Black History Month: Pulp Fiction (1994)
Tuesday, February 24, 2015 at 4:38PM
JA in Black History Month, Oscars (90s), Pulp Fiction, Quentin Tarantino, Samuel L Jackson, religiosity

Our Black History Month through the lens of Oscar continues with Jason on Samuel L. Jackson...

If you'd like a master class in screen-acting (not to mention a Minor in Pronouncing Vulgarity in New & Unique Ways) then you couldn't do much better than by studying the two times Sam Jackson's called upon to recite his character's favorite Bible scripture, Ezekiel 25:17, in Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction. The scenes essentially bookend the film with Jules holding an audience captive through just the conviction of his delivery. Hardly the last time Sam would manage that feat.

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Oh and okay yes in Pulp Fiction he's also got a gun, always a gun. But mostly it's the delivery! He makes that gun practically melt away until all you can see are his intense "Gremlin eyes" (actual quote from Entertainment Weekly) staring at you from under that dark cloud of Jheri-curl, and as he speaks you sink deeper and deeper under the spell of those words - at the film's beginning we find ourselves sinking into horror and despair as we realize he's delivering our eulogy, bang bang. And then, appropriately given the film's upended chronology, at the film's end he gives Pumpkin & Honey-Bunny a new full-walleted lease on life and he embraces his own future, a newfound walker of the Earth to be. The beginning is the end, and vice versa. "The path of the righteous man is beset on all sides..."

Samuel L. Jackson was already 22 years into his acting career by the time Tarantino wrote him the part that would come to define him, not to mention give him his only-to-date Oscar nomination. (Shameful fact, that latter bit.) He'd auditioned for a part in Reservoir Dogs and been passed over, but then QT saw the nimble magic Sam was working for Spike Lee in Mo Better Blues and Jungle Fever (the 1991 Cannes jury actually created a Supporting Actor award just to give Jackson's performance as the drug addict Gator in the latter film a statue) and knew he had to have him. And it was a match made in profanity heaven.

 

And it's all in those two scenes, start and end, end and start, with the wide-ranging journey we take dodging magic bullets and acts of god hanging in between. In Sam Jackson's Gremlin eyes (thanks again, Entertainment Weekly) the path of righteousness is forged - on the one side bloody mayhem, on the other a spiritual quest, with nobody balancing the two halves of Quentin's beautiful mumbo-jumbo much better before or since. "Blessed is he who, in the name of charity and good will, shepherds the weak through the valley of the darkness." Be our shepherd, Sam Jackson. We shall never want.

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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