PULP FICTION: 4K UHD Blu-ray (Miramax, 1994) Paramount Home Video
History may provide for a kinder reflection,
but in the opinion of this reviewer, director, Quentin Tarantino is a one hit
wonder. That hit is undeniably Pulp Fiction (1994), a crudely eclectic
ensemble piece, melding four distinct movie genres (the crime story, the
suspense thriller, the screwball comedy, and the action movie) into one
seamless, viciously enthralling, no-holds-barred spectacle. While much, if not
all, of Tarantino’s filmic canon remains an oft grotesque assault on the senses
– both, the five we know, as well as our sense of good taste, Pulp Fiction
is irrefutably, a remarkable ‘break out’ for Tarantino’s particular lack of
respect for the niceties. Furthermore,
his screenplay is an ingenious patchwork of sordid stories, curiously aloof and
fascinating unto themselves, only to crystallize into one cohesive narrative mere
moments before the final fade out. That’s a tough sell and a nearly impossible
creative tightrope to balance. But Tarantino knows exactly when to depart from
one story to move onto the next. He never lingers or divulges too much too soon
during and manages the additional coup to keep us all guessing where the show’s
intermittent shock and revulsion are headed. Pulp Fiction is a harrowing
‘dark ride’ through the recesses of some very depraved minds, coupled with all
the writhing narrative pivots and plunges of a very exhilarating roller coaster.
Permit us to give the
Cherokee/Irish Knoxville, Tennessee native his due, named in part after Burt
Reynold’s Gunsmoke character, Quint Asper and who, while still
underaged, worked as an usher at an adult theater, a recruiter in the aerospace
industry, and then, did 5 years at a Manhattan Beach video store. His tastes
always skewing toward the obscene and salacious, Tarantino met several of his
later collaborators while attending acting classes at the James Best Theatre
Company. Look closely for an early glimpse of him as one of the Elvis impersonators
who appeared on Season 4’s ‘Sophia’s Wedding’ episode of TV’s wildly popular
sit-com, The Golden Girls. Sinking his paltry $650 salary from that gig
- and much of its $3,000 residuals - into the authorship of Reservoir Dogs
(1992) – the resultant movie proved a palpable hit at the box office. In
retrospect, however, Reservoir Dogs plays more like a dry run for Pulp
Fiction than its own stand-alone creation. Thematically dark and perversely
funny, Pulp Fiction shook Hollywood to its core, not so much for its
originality, but rather, its raw and uninhibited wicked take on the criminal
element at its most haphazard and greedy.
The picture’s stylized violence and
non-linear storylines earned Tarantino a ‘shared’ Oscar for Best Screenplay with
Roger Avary, as well as a nod for Best Director and Best Picture. Tarantino
also took home the Palme d'Or at Cannes even as the ticket tally rose to $200
million worldwide. Aside: conventional logic suggests a critically acclaimed
picture cannot also be a box office dynamo. But Pulp Fiction is both,
and it remains a potpourri populated by stellar cameos, made pointedly, if
compellingly ugly from Tarantino’s delicious pursuit into the aberrant. In hindsight,
it is also the movie that reintroduced audiences to John Travolta - that 70’s
pop icon, miserably to fizzle and all but vanish from the screen in the 80’s
and, by 1994, to be considered something of a has-been in the industry.
Travolta really does owe his resurrection and the latter half of his highly
lucrative career to the awesome staying power of this movie. It’s a decidedly
new Travolta we get in Pulp Fiction. Few actors have been as willing to
take such risks. But here, Travolta is playing against type, eschewing the
clean-shaven pin-up for his alter-ego, Vincent Vega - a long-haired assassin,
ever so slightly insecure and gone to seed.
The central plot of Pulp Fiction
concerns two hit men, the aforementioned Vega and Jules Winnfield (Samuel L.
Jackson). The pair are working for crime boss, Marcellus Wallace (Ving Rhames)
to liquidate several former associates who have double-crossed Marcellus and
stolen a very valuable piece of property (more on this later). On their fool’s errand,
Jules and Vincent inadvertently connect with Ringo (Tim Roth) and Yolanda
(Amanda Plummer) – small-time hoods about to hold up patrons at a roadside diner
in broad daylight. This is Tarantino’s pre-title narrative hook and Roth and
Plummer’s sizzling exposition sets the screen on fire. From here, we jump
around unconventionally, first, to Vincent’s brief encounter with Marcellus’
wife, Mia (Uma Thurman), who almost dies from an accidental drug overdose while
out on the town with him. We also meet washed-up prize fighter, Butch Coolidge
(Bruce Willis) who refuses to take a payoff for throwing his upcoming match. Christopher
Walken, in a riotous flashback, provides us with the history of a watch
belonging to Butch’s dead war hero/father, he once concealed inside his own anal
cavity to smuggle it out of Viet Nam. Don’t ask.
