Bad boy auteur Quentin Tarantino (who, for my money, still displays more cleverness than art) hit a $107 million grand slam at the box office in this violent comic book story of three interwoven tales. John Travolta and Samuel L. Jackson steal the show as Elmore Leonard-type dumb hit men who keep a running banter of funny small talk going throughout the film. (R. Pitman)[Blu-ray Review—Oct. 11, 2011—Lionsgate, 154 min., R, $19.99—Making its first appearance on Blu-ray, 1994's Pulp Fiction sports a great transfer and features a DTS-HD 5.1 soundtrack. Blu-ray extras include an episode from The Charlie Rose Show with filmmaker Quentin Tarantino (56 min.), “Not the Usual Mindless Boring Getting to Know You Chit Chat” retrospective interviews with cast and crew including John Travolta, Samuel L. Jackson, and Tim Roth (43 min.), a vintage production featurette (30 min.), deleted scenes (25 min.), the critics' roundtable “Here Are Some Facts on the Fiction” (21 min.), the Siskel & Ebert: At the Movies segment “The Tarantino Generation” (16 min.), an interview with Tarantino at the Independent Spirit Awards (11 min.), two behind-the-scenes montages (11 min.), a production design featurette (6 min.), Tarantino's acceptance speech from the Cannes Film Festival (6 min.), a trivia track, and a stills and marketing gallery. Bottom line: a contemporary classic makes a winning debut on Blu-ray.]
Pulp Fiction
(Miramax, 154 min., R, avail. Sept. 12) Vol. 10, Issue 5
Pulp Fiction
Star Ratings
As of March 2022, Video Librarian has changed from a four-star rating system to a five-star one. This change allows our reviewers to have a wider range of critical viewpoints, as well as to synchronize with Google’s rating structure. This change affects all reviews from March 2022 onwards. All reviews from before this period will still retain their original rating. Future film submissions will be considered our new 1-5 star criteria.
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