- Cameos - Quentin Tarantino plays Jimmy Dimmick in pulp fiction, and Mr Brown in reservoir dogs.
- Feet - Dancing scene with John Travolta, dialogue about Mia and foot massage and the long tracking shot when Mia enters the lounge of her feet. Kill Bill scene ' Wiggle your big toe'
- Violence - Killing of Marsellus Wallace's business partners, fight scene in Kill Bill. The almost glorification of violence in Tarantino's films is there to portray how artificial it is rather than glorifying violence and guns etc.
- Dialogue - The realism of dialogue, foot massage, Tarantino tends to make constant use of foul language and racial slurs and sexist remarks, this makes the dialogue more realistic by the use of dark humour this is seen in Pulp fiction when Vincent and Jules are talking about hamburgers. An example
- Use of the same actors - Samuel L Jackson, Uma Thurman, Tim Roth.
- Masculinity and gender (representation of women in a derogatory way) - 1990's was more equality, strong female lead characters with a sense of male domination through their view of women as sexual objects. Uma thurman could be portrayed as powerful while passive in the marketing aspect in the poster, conveys positivity of female representation in the film.
- Bathrooms - Prominence of bathrooms, Vincent in killed in a bathroom, Mia Wallace etc.
- Restaurant scenes - Pulp fiction diner robbery, reservoir dogs.
- Mexican standoff (3 way shootout) - Diner robbery, reservoir dogs between Mr White, Jo and Eddie
- Taking existing stories and twisting them to tell it differently - In Pulp Fiction, a boxer (butch) paid to throw a fight by Marsellus, two hitmen doing their jobs. in reservoir
Postmodernism -
- Replacement of realism with artifice (mise-en-scene, character and story), Tarantino mixes up the chronology of his narrative, in a typically postmodern style. The unrealism and artificiality is portrayed in pulp fiction through the larger than life characters through their names and appearance of how their importance of being e.g. a hitman is in contrast to their appearance which reflects the postmodern style as it brings an unrealistic perception of them. Also another typical postmodern style in Pulp Fiction is the the distinction between reality and artifice which is blurred through the violence, as it is seen as cartoon-like and artificial in the way violence occurs in the film with a deliberation of over exaggeration.
Style -
- Worms eye shot of car trunk -
Reservoir Dogs
Pulp Fiction
- Realism of dialogue ( use of racist and sexual language) - In pulp fiction, Django and Jackie Brown there is a frequent use of racial language e.g. the word n**** is prominent in these films. Also there is the frequent use of sexual language in these films mainly used by the strong male characters, towards the women.
- Use of music ( contrapuntal sound) - The sound in Pulp Fiction, doesn't match the action. e.g. the scene before Butch runs over Marsellus Wallace the song playing is happy, upbeat music therefore is contrapuntal as afterwards there is a shootout between Butch and Marsellus.
- Use of long takes - e.g. When Vincent and Jules are taking the lift to the apartment of the ex-business partners (Brett etc) of Marsellus Wallace.
- Corpse or injured point of view shot -




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