John Travolta Essays

  • Face Off: John Travolta And Nicolas Cage

    709 Words  | 2 Pages

    for chaotic action sequences, Mexican Standoffs, and frequent usage of slow motion. This film contains all of these aspects, as well as the addition of the two famous actions stars, John Travolta, and Nicolas Cage. As the film title states, the film starts with a soul of an FBI agent named Sean Archer (John Travolta) and his very young son getting shot and nearly assassinated by one of the mob terrorists named Castor Troy (Nicolas Cage). Sean Archer’s son persists dead from the gunfire. After a

  • Pulp Fiction History

    1437 Words  | 3 Pages

    The year 1994 saw many great events occur. Whether we are observing the Rwandan genocide that left over eight hundred thousand people dead or the Russian invasion of Chechnya, the year 1994 was an eventful year to say the least. However, later that year, one of the greatest films of all time, and more importantly my favorite film, Pulp Fiction was released to critical acclaim on October 14, 1994. Hence, this essay seeks to provide a holistic historical overview and importance of the film, Pulp Fiction

  • Review: Pulp Fiction

    780 Words  | 2 Pages

    stories involving; two hit-men, a boxer and his French girlfriend, a crime boss and his mischievous wife, a small time drug dealer, two lovebird robbers, and two hillbilly rapists. However, all these stories revolve around three main plots; Vincent (John Travolta) taking the crime boss’s wife out (Umma Thurman), the crime boss asks the boxer (Bruce Willis) to throw out the boxing match, and the two lovebirds de...

  • Postmodernism in Pulp Fiction

    1676 Words  | 4 Pages

    The film Pulp Fiction was an immediate box office success when it was released in 1994 and it was also well received by the critics, and celebrated for the way it appeared to capture exactly a certain pre-millennial angst and dislocation in Western capitalist societies. The term post-modernist, often used to refer to art and architecture, was applied to this film. The pulp fiction refers to popular novels which are bought in large numbers by less well educated people and enjoyed for their entertainment

  • Ladder 49 Movie Review

    1068 Words  | 3 Pages

    end everyone would be proud and happy. This is how a movie of this kind typically is, but I was somewhat wrong. In the 2004 film Ladder 49 Joaquin Phoenix stars as Jack Morrison a firefighter going through the different stages of his life. John Travolta stars as Chief Mike Kennedy, throughout the movie he aids Jack in his career as a firefighter and his personal life. He is a mentor to Jack and the rest of the men in the fire house. Chief Kennedy is there when Jack gets married. He is there

  • The Things that Money Can and Cannot Buy

    1581 Words  | 4 Pages

    Money, the media of exchange for products and services, provides things people need, like food, clothing, shelter, or medicine. People spend most of their life looking for it. My parent for example, works from sunrise to sunset to obtain it. The more money people have the more benefits they can get, because they will be able to get a bigger and better houses, clothes, or food. Less money means stress in bill payments, gas prices, and food prices. With money, people can fulfill their material need

  • Civil Action

    1020 Words  | 3 Pages

    A Civil Action The movie A Civil Action brings up an interesting idea that many people in the public don't see or hear about very often. The idea that the big corporations often don't take into account the safety of the people that work for them or the people that live around the factories. These big corporations are run entirely by money and the idea of what things will cost and how much money they can possibly make. Too many times money is more important than the lives of human beings and the people

  • Pulp Fiction Narrative

    1062 Words  | 3 Pages

    intense scene, before dropping down to a relatively calm, only to build back up again a few scenes later. This goes on throughout the entire course of the film, pummeling the viewer from one scenario to another. In Pulp Fiction we see how Vincent (John Travolta) and the dealer are bringing Mia (Uma Thurman) back to life, after she had an overdose. In a medium shot the dealer explains to Vincent what to do. While the dealer is counting to three, the camera zooms into even tighter close ups of Vincent and

  • Pulp Fiction, by Quentin Tarantino

    906 Words  | 2 Pages

    The movie Pulp Fiction, directed by Quentin Tarantino, contains violence, sex and drugs but is an underlying religious film. The five main characters either follow the lord and are rewarded or they follow the devil and are punished. John Travolta plays Vincent Vega, Ving Rhames plays Marcellus Wallace and Uma Thurman plays Mia Wallace, these three characters represent evil and sin. Samuel L. Jackson plays Jules Winnefield and Bruce Willis plays Butch Coolidge and these characters represent good and

  • Literary Devices Utilized in Thomas Foster's Book "How to Read Literature Like a Professor" Put to Use in "Pulp Fiction"

    1048 Words  | 3 Pages

    a movie or story without them. Works Cited Foster, Thomas C. How to Read Literature like a Professor: a Lively and Entertaining Guide to Reading between the Lines. New York: Quill, 2003. Print. Pulp Fiction. Dir. Tarantino Quentin. Perf. John Travolta, Samuel L. Jackson, Uma Thurman, Tim Roth and Amanda Plummer. Miramax / Buena Vista Home Video, 1994. DVD.

