The Rewatchables - ‘Pulp Fiction’ (Part 1) With Bill Simmons, Chris Ryan, and Sean Fennessey
Episode Date: July 29, 2024The Ringer’s Bill Simmons, Chris Ryan, and Sean Fennessey are tryin’ real hard to be the shepherd after rewatching Quentin Tarantino’s 1994 masterpiece ‘Pulp Fiction,’ starring Samuel L. Jac...kson, John Travolta, Bruce Willis, and Uma Thurman. In Part 1, the guys break down why they love the movie, discuss the story of how the movie was made, and dive deep into the iconic characters. Producer: Craig Horlbeck Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Join me, Danny Kelly and Danny Highfits on the Ringer Fantasy Football Show for all things, fantasy, NFL, and more.
But that time you said, join me, Danny Kelly. It sounds like you're Danny Kelly. It's join me, Craig Horlebeck.
Right, right, right, right, right, right. Okay.
Join me, Craig Horlebeck, as well as Danny Hyfitz and Danny Kelly.
Nice.
Thank you. For all things, fantasy football, NFL, and more on the Ringer Fantasy Football Show.
Boom.
This episode is brought to you by Adobe Firefly, the all-in-one creative studio with AI-powered image and video generation.
Built for today's creative process, Firefly helps you generate, edit, and experiment fast.
Because the asks aren't getting smaller, and the timelines?
Ooh, yeah, still tight.
With all the best creative AI models in one place, Firefly brings your ideas to life.
Learn more at Adobe.com slash Firefly.
This episode is brought to you by Apple and AT&T.
Scroll long enough and you'll hear it all.
Miracle diets, fitness trends, you name it.
But with iPhone and Apple Watch, you get meaningful insights from a very trusted source.
Your body.
You can track sleep quality, cardio fitness, and more than unpack all the information in the health app on iPhone
to get a picture of your overall health.
These health insights are developed with clinical.
experts from start to finish. Find out more at apple.com slash health. Apple Watch is not a medical
device and should not be used as a substitute for professional medical advice.
The rewatchables is brought to you by the Ringer podcast network where you can find the big
picture with Sean Fentasy. That's right. Who's on a high right now because the Bob Dylan
Salome trailer came out today. Is it a high? Is it a low? I'm not sure. It's either. It's a gamut of
emotions.
CR is here, Chris Ryan.
What's up, man?
Fresh off getting exonerated, beating Tommy Moldo in a trial.
Oh, no.
That was somebody else.
That's right.
I defended myself.
You can hear him on the watch.
Yeah.
Sometimes in the Philly Special.
Sometimes.
Sometimes in the big picture.
Yeah.
My name is Bill Simmons.
What does the rewatchables look like to you guys?
What does it look like?
Say what again!
Pope Fiction is next.
Does this pod look like a bit?
Oh, I'm sorry. Did I break your concentration?
Miramax Films asks the question, what are two hitmen, one girlfriend, a boxer, and the secret suitcase have in common.
The answer, they're all part of the most electrifying film of the year.
John Travolta, Samuel L. Jackson, Uma Sermon, Harvey Keitel, and Bruce Willis.
You won't know the facts until you see the fiction.
All-fiction.
Rate an R. Starts October 14th everywhere.
All right. We've been circling this one forever, and the 30th anniversary is coming up in October of one of the best movie experiences in the theater I've ever out of my life, a movie that I've seen. A slew of times, a movie that changed a lot of shit.
Sean, you credited this as the movie that officially sucked you in with movies for life in a profound way?
It's the big bang. This is the big bang for me.
What about UCR?
Same thing.
everybody's got their like their everything goes technicaler moment with movies and I think I've told
the story before my mom always used to say that like when she and my dad went and saw Star Wars when
it first came out and like when the spaceship flies over the audience in the first scene that
they're like nothing like movies are never going to be the same that how can you go back from
this and that's kind of how I felt when I saw Polt when Miserlew kicked in I was just like
oh well this is this is all I'm interested in now.
So the rare case of the hype building for six, seven, eight months dating back to Khan and all the people in it, be like, oh, man, that looks like a good movie.
And we'll talk a lot about the movie machine that was starting to really go in place there in 94, 95.
But by the time it was about to come out, and there was real anticipation, almost like, I don't know, like an NBA finals game one, something like that.
And part of me, I remember, because I'm out of college at this point, I'm living in Boston.
Part of me was like, ah, it's not going to be, can't be this good.
Come on.
You'd already been let down by Twister.
Yeah, I went on a Friday, Summerville, Summerville Lowe's Theater.
Was it the Friday?
Was it opening night?
Yeah.
I mean, what was I going to do?
I was just, like, barely working.
I went to, like, at 2 o'clock Friday.
And it was just unbelievable.
And I think the moment, the moment I remember in the theater that still holds to this
day is the uh when she when she finds the heroin in her coat and it's like oh no because you just think
the way it's being set up it's like don't don't don't fuck marcellus's wife don't come on don't but you
think you just used to a certain type of movie that's going to move a certain way and it's like oh man
he's going to fuck marcellus's wife and she finds the heroin you're like oh no and then all
a sudden she's overdosing and then that next five minutes and then it becomes i've never seen a
movie like this in my life. And that was it.
There were people fainting at the con screening
in that scene, right? Or like, was it where
in the New York premiere, there's some story about they had to
stop it for like 10 minutes? During the adrenaline show.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean,
I was 12 when it was when it came out.
And so, you know,
it was the perfect time for me
to see it because I was
entering like real adolescence.
So a movie like this, which has
drugs and cool cars
and drug dealers and
and violence and hit men and sexy
women, like all that stuff, obviously you're just interested in general, not realizing at the time
that the movie itself was this, like, play on all of those tropes, you know, that it was kind of like
trying to subvert or re-contextualize what all those things even were. So that gives it an added
layer of intrigue when you're a kid. And also, I'd like just come out of like G.IGO and
He-Man and being interested in all that stuff. You know what I mean? So I just kind of got shotguned
into a version of adult stuff
by way of this guy who had been deemed
like the coolest filmmaker
who'd come along in 25 years
and I was just completely insorseled
by the whole universe.
Like I had seen true romance before this movie
so I knew who Tarantino was.
I think I had to wait to see Reservoir Dogs
on video.
I definitely didn't see that in a movie theater.
And I bought every book.
I read every article.
I was on message boards.
Like I was so...
Soundtrack on repeat.
Pete that whole year.
1992 through 1997, that period in all the movies that he made or produced or his friends made
dominated my life.
It was my favorite thing in the world.
And this is like the big centerpiece at the middle of it.
You know what it's like I remember.
So I was 16.
I was just starting senior year of high school when this came out.
And my dad took me to, I guess, what would have been the Philly premiere of it or like a
maybe it was a critic screening, but it was like.
Your dad, Desmond Ryan.
Yeah.
A esteemed movie critic.
Yeah.
For the Philly Enquirer.
And like, um,
I remember the sensation that I still get,
even though I know the movies that he's paying homage to
slash ripping off slash cribbing stuff and recontextualizing it,
is that from the second Tim Roth and Amanda Plummer,
that scene starts, and then it goes and freeze frame,
but the audio track keeps playing,
and then it goes into Dick Dale,
and then it goes into this convert,
and jungle boogie, and then it goes into the conversation.
The double songs and the credits.
I was like,
so far we're about 10, 12 minutes in, and I have it, every frame is something I've never seen before.
Yeah.
And you're like, how long can you sustain this?
Where you're kind of like melting my mind with every single thing that happens.
And even though now, like, knowing, oh, this was a trope or this is a Godard thing or this is from Bonnie and Clyde, like, I'm still like it just feels as fresh as it ever did.
That's the weird thing.
It's like, this is probably the movie I've watched the most in my life.
is for me, too. I was thinking about that.
It's probably the number one.
In a true rewatchable fashion, like,
completely out of order.
Like, sometimes it'll just be, it's on,
sometimes I just want to watch one scene.
Sometimes I just want to watch one section.
So in a weird way, the non-linear
structure has now contributed to
it being the perfect rewatchable
because it doesn't kind of matter what order you watch it in.
I wanted to ask you about that specifically
just because you were a little bit older than us.
So...
I am? Just a little bit.
I hadn't seen the wild bunch.
hadn't seen
Godd movies.
I hadn't seen any of that stuff.
And even if you hadn't seen it,
like, because you were following along with it,
did you...
Was any of that stuff on your mind?
Because when I was watching it,
I was like, this is the first movie
that's ever made.
This is the first adult film
that was ever made.
And that can totally scramble your brain.
You know, and then you have to, like,
I spent the last 30 years of my life,
like, untangling every single thing in it.
It's the roadmap, though.
Like, because you have all these, like,
different things that you're kind of starting
to become aware of when you're young,
and then you get a piece of culture
that's like, here is a...
compendium of everything that is fucking cool.
Yeah.
You know, like hit men, surf music, like, alt country, you know, Godard, gangster movies,
Western, Sergio, O'Leon, like, it all gets put into this one box and you can just sort
of sort through it.
But what it, like, were you aware of, like, what it was?
Yeah, because Tarantino's older than me, so he's probably like 70.
So his pop culture kind of background and baggage was just a generation older than mine.
So the only stuff I had from, from the era that's.
some of the stuff he's cribbing from is the Eastwood Westerns and like all those movies.
But other than that, my kind of worldview with culture started around 75.
Okay.
So I would get like Fonzie correct the window, stuff like that.
Like, oh, yeah.
But for the most part, it felt really new to me too.
You guys made me think of something, though.
Like, as I've said in the past, like, I saw 48 hours when I was 13 and it was like,
that was it for me.
Like, it was like before and after when I saw that in the theater.
And then I think there's another stage you hit with movies.
it's like you're going to get sucked in like 12, 13.
We've always talked about whatever movie you love the most that year is usually
going to be your favorite movie ever.
But then there's another section, like end of high school, freshman year of college,
when you start really understanding how movies are really made, you start think of it
almost like sports.
And that's what I really got into in college in the late 80s, early 90s.
Then there's a third thing, which is exactly where I saw this movie when I was 24, 25,
somewhere in there.
When now it's like you have a reservoir,
you've seen a whole bunch of movies.
Now you have stuff to compare things to.
And then something like this comes out
and you're like, oh my God.
Like you actually understand the gravity of what happened
because you've seen enough movies
to understand that it's different.
This is so much different.
Yeah, and I feel like those are the three stages
of when you love movies.
Does it make sense?
Yeah, totally.
It does.
And also, whatever movies were between 1989 and 1994
and how different this is,
I feel like is relevant to that too,
because you've just been spent that five-year period,
like watching everything.
Literally watching everything.
You know, it's like costume dramas
and we're coming out of like the Out of Africa period
and Hollywood's trying to figure out how to, you know,
live in this post diehard experience.
And it's a little bit of in between time.
And this movie is a bit of a reset for, in general,
what movies are going to be for the next decade.
I have a lot of thoughts about 1994 coming up,
but I'm going to read three quotes that I think are important.
And they're all written in the mid-90s.
Peter Biscan, Pult became the Star Wars of
independence, exploding expectations for what an indie film could do at the box office.
So we'd take that.
John Ronson, back when he was, I think, writing for The Independent in one of those places.
Not since Citizen Kane has one man appeared from relative obscurity to redefine the art
of movie making.
So there's that.
Then Ebert in early 1995 in the Tarantino generation, which was the first podcast ever.
There was a special Siskel and Ebert episode, created podcast.
Him and Pump Up the Volume are the Teague Created Podcasting.
And Ebert said about Tarantino, he represents a moment of time.
The first director who's a rock and roll star.
And I think those three things together are what drove a lot of the dialogue and
excitement about this.
He was also a rock and roll star.
Well, indie films weren't supposed to do this.
I wasn't really supposed to know anything about the director, right?
And then he came out of nowhere.
Yeah.
And you add those three things together with the fact that the movie was as awesome as it was.
And it really was a phenomenon.
But whenever you hear people talking about like
why they love punk rock, right?
It's because they feel like the people
who are on stage could also be in the crowd.
It's this kind of connection
that they have to that person.
And I think that that has a,
there is an element to Quentin's stuff
that feels very,
even though he's a genius and even though it's like,
I could never think of anything
this perfect in my life,
he worked at a video store.
Like, yeah, for like five years.
We knew those guys.
Like, we were going to the video store and just you would go into the video store not only to pick up a movie,
but as a social experience to like go talk to the guys behind the counter and wander around for hours and stuff.
And keep picking things up and looking at the back and putting them down.
But it wasn't just him because in the context of 94, Kevin Smith too, with clerks, right?
Yeah.
It's like, oh, he made this.
He bought a camera and film looked like shit, but it was really fun and people liked it.
And it was this moment, I think, where everybody was.
was kind of like, could I do this?
Robert Rodriguez, Spike.
I don't know if that existed before in the same way.
Like the previous generation, you had to, like, move to L.A.
and you had to maybe go to film school or you had to work on movies and you had to, like, work
your way up.
And it felt like in 94, the fucking ceiling just came off.
It's true.
That's definitely how it felt and how it was narrativeized.
If you listen to Tarantino talk about it, he's basically spent eight years in obscurity
trying to get stuff made.
Right.
And so that was a great story to tell in magazines about this guy who came out of nowhere to take over movies forever.
But that isn't really what happened.
I mean, he tried to get this 60-millimeter movie off the ground for years and years.
You're shooting it on the weekends just like Kevin Smith shot clerks, self-funding, trying to write his own ticket in that way.
And it took a really long time.
And it took him convincing people to give him money.
