Women In Pulp Fiction

600 Words2 Pages

True Quentin Tarantino style is blood spurting, violent, and deep, Pulp Fiction is as encompassing as they come. The series of iconic events that formulate Pulp Fiction include a restaurant heist, murder, drug use, and a scene that implicates highly violent S&M style rape. Through its star persona, genre and film theory (specifically formalism) Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction glorifies guns and violence, thereby mitigating the effects of violence, and ultimately, condoning its use.

Tarantino picks his star personas carefully he habitually picks men who portray iconic rugged and temperamental individuals whereas the women are not classically beautiful or multi-dimensional but can hold their own covered in blood. The common occurring theme for the man and woman acting relationship in Pulp Fiction is that boys-who-will-be-boys causes damage and the women are lesser or nonexistent (Durgis). Regarding Pulp Fiction the most violence impacted characters are Samuel L. Jackson’s Jules and Uma Thurman’s Mia Wallace. Immediately Jackson’s star persona is associated as a wise man but violent – usually shouting expletives. His character in this film is gun …show more content…

Tarantino love throwing in his own takes on ideology but strategically placing social commentary through his films. In the case of Pulp Fiction genre arguably plays a role in condoning violence. Ultimately, it is a crime film but can also be lumped into other subgenres like black comedy which implies off color topics. Again noting gun battles, drug use, murder and rape. It could also be lumped into an action genre because of its quick camera panning and the use of weapons. Guns are the main icons that Tarantino uses in violence but also uses katana and physical violence on other

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