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-== A BLAST TO THE HEART
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Onscreen, John Travolta had just raised an Adrenalin-filled
hypodermic needle above the comatose body of Uma Thurman and, with
desperate force, plunged it straight into her heart. In the audience
at New York City's Lincoln Center, where Quentin Tarantino's Pulp
Fiction was being shown, a young man watched this scene and passed
out. "Is there a doctor in the house?" someone actually asked. The
film was stopped for nine anxious minutes before the announcement
came: "The victim is just fine."
A Tarantino movie has this effect on people. There's
an ear-slicing scene in Reservoir Dogs, the 1992 heist movie he
wrote and directed, that revolts some folks who have never even
seen it. In True Romance and Natural Born Killers, two Tarantino
scripts with identical itineraries (Bonnie and Clyde going to hell
in a hot rod), knives skate across faces and guns blow fishbowl
holes in stomachs. When a tough wants to leave his mark on someone,
he does it with a mutilating flourish. Tarantino's films allow for
no idle bystanders; you either get with the pogrom or get out of
the way. Thus does he make the viewer a co-conspirator - and sometimes,
as at Lincoln Center, a victim.
Here we go again - another gore gourmand acting
out fantasies of aggression for the grind-house trade. Well, no.
For a start, Tarantino's films are energized not so much by violence
as by its threat; it's in the air like a balloon ready to explode.
More important, Tarantino, 31, sees movie violence as a vivid visual
correlative for the internal agitation of urban America, for all
those people who believe their lives are a pitched battle for self-preservation.
If he romanticizes his gunmen, he also anchors them in vulnerability,
stupidity and the blinkered loyalty of men to men. But damn, they're
good company. Tarantino knows them inside out, even if most of his
gangland wisdom came from a life of movie watching (he worked for
five years in a video store). "I've seen what I've seen, and I've
met the people I've met," he says flirtatiously. "I've been in weird
situations. I'm not a hood, but I've seen fringe things here and
there." And what he sees, he translates into sharp words, telling
gestures, explosive images.
Tarantino's movies are smartly intoxicating cocktails
of rampage and meditation; they're in-your-face, with a mac-10 machine
pistol and a quote from the Old Testament. They blend U.S. and European
styles of filmmaking; they bring novelistic devices to the movie
mall. And in Pulp Fiction, a multipart tribute to the hard-boiled
books and films of American mid-century, he has devised a sprawling,
sturdy canvas that accommodates the high-octane and the highbrow.
Just ask Bruce Willis, one of a half-dozen actors
(along with Travolta, Thurman, Samuel L. Jackson, Ving Rhames and
Harvey Keitel) who found some of the juiciest roles of their careers
here: "You can say the most intellectual thing about Pulp Fiction
and be right. But it also works for the trailer-park kids." It surely
ought to work for those viewers lulled these many years by cinema
soporifics. For 2 1(R)2 teeming hours it hits you like a shot of
Adrenalin straight to the heart.
Here's some of what happens:
Vincent (Travolta) and Jules (Jackson), henchmen
of Los Angeles crime lord Marsellus Wallace (Rhames), retrieve a
briefcase from some cheating kids. Three people die there, and a
fourth in a getaway car. A specialist (Keitel) drops by to supervise
the cleanup. At a diner, the henchmen's breakfast is interrupted
by a thrill-crazy young couple (Tim Roth and Amanda Plummer) staging
a holdup. He and Vincent go to see Marsellus, who is telling an
aging boxer named Butch (Willis) to throw his next fight. Later,
Vincent buys some potent heroin, then escorts the boss' sexy wife
Mia (Thurman) for a toxic night on the town. Vincent gets out the
needle. Butch double-crosses his boss, wins the fight and plans
to skip town, but soon must decide whether to save Marsellus' life
at the sure risk of his own.
That is the story. (Tarantino wrote everything
except the Butch episode, which was created by the director's occasional
collaborator, Roger Avary.) But it is presented out of chronology,
so as to alternate fierce melodrama with behavioral comedy, and
vengeance with revelation. Tarantino pulls the string around one
story while setting up the next in the bustling background. He played
neat tricks of a similar sort in Reservoir Dogs. "It's not like
I'm on this major crusade against
linear narrative," he says. "What I am against
is saying it's the only game in town."