Like he talks about the story about getting like Richard Gladstein to give him money from live entertainment for reservoir dogs.
He worked really hard for a long time, dead broke, thinking he was going to fail.
And so there's this tension in the storytelling where you're like, wow, you could do it too.
But you also have to eat shit for a decade and maybe not succeed.
By the way, I completely identify it because like when I went to ESPN in 2001, I had the column.
And then it was like, oh, yeah, you were at the forefront of when the internet in sport.
And I was like, yeah, I ate shit from 93 to 2001.
and I was up my own and nobody read anything I did.
When you read the stuff about how long it took him to get,
even to get meetings with people, you know,
and you're just like, this guy's just going to work
and the video started talking to Roger Avery,
being like, oh man, I had this meeting two days ago with so-and-so.
Oh, all right, I got to go to work because there's two people at the counter.
And this is Pulp Fiction for, you know, the embryonic stages for seven years.
Yeah, and even one of the cool things about what he did was,
even though he was grinding to get into the industry for that long of amount of time,
he had his own artistic POV that he was unwilling to go away from.
Like he wasn't going to go write speed three, and maybe he would have if they had offered him.
But if he did.
He did do a revision on its pat.
Yeah.
But if, you know, it's like if they offered him, grab some money.
Yeah.
But if they offered him, like he was always just going to be, this is what I do.
And if you guys don't like it, you don't have to give me any.
money. And that's how he basically got the director gig on Reservoir Dogs, as he was like,
I'm not selling the script unless I get attached as the director. Yeah, as I recall, I think he was
pretty strategic about it, but the intention was always what you just said, because he did
ultimately sell true romance to, you know, Tony Scott and let Tony Scott make it. And he wanted him to
make it after they had met at some party. So, you know, natural-born killers, that's a very complicated
story about how much that movie was changed and how frustrated he was with what Oliver Stone did to it.
Good secret feud. Fun Google for the listeners out there, Oliver Stone v. Tarrant.
that he did.
But all of that is happening
in this 18-month window
after the success
of Reservoir Dogs at Sundance
and his intention is always
to be the writer-director.
Like that is the thing
he really wants to be doing.
I like thinking about
whether or not Quentin
could have happened
at any other time.
Like whether or not
this could have happened
at any other time in movie history.
And there's a lot of things
that contribute to that.
But I wonder whether or not
one of the reasons
why this is the perfect rewatchable,
but also why
we are so
obsessed with them, but it's so much of our kind of generation of growing up is that he is the end
product of movies being available in people's homes to watch over and over and over again.
Like he is the end product of movies becoming not just like, I'm going to the theater to see a
movie this weekend, but it is my obsession. I am obsessed with this movie. I have thought about
this movie because I've watched it 15, 20 times, and now I have theories about this movie.
And now I have an idea about how I would subvert this kind of movie if I was watching it.
And yeah, tons of people made films and they commented on other films and tons of people, like, became obsessed with, you know, the big sleep and made movies that sort of played around with detective, like, tropes.
But Tarantino's working at this video store.
All he does all day is talk about movies.
All he does all day is think about movies.
He just watches movies all the time.
When Harvey Kytel met him and he was like, are you, do you know drug dealers?
Do you know bank robbers?
He's like, no, I just watch movies.
You know, it's like this idea that, but this is all.
Only like five years old.
Like mid-80s is when there's video stores, basically, right?
Yeah, but then you got to go into the three-channel air in the 70s.
Sure.
And then the four local channels.
But you're not in control of that.
But yeah, you're just when movies come up, you're like, I love this movie.
And then that moves the cable in the early 80s, which I'm sure it was a big impact.
I was just going to say, this is also a guy who has watched more television than anybody I've ever met.
Yeah.
And who also was in movie theaters nonstop from the age of seven through 25.
Yeah.
He's working in porn theaters when he's 16.
So it is that for sure.
And there is that energy you can feel that energy of a guy telling you like,
have you seen this movie?
Have you seen this movie?
Have you seen this movie?
Yeah.
But also, that also doesn't really exist while I watch the movie.
Like, while I watch the movie, like, I'm looking at the Quentin Tarantino Wiki,
and it's just like an entire resource of every reference made in this movie.
Yeah.
And there's hundreds, just in Pulp Fiction.
And some of them you pick up on when you're watching and some of them you don't.
But I don't feel that that's the point of the movie when I'm watching it.
The point of the movie is the story and the ride of the movie.
No, because it's authentic to him.
And he's able to, like, transmogrified in a way that a lot of directors can't.
Like, I talked about this with that movie Maxine that came out earlier this summer, which, like, I like the movie, but the movie is a series of reference points.
And if you know the reference points, it's a better movie experience.
And if you don't, the movie might be a bit of a head scratcher to you.
Yeah.
And if you don't get the reference points in Pulp Fiction, it doesn't matter.
Yeah.
No.
I mean, I'll talk about it later, but I watch with my son.
And he's not going to get Fonzie jokes and stuff like that.
but he was riveted the whole time.
I was thinking about some of the great directors we've had in the last 50 years.
One of the reasons they succeeded was this is something they wanted to do,
like from the gecko, like Spielberg.
You know, he's the moment he had a camera, we were off.
PTA grows up in the valley and it's just like he decides, what was he 16?
This is what I'm doing.
And he's just studying it and trying to figure out what his style is.
And I don't think it's a lot different than writing
where when you're a young writer
and you're trying to figure out where your style is,
you're just grabbing from eight, nine, ten people.
And you're like, oh, I like this.
I'll take this.
Oh, I like when that person did this.
And eventually whatever that is becomes your style.
And I think Tarantino is the best version of that
because he probably saw the most movies.
He loved movies the most.
And just he had this data bank in his head of like,
I love this.
I love in that.
And mostly obscure movies
or movies that weren't like major.
It wasn't like he's like,
I love the scene in Jaws,
even though there is a thing
that's kind of cribs from Jaws.
He does both, right?
Yeah.
Like he does super pop,
obvious things,
and then also he does things
that are the most obscure martial arts film
that you'd never seen.
Even when the internet came,
really, in the 2000s,
and you learn more about this,
we're like,
oh, I didn't realize that was from this.
And that way,
but, you know, he just,
he was this huge data bank,
but also incredibly creative.
Yeah.
and was able to see this piece of turf
that only he could see.
And he was like, there's a type of movie like this
that doesn't exist right now,
and I think I can do it.
There's dialogue pieces to it.
Why can't bad guys kind of talk like normal people?
Why can't I swerve this way?
Why can't I make people think,
oh, this is a part about a boxer?
No, actually, we're going this way.
And it's just the strategy he put into this movie
was so smart.
Well, the whole Jules and Vincent plot is basically, I've read him talk about this in like
film comment or something right when the movie came out where it's like, Jules and Vincent is the first
10 minutes of an action movie from the 80s or 90s. Hitman kick in the door.
Take the case, shoot the guys.
And then this credits roll.
And then it's the next thing is everybody reacting to that and the chase for Jules and Vincent
or Jules and Vincent doing whatever.
He's like, fuck all that.
I want to say what happens the second they walk out the door?
what happens to their morning,
what happens if something goes wrong,
how would you get,
and everything is what would happen,
what would happen, what would happen.
999 people out of 1,000,
that's a bad movie.
There's a reason why all the action movies
go to the credits
and then it's a big chase
to find Jules and Vincent.
It's not like, hey, do Jules and Vincent get food?
Do Jules and Vincent fuck somebody up
in the back of their car
and then have to wash it down
and who would help them?
How would they find that?
Yeah, how do you clean up a body?
after you shot the guy's head off.
He was interested in that.
His, like, quintessential L.A.ness
and his rooted in, like, the specificity of the valley
and of, like, the surrounding areas of L.A.
that, like, he's just, like,
I am going to draw, like, all this authenticity
out of, like, this lightly fictionalized,
stylized version of L.A.
makes it so that you're just, like,
I feel like I am in a fantasy world,
even though it's fucking too Luca Lake.
It's so smart the way he did it.
Yeah, I was thinking about it last night.
So it's a movie that's set in the 90s,
feels like the 70s, looks like the 50s, is timeless.
Like, that's a very difficult thing to pull off.
Yeah, we have an unanswerable question.
What year exactly is this movie?
And there's like four options.
Yeah, it's so strange.
I mean, I think that part of the purpose,
like part of the strategy of the movie
is that it is meant to break your expectation.
Well, especially the linear structure was the biggest thing.
Like watching with my son last night,
he was just like, there was a couple times
where he's like, what's coming out?
Is it just a bunch of scenes?
I'm like, just hold tight.
It's funny because as many times as I've seen it,
I still will get a little confused once in a while.
I'll be like, so we went,
just in the chronology of things,
because you get so caught up in the individual stories.
And I'm just tracing,
I have a whole thing about Vincent and the character of Vincent,
like what Vincent goes through in the movie.
It's a lot, and it's over a very short period of time.
Figuring out which day is Wednesday and which day is Thursday.
It's also like people are doing nighttime shit in the morning.
So it's like you're always,
You're always a little bit on the edge of your seat with this movie, even if what's on screen isn't a tense thing.
Because you're like, wait, why are they eating burgers at 7.30 in the morning?
Is it 7.30?
Like, you're always asking yourself, like, what's going on?
And it just makes you so engaged.
You're never like, yeah, I know.
They're going to do this.
And then that happens.
You're always like, wait a second.
What?
But that's a huge point.
So I had two quotes here.
One is from Cisco in the first podcast ever in 1995.
the most influential movies in Hollywood history
are always the surprises.
And he said,
Psycho, Bonnie, and Clyde, Clockwork Orange,
the ones basically disruptors,
which is a big thing when you talk about tech,
talk about sports, anybody.
The people we remember are the ones that are like,
what about this?
And they just flip it.
What if we took some walks?
Tarantino said in 1992,
in the 80s,
the studios could predict what worked and what didn't.
And that's what the 80s were,
one movie you'd already seen after.
another, which is true. Suddenly, that's not working anymore. When the audience is fed up with the
standard stuff and crying out for something different is when exciting things happen in Hollywood,
it made me almost think like where we are in 2024. It's very similar. I mean, he has talked
about this recently, just that we're in an era that feels closer to the 80s movie-wise.
Yeah, without the cocaine, so it's even less fun. We don't have Don Simpson.
Don Simpson, uh, whatever. Um, is this the best rags?
to Rich's
director story ever for you?
I was trying to think of,
is there a better
out of nowhere than this?
Spike Lee is a really good one.
And Spike is really influential
on Quentin,
and they have kind of an interesting
history over time
where they've kind of gotten
into it over the years.
But early on,
they were,
they're kind of paired
because similarly,
Spike is like,
you know,
his father's a musician,
but he's not like,
doesn't have huge access to power.
And he does actually make
his black and white
independent movie,
the movie that Quentin didn't get to make.
She's got to have it.
And she's got to have it.
It's also a really, along with like sex class and videotape and slacker and a couple of other movies, they set up the watershed moment that leads to dogs and Pulp Fiction.
And I think Spike is a good one.
And, you know, you mentioned Orson Wells too.
And then so you think about Orson Wells and Spike Lee and Quentin Tarantino and Alfred Hitchcock, too, upsetting expectations with, you know, a psycho.
What are those movies have in common?
those are directors who put themselves in their own movies
who are incredible at marketing
and telling their own story publicly.
So that's what I had in this ragsteris thing.
And I had Spike down there.
I do feel like Spike is super important to this Tarantino arc
because Spike's the first guy who sells himself as a character.
His story became part of the movies.
And I just don't feel like that was, like Spielberg wasn't like,
oh, this guy did duel in Jaws.
And now he's on five talk shows.
and now he's doing a Nike commercial.
Like he was just in the 80s
something shifted.
I think Spike,
him doing the Michael Jordan commercials
was a huge deal.
So far ahead of it.
Him being on posters with Michael Jordan
and he felt like a celebrity as a director.
He created an alter ego.
It was like a way to kind of offload
the like branding,
forward facing stuff was to put it on Mars Blackman.
And then it's like he can be,
he can be like one of the great filmmakers
of my lifetime in the background almost.
But like he can do all the like
iconoclastic kind of like
forward-facing stuff.
And start shit and talk about disrupting.
I wouldn't underestimate Woody Allen too,
just because regardless of whatever you think about Woody Allen right now,
the way that he injected his sensibility into a movie culture,
and you could never take it out after that,
like the incredible influence,
and obviously he also starred in many of his own movies.
Yeah.
He also reset the feeling of what a movie could be.
We're like, when you look at Annie Hall,
like, there's a lot of rule breaking going on in that movie
where, like, what you expect is supposed to happen
or the way that you'd see like a split screen
or two characters were talking to their therapist,
or there's some complicated things that are happening there.
You can feel even the influence of that.
I don't know if Woody Allen was rags to riches per se,
but it's a very similar situation.
No, because he had that whole, like, 60s comedy background.
It's the Spike one, Spike had the, even though he was, like, out of nowhere,
but he also had the conventional, you know,
he went to film school.
He checked, like, it makes sense.
The Tarantino thing, working in a video store for five years
and basically being the annoying guy who's like,
I have the script.
Like, these guys don't make it, what?
99,999 out of 100,000 times.
But it was a particular time in American culture
you can see the same thing happening with alternative music
where it was just like, I don't know, man.
Like this dude who was down the bar for me last month
is now on Letterman.
You know, like that's crazy.
Well, you have, I remember in the moment
like reading about it.
And we're going to talk later about just the whole culture
that was in place at this point.
But this was the first one where I was like,
is this guy a real person?