  • The Use of Different Genres in Thelma and Louise and Pulp Fiction

    985 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Use of Different Genres in Thelma and Louise and Pulp Fiction The term ‘genre’ is used for classifying media texts into groups that have similar characteristics. In Thelma and Louise and Pulp Fiction, a mixture of genres was used in these films. This is known as hybrid genre. In Thelma and Louise, the following genres were used throughout the film: chick-flick, drama, comedy, musical, action, police chase, western and romance. In Pulp Fiction, the following genres were used throughout

  • pulp fiction

    1227 Words  | 3 Pages

    Pulp Fiction is like boot camp for the Marines. You come into it from your civilized life, they subject you to violent language until you're numb, they abuse you verbally and physically until all of your normal feelings and values are reduced to dust. Leaving you aware that you have changed, and able to describe the change, you find yourself questioning the person you were previously. First thing you know you're saluting. This story is a cleverly disorienting journey through a landscape of danger

  • Pulp Fiction Thesis

    1678 Words  | 4 Pages

    There are movies that make you laugh, that make you cry, that blow you away with jaw-dropping, ever-so-satisfying action sequences. And there is Pulp Fiction, Quentin Tarantino’s masterpiece, an homage to the old Pulp Magazines and crime novels popular in the 1950s. Known for their incredibly dense and complex dialogue and excessive violence, Tarantino adds his trademark nonlinear chronology and thorough character development to create a movie that celebrates the fact that chance governs all of our

  • Review of the Movie "Pulp Fiction" by Quentin Tarantino

    1130 Words  | 3 Pages

    A soft, moist, shapeless mass of matter. 2. A magazine or book containing lurid subject matter and being characteristically printed on rough, unfinished paper. This is the exotic, but extremely fitting and appropriate, opening to the 1994 film, Pulp Fiction. Directed by Quentin Tarantino, this film is unpredictable, surprising, and possibly offensive. It forces action and thrill-seeker cineastes to dispose of all predictions and prepositions. The director uses shock, surprise, mystery, absurdity

  • Sequence Analysis Of Pulp Fiction

    586 Words  | 2 Pages

    Katie Randazzo George Tysh Film Noir & Beyond 17 March 2014 Pulp Fiction- “Sequence Analysis” Pulp Fiction is a film that is structured around three story-lines. Vincent Vega is the lead in the first story. In the second storyline, Butch Coolidge is the lead, and Jules Winnfield, is the lead of the third. Each storyline targets a different series of incidents but they connect and intersect in numerous ways. “The film starts out with a diner hold-up staged by "Pumpkin" and "Honey Bunny," then picks

  • The Warriors Path Essay

    915 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the novel The Warriors Path by Louis L’amour is a book that contains action, adventure, and the mystery of the unknown world. The book takes place in the late 1400’s, when America was first discovered. The story of the Sacketts continues to prosper in the new world, this time with a new character to take the story’s place. In the story, Kin Sackett, who is Jubal Sackett’s son, is a backwoodsman that has been living in the new world for many years. Kin Sackett is just as stubborn and tough as

  • Grease Compare And Contrast

    700 Words  | 2 Pages

    A movie to relatable to anyone that has been in high school or is experiencing it. “Grease” is the word! In 1978 Grease was filmed and it become a classic. Thirty-eight years later Fox aired Grease: Live! sending an overly excited crowd. Between the two movies there were lots of differences. Extra scenes, getting to know each one of the characters, lines taken out or switched around, and new songs. When watching Grease: Live! I was astounded that it was going to be three hours long. THREE hours

  • Stereotypes In The Movie 'Grease'

    585 Words  | 2 Pages

    Grease, one of the most well known ‘coming of age’ movies, a movie about a new girl who moves to a new country, falls in love with a boy and makes new friends who empower her to embrace her true self and become who she really is. No. Grease is a movie that teaches young girls that it’s okay to change who you are just to grasp the attention of the boy you like, and that you must not be a prude. A movie that is full of sexual innuendos all to make the good girl look bad and have amazing stories to

  • Pulp Fiction: Leadership from a Criminal Perspective

    833 Words  | 2 Pages

    Pulp Fiction, a film written and directed by Quentin Tarantino, interweaves a series of accounts depicting the various roles of southern California criminals. Within each story, a single character, or several characters, display various leadership themes. Considering that all of the characters in Pulp Fiction are gangsters, the use of leadership tends to revolve around unethical situations. Throughout the entirety of the motion picture, the crime syndicate in Pulp Fiction demonstrates a flat organization:

  • Drive In Theatre In The 1950's

    1243 Words  | 3 Pages

    Drive-in theatres, fixing up cars, and rock n’ roll were the only things that mattered to teenagers in the 1950’s. It is hard to find a drive-in theatre today but in the 50’s they were the place to go. It was where you went on a date especially if the boy had a car. Rock n’ roll is still considered the music that teenagers listen to during their rebellious stage, though the sound has changed drastically. From a time that gave the world movie theaters, colour television, and records from artists like