Jules Winnfield and Vincent Vega, played by Samuel L. Jackson and John Travolta, respectively.
The speech comes from the Bible passage Ezekiel 25:17, and is as follows:
"The path of the righteous man is beset on all sides by the iniquities of the selfish and the tyranny of evil men. Blessed is he, who in the name of charity and good will, shepherds the weak through the valley of darkness, for he is truly his brother's keeper and the finder of lost children. And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger those who would attempt to poison and destroy my brothers. And you will know my name is the Lord when I lay my vengeance upon thee. "
They drink espresso mixed with a walnut and cherry shaving dusted with a coat of cinnamon. (I worked on that movie)
shoes probably.
She is barefoot when Vincent comes to pick her up, but she takes shoes off when they dance.
it was cocaine because if you actually remember the seen where she overdoses you'll see that she is sniffing :D
that's wrong, its heroin. you can sniff heroin just like cocaine. Heroin is not allways brown, it can be white and it looks just like cocaine.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5bHeroin_asian.jpg
also, she had been doing cocaine all night and she snorted the equivalent of what she had been snorting in heroin, so she ods. Two extreme opposites mixing at high doses can be fatal.
John Travolta?
John Travolta, Samuel L. Jackson, Uma Thurman, Harvey Keitel, Tim Roth, Amanda Plummer, and Ving Rhames.
Others are Maria de Medeiros, Eric Stoltz, Rosanna Arquette, Christopher Walken, and Bruce Willis.
If Love Is a Red Dress (Hang Me in Rags) - Maria McKee
It's on the two disc collectors edition of the Pulp Fiction soundtrack.
There are a number of places from which one could purchase a Pulp Fiction wallet. These include the website PulpFictionWallets, as well as Amazon and eBay.
Nothing. She is mostly barefoot in the movie, because Quentin Tarantino apparently has a bit of a foot fetish.
the actor that played Pumpkin in 'Pulp Fiction' was Tim Roth. He also played in 'Reservoir Dogs', and the show 'Lie to Me'.
They use Adrenaline to revive Mia Wallace
Pulp Fiction is Not told from beginning to end. It has the almost end, then the beginning, than the end, then the almost beginning and there are variations on certain events told from the point of view of different people. John Travolta's character was killed when he was shot by Bruce Willis, the person he was hired to kill. The reason John is alive at the end of the movie, is because the end of the movie is not the end of the time line. It's a different unique movie, and it usually requires two viewings to understand it and place the events in their proper sequence. Quentin Tartentinio, the director, wanted to make a film that was not the same as other films with a beginning middle and end shown in that order. He wanted to mix things up a bit. and make the audience think about what they were seeing, instead of just watching an ordinary movie with an ordinary sequence of events, like almost every other movie ever made.
One example of literary pulp fiction is the Modesty Blaise series written by Peter O'Donnell. Blaise is the retired leader of the crime ring known as The Network. Orphaned at a young age and forced to fend for herself in Europe and the Middle East, Modesty is fiercely independent. Willie Garvin, a master knife-man whom she found and brought into The Network, is her closest ally. Her connections to British Intelligence through Sir Gerald Tarrant often result in the duo coming out of retirement. Their adventures take them around the world and are generally based on philanthropic, not mercenary, motives. Some titles in the Modesty Blaise series include I, Lucifer, Sabre Tooth, A Taste for Death, and The Impossible Virgin. Coincidentally, in the movie Pulp Fiction, it is a Modesty Blaise book that Vincent Vega (played by John Travolta) is reading in the bathrooms at the coffee shop and at Butch's apartment.
A film shown to Uma and John before the shoot called "band of outsiders". The film contains a famous dance scene in which the characters are dancing for fun rather than perfection, something mimicked in Pulp Fiction.