It almost felt made up.
He was a plant.
He was an industry plant.
This guy's name is,
this guy's name is Quentin Tarantino.
That's his name.
And he's in the movie and it's the guy who was,
I remember reservoir dogs.
I didn't sit in the theater.
I rented it.
But it was like,
oh yeah, that guy?
And now he's going to be our next savior for movies.
His name's Quentin Tarantino.
He worked in a video store for five years.
To me and Sean,
we were like,
Yes.
Yeah.
That makes sense.
Great name.
I'm into it.
But then you think back to the momentum of reservoir dogs, which, and we did the
Reservoir Dogs pod, I don't know, four or five years ago, but that blockbuster really helped
that one.
Blockbuster and cable.
And so that's pushing momentum toward him.
Khan wins.
There's a Travolta comeback, and we're at the point, and we're going to talk about Travolta
later, but there's a, everyone loved Travolta.
And it was like, oh man, he might have re-energized Travolta.
Bruce Willis is in it.
You have the self-promoter hot director with a great story that could be told in 19 magazine features.
Also, incredible talker.
Then you have the start of Miramax.
In incredible talker interview.
Like, you can go on talk shows.
He can go on Charlie Rose for an hour to be interesting.
We have the start of Miramax.
We have Indies, which basically from sex lies and videotapes, Sundance on.
Now that's becoming a story.
And you have Tribolta.
It honestly was like a cultural tsunami.
it felt like the biggest thing in the world
when it was coming out.
Shawshank comes out the same day.
It's like, it's over here.
Yeah, yeah.
It's a Tim Roberts, Morgan Freeman,
like a big movie,
and it just got blown out of the water by it.
Yeah. So...
I think I had seen Pulp like two or three times
in the movie theater by the time.
I saw Shawshank.
Yeah, it's true.
I was like, I don't have time for this shit.
I have to go see Pulpachshank again.
I definitely saw Shashank maybe three weeks later
only because my dad was like,
you got to see Shoshank in theaters.
But I think the big...
thing about all this is this ties into this generation X mid-90s where there was a lot of like
people at parties who just felt like they could do oh I could do that I could be the lead singer
of a band I could be I could have written Generation Act the Douglas Copeland book I could have written
that oh I could have made that movie and there was a lot of that and tarantino became the guy who
actually emerged and he was the oh I could do that and it was like the best version ever of
because he could do it.
You know what's so funny about that, too?
And I recognize that,
and you can tell even just, like, reading about these times
that there was this sense of, like,
anyone can have it,
and there was also a lot of bitterness about that, too,
like a cynical kind of quality about that.
We didn't have the internet yet,
so we had way more time to just be mad about stuff.
But being in the generation behind,
I had the, I mean, I'm in the position I'm in,
in my life right now,
because I really grew up to, like,
venerate these people.
Like, my attitude was not, like,
I want to be Quentin Tarantino
because that is an impossibility to me.
So, like, maybe I took the wrong lesson.
From this, you know, where like the lesson could have been for aspiring young filmmakers,
try it.
Like, he did it.
Maybe you could do it too.
Spike Lee did it.
Maybe you could do it too.
But in my head, I could never get out of my own headless, like, this guy's seen every
fucking movie.
And he knows how to draw reference to it without beating you over the head with it.
Like, I'm still, I still haven't seen all the movies that are referenced in Pulpiction.
And I do this for a living.
Right.
So there was something kind of like Titanic, like overwhelming about what the accomplishment
felt like to me as a young person that was inspiring, but maybe not in the way that it would have
been for people who are more embittered at the time who were around his age.
The thing is, I took similarly, like, inspiration from this whole experience of the early
90s, obviously. And it was definitely more that, like, there was just, like, basically one thing
I was good at. And I was like, I guess I'm just going to do that. And I know that I might not get
paid for it ever. It's just like, I'm ready to shoot. I know it was ready. And it was just like,
I'm just going to do this. And I don't know how to.
get successful at it. And I may not ever be successful at it. But, you know, I worked in record
stores when I first started writing. Like, I think that, like, there was an element to it where you were
just like, it wasn't like bet on yourself, but it was just like, actually, it was a rejection of a lot
of like what you were seeing on screens or what you were listening to or what you were reading.
You were like, I want to write the thing that I would read. You know, I want to make the movie that I
want to see that none of these other motherfuckers are making. Like, I want to go into a dark room and
see my shit up on the screen.
But there was also a lot less awareness back then
of what other people thought of stuff,
which we've talked about in other pods.
Just talking about this.
Yeah, like there's some movie.
Like, I love the Sleep with Me,
the top gun scene that Tarantino's in
when he talks about how they're actually gay.
And I didn't know if anybody else had even seen that.
Like, nobody saw that movie.
And so if any other person was like,
oh, it's like that Terranite,
I'd be like, you saw that?
Yeah.
But, you know, 10 years later,
the internet, you kind of know what people have
seen and consumed. That's why I went to the
internet for this, because, you know, when I was 12,
I don't think I had a single friend who saw this movie
or wanted to talk to me about it. When I was like 14, 15,
16, you know, Jackie Brown's coming out, he's really
famous, he's won an Oscar, like, it's a little different. And then
when Kill Bill came out, it was totally different. It was like...
Yeah. This is a blockbuster film. This is a huge movie.
But I, like,
kind of retreated into myself
with this stuff. I was like, this is my hobby.
This is the thing that I care about that's mine
and it's kind of a secret. And
it takes, like, I mean, I've
told stories before about, like, meeting Chris and New
York and how, like, huge that was for me because he was like, yeah, I, too, would like to talk to you
about Gladiator. I am also obsessed with Gladiator and, like, watching the Raptors. You know what I mean?
Like, I didn't have a ton of people in my life in my adult life even. You have to, like,
accumulate those people and find them who get your references. And he was, like, his movies were a version.
They were like a guidebook and also, like, a pat on the back. They were like, try it. Check it out.
Look at all this cool stuff. Yeah, I had Joe House with barbecue basketball and movies.
We're going to take a break, and then we got a lot more to hit here.
This episode is brought to by Pure Michigan.
In Grand Rapids, every moment feels like a scene worth replaying,
every riverside stroll, every slow afternoon sipping small batch brews,
every guitar riff drifting out of the city's brand new amphitheater.
This is a place where everything feels cinematic.
Like you've stepped into a highlight reel that's yours to explore.
Ranked as the number one city on the rise from LinkedIn,
Grand Rapids invites you to find a rhythm all your own.
Season after season in Pure Michigan.
find your season at experience gr.com.
This episode is brought to you by McDonald's.
Right now at McDonald's,
you can get great deals all day with McValue.
Jumpstart your day with the under $3
menu featuring a sausage McMuffin
for just $1.50.
Or grab the perfect lunch
with the McDouble for just $250.
Honestly, nothing pairs with a movie marathon
like a McDouble in hand.
Get even more value with McValue.
Only McDonald's.
Limited time only.
Prices and participation may vary.
Prices may be higher for delivery.
All right, we talked about the first podcast ever,
Siskel and Ebert, the Tarantino Generation.
Some of the quotes from this,
it's only 16 minutes.
I would encourage people to watch it.
Which also included on the Blu-ray.
Right.
Pulp Fiction, if you want to watch it.
Even Martin Scorsese and Francis Coppola had warm-up periods.
That's a quote.
You'd have to go back to Orson-Wells, dot, dot, dot.
on this show we'll be asking,
is there a danger here too much too soon?
They're already worried about what's going to happen to Tarantino
because he's out there having a good time.
Concern trolling. That's something we find in a lot of podcasting.
Siskel throws Hitchcock out there.
Siskel says, like David Mamet in the American theater a decade ago,
like something has shifted.
This new voice has come in.
That's like the chainsaw in the hot tub.
And then Siskel has two quotes that I thought were great.
Sorry, Raj.
Cisco, I felt like Cisco kind of won the first podcast ever.
Roger and I have been witness to the ossification of American movies with their brittle formulas.
Pulp Fiction is a refreshing mindbreaker.
Great job, Gene.
And then audience are saying they'd rather spend time with these creeps than with the boring straight people that occupy most American films.
See, that's the Cisco and Ebert morality that creeps into a lot of those episodes.
That's the one thing with them where I'm like, they're creeps?
Like, you know, we love these characters, you know?
Did this start the anti-hero stuff?
Because I think it probably goes back to the godfather,
but you think, like, this movie comes out in 94.
We get Tony Soprano.
We get Stone Cold Steve Austin.
We get Vic Mackie.
We get Schillinger and Beecher.
All that stuff comes in the late 90s,
and I wonder, like, the Jules and Vincent kind of start this.
I mean, this is probably the most influential movie or storytelling
that came out of, like, that day.
decade.
I had that question written down.
But I think that people can take lots of different lessons from it.
And honestly, like, one of the really mind-bending things about watching it this time for the pod is take, I took totally different things from this movie this time around than I did when I was 16 and I did when I was 25 and I did when I was 32.
You're like, yeah, Fabian, good character.
I see it this time.
I
you know
and I so yeah
I think that
it definitely had something to do
with audiences being open
to watching their hero
quote unquote
not do very heroic things
I think
I definitely don't think
it didn't like invented anything
I think it's a riff on it for sure
but it definitely paved the way
for
the like total picture of Tony Soprano
you know the idea that you would see him
in non-gangster moments
And also how funny the Sopranos was.
That's how Van and I was talk about it.
That might have been the funniest HBO show,
even though it was the meanest and the most violent
and in a lot of ways the worst.
I think that's important to this too,
because the reputation that this movie has
is as like a culture shift in classic.
But it's a comedy.
It's clearly just a comedy.
It's an action comedy or a gangster comedy or whatever,
but it's meant to be super funny.
Is that the one with the shit on her face?
It's one of the best lines of the land is.
All right, things pulp fiction created
popularized or revived
Quinn Tarantino
just covered him
crackling dialogue for action movies
we had
we had Shane Black
we had 48 hours
yeah like he's dipping in the stuff that worked
but he's like why don't more people do this
and just goes full scale
you're right he ramps it up
yeah he ramps it up
John Chavolto will get to him
that was a reviving
new our action thrillers
this were in the golden era right here
this is where in last seduction
and just all this shit got out
I think dogs actually weirdly
like maybe start is the gasoline
maybe this turns the engine over
kind of thing
so that's a popular as
Sam Jackson
we'll talk about him later
but he had never let a movie like this
Uma Thurman
who was in Johnny Be Good
with Anthony Muggerald
Robert Danny Jr.
And was in dangerous liaisons
and everybody liked
her and she she had a next big thing
kind of stretched there
and then it happened and then this movie
I think boom
how a lot of thoughts
the Uma
QT combo
creates that
we go back to the wall with that one a few times
con as a way to
break
culture
I don't remember it happening
I always felt like it was this artsy
fartsy film festival and fans
in France.
And this was the first time I remember.
Him flipping the bird as he's like walking up on stage to get the Pandora.
I don't remember ever caring who won that film festival before.
But when knowing about this, it was like, oh, shit, that movie with all those people in it and the guy from Reservoir Dogs and now it's going to be a thing and Merrimax.
I do think it helps with the narrative.
I also think it's notable that the person who gave him the Pomodor who was ahead of the jury that year was Clint Eastwood.
Yeah.
You know, it's not always an American actor or director that's in that spot.
You know, it's usually not.
A lot of them, you know, not a ton of American films have won the Pompore.
He tells Tarantino, one word of advice.
Just go to 4.30 and then call quits.
One or two takes back.
He loved it.
He loved this movie.
Gimps?
I think definitely.
Revitalized?
Created and popularized.
Okay.
Oh, I think Gimps were around.
Gimps around.
Okay, popularized.
Yeah.
Gimps were a problem.
There's some gimps in the background of cruising.
Bing Rames?
Yeah.
Definitely.
Mix tape movie soundtracks.
This and Dazed, yeah.
Well, Dazed is more of a one genre thing, but yeah.
Can I make a point about that?
Yeah.
We have a whole movie soundtracks section.
It's not quite about soundtracks,
but it's representative of like the blenderization of the movie in general,
which is like, I don't know that it introduced this,
but hip-hop sampling, Beastie Boys,
Bex O'Dole,
David Foster Wallace novels
You know
Meta, like postmodern fiction
Like all of this stuff is all happening
Yeah
In 1993 to 1997
Blurring like the ironic non-ironic
You know like O'Neil Diamond's actually cool
Like you know for five
Long time people were like
That's the corneest shit ever
And just like smashing all the stuff you like together
Yeah
You know like BC boys rapping about Rod Carew
You know and you're like
Yeah that became the 90s
That's like when I started doing my column
I was like, well, I'm just putting all the things I like in it
because I've seen other people do it.
You're another example of that, exactly.
Sports and movies, why not?
And this is the perfect movie for that.
But nobody was thinking that way.
I don't think completely until this movie.
It felt like a generation of kids where it's on TV and music.
And they were just like, I'll take the music I like over here.
And the music I like over here.
And the soundtrack does that too, is the reason I bring it up.
Miramax,
unequivocal before and after with Miramax.
This was the one that I think made it Miramax, this movie.
Definitely.
Tri-Star pictures turned it down because it was too demented.
Harvey jumped on it, read it on a script on an airplane.
This is also ostensibly a Disney movie.
First film they fully financed.
Things Pulp Fiction officially cemented.
Bruce Willis.
God, I needed this one.
This is coming out of Die Hard, Die Hard, too.
And then like some...
He's like the Hudson Hawk era.
Hudson Hawk, the bonfire of the vanities,
Mortal Thoughts.
