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Writer's pictureGus Keller

Pulp Fiction



Combining peak creativity, passion, and respect, Pulp Fiction is a postmodern masterpiece. Its iconic dialogue authentically establishes unique voices, tension, and themes. The chronology is fragmented, creating vignettes and a recontextualized bookend. This puzzling timeline also heightens twists. Though seemingly casual, there are rich philosophical symbols, motifs, and ideas. Pulp Fiction is nihilistic, yet finds positive meaning in that meaninglessness. It has attitude, it's funny, and it maximizes juxtaposition. Plus, the cast perfectly embodies their characters with natural weight and meta significance. Thus, Pulp Fiction appears to be a shallow thriller yet is deeply thoughtful.


Technically, Pulp Fiction is trendsetting. Its elevated direction is accessible, creating a new subgenre with inventive style. Its eclectic music breaks customs to purposely clash tones. Meanwhile, the visuals use extended takes, angles, framing, lighting, composition, movement, colors, and depth to intensify significance. Similarly, the editing employs match cuts, jump cuts, smash cuts, inserts, fades, intercuts, and pacing to maximize suspense and blend contrasting emotions. Furthermore, the bold production design is distinct, the effects are practical, and the sound mixes natural diegetics with extreme symbolism. Overall, Pulp Fiction is a refreshing and motivated landmark.


Writing: 10/10

Direction: 10/10

Cinematography: 10/10

Acting: 10/10

Editing: 10/10

Sound: 9/10

Score/Soundtrack: 10/10

Production Design: 9/10

Casting: 10/10

Effects: 9/10

Overall Score: 9.7/10

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