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Pulp Fiction - Miramax Collector's Edition

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Pulp Fiction (Two-Disc Collector's Edition)

Restricted  - 154 minutes

Miramax Entertainment

2002-08-20

Region 1


Starring:

  Rosanna Arquette
  Steve Buscemi
  Paul Calderon
  Bronagh Gallagher
  Peter Greene

Format:

Anamorphic,  Closed-captioned,  Collector's Edition,  Color,  Dolby,  DVD-Video,  Widescreen,  NTSC


Purchasing:

  Usually ships in 24 hours  $19.99  $14.99

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Ownership

Flixville:51(6.67% of users)
Facebook:47(8.25% of fb users)

Ratings

Flixville:16(avg 4.72 stars)
Facebook:15(avg 4.70 stars)

Description:

With the knockout one-two punch of 1992's Reservoir Dogs and 1994's Pulp Fiction writer-director Quentin Tarantino stunned the filmmaking world, exploding into prominence as a cinematic heavyweight contender. But Pulp Fiction was more than just the follow-up to an impressive first feature, or the winner of the Palme d'Or at Cannes Film Festival, or a script stuffed with the sort of juicy bubblegum dialogue actors just love to chew, or the vehicle that reestablished John Travolta on the A-list, or the relatively low-budget ($8 million) independent showcase for an ultrahip mixture of established marquee names and rising stars from the indie scene (among them Samuel L. Jackson, Uma Thurman, Bruce Willis, Ving Rhames, Harvey Keitel, Christopher Walken, Tim Roth, Amanda Plummer, Julia Sweeney, Kathy Griffin, and Phil Lamar). It was more, even, than an unprecedented $100-million-plus hit for indie distributor Miramax. Pulp Fiction was a sensation. No, it was not the Second Coming (I actually think Reservoir Dogs is a more substantial film; and P.T. Anderson outdid Tarantino in 1997 by making his directorial debut with two even more mature and accomplished pictures, Hard Eight and Boogie Nights). But Pulp Fiction packs so much energy and invention into telling its nonchronologically interwoven short stories (all about temptation, corruption, and redemption amongst modern criminals, large and small) it leaves viewers both exhilarated and exhausted--hearts racing and knuckles white from the ride. (Oh, and the infectious, surf-guitar-based soundtrack is tastier than a Royale with Cheese.) --Jim Emerson

Pulp Fiction (Two-Disc Collector's Edition) Wall

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Mark wroteat 6:47pm on September 28, 2007

I don't think Buddy Holly's much of a waiter.