It was like, are you just a diehard guy
or is there more here?
You get the impression that he knew
and that's why you did this.
Yeah.
Sean, you're going to hate this.
The Oscars.
It revite a lot.
Like, it cemented the Oscars.
I think it was the best Oscars ever.
David Letterman hosting,
Pulp Fiction, Shawshank, Gump,
Tarantino.
Great arguments.
Do you have an argument?
Do you have one in your mind
that you think of as the best?
We've never had a better one.
I'd have to.
to think about that.
People cared the most.
That's a hard one.
The audience was the biggest.
I mean, I haven't seen every Oscars.
We're actually arguing about this stuff in a row.
We weren't arguing about the shit in 1982.
I don't understand how, like, the Oscars in which Forrest Gump beats Pulp Fiction and Shawshank Redemption is the best Oscars ever.
There's just, that's not, that's insane.
Most famous one.
Okay.
Made him the maddest.
Yeah.
On that scale, I guess.
It started the whole, what the Oscars became.
Which before that, it was like, oh, man, he should have won.
You weren't mad about it.
This is like, we're heading toward the internet.
We have way more movie awareness.
And in 1994, me knowing nothing, I'm like, I can't fucking believe Sam Jackson didn't win.
This makes me so mad.
This was, like, to me, like, almost like an NBA MVP going the wrong way.
That was the first time I remember feeling that way about movies.
I was never like, oh, man, I can't believe if Hopkins won.
Like, I just didn't care.
Is Forest Gump like Westbrook?
Is it Derek Rose?
What is it?
But we all like Forrest Gump.
I do, but, you know, relatively speaking.
I still don't know who should have won best movie.
I think Shawshank was a great movie.
I don't know.
It's tough.
It's not tough for me.
I think it's Pulp Fiction.
Yeah, it's not.
Yeah, it probably is.
Shashank's really good.
I like Forrest Gump.
I would have Forrest Gump third.
I think Shawshank.
I think Shawshank's really great.
Pulpiction is a generation-defining, culture, moving movie.
It is the reason the Oscars exist is to recognize in the moment.
But that never happens with the Oscars.
I agree.
It's why I complain about it all the time.
The intention is to identify
Pulp Fiction as a movie that matters.
More cementing.
The culture of independent movies,
I think, officially rounded in a shape
from this point.
It was a five-year...
It was a five-year...
It's to sort of gesture
towards it being, like,
cool indie, but actually have it be...
How can we sell this to you?
One of the misnomer's of this movie
is that it's not an independent movie.
It had an eight and a half million dollar budget.
Tarantino has paid $900,000 to write and direct it.
It got Bruce Willis and it got Harvey Keitel and Chibolta and Walking as a cameo and
Uma Thurman.
These were all real stars.
Like, Clerks was an independent movie.
Yeah, yeah.
That was like, my buddy's going to play Dante.
It more resembles what you often see as independent movies now, where you're like a movie
made by Focus for $8 million, but it has Russell Crow in it.
You know, you're like, that's not really an independent movie.
It cemented the Watkinsance.
which had been brewing for a couple years there.
True romance helped.
The S&L guest hosting stuff was great.
And then this movie and we're off.
And we're also off with the Keitel Sons.
That is like...
I would say that that had actually fully happened by then.
Between Reservoir Dogs and the piano.
I feel like the piano was the thing.
The piano, but then this was the cherry on the Sunday
because Winston Wolf became, you know.
We'll talk about him.
An icon.
Yeah.
Tarantino did talk a lot
about how part of what helped
with all of this stuff
is that the piano
made Keitel famous overseas
because that movie was huge in Europe.
And so because it was so popular in Europe,
that helped,
it was another domino that fell
in Reservoir Dogs of Pulp Fiction's favor.
You know why?
Because he fucking dropped some gonad on it.
Yeah.
Fucking broke it out.
Yeah, not the first time.
Generation X.
Cemented Generation.
As a card-carrying member and first ballot,
Generation X-Rexer.
Like a very representative
piece of Generation X culture?
That's not the point.
Okay.
We needed this one.
We did, yeah.
It was a lot of, like, Generation X movies
that we love, but they didn't totally hit,
like, singles, reality bites, slacker,
you kind of bottle rocket, all these movies that,
like, I love that movie.
But this one was like, oh, this came out of our,
our world from somebody who understands us and blew it out.
It's the movie that is referenced by the 60-year-old
Time magazine columnist when referring to the generation
beneath them. Yes. And then the
Tarantino era was the last cementing. I was going to say
the one other thing, kind of piggybacking off what Sean
said about the pastiche nature of art at that time,
is
this movie really introduces this almost like nonlinear
nostalgia, which you see very much
in like swingers, kind of a couple years
later, but like 50s diners,
but 70s,
kung fu movies and black exploitation
movies, but 80s
like this and, you know,
Jungle Boogie. Yeah, it's like, I think that the idea
that for the same, in the same way that you're like,
you can have surf music and funk music
and spaghetti western soundtrack next to each other,
you could also kind of be like,
it's 50s this way, but it's
early 60s this way, and then it's
80s this way.
Yeah, and turning kits into cool.
Yeah.
Like, John Travolta doing the Batman dance in a 50s diner, and that being the coolest scene
of the year.
I was like, how did that happen?
It's crazy.
Like, it's inexplicable that that works.
Yeah.
And it works.
Biggest movie TV inspirations for Tarantino.
I made a list.
So the things that inspired him.
That influenced this movie in some way.
Okay.
Deliverance.
The male rape out of nowhere.
No doubt.
Assault on Precinct 13, our Guy Carpenter, doubling back to help your enemy.
Jean-Luc Goddard, a random out-of-nowhere dancing.
The deer hunter, Christopher Walking, just wearing a military uniform.
Psycho, Marcellus crosses the street and sees Butch, the bodyguard, Sunny Chiba, Ezekiel 2517.
Blowout.
John Travolta.
Tarantino's favorite Travolta performance
and the one that made him say,
I still believe.
I'm holding my stock.
Tarantino had a beach condo on Travolta Island
when the thing had been hit by a tsunami
and a hurricane.
The story that he tells is Travolta tells
about their first meeting is amazing.
You want to do that now?
The Hollywood apartment.
I have a Troubleca spot.
Well, wait.
Breathless with Richard Gear,
a huge Tarantino.
He loves that movie.
By the way, my mom's single favorite movie,
You want to know how weird my mom is.
Speaking of pastiche, that's a kind of a movie of pastiche, too.
Rio Bravo, male friendship.
48 hours.
Bantor between two guys doing stuff that's not normal.
Shaft, Jules.
Bad motherfucker.
Jules.
The power of the 1950s and the influence on the people that came after.
That's the diner.
Television, Speed Racer, Clutch Cargo, Brady Bunch,
Church family, Avengers, Three Stooges, Flintstones, Green Acres, I spy, Kung Fu, and Happy Days.
And then the big thing he said was these things that he liked, he wanted to flip and turn it into, which goes back to the deliverance thing, where it's like, oh, I think this is happening.
And all of a sudden we're very right.
And he said, if you're hip to movies, you're watching the boxing movie, body and soul.
And suddenly the characters turn a corner and they're in the middle of deliverance.
and you're like, what, how did I get in deliverance?
I was in body and soul.
What's going on here?
That's how his brain works, really smart.
I mean, there's a few more of those.
It's worth mentioning Black Sabbath,
which is like the horror movie anthology
that he was inspired by to put the three stories together.
Yeah, there's a reference to it.
What else would you put in there, though, then?
Sam Peck and Paw, Wild Bunch.
Like, the energy and the first five minutes of the movie
where you're like, whoa, and the freeze frame,
like, that's just the direct lift of William Holden
and the final freeze frame and Wildbunch.
I think
I mean the production company
A Band Apart is named after
the French title Band of Outiders
But it's a Band of Part
And so like a lot of Gerds
Cool and the feel of that
Of those films and also the ingenuity of those films
I think translates over
Yeah Corman exploitation movies
Like biker movies are all over this movie
You know like the chopper and easy rider
Is a huge one
Cassavetes
I mean he's talked about Cassavetes
It being influential on like
the Jules Vincent talking and talking and talking and why can't they just walk over there and
keep talking instead of knocking on the door.
It's like that kind of like, why can't we just, what are these fucking rules like if they're
not made to be broken?
Like, why do we have like, why three-act structure and why this and why that?
And kiss me deadly with the briefcase.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah.
So I want to dive into late 94, early 95 because I feel like this is part of the mythology
of the movie because it's basically the exact point.
when becoming obsessed with a movie
or basically anything
kind of changes
because you have,
and I wasn't even on the internet
until 96,
but you have the early stages
of message boards
and movie internet culture,
which you can see
in the first podcast ever
with Siskel Niebert,
they show websites.
Yeah.
And it's like, look at this,
Tarantino.
Is any cool, like, up by this point?
I don't think so.
I think it's a little early.
There's some filmography stuff.
I wish I had known about this.
Man,
I just didn't have one person
told me this existed.
I was all over it.
You could go on
and just be like,
What is everything Tarantino's done?
I've said this before,
but I used to download like 12 second clips from reservoir dogs
because I couldn't get my hands on it.
So I would just download like little moments
of guys saying lines of dialogue and quick time format
and just keep them.
And they would take up all the hard drive space
on my mom's computer.
I just had a book.
My dad gave me by this writer David Thompson.
It was called a biographical dictionary of film.
Yeah.
And so it would be like, you know, Coppola.
And then at the bottom of the Coppola biography entry,
which is just like a small Wikipedia entry
would be his filmography
and I would just kind of go through with pencil
and be like, okay, got to see that, saw that,
see that, you know, like,
that was the way you would have to find out
about this stuff.
There's long form movie journalism
is probably at a peak here
because you have Vanity Fair,
the New Yorker,
you've premier doing it every month,
you have Rolling Stone,
still throwing a fastball.
Is movie line going?
You have movie line.
You've New York Magazine.
You have the last days of Playboy.
And I think Tarantino in 94 might have had a feature in every one of them.
It's just like there was this whole circuit that you did.
And I read all that shit.
Cisco and Uber are in their primes.
Goldman's books are a thing at this point.
Plus he's got the New York magazine column.
Generation X, we just had a lot of spare time.
My things to do.
Like playing entire NHL-94 season on Sega.
We had jobs that didn't maybe require all of our attention.
Just a lot of killing time or just like,
yeah. You also
have the children in the 70s
who have now grown up on movies
and Pauline Kale books and
have studied stuff and there's
ways to just rent movies over and over again.
That's like a seven-year
tale plus cable TV.
And you also have the colleges
and film schools blowing up. Like I took a
two movie classes
in college at Holy Cross, which wasn't
exactly like USC film school.
But there was a sense of like
some sort of
people levitating above whatever the last 30, 40 years of movies
and trying to figure out commonalities and structure and themes.
So you have that.
And then, you know, I just feel like this podcast we do now,
the roots of it are like in the mid-90s.
It's the first time people really just dove into shit like this and wherever.
Like think about Kosterman if we'd all known each other
and we were just all sitting in a bar.
We probably would have argued about some scene in Pulp Fiction for like two hours.
I believe that.
Were people doing that in like
1982?
I don't know.
I think that the video store
conversations that Clinton and Roger
and all of those guys were having
are kind of like
a representation of that.
Yeah, and there are extensions
of record store arguments, you know.
Do you feel like there's
this, could you say
this was the dawning of like the deep dive era?
Because the OJ trials in 94.
Like when people caring
about something, you're just like,
oh, now I can try to grab
every piece of this.
I wonder whether or not
there's some.
something to, you know, with the sort of matriculation of underground culture and the mainstream
culture. So whether it's independent film, whether it's alternative rock becoming rock, whether it's
all these things. It's not like a pop artist, which is, this is not to dismiss pop artists,
but it's not like you're like, what you kind of see is what you get. Like there's like this
surface image, there's the music, and then you can be like, I can learn who this person is and
where they came from in a paragraph. When you kind of got into say, I don't know, Soundgarden.
you found out that there was a lot of stuff going on
contributing to like whatever made Soundgarden
what made them sound that way
they were basically like normal guys living somewhere
and like I wonder whether or not
there was an element of like there was something
to deep dive into and then also
all the things that kind of shaped that band
or shape this filmmaker or shape that writer
that was like a huge like
it took a lot of scholarship
so I kind of find out all the stuff that you wanted to find out
about the things that you were interested in
Yeah, I feel like I've lived through every phase of this.
And you could feel it in sports too.
I really cared about the NBA draft in the 80s.
And there was no draft guide.
There was no rankings to read.
I remember listening to sports radio show.
There was one show, W. Fan, and they did like a draft special.
And I was like, oh, my God.
And they're like, oh, and I think this guy would go forth.
I'm like, what are they doing?
How are they doing this?
By 94, that's kind of starting to become in place, right?
You could, whatever you wanted to deep dive, you could probably find it.
And I just don't feel like that was the case in the 80s.
I think that that like blendered recombinant culture made this possible too,
where like I wanted to know every sample on the Beastie Boys album in the same way.
And I would like look for it on the internet.
I remember there was a, you know, my family mostly went to Blockbuster,
but there was an independent video store in my neighborhood called ATR.
And an ATR member after Pulp Fiction came out, there was just a whole shelf that was, it came from Pulp Fiction.
And it was like all the movies that were referenced by some like, you know, endeavoring clerk who put, you know, Corbucci movies and Sunny Chiba martial arts movies and this is like stuff that you can't get a blockbuster and that you wouldn't understand was a part of the movie until you started reading and reading and listening to Quinn talk about it.
