Redemption in Pulp Fiction

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“Three stories…about one story,” that is how Quentin Tarantino, the director of Pulp fiction, describes the movie. At first glance, it appears that the story uniting the three stories is the narrative of the movie, however upon further analysis it becomes evident that the true story uniting the three stories is the search for redemption. Tarantino highlights this by fragmenting the narrative so the movie ends with three characters, Butch, Jules and, Vega, having a chance at redemption. In order to receive redemption, there must be sin or error surrounding you, in the instance of Butch, this error is an exaggerated sense of family loyalty. In most cases family loyalty is seen as a positive attribute; however in excess it can be detrimental to you and everyone around you. This first becomes evident when Butch is unable to throw a boxing match, even though doing so would keep him and his girlfriend out of danger, as well as providing considerable monetary gain for both. Instead he wins the match and he and his girlfriend are forced to go into hiding. After realizing that his girlfriend ...

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