![]() (As Jason Bailey points out in his recent book on Pulp Fiction, one of the first things we learn about Marsellus, courtesy of Samuel L. Butch does, and Marsellus then blasts his rapist in the groin. We see a figure standing behind Butch and hear a shotgun being cocked. Butch then faces down Zed (who, in his security guard uniform, is the closest thing we see to law enforcement in all of Pulp Fiction), daring him to reach for his gun. Butch slices Maynard’s chest open with the sword and skewers him. Surf Music and Seventies Soul: The Songs of ‘Pulp Fiction’īutch comes downstairs to find Zed sodomizing Marsellus in “Russell’s old room” (we never learn who the unfortunate Russell was) while Maynard cheers him on. I like using stuff for comic effect, but I don’t want it to be har, har, wink, wink, nudge, nudge, you know?” Instead, he picked “Comanche,” a 1961 song by the surf band the Revels. Tarantino said that ultimately he was glad he couldn’t go with “My Sharona”: “It would have been too cutely comic. I thought, oh, God, this is just too funny not to use.”) Unfortunately, the 1994 Gen-X rom-com Reality Bites also wanted it for a scene where Winona Ryder, Janeane Garofalo, and Steve Zahn dance in a convenience store, and the licensing people chose Pringles over sexual assault. 1 New Wave single from 1979, “My Sharona.” (Tarantino said that the song “has a really good sodomy beat to it. The track he actually planned to use? The Knack’s No. The script dictates that the music playing during the rape of Marsellus is “The Judds, singing in harmony.” But Tarantino never intended to use the country-music family: he had gotten wise to the notion that if he specified the song he really wanted on the soundtrack, whoever controlled the rights would charge him extra, so he would plant false musical cues. (The theory falls apart because Budd’s lying: the sword turns up in a golf bag in his trailer.) Some people like to think that the sword Butch finds is a crossover from Tarantino’s Kill Bill movies: specifically, the sword that Bill (David Carradine) gave to his brother Budd (Michael Madsen), since Budd tells Bill that he pawned the sword. There’s an entertaining but goofy theory about that sword, to be filed next to the fan-favorite notion that Marsellus Wallace’s soul has been removed through the back of his neck and stored in his briefcase. Tarantino’s screenplay specifies that Butch holds the weapon “Takakura Ken-style,” referring to the Japanese star of movies such as 1968’s The Drifting Avenger. ) Then Butch spots the appropriate weapon of honor and vengeance: a samurai sword. (Check it out here, starting around 6:30. The sequence is like an old Looney Tunes cartoon - “The Rabbit of Seville,” for example - where Bugs Bunny and an opponent engage in a rapid-fire arms race. He wordlessly grabs a claw hammer, then upgrades to a baseball bat, followed by a chainsaw. He turns back to help Marsellus, the man who just tried to kill him, but first he needs to find a weapon. Standing at the door of the pawnshop in a blood-soaked T-shirt, on the threshold of escaping his predicament and his movie’s genre, Butch has a crisis of conscience (beautifully underplayed by Willis). Once they take Marsellus into the adjoining room, Butch knocks out the Gimp with a single punch, and heads upstairs to freedom. Maynard is joined by his cousin, Zed, and their leather-clad servant, the Gimp Zed decides that they will rape Marsellus first. Marsellus and Butch awaken in the pawnshop’s basement, tied to chairs and equipped with red ball gags. A limping chase on foot leads them both into a pawnshop, where Butch punches out Marsellus and the proprietor, Maynard, concusses Butch. The next morning, Butch heads to his apartment to fetch a watch while there, he kills Vincent (John Travolta) and hits Marsellus with the car. The setup: the boxer Butch Coolidge (played by a 39-year-old Bruce Willis) double-crosses crime boss Marsellus Wallace (Ving Rhames) instead of throwing a prizefight, he bets on himself and wins. No scene upended more expectations than the pawn shop sequence (SPOILER ALERT - if you haven’t ever seen the movie, this is the moment when you should stop reading and go do that. But when Quentin Tarantino’s film debuted at the Cannes Film Festival in May 1994, it thrilled and shocked the audience in equal measures. Pulp Fiction has become so canonized as a modern classic, it’s easy to forget how transgressive it was on its release twenty years ago. ![]()
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