And there was like, that's the thing is like there was no money in it for that guy to do that.
Right.
You know what I mean?
Like to make the shelf that way?
But it's how you made that job fun.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, I had...
It was also making a podcast.
I mean, we do this all the time.
You know, we're doing it right now.
I do feel like this was the apex of pre-internet culture.
Because I listed all just all.
And I probably missed 20 things, but we had Seinfeld Friends and ER on the NBC Thursdays.
We did the OJ trial.
Grunge music apex and the hip-hop, early apex and rap and West Coast, East Coast.
Biggie Tupac's happening.
Generation X is happening.
The 94 Olympics, Tanya and Nancy, that happened.
MJ's retired and we're all like going to bars.
Like, this feels fishy.
What the fuck actually happened here?
And then he comes back.
Pulp Fiction.
I love the idea of you going to a bar in when MJ retires.
I'll have a mickelope.
I have a couple of things I want to get off my chest about this retired.
But that was the error.
It was like my uncle's next door neighbor is friends with David Stern.
and he said he got suspended.
It was like a lot of like,
I know this guy who knew this guy
who knew this guy.
Shawshank and Forrest Gump,
Letterman and Leno,
the 94 Oscars,
the Cowboys and the 49ers
just battling every year.
Mike Tyson's comeback.
There was just like all the shit going on
and you basically only had to talk about it
with your friends.
Yeah.
And also,
you didn't know where else to go.
I was thinking about the Vincent telling Jules
about Europe scene
and how like,
Jules is like,
no, you fucking,
you have the.
Mike, man. You just tell me all about it.
Yeah. And you really, I
did feel like a much more present
person who listened more because I was
like, yeah, man, I watched on YouTube.
Like I know about, I've never
been to Amsterdam, but I know about Amsterdam.
You know what I mean? It was like, oh shit,
my friend went to Prague. Let's hear about it.
Yeah. Just the unknown.
Yeah. Like, things you don't know
about and you're willing to be open to other
people describing them. You don't have to feel like, yeah, I already
heard about this before. It's a great point.
Was this the most ripped off movie in the past 30
I believe so.
I think it was too.
Not just
two days in the valley,
very bad things,
things to do in Denver when you're dead,
like the usual suspects even a little bit,
gross point blank,
eight heads and duffel bag,
go away the gun.
All those movies that were just like,
hey, let's try to do Pulp Fiction.
But pieces of it,
I think, got lifted
in all these ways.
I would say that there is a patter
to this movie,
the references
I mean, you can see this movie showing up in Gilmore Girls.
You can see this movie showing up in the first few Avengers movies that Joss Whedon wrote.
Like, you can see this movie still has its fingerprints in so many different things,
even if the people who wrote it didn't know that they were kind of referencing Pulp Fiction.
Yeah.
I think the attitude...
Fucking Deadpool.
Yeah.
You know, like...
Completely.
The attitude has been photocopied a million times, but I think the style has never been replicated.
There's nothing like it.
What do you think, Craig?
because you're basically been alive that entire time.
Yeah, I mean, I think that I was a film major in the mid-aughts,
and Pulp Fiction was like the almanac for every single kid
because it felt like Tarantino was so relatable
and his story was so, like, attainable,
that everybody was like, like, this guy's just like writing a movie
about like shit that he likes.
And so I think everybody has been trying to rip off,
specifically with dialogue where it's so unique.
And honestly, a lot of characters in this movie kind of speak the same.
which I think is interesting.
And I think that has been recreated a lot in movies now.
Let's take a break and then we've got to do this story
and then dive into a couple of the actors.
The playoffs are here and you can predict the action
all the way to the finals with Fandul Predicts.
Follow all the playoff dishes, swishes, wishes, wishes, and misses.
Predict the spread, the total points, and even the game winner.
Sign up for Fandual Predicts and predict it from the game.
couch. Offered by Fandual Prediction Markets LLC, a registered futures commission merchant.
18 plus. Trading derivatives involve significant risk and may not be suitable for all investors.
Manage your activity with our consumer protection tools.
This episode is brought to by the active cash credit card from Wells Fargo. That's a mouthful,
but that's because it packs a lot in. Earn unlimited 2% cash rewards on purchases with it,
big or small. So whether it's buying tickets to the game and grabbing a coffee,
It earns unlimited 2% cash rewards on purchases.
Say it with me, the active cash credit card from Wells Fargo,
be a 2%er.
Learn more at Wells Fargo.com forward slash active cash terms apply.
All right, quickly, the story behind Pulp Fiction,
Dana DeVito's company Jersey films signed QT and Avery.
They formed a company Bannaparte to a dev deal.
He got 900K to write and direct Pulp Fiction,
goes to Amsterdam, writes out the script,
lives there in like a one-beder,
room, hotel room or something for three months.
Hand writes everything.
And then somebody types it up.
He wanted to do a three-story trilogy.
Roger Avery wrote one part as a short, the Butch Marcellus part.
And then QT said, take the oldest chestnuts you've ever seen when it comes to crime
stories.
You know, the guy's got to go out with the big man's wife and don't touch her.
All that old forms of storytelling and then have them purposely run away.
And then he got two scenes.
from A or two ideas from
every were the miraculous missed shots and the
rear seat automobile killing
and then the notion of the crime world
cleaner inspired by a short
called curdled they saw
as a film festival and he actually
used the actress as Esmeralda
but nothing really
happened until Harvey
Keitel signed on
with his and he's like can I show my penis
and I know we don't need your penis for this one
we just need you so
they raised their first 1.5
that way.
There's some,
we don't need to dive into it too much,
but there's some interesting credit stuff
with him and Roger Avery
that has been well documented
that at some point
when they released the movie,
the studio, Tarantino,
somebody wanted to be written and directed
by Quentin Tarantino.
So they did the story by the both of them
and Avery definitely gave up
the co-writing piece.
The story got points
and it's been murky and both guys,
they do a podcast together.
Yeah, they're not like there's bad blood.
They're good, they're friends.
But Tarantino bought ideas from Rogers, what was reported at the time.
And he bought Pandemonium Raines, which was the Butch and Marcellus boxer idea.
And then there were other pieces of it.
But he says, you know, he rewrote all the monologues that appear in those sequences.
And, you know, he gets the screenplay credit.
The one, my favorite piece about the sort of making of the script is he wrote the script, obviously, in these basically like these school notebooks while he was living in Amsterdam.
And then didn't get it typed until he came back from California.
So there's this moment where he's, like, got Pulp Fiction in, like, 30 notebooks.
Yeah.
And I'm like, that's, like, the most valuable piece of luggage in the history of movies.
Right.
Because there's no backup for that.
That's within the suitcase.
Yeah.
That's the suitcase is the fucking, you know, his suitcase.
What if he still has those?
I don't know.
That's a good question for the archives.
And apparently his writing is like mine.
It's, like, basically unintelligible.
So he had some typewriter.
I'll tell yourself short, don't know.
Meaning your penmanship?
Yeah, penmanship. I don't think it's great.
So, promotion of pulp, besides con, one of the best trailers ever.
And I don't remember how many months before the movie came out, but the trailer was one of those.
Wait, what is this?
During an era when movie trailers really meant something.
Now it's like they get leaked and online and it's not the same experience.
If you're in the theater, you'd want to go to the theater because you'd want to see
the trailers. I don't, do you guys feel that way anymore?
No, I mean, I think that...
He and I are both, like, recovering addicts of trailers.
Yeah. I love them, but also feel like they
actively ruin movie experiences now.
Well, back then, that was how we...
A lot of times, we found out
if a movie was coming out.
Yeah. Was the trailer, or you read it to him.
Now I'm, like, actively, like, every time the Alien Romulus trailer
comes up, I'm like, I don't want to see it.
Yeah. My...
So I see a movie with my friends every year on my...
birthday. So for my 12th birthday, we saw the client, the John Grisham movie. And Paul played before
the client. And I think that's probably when I really fully became aware of the movie.
Yeah. And it was hard to not be like put that inside of me immediately. Like I need this now
because it was just such a great trailer. So yeah, those two things. Then you had the press push
was about as masterful as it's ever been. Like Tarantino's doing every interview. They're pushing
in the indie story hard, they're pushing Miramax,
and it's just press everywhere.
And then really savvy ad campaign,
and by the time it came out,
people were like, okay, I'm there.
Let's go.
The 12 rules of Pulp Fiction.
Oh, intriguing.
Foot massages are sexual proxy apps.
The holiest of holies?
Boxers don't have an old timers day.
You're just replacing Coach Finstock right now.
Don't fuck with another man's vehicle.
You just don't do it.
American names don't mean shit.
Uncomfortable silences are actually okay.
No milkshake is worth $5.
But any time of the day is a good time for pie.
Pigs are filthy animals unless it's Arnold from Green Acres.
Do you actually agree with that?
I thought you don't like bacon?
I'll eat bacon and pork
pork chops taste good
bacon's good
any Nimrod given
$1,500 should be shot
on general principle
even people who hate each other
can't allow their enemy to be raped
in a pawn shop basement
I've got to remember that one
stay cool at all times
and then the big one
anyone can become a good person
which I watched with my son last night
and his mind was blown
and then we had to pick up pieces of his skull
like he was Marvin in the backseat afterwards
and he's like, Dad,
if you had to say,
what is that movie about ultimately in one sentence?
We just had this conversation.
In one sentence, what would you say?
And I was like, you know what?
I think it's about
anyone can become a good person
would be my answer.
But I might be wrong.
I think you're right.
Second chances.
That's definitely the big theme of the movie
is redemption.
Redemption.
Redemption.
I think the twist I would put
on that is that this is a movie about movies saving their life because it's constructed out of
this guy's experience with movies throughout his life and with culture throughout his life.
He's trying to make this movie for most of his adult life. It's banging around his head.
And, you know, it's a kind of deeply spiritual film when you watch it. You know, it's like there's
so many references to divine intervention in God. People think the briefcase is God will get into it.
Pre-will versus fate.
Yeah.
And I think it's about, I think it's about that.
I think it's about, yeah, it's never too late to be saved and anything can save you.
And in some ways, like, I think that this film is about how film saved him.
Unless you're a Jets fan.
Jesus.
I think if you, I think there's a way to read the movie.
And maybe this interlocks with some of my Jets fandom.
There's like, if you choose to live righteously, you will survive.
And if you do not, you're Vincent,
your Zed, you're Brett,
anybody who trespasses gets killed.
Obey the laws of karma.
Yeah.
Big part of my life.
The redemption arcs,
Vincent rescues Mia,
Butch rescues Marcellus.
Jules rescues Ringo and himself.
Butch and Jules use second chances
to launch new lives.
Vincent continues his old life.
Until he doesn't.
But then he kind of does because of the structure of the film.
Right, right.
And Marcellus, I would assume, continues his old life and he'll be dead too at some point.
Not a lot of geriatric drug dealer kingpins.
Free will versus fate.
Not sure what happens to Winston Wolf.
Structure of the movie goes like this.
Prologue, the Diner, Vincent and Jules, Butch and Marcellus,
Vincent and Marcellus's wife, Mi almost overdoses, gold watch.
Butch versus Marcellus, the Bonnie situation.
Wolf saves the day and then the epilogue in the diner.
Do you want me to tell you the...
I have the actual structure.
The actual structure, yeah.
Because my son asked afterwards, he's like,
is there a version of this movie that's chronological?
And I was like, I don't know if you'd want to watch that,
but here's what it would be.
The watch is the first scene.
Vincent and Jules pick up the briefcase and shoot everybody but Marvin.
Vincent accidentally shoots Marvin in the car.
Oh man, I shot Marvin in the face.
Vincent and Jules go to Jimmy's house and get help by the wolf.
Vincent and Jules go get breakfast as Honey, Bunny, and Ringo are also having breakfast.
They robbed the diner.
Jules doesn't kill them, keeps the briefcase.
They go to Marcellus's club, drop the briefcase off, run in a butch.
Vincent goes to buy heroin from Lance.
Vincent takes me out for a date
and then me almost overdoses.
Butch double crosses Marcellus,
wins the fight, goes on the run,
Marcellus and Vincent's takeout Butch's place.
Butch kills Vincent.
Marcellus gets raped.
Butch and Marcellus kill the rapist.
Butch and his girlfriend escape.
And that's the end of the movie
in the linear fashion.
I like it the way he did it.
Of course you do.
Yeah.
Got it.
How many days is this?
Two?
I had this on answer.
I think it's more.
I think it's like,
because here's the tell.
So Vincent goes on the date
and he has his clothes
from when they go get the suitcase.
Oh, but they would be bloody.
Is that where you...
Or either, or they threw up...
Well, no, because they threw him away, right?
They threw him away.
So he just has another outfit.
Well, he just has...
He's like Johnny Cash.
We don't know how much time
transpires between
when they leave the diner
and go to the club.
And then after that,
is it later that night he's taking it?
out Mia?
Well, I think...
Is it the next day?
Do they say?
So they dropped the briefcase off.
They run in a butch.
That's all...
I mean, that's seven of the 13 shifts
are all in that one morning.
But then, I don't know
how many days passed
between him dropping up the briefcase.
Well, it's like,
is the fight that day?
No, he's going to buy heroin
is the next thing that happens.
That could be two days later.
It could be three days later.
Right.
He has the key of,
says, you know what somebody
did the other day? They scratched my car.
Like, I wish I could find that motherfucker.
And does that...
And I assume that's Butch who keyed the car.
And he said the other day, so the other day
could mean two, three.