And while keeping things tightly wound, he gives
his actors plenty of room to breathe the heady air of his dialogue,
with all its wit and thoughtfulness punctuated by obscenity. Says
producer Lawrence Bender, who for a miserly $8.2 million mounted
this glossy production (including a '50s-style restaurant set so
cool that some backers want to franchise it): "It's the kind of
dialogue that's so organic, you can chew, eat and digest it."
Tarantino's and Bender's company is called A Band
Apart, after Bande a Part (Band of Outsiders), the 1964 film about
two hoods and a femme fatale that Jean-Luc Godard based on an American
paperback novel. But where Godard used pulp fiction as an excuse
to discuss the philosophy of the boulevards and the boudoir, Tarantino
is true to the genre's moral muscularity; he's interested in the
philosophy of the abattoir. His tough guys chat about life's iniquities
and inequities, about hamburgers, the Bible, the ethics of foot
massage, the perfidy of women.
Sometimes they sound like catty old fishwives.
But this is a very male form of gossip - verbal machismo. With their
edgy patter, the guys test themselves, their friends, their victims;
every conversation is a pop quiz with life on the line. And when
they do shut up, it's often to blow someone away, or do drugs, or
sink into edgy pensiveness. In Tarantino's film there are no comfortable
silences.
There's never silence when Tarantino is in the
room. This engaging, nonstop performer - named by his half-Cherokee
mother for the hero of Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury as well
as for the half-breed (Quint) played by Burt Reynolds in Gunsmoke
- was born in Knoxville, Tennessee, and moved to Southern California
when he was two. Since then, it's been a movie-mad life. His folks
took him to all sorts of films, then he went on his own. He seems
to have remembered - and understood - everything he's seen. "He's
probably the best video-store clerk there ever was," says Avary,
who worked with him at Video Archives. "The world of video clerks
will sadly miss him."
And now those films are memorialized in Tarantino's
own. "People ask if my love of movies can be too much," he says.
"What annoys me about the question is the snobbery; it treats movies
like a bastard art form. Could a novelist ever read too many books,
or a musician listen to too much music? Well, I totally love movies."
He loves acting too. Tarantino has small roles
in his two features (and a hilarious turn in the new comedy Sleep
With Me). He knows what actors need and how to keep them percolating.
"Quentin is a great collaborator," says Thurman, a creepy delight
in Pulp Fiction as a woman convinced she's in control of her life
and her men. "He is extremely clear about what he wants, but he's
not close minded; he's no bully." Travolta says Tarantino trusts
actors: "He lets you put all the icing on the cake. For Vincent,
I could mock up the hair, the accent, the walk, the talk." The result
is a deft portrait of a guy who moves warily and at his own slo-mo
pace, as if he needed all his concentration just to stay alive.
There are plenty of subsidiary characters worth
their own movie, like the suburban drug dealer (Eric Stoltz) and
his trippy wife (Rosanna Arquette) - a married couple for the strung-out
'90s. Part of Pulp Fiction's fun is that memorable weirdos keep
popping up in the second and third hour. Part of the movie's skill
is that familiar characters reveal new depths. By the end, Jackson's
Jules - in a "transitional period" from L.A.'s baddest malefactor
to Tarantino's idea of masculine sanctity - has commandeered the
film. But even Jackson, brilliant in the role, knows that all good
films, like the Scriptures, begin with the Word."Films are a show-me
medium," says Jackson, "and Quentin makes tell-me movies."
Pulp Fiction is Tarantino's show-and-tell extravaganza.
It towers over the year's other movies as majestically and menacingly
as a gang lord at a preschool. It dares Hollywood films to be this
smart about going this far. If good directors accept Tarantino's
implicit challenge, the movie theater could again be a great place
to live in. - Reported by Elizabeth L. Bland
and Jeffrey Ressner/New York.
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