beginning and the end have been tied in a manner that those confused by the structure of the film will see everything as clearly as crystal once the movie ends. That s the dawn of the movie.
If you thought John Travolta and Bruce Willis had touched the highest point with their acting abilities then here is a surprise for you. Like in the Reservoir Dogs , the movie has the crisp quality of Tarantino s dialogues. Some monologues that may sound vulgar to you at first, have humor laced in them with points to ponder upon. Even the profanities sound poetic. All in all, a masterpiece.