Right? So that's like the second
set of... We also don't know
how much time
passed between Mia's
adrenaline shot and then the fight.
Yeah, because Mia's so... She sees them again.
Right.
It could have been one day.
It could have been five days.
Doesn't you see Vincent go, like, how have you been?
Yes.
Does she say I wanted to thank you for the other night?
She does.
Okay.
So it's like, maybe a couple days.
It's been a couple of days.
I think it's three days.
I think it all happens within a week.
Okay.
It would be my guess.
John Trowota.
You've been, this is, it's all been leading up to this for you.
One of your guys.
The phenomenal comeback by which all phenomenal comebacks,
care two four have been mentioned against.
It's the best one.
Is there a better one?
At least until
Embed plays 65 games in the season.
I just took a judge shot.
I know.
I had to keep the streak alive.
I'm at six now.
Probably.
It's the go-to.
Right?
Come back of all time.
It's a little bit of a misnomer.
A little bit.
Because you're counting,
look who's talking.
Those were big movies.
They're not cool movies.
Yeah.
But he was definitely still present in movie culture.
He had not disappeared or been, you know, shunted off to network television.
He was in a little bit of movie star jail, but he was still making movies.
I would say he was in movie jail.
Okay.
Because Tarantino and the list will do in part two with the casting what ifs.
He said one of the actors had in the list was John Chabota, and it came back,
the entire list is approved except for John Trubolta.
So I'm going to say that's officially movie Jill, right?
He couldn't make the movie if John Travolta was one of the three biggest parts.
So Travolta, who we love and we've talked about and we talked about for a long time in the blowout podcast.
But from 82 to 94, he turns down American Gigolo.
Well, that was earlier than 82, but American Gigolo officer and a gentleman.
He turned down Mani from Scarface.
and he turned down splash,
and then a few years later,
turned down Forrest Gump.
Tough.
Tried out for First Blood,
Top Gun, Pretty Woman, didn't get him.
And then some of the bombs he made,
staying alive and two of a kind, same year.
Perfect.
A Tooby Classic.
Kind of like it.
A Tooby Hall of Famer.
Yeah.
The experts,
chains of gold,
it just goes south,
and then he's in these look
who's talking movies.
but he's kind of like a parody of himself.
Like he's heading toward he's going to have like a Tuesday night sitcom on NBC.
Definitely.
It's going to be welcome, welcome back on.
He's a single dad and one of his kids is a little wild.
That's where his career is heading.
Staying alive is the, that's the sliding door.
Taking that movie and doing that over all the other stuff he could have been doing is the mistake.
You know with me, Sierra?
it's worth saying
that for everything
that Quentin Tarantino
is incredibly gifted
to doing,
he may be the preeminent
castor of movies.
Yeah.
He's great.
Perhaps ever.
I don't know.
I mean,
like,
over the course of his
filmography,
the fact that he has
such a distinctive way
of writing
and such a distinctive way
with characters,
then also is like,
I can pick the exact right person
at the exact right point
in their career
and show something
that's just a little bit different about them
while also capturing their essence
like did it with Brad Pitt,
he did it with DeCaprio, he's done it with Jamie Fox.
He's like over and over and over again.
He has shown this ability to be like,
this is the guy, this is the part,
this is the time in this guy's career,
and everything changes for that person afterwards, almost.
I think it's because, and this was one of the reasons
why he was such a good guest on this show
and knows what the show is,
is he's better than anybody at understanding
movie star persona and how important
that is, and like it's a written in-cinema speculation,
he writes a lot about that. He understands
like the dynamics, he studied acting.
But for famous people,
he really gets
how they think about themselves
and then how to subvert that in a way that doesn't
violate their idea of themselves. And that's
the Travolta thing. I mean, this is, this part in this movie
is nothing, is unlike
any movie he'd ever made by far.
I mean, he never played a guy. Like, this guy's a piece of shit.
It was written for Madsen.
It's not supposed to be Travolta. Right.
Yeah. You say,
See, like, I sent you that YouTube clip of him.
Tarantino, most of the directors, like, they watched a monitor, and they're over on the side,
and he stands next to the cameraman, and there's this video of him watching the twist scene,
Richard Bolton, and Tarrantino's kind of dancing next to the camera.
But he's such a movie fan.
He wants to be as close to the actors as possible, like he's in the first row of Broadway play.
And he just sees Stardom differently, which I would encourage people to read his book,
which I thought was excellent, but his Steve McQueen chapter, which we talked about,
about before, about the essence of what made Steve McQueen a movie star and how we don't have that
in the same way anymore, he just sees, he just sees certain things. And other people are good at it.
I think PTA is really good at that. For sure. It's usually if you're a great director,
you usually have a pretty good eye for casting. You're going to at least be like a B plus.
But he saw something philosophical in John Travolta. I mean, Vincent is a philosophical character. He has
ideas about how the world should be.
Did John Travolta ever
evince that in any movie?
No.
Like that's not...
Let's talk about that dinner they had.
I think it was more than that.
I mean, it was like he went over to his apartment,
Travolta.
Tarantino, according to Travolta,
explained his fandom
and why he loved him,
what he loved about him for a long time,
just to, you know,
be honest, but ingratiate himself to Travolta.
But he was trying to get him to do
Dust Till Dawn.
He wanted him to, I think, be in the Clovertey part.
Because he thought Madsen was doing
Vincent. So he was pitching him on a different movie.
And he went on and on about how much he loved, you know, not just blowout and Saturday
night fever, but Welcome Back Cotter and Greece. And then they played the Greece and Welcome
Back on board games together for hours. Yeah. Until 4 o'clock in the morning. He let him have
the Barbarino part. But there's this part there in the research that said about he kind of
goes at Travolta when they're hanging out. And he gives like the, what the fuck are you doing, man?
you're one of the great actors of the last 25 years.
Like, what's up with your choices?
Why are you picking movies like that?
And Chavolto was kind of taken aback.
Yeah.
But he mentioned during the dinner, oh, I had this one part I would have been great at,
but I promised it to another actor.
And then Madsen drops out.
Did you do Wyatt Earp?
How do you feel about that, Sierra?
It's a tough beat for Michael Mads.
Yeah.
I mean, it's also interesting.
C.R. is doing a solo Wyatt Earpod
that we've discussed in the past for rewatchables.
It's like when I did castaway by myself,
CR doing white earth for two hours.
Part three, Buffalo hunting.
So. It's funny.
I was just,
I rewatched Reservoir Dogs for this.
Yeah.
And, you know, Madsen is,
Mr. Blond is unreal.
But the part that jumped out to me the best
is after he and White and Pink
are yelling at each other
when they've all gotten back to the warehouse.
And they've just finished yelling
and Keitel is finally starting to calm down
and Madden goes,
that was really exciting.
Yeah.
And I was like, I wonder, he could have been Vincent, you know, like, he definitely could have done this.
I also think, I think Seismore could have done it.
And I'm probably a bigger Seismore fan the most, but.
You were a little hot.
Yesterday I had to do more research for this and I wanted to put something on TV.
And I swear this happened, I turned the TV on and heat was on.
That was when you texted.
Yeah, yeah.
I was like, oh, my, so I watched like an hour and a half of heat as I was researching this.
And I was watching Seismore in the, for me.
the action is the juice. I'm in.
And I was like, I think I could have bought him as Vincent.
But it's so hard because we'll get to this.
I mean, the casting would have sort of amazing for this,
but there is a sweetness to Vincent.
Yeah.
That is quintessentially like the thing that I associate with Travolta.
Well, would you go best Travolta performance ever?
Yeah.
Or would you say blow up?
Absolutely.
Yes.
Him in the diner with her, he's lights out.
And not just the dancing.
I think I agree.
Even the Tony Rocky Horace
I love Saturday Fever.
I have that's, yeah, that's a big scene for me
is when she comes back from the bathroom
and his performance,
because she comes back from the bathroom is crazy.
He gets to use all the best pieces of himself.
I mean, he's unbelievable in Saturday Night Fever.
Yeah.
And he's like a kid in that movie.
Yeah.
Blowout is pretty great.
Yeah, yeah.
Really good stonebacker too.
My gold, silver.
Yeah, what he does,
he kind of came up with the accent
and at Tarantino,
kind of let him have it.
Broken Arrow?
Well, then, so after this, this movie, all of a sudden he's back.
He makes 14 movies from 95 to 99, including Get Shorty, Broken Arrow, Phenomenon, Face Off, Primary Colors,
thin red line, General's Daughter.
And then Battlefield Earth happens in 2000.
And people are like, whoa, the fuck's going on here.
And then that was it.
He kind of lost the moment.
But it had this five-year crazy resurgence.
he's still kind of dining on.
He's had some moments, you know?
Yeah, but that was like the window.
Like, it felt like he was one of the five biggest stars in the world
by the time we get to the late 90s.
He's still a good actor.
He's taking on some really bad movies, like a lot of VOD movies.
But, like, I don't know, if you watch him in Savages, you know,
like he's pretty good in that, that Oliver Stone movie.
He's good in, like, Hairspray and Wildhogs.
Like, those movies are big movies.
Those are big Hollywood movies.
It's only 15 years ago.
Yeah.
But he's not.
You're a big wildhugs guy?
The huge hit.
My buddy Mike Tolan did that movie.
No, no.
He's like, yeah, I'm doing a movie with Troubleta.
I'm like, what?
Yeah.
I have Travolta, Cruz, Harrison Ford, and Sigourney Weaver
as the four biggest stars of the past 50 years
have never won an Oscar.
Wait, say that again.
Travolta, Cruz, Harrison Ford, and Sigourney Weaver.
The Sigourney Weaver call is great.
They've never won an Oscar of any kind.
What about Amy Adams?
Adams fifth.
I mean, Glenn Close, I think, is the most cited one.
Biggest stars are best actors.
Biggest stars.
Biggest stars who are also good actors.
Yeah.
But those are the four.
The Glenn Close one is legendary now because, you know, she's trying.
But she wasn't a Force of Nature star like those four.
She wasn't.
I can't believe.
Is Walberg in this?
And he's second level.
I mean, he's a huge star, and he was nominated.
This would be a fun podcast.
It's a good idea.
We could level it out.
I think this movie did lock him down as the best movie dancer ever.
Because now he's got Greece, Saturday, Fever, and this twist scene, it's like, that's it.
Top that.
Nobody's topping that.
Chivalta said before this movie came out, three times I had set trends with fever and
Urban Cowboy and Grease, which launched Disco, Cowboys, Sheik, and Greasers.
So he's like, John Chavolta, I said,
trends. That's what I do. It's like CR.
Set trends.
See, I've been in blogging. A lot of people don't know.
The haircut, the extra weight, and the weird accent are three things that don't usually
catapult somebody back to superstardom, but they all work there.
And then he talked about how he tried to, talked about slowing words down and over-emphasizing
them with his lips and teeth, like right out with cheese and doing that.
And then Quentin said to him, I didn't know I was doing a comedy.
You made this role so funny.
Say something off-kilt or bizarre at the time this awful thing happens.
It's funny because it's unexpected.
Any other Travolta stuff?
It's funny because I'm just looking at my favorite quotes from the movie,
and the best delivery of the quotes.
And none of them are Travolta.
Even though he's ostensibly the star.
Bacon is good.
That's a good one.
Pochap's a good.
I mean, it's hard because he's, he's,
up against fucking Bo Jackson and his prime.
I have a couple of Tramotas.
Let's talk about Bo Jackson's prime.
Sam Jackson.
So we're going to play a clip right now of when Sean and I did King of New York and the
rewatchables with Tarantino.
And there's been this perception of the last 30 years that he wrote Jules for Sam
Jackson.
And Tarantino told us that's actually not sure he wrote it for Lawrence Fishburn.
So we're just going to play that right now.
You never considered him for Jules?
Yeah, he turned it down.
Yeah, he was offered it and he turned it down.
I think it worked out for the best.
Yeah, I worked out for the best.
No, he was offered Jules and he turned it down.
Why would you turn down Jules?
I'll tell you why.
You want to know why?
Yeah.
All right.
His people suggested he turned it down.
It all happened.
It's an interesting thing.
I wrote initially, I wrote Jules and Vincent for Fishburn to be Jules and Michael
Madsen to be Vincent.
And then we offered it to fish.
he read it his people read it and his people suggested that he passed he said you got to pass
you got to pass on this one and the reason they suggested is they said okay here's the deal
you could have done this last year but the reason you hired us is to make you a leading man
to make you a star so yes you know if this was your searching for bobby fisher time this was
your class action time then you could have done it but you can't do that anymore
Now it's got to be Larry Fishburn in,
but da-da-da-da-da.
And you've got to be above the title.
And so you're not, you're, he was like, but I begin the movie.
I end the movie.
You're a supporting character.
And they're casting John Travolta.
You're supporting to John Travolta.
You're a supporting character.
You can't, you've got to, part of the thing is you got to say no to supporting roles,
no matter how good they are if you want to be a leading man.
Now, actually, their strategy is actually right on.
If you've gotten stuck in the really good supporting character role
And it's hard to turn them down because that's a good director
It's going to be a good movie
You're working off the big stars
They took me lightly
Their strategy was right on
They took me lightly
Now here's the interesting thing
So he turns it down
And talks to me about it though
And he says
Look I want to do it
All right but you know look I'm paying these people
So if I'm paying them
I ought to listen to them
You know they got a strategy
the movie he did instead of Pulp Fiction
was
Is it just cause?