Pulp Fiction’s star power
and its shock value converge on an intentionally disturbing rape involving
rednecks, Zeb (Peter Greene) and Maynard (Duane Whitaker) taking out their
sexual frustrations on a bound and gagged Marcellus. This ends when a bound and
gagged Butch, their intended next victim, instead manages to free himself and
slice through Zeb with a Japanese saber. Meanwhile, Vincent accidentally
assassinates small-time hood, Marvin (Phil LaMarr) in the backseat of Marcellus’
car when his gun discharges after hitting a speed bump. The genius in Tarantino
is how he can manage deliberately to orchestrate these gruesome exercises, repelling
us with one act of violence – the rape – while ticking our collective funny
bones with the other – Marvin’s brain-splattering dispatch. Somewhere between
repulsion and exhilaration is Mia’s near-death experience, her breast bone
penetrated by a stabbed injection of adrenaline straight into her heart to save
her life. And, of course, there is the language to consider. Pulp Fiction
is not a movie for either the faint of heart or Puritan sensibilities. In fact,
it violates just about every tenet of public decency, yet with a ‘charm’ all
its own. The viciousness in Tarantino’s story-telling arsenal is immediately apparent
as Yolanda threatens to execute every last ‘mother fucking’ restaurant
patron unless they acquiesce to her robbery demands. Unlike much of Tarantino’s
later work, in which the obscenities gets bandied about, as if to spill from a
ruptured colostomy bag full of verbal diarrhea, and merely, because he can, the
profanity in Pulp Fiction is proficiently placed for maximum impact,
amusement and laughs.
Even more satisfying than how all these
parts come together, is just how masterfully each vignette manages to perfectly
function as its own independent mini-movie. The great mystery – or rather,
MacGuffin in the film, relates to what is inside a much sought-after briefcase
recovered by Jules and Vincent on Marcellus’ behalf. Tarantino has always remained
chary about divulging any concrete explanation here, the curious golden light emanating
from inside the briefcase, interpreted by some as belonging to Marcellus’ soul.
During the sequence where Marcellus orders Butch to throw his fight, we get our
first clue – a big close-up on the back of Ving Rhames’ bald pate with a giant
Band Aid concealing…a scar. If the object in the briefcase is Marcellus’ soul,
how was it extracted from his body? Better question - once reacquired, how will
it re-enter it? At some point I suppose abject acceptance will refute the
evidence. After all, it’s only a movie. Pulp Fiction works on every level
as a superiorly-crafted action/mystery/ comedy/drama. Alas, its’ reputation has
dogged Tarantino ever since. Nothing Tarantino has come up with since Pulp
Fiction has been nearly half as inventive or as entertaining. And much of
what he has hewn during this interim has absolutely zero re-sell value. Seeing Kill
Bill (2003) or the Hateful Eight (2015) once is, arguably, one-time
too many. Still, what Tarantino has given us in this film is so good, so
solidly crafted, so utterly compelling and on so many levels, its’ hard to
fault him for perhaps failing to live up to his own legacy. Pulp Fiction
is a very tough act to follow.
Paramount has inherited the picture
from Miramax – its original distributor. The studio’s newly minted 4k
Blu-ray is nothing short of excellent. Shot on Kodak stock, colors are
exceptionally rich and vibrant here. Flesh tones are point-on accurate with an
insane amount of fine detail emerging from ever pour of this spectacular UHD image.
Grain has been reproduced to a finite precision. Aside: on anything less than an
85” monitor, it will be rendered virtually invisible. In projection, however,
the visuals adopt a pure and organic texture, augmented by the subtle grain
levels. Blacks are very deep and velvety without sacrificing image detail. The 5.1 DTS belies the fact it isn't a Dolby Atmos mix, but a revelation besides. Prepare to give your speakers, especially your
base, a healthy workout. The UHD presentation includes two newly produced
featurettes in HD – Not Your Usual Mindless Chit Chat, and Some Facts
About The Fiction, plus an enhanced trivia track. An accompanying Blu-ray
houses virtually all of the legacy features: cast interviews, Tarantino’s appearance
on The Charlie Rose Show, Siskel & Ebert’s take on the
picture, outtakes and other behind-the-scenes stuff, a stills gallery, trivia
track and theatrical trailer. Bottom line: Tarantino’s raging masterwork
arrives in 4K, offering the best the format has to offer. This is a
reference-quality disc. Very highly recommended!
FILM RATING (out
of 5 – 5 being the best)
5
VIDEO/AUDIO
5+
EXTRAS
4
Comments
Thanks for your kind words. I'm not well - still. It's ongoing. Not sure what the future will bring. I hope to keep my hand in, publishing some reviews when I don't feel as though I've been hit and run over twice by a cement truck and left to cure in the hot sun. We'll see. Keep checking back, as it remains my intention to keep the blog alive. I'm trying. Your support means a lot.
Best to you and yours, and Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year
- NZ