No, it's not just cause
It's a
That would be a supporting role actually
It was a movie you did with Ellen Barkin
All right
Oh, bad company
Bad company, that's what it was
That's the movie he did instead
Because he was starring in it
Yeah
He goes into like a little
I like that movie
But he goes into like a little bit of a black hole
For the next few years
Oh, okay
But there's a really one
I mean
He eventually
What he passed up
with Pulp Fiction, he eventually gets with the Matrix.
That's where he finally gets it, gets it.
But what happened, I mean, it was just the weird turn of events,
what it ended up happening is, okay,
so he turns down Pulp Fiction because it's not a big enough role.
He's not the star in it.
So Sam Jackson gets the role instead.
So Sam Jackson does it.
Now, they're going to do Die Hard 3.
and they've literally written the role for Larry Fishburne, the black character in it.
And, well, if he's holding out for the right movie, this is the right movie.
It is, he's one of the leads in it.
It's him opposite Bruce Willis.
It's going to make $300 billion.
Yeah, it's for sure a hit and not just a hit, a hit that will play all over the world.
So the entire world, not just America, the entire world is going to know who Larry Fishbur
and as he will be the guy from diehard three.
I love this movie, by the way, but keep telling.
So he is that guy.
They've written it for him.
Not only that, he knows they can't cast anybody else.
They're not going to get Denzel and they're not going to get Wesley.
They need him.
They need him for this movie.
So he asked for a million dollars.
They don't want to pay him a million dollars.
But they need him.
So they're going back and forth, negotiating, negotiating,
negotiating, negotiating, negotiating, and they have one out.
And that is, it's now May.
It's Khan Film Festival.
And Andy Vanya is going to be in Khan.
And there's this guy named Samuel Jackson,
who's apparently really good in Pulp Fiction.
So they're going to go literally and see the premiere,
because they're going to support Bruce anyway.
They're going to go and see the premiere of Pulp Fiction.
And if they like the Sam Jackson guy,
they're going to pull the offer from Larry Fishburn
and give it to Sam.
And if they don't like the Sam Jackson guy,
they'll close the deal with Larry.
And the rest is history.
Unbelievable.
I think that's a top five movie What If?
Because if Fishburn gets his part
and then he also gets Die Hard 3,
plus he had Ike Turner,
plus he gets the Matrix down the road.
You could argue he's one of the three biggest stars
in the 90s.
Like, does he...
Probably.
Does he market correct Denzel at that point?
Does he start...
Like, what happens?
It kind of like blows your brain.
He's a...
Is he a little bit older than Jackson?
Or are they the same age?
I think Jackson is actually maybe a little older than him.
Oh, yeah.
Remember, Fishburne's 17 and Apocalypse.
I think...
It's a tricky thing, right?
St. Jackson's 13 years older.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I think it's a complicated question
because I'm not sure that mass audiences
specifically showed up for Sam Jackson
or for Lawrence Fishburn over time.
Like, they were simultaneously huge stars.
Yeah.
You know, they worked a lot,
but they were not like what you would
classically define as a box office draw.
So Denzel and Snipes in that decade.
Whereas Denzel is.
Yeah, you put them on a poster and people came.
Exactly.
I do feel like Sam Jackson got to that point
because they started putting him on like shaft
and movies like that,
whereas he was the only reason
to see the movie and people were going.
But he also did this weird character actor's side too
where he'd be like in Deep Blue Sea.
He basically did everything.
He just worked all this time.
To me, he reminds me a little bit of Michael Kane.
He's like really good.
Great comparison.
All the time, but works constantly.
And so it kind of, I don't know if it dilutes it,
but it's like kind of shows up in the movie
and does his thing.
And the movie might be a piece of shit
or it might be really good.
And he used this movie and this performance
to get involved in franchise movies.
to get involved in Die Hard of a Vengeance,
to get involved with Star Wars,
to get involved with Marvel,
because that's a way to get bigger and bigger,
make more money, be more famous.
I mean, he really leveraged this beautifully.
Well, so he thinks he has the part,
and he goes and he does, like, a reading for it,
and he kind of mails it in because he thought he had it.
He didn't want to, like, bring the guns out.
And Tarantino, who he talked about when we did the pot of them,
loved this actor, Paul Calderon.
And this is a big what if.
Brings him in to audition, like a just-in-case.
and Paul Calderon crushes it.
Yeah.
So now Jackson comes back, not realizing now he's fighting for the part.
And they tell him and he gets pissed and gives like what everybody says.
It's one of the great auditions ever.
There's an oral history of the movie in Vanity Fair.
And it's basically like it's down to the two of them and they both fly from New York to
L.A. to do an audition.
Yeah.
And in the Vanity Fair article, at least, it's like Calderon shows up and Quentin's late.
So he does the audition with like one of the producers.
Yeah.
and kind of blows it.
Yeah.
And pulls the plug
midway through.
He's like, I don't have it.
And then Sam Jackson walked in
and was super pissed that he had to do it.
And he's eating a burger
when he does the audition and is like,
fuck all of you.
And they're like,
this is Jules.
And then Paul Cateron becomes the bartender
in Pulp Fiction.
So I think what it is
is that the audition that he gives
is for the final scene with Tim Roth.
And he does the entire,
I'm trying to be the Shepard part.
and Lawrence Bender says that that's when they knew they had the end of the movie.
Like they weren't totally sure that the end of the movie was going to work.
He changed his tone.
Yes.
And Jackson's performance in that audition clearly indicated to them like, we got this.
We nailed.
This is the right movie and he's the right guy for the part.
All right.
So watch this movie with my son last night and he was blown away.
But Sam Jackson was the piece that blew him the most because he's known Sam Jackson.
St. Jackson's been in a million movies.
He knows him.
but he was just like,
he,
I was like,
who's your favorite character?
He was like,
was that performance
a big deal when it happened?
Because like,
has anyone ever been better in a movie?
Like,
he just,
he couldn't,
like,
he couldn't, like,
get over.
That's actually a very valid question.
Yeah,
and I was like,
it's funny because I have that written down,
was this the enduring performance
of the 1990s?
Because if you're looking at,
like,
Hannibal Lecter,
Forrest Gump,
Ellis Red Boyd.
It's not like the,
it's a less,
long list than you think.
If you're just thinking like...
Yeah, no.
No.
I forget about now.
No.
Yeah.
Bring me in the firm.
Yeah.
I think it's him and Lector in the finals, though.
There's some other ones you throw in, right?
Like Haley Joel Osman in Sixth Sense, stuff like that.
Like, there's a couple of like iconic memorable figures.
I just think that this is a guy...
He has like three of the coolest speeches ever in movies written for him,
and he nails them.
them. He is them. And it is as exciting to watch him perform in this movie for me as it was the
first time. And I've seen it north of a hundred times. You know, like, how they talk about, like,
movie starlets from, like, the 40s and the 30s and how directors would, like, make the audience
fall in love with them with the way they shot, you know, Greta Garbo or Betty Garbo. Yeah.
It's like, that's how I think Tarantino shoots Sam Jackson. It's like, he's fucking in love with
Sam Jackson. He's like, I see this thing and this guy. I've written this material for him. But the
entire first the big Kahuna Burger scene, the camera is all the way and like kind of where
Vincent is for the most of it.
Yeah.
Because it's like he dominates the entire thing.
And so much of Carantino's writing is about the way control and power shifts within
dynamics when conversations are happening.
And Jules is the only one with the power in that whole scene, the entire time.
He's the one who tells everybody what to do.
He's the one who's like, you sit down, flock of seagulls.
Vincent, are we happy?
like it's like watching
it is like watching an incredible athlete
go off basically
yeah I was thinking my friend Goldman
when he wrote about
like the best actors he ever saw on stage
and the way he wrote it
I'm not a stage guy
and I haven't been in a lot of plays
but he would talk about like
what it was like to see Olivier on stage
and the way he would recount it
like you just never almost like the way
I would talk about sports
like you had to be there for Jordan in 96
like I've never seen
and you would talk about it.
tell stories about it and he would talk about Olivier that way.
It rarely happens in movies where you see somebody that is acting so well.
You're like you almost feel like you're on stage in the first row watching.
You know, like Daniel, when we did, there will be blood.
Daniel DeLewis was like that.
He has a couple of scenes you're like, holy shit.
That's some of the best act they've ever seen in my life.
And you're right.
Jackson has like three or four of these.
But I think what's really cool is not only does he have these big powerful speeches and
this force of personality.
stuff, but he's also a really good wingman
for the dialogue with...
He sells him. Yeah. Vincent, like, he's
funny. For example. Yeah.
He's just, it just brings everything
in the table. I think it's one of the great
performances ever for me.
I was mesmerized by him this last time I watched
it. There's a...
The scene towards the end of the movie, but
kind of in the middle of it, when they
finally get to Marcellus's bar
and they go up to the bar and he's
got the case. And
you know, they're asking, Paul's asking,
Vincent about going out with Mia,
how he's like,
have you ever met me
and all that?
But right before he asked that,
Sam Jackson's just sitting there
with the case
and he is staring at Marcellus.
And it's like he's going to quit,
presumably, you know,
but like there's,
like what he's able to do in silence
versus what he's able to do with screaming,
what he's able to do being funny,
what he's able to do listening,
what he's able to do with action sequences.
It's just like every single tool
that you could possibly ask an actor to do.
You're calling the wolf?
Yeah, he's really sly and funny and also really scary.
Like within five minutes of the movie, you get both,
you are aware that there is an invention called television.
And on that invention, they show shows, right?
Which is so funny.
And then five minutes later, he's like,
I don't remember asking you a goddamn thing.
Yeah.
That was good, Chuck.
It's like that's as funny as, it's like that,
and then it's also like, allow me to retort.
Yeah.
The hair, everything about it.
You know, we knew Sam Jackson for a few years there.
He's in a bunch of stuff, but his Jungle Fever was like,
that was the one he played the drug dealer, right?
The drug addict.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So, and he was always like the number four, number five, number six guy.
He's in a movie called Fresh that I really like that he's really good in.
Which, by the way, it's on Netflix now.
People want to watch him a good movie.
But he was always kind of...
Produced by Lawrence Bender, who produced this movie.
which is part of the reason why I think they were on board with getting them involved.
When he was like, cool, I got this part.
I have to go back to New York to make fresh now.
So he was always on the side.
He had, you know, he's discussed at like major drug issues in the early 90s and he cleaned himself up.
The jungle fever performance is like this rendition of that.
But I don't think there was a lot of signs that this was inside.
And then you'd think like, you know, just then it just launches the rest of it.
Not for nothing.
There's also not a ton of opportunities.
for black male lead actors to perform with a bunch of white actors.
I mean, it's still a very, like,
it's a relatively segregated time in terms of those kinds of movies.
Especially late 80s.
We talked about that a lot.
Like, there's TV and movies.
There was nothing going on.
Yeah, I think it's the best performance, at least of the 90s.
I don't know how to measure that,
but I know that this is my favorite character in my favorite movie.
Yeah, yeah.
Like, maybe that's it.
So Bruce Willis, we talked about die hard, die hard too, marries Demi Moore.
He becomes an A plus list. He's on moonlighting.
Does the Seagrams ads, the wine cooler, seagrams.
Golden wine, cooler.
Like one of the worst 32nd.
It's so funny.
Had a couple bombs and was still one of the biggest stars of the world.
And was also smart enough to realize, like, I liked Reservoir Dogs.
I'm in your next movie, whatever you got.
And he wanted to be the Vincent part.
And he didn't understand why...
He was annoyed that he wasn't the best part.
Yeah, he didn't understand why Travolta would have a higher kind of ranking.
Could that work?
I don't think it works the same way.
I don't...
Part of the problem with Bruce Willis and why he's so good in this movie is he always kind of feels like Bruce Willis.
I don't know if I'm buying him as...
Travolta really becomes a different person in this movie.
I don't know if Bruce Willis had that in him.
Do you think he had it in him?
I think that there's parts of him.
I think that he could have done parts of Vincent,
but I think he's perfect as Butch
I mean he looks like a boxer
He looks like an old boxer
You know
And this is really a
It's kind of a Steve McQueen part
Which ties back to the Tenthino DNA
He's also really good at
Because he does it in the diehard movies
He does it in his other films
Like when he's flipping out in the car
Yeah
And he's just like God damn it
The fucking watch on the kangaroo
Like that's like he's like not
That's not McQueen
McQueen doesn't do that
Yeah
the soundtrack
movie soundtracks
were having a renaissance
around then anyway
and then this one
I just tell you
anecdotally like
this was just an album
that was all over the place
for years and years after
people just put them on
when you got to college
yeah it was just
you would just hear it
so I believe the first time
this was ever done
was in the Good Morning Vietnam soundtrack
which was the same company Mercury
that put out the Pulp Fiction soundtrack
and they put
Not the style, but they put dialogue of Robin Williams doing the DJ stuff from that movie on the soundtrack.
And it's this great like Motown 50, 60s collection of songs.
It's kind of like a sub-big-chill kind of style.
And I have every line of dialogue from that movie.
A movie I don't really like that much, memorized because I listen to that soundtrack all the time as a kid.
And then the same company did this for this.
So when you listen to this soundtrack, you know Ezekiel 2517.
I know it forever.
I'll never forget it because I've listened to it so many times waiting.
to hear fucking, you never can tell or whatever.
Jungle Boogie,
let's stay together, one of the,
one of like the best songs.
It's just an amazing song.
Weird that it hadn't been used in a movie
in the right way.
Son of a preacher man.
Girl, you'd be a woman soon, which is a remake of the
Neil Diamond thing. Tarantino, one of the things I admire
about the way he thinks about filmmaking is
he's very
kind of crazy about
what a song means to a movie.
And once a song is, you know,
used in a movie, it's almost like it's got to be hands off, which I don't feel like a lot of
filmmakers are just like, oh yeah, I'll grab that one that they used and remember the Titans.
His thing is like, I am picking songs that have never been crossed over into a movie in the right
way, and that's it.
That is totally true.
However, he also does something where he recontextualizes a piece of music, like the Green
Hornet theme, Kill Bill.
Yeah, yeah.
And he'll be like, this works really well.
you to have the feeling you had if you watched the Green Hornet.
But this is a totally different experience that we're having with it.
So like he does do both things.
Like he would he wouldn't just he would lift a song like a score from a spaghetti
Western and dump it in the middle of a samurai sequence and be like wow I didn't
realize that these things were not only connected but the same.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so he has like a real gift for understanding the way that those things interplay.
But also he's he's same thing with movies and TV like he's got a jukebox in his head.
He knows every song.
Some of the songs here like uh,
girl you'll be a woman soon. Mia's singing
in the, as she's dancing around the living room.
So like it's kind of diogenic.
She obviously starts it on the reel to reel.
Others, like a lot of the surf music keys in like,
you know, not not miserly,
but like some of the other surf music is used around like getting high.
You know, like he has like a real logic to why things are where they are.
He even seems to like have a real understanding of like,
let's stay together as nighttime music.
Like, you know what I mean?
This is daytime music.
You know, it's like, it has like, everything in it has an internal logic.
Everything in the film itself has an internal logic that while you're watching it,
you're like, I understand.
I don't get it.
It didn't, I've never seen it done this way before, but I somehow understand.
What do you think he saw on Uma Thurman?
A classic, almost European looking ingenue.
That's funny because the thing they jumped out to me this time watching it is, um...
She's also a kid.
She's young.
But a woman who could hang in this kind of environment too,
which is like a very violent and like intense
series of events that happens to her and around her.
Like a very dark world.
And someone who's very comfortable in that dark world
and who seems cool or at least can perform the idea of cool around it.
But it's interesting because she wasn't.
Like, Uma Thurman herself has been very open about like being like,
I, another done drugs.
Like I didn't want to do it because of what happens to Marcellus later.
You know, like, it's interesting to think about her lack of comfort with the material.
She's coming off. Final analysis.
Jennifer 8.
Mad Dog and Glory.
Interesting movie, by the way, Mad Dog and Glory.
Jennifer 8.
Even Cowgirls get the blues.
And then all of a sudden, this and that was, she became, it seemed like she was the coolest actress in Hollywood, just because this movie.
Can I ask a question about Uma or Mia?
So the poster of this movie is like, I don't know, maybe the most famous movie poster of all
It was in like every dorm room in college,
almost to the point where it became a stereotype.
What do you think went into the decision
to only feature Mia on the poster of this movie?
I have some stuff on that in part two.
Oh, okay.
Ironically.
Do you want me to answer that or no?
You can answer it now.
I mean, the poster is just meant to replicate
the kind of pulp novels and magazines
that the story is entirely inspired by.
So, like, if you looked at,
the movie was originally supposed to be called Black Mask
when he and Avery were talking about it,
and there was a magazine called Black Mask,
And if you look at a lot of the covers, it'd be like a guy with a gun or be like a femme fatale, you know, in a bedroom, you know, laying on her back or something.
And it's meant to be an homage to that.
And also just like put a sexy girl on a poster is a tale's oldest time.
But to not feature Bruce Willis or John Travolta, you know, for a relative, you know, a movie you want to succeed.
It's like a bold choice.
It is.
Well, you know, it's, I had some of this for part two, but they did.
There's a savviness about how to market a movie that exists in 1910.
So they're doing all these different posters.
They had one that was when they thought the movies come out in October 21st.
They did four movie posters of Harvey Keitel, Sam Jackson, Uma, and I think in Troultta.
And each one is different and it has like what their name is in the movie.
And that's, they marketed that too.
So that you would see these posters and be like, where the fuck did that come from?
Especially when eBay comes in in 1999, 2000, whenever.
And all the stuff was just on eBay.
It was like these weird posters
that were put all over the place.
But they really try to create this cool culture
around the movie that I don't want to say
they invented it, but it felt like they perfected it.
Yeah, it was brilliantly marketed for sure.
It's interesting, too, that she's on the poster
because they obscure her in the film
until they get to Jack Rabbit Slins.
That's a big Tarantino trick
because you don't see what Marcellus looks like
and he doesn't look like a bitch.
But you don't see what he's...
looks like either for a couple of scenes.
Hey, I'm going to give you the best same-day release combos ever,
and you guys pick which one you think is number one.
June 4th, 1982, Poltergeist and Star Trek 2, Rath of Khan, same day.
July 15th, 1988, die hard, a fish called Wanda.
July 12th, 1991, point break and boys in the hood.
June 8, 1984, Ghostbusters and Gremlins.
June 16th,
1978.
Greece and Jaws 2.
What a day that was.
November 25th,
1995, casino and toy story.
December 15th,
1995,
Jumanji and Heat.
Solid day.
It's a good double feature.
June 25th,
1982, Blade Runner and the Thing.
It's a big Sean day.
God damn.
Were you born that day?
July 26th.
Wow, you just missed it.
July 19,
2023, Barbie and Oppenheimer.
And then October 14th,
1994, Pulp Fiction and Hoop Dreams.
And Shawshank had been out, I think, for
two weeks before that.
You forgot about my favorite October 5th, 2018,
the day that a star is born in Venom were released.
I think I'd probably go Blade Runner thing.
Okay.
I can't pretend like I was like,
Hoop Dreams is next after watching Pulp Fiction.
What's the day where like a Tribe Call Quest album
and a Wutang album,
and like a Wilco record
and then like an Outcast album all came out
and there's like a famous rap day
like in 1995 where like all three albums came out
and everybody who's the TOW records and they're like
I don't have $78 for all three of these albums
There was a day when
there was like a ghost face and a Wilco record
came out like on the same day
I remember that very important
I mean I will go to a double feature
of two shit movies and have a great time
so I can't imagine this one
I think I think the Pulp Fiction
Hoop Dreams combo wins because
of the influence of both
Hoop Dreams basically creates documentaries.
It's a masterpiece.
It took a while for me to get hip to.
Probably also not playing in very many theaters.
1995 Oscars.
Pulp wins for best screenplay.
It's nominated for movie director, actor,
supporting actor, actress, editing.
Get it off your chest, man.
Best picture.
Forrest Gump wins.
Four weddings and funeral.
Pulp, quiz show, Shawshank.
So we're redoing that.
Pulp gets it.
I think it has to at this point.
To this side of the.
table, yeah.
Quisho.
Like Quisho?
No, Pulp, obviously.
Best director. Zemeckis wins for Forrest Gump.
Woody Allen, Bullets Over Broadway,
Tarantino, Redford for Quist Show.
And I got the Polish name for three colors.
Come on. Christoph.
We're through the last name.
That's probably a more egregious one,
because I could make a pretty strong Shawshank case
against Pulp, even though I think Pulps
a more creative and influential movie.
movie. But Tarantina should have won for Best
Director. That's kind of outrageous
looking back. Forrest Gump,
great movie really respected.
Baby Boomers Triumphing over Gen X.
That's what that is.
Best actor Hank's wins over
Morgan Freeman and Shawshank,
Nigel Hawthorne, King George,
Paul Newman and Nobody's Fool,
weird one, and John Chavoltan Pulp Fiction.
That's so interesting that Tim Robbins
wasn't nominated.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Really strange.
Obviously Freeman is great in that movie.
movie, but the movie is on
Tim Robbins' shoulders.
I mean, they both should have been nominated.
Yeah, it's just unusual.
Hanks or Chavota?
Travolta.
Agreed.
I think it's a harder part than Hanks.
I enjoy watching for us. Hanks is amazing.
I get it, but it's like,
this is like not even the same stratosphere
to me. Do you think he got it for the premature
ejaculation scene?
Oh!
Best actress. Nobody nominated.
Best supporting actor.
Martin Landau wins for Ed Wood as Bella Legosi,
Sam, Chas Palmetry, Paul Schofield,
Gary Seneas and Forrest Gump.
It's a crime.
I think this is the number one biggest Oscars outrage of my lifetime,
except for maybe Pacino in 1974 and Godfather too,
but at least Chinatown was that year or two.
There's cases to be, there's no case to be made with this category.
This is outrageous.
I agree with you.
It's hard to take down.
I like Martin Landau quite a bit.
I think he's very good in Ed Wood.
I think Edward is an interesting movie.
It's one of the last good Tim Burton movies.
There's no question that Samuel Jackson should have won.
This is the only time he was nominated.
He's never been nominated again.
He's clearly not going to win an Academy Award.
He's like 80 years old.
How old is Sam Jackson?
He's like 75.
75.
It's crazy.
It's a sin.
Should he have gone for Best Actor?
I don't know.
Like, if Hopkins can win for Silence of the Lambs being in the movie 18 minutes,
it's hard for me to believe Jules couldn't get a sniff here.
He's in half the movie.
I mean, this is also you get into the Harvey, like, machinations of, like,
so Harvey probably thought he had that locked up for supporting.
And then supporting actress, Uma gets nominated,
but loses the Diane Weasden Bullets Over Broadway.
And, uh, yeah.
Interesting.
One of my favorite Oscar moments, because I remember just being like,
God, this is candid.
When Quentin won screenplay
and he got up on stage,
he's like, this is probably the only thing
I'm going to win tonight,
so I'm going to do my thing.
I was like, this is awesome.
He already fucking knows how this is going to go.
He's repeated at the other times.
He's won, too.
He just kind of was like,
I'm going to cook right here.
So, Ebert had it as the most influential
film of the decade.
In 2008 Entertainment Weekly,
best movie of the previous 25 years.
February 2020,
New York Magazine,
did their best movies that lost best picture at the Oscars.
It was one of the ten.
Interesting list, by the way.
Citizen Kane, Sunset Boulevard,
Dr. Strange Love,
butchcasting the Sundance Kid,
The Conversation, Nashville,
taxi driver, elephant man, in the bedroom,
there will be blood and Roma,
plus Pulp Fiction.
That was the New York Magazine list.
8.5 million dollar budget made
$210 million at least,
probably more,
first indeed ever to make $100,000.
plus a million.
Our guy Raj,
who didn't
just invent podcasting.
He, uh, four stars.
A comedy about blood, guts,
violence, strange sex,
drugs, fixed fights,
dead body disposal,
leather freaks and a wristwatch
that makes a dark journey
down through the generations.
The screenplayed by Tarantino
and Roger Avery is so well written
in a scruffy fanzine way
you want to rub noses in it.
The noses of those zombie writers
who take screenwriting classes
that teach them the formula
for hit films.
When was this review published?
Did you clock that?
I thought that was the original one.
It's not.
I can't remember because he's written it.
He's written about it a few times.
He put it in the great movies book.
He saw it, can.
And I remember, I could be wrong about this.
I don't think I am.
I think he was kind of like,
this is either the greatest movie of all time
or something very scary
about what's going to happen to movies.
And both sides did it a little bit?
Did he?
And it's something that he's done.
in the past.
He did the October 14th, 94 is four stars.
So that's the release.
That's when the,
that's like the theatrical release.
Said new movie is a comedy about blood,
guts, violence.
Yeah, it's all the stuff I had.
Yeah.
So I don't know what he wrote about it after seeing it can.
But I think it's an interesting thing because you,
the critical,
there was a critical consensus for the most part that this was a thrilling
explosion of an essential new voice.
You're saying, Raj, yeah, butted it a little bit?
Well, I think some people
But he always had a little weird thing about violence
Yeah, the morality thing
Slipping in a little bit
But like a guy who's obsessed with movies
And the way that movies talk to each other
From a guy who's obsessed with movies
And the way that they talk to each other
Is you'd think it'd be catnip
But there were also like some
More Hale critics
Who were like very down on this
Yeah, very down on what to represent
I think Andrewslerus was kind of like
A little down on it
John Simon was down on it.
A handful of critics who were very,
Kenneth Tehran in the L.A. Times,
he trashed it.
He trashed it.
That's like when Saturday Night Live came out
and it got like mixed reviews
and the New York Times guy didn't like it.
Sometimes they don't know until it's too late.
I think that, I mean, I think that there's still some critics.
I forget the name of the critic from the Christian Science Monitor
who Quentin has always really liked and he didn't like his movies
but he still liked him as a critic and Quentin knows everything about critics too.
And this idea of like acknowledging the virtuosity of the work,
but hating what it is and what it represents
and almost like what it portends for the future.
Because a lot of smart critics who'd seen every movie
were like, oh, fuck, this is just going to be like a thousand of these now.
And just feeling like their jobs are going to get more annoying because of this movie,
which I think is a fascinating outcome.
Yeah, and the premiere magazine, which is right here that they have a quote from Weinstein
where it's just like, we sit through scripts and everybody's got a heist and it's eight guys.
and it's just like just sifting through.
Yeah.
It was already happening by the time this came out.
All right, that's it for part one.
Somehow we're almost at two hours already.
What was the over under?
What did Fando have for the over under for the Pulpiction pod?
I thought four total, but we'll see.
And we could be headed toward four and a half.
Produced by Craig Horlebeck.
You will be able to hear part two of this podcast,
probably like 12, 15 hours after we put up part one.
So stay tuned for that.
And you'll be able to watch all of it on the Ringer Movies YouTube channel.
as well. See you for practice.
