Current:Home > ContactQuentin Tarantino's 'Pulp' players: A guide to the actors who make his 'Fiction' iconic -Wealth Navigators Hub
Quentin Tarantino's 'Pulp' players: A guide to the actors who make his 'Fiction' iconic
View
Date:2025-04-17 14:24:00
Thirty years ago this week, no one was spouting Bible verses any better than Samuel L. Jackson.
The now-iconic actor scored an Oscar nomination for playing violent but thoughtful – and undisputedly cool – hitman Jules Winnfield in “Pulp Fiction,” Quentin Tarantino’s genre-mashing, game-changing indie masterpiece that put the director and Jackson on the pop-culture map. Since then, Jackson’s appeared in several other Tarantino outings. And Tarantino, starting with his 1992 debut “Reservoir Dogs,” has built an impressive repertory company that's as much a hallmark of his oeuvre as antiheroes and funky soundtracks. (The person who’s been in more Tarantino films than anyone? The director himself, sometimes in supporting roles and other times just in voiceover.)
To celebrate 30 years of “Pulp Fiction” (released October 14, 1994), here’s a Venn diagram showing Tarantino films’ recurring starpower through the decades that could only be described as Kool and the Gang.
Can't see our graphics? Click here.
Paired with John Travolta, Jackson had his big Hollywood breakout in "Pulp Fiction" before popping up three years later as a gun runner opposite Pam Grier in the crime comedy/blaxploitation homage "Jackie Brown." And in the '90s, three of Jackson's high-profile "Pulp" co-stars starred in Tarantino's earlier "Reservoir Dogs": Tim Roth, Harvey Keitel and Steve Buscemi went from playing gangsters Mr. Orange, Mr. White and Mr. Pink, respectively, to populating "Fiction" as diner robber Pumpkin, no-nonsense fixer Winston Wolfe and a Jack Rabbit Slim's waiter, Buddy Holly.
In the 2000s, Jackson had small roles as wedding pianist Rufus in the second volume of the martial-arts revenge epic "Kill Bill," which starred his "Pulp Fiction" co-star Uma Thurman, and as a narrator in the World War II fantasy thriller "Inglourious Basterds." (Both also included '70s and '80s action star Bo Svenson and French actress Julie Dreyfus.) "Basterds" featured Eli Roth, the director of "Hostel" and the recent "Borderlands," as a Nazi-hunting soldier opposite Brad Pitt and in his buddy Tarantino's female-fronted action horror "Death Proof" as a dorky bar patron who makes fun of Kurt Russell's villain.
Tarantino was in his Western era in the 2010s with pre-Civil War revenge thriller "Django Unchained" – which offered a good-guy role for "Basterds" baddie Christoph Waltz – and twisty locked-room mystery "The Hateful Eight." (Jackson scored parts in both, as an enslaved henchman in "Django" and the lead bounty hunter of "Eight.") After playing the evil plantation owner of "Django," Leonardo DiCaprio played an old-school action-movie star opposite "Basterds" man Brad Pitt in "Once Upon a Time in Hollywood," an L.A. story based on the Manson family murder of Sharon Tate. But the real MVPs of that decade were film legend Bruce Dern and New Zealand actress/stuntwoman Zoe Bell, who appeared in all three movies – as did, you guessed it, Tarantino.
Read more: As 'Pulp Fiction' turns 30, we rank all Quentin Tarantino movies
Notable names and faces who've appeared in at least two Tarantino movies
Contributing: David Baratz
SOURCES: USA TODAY research, IMDB
PHOTOS by Getty Images; USA TODAY Network; Reuters; Miramax of Courtesy Everett Collection
veryGood! (3964)
Related
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- China's ruling Communist Party expels former chief of sports body
- Sabrina Carpenter Shares Her Self
- See Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon's Twins Monroe and Moroccan Gift Her Flowers Onstage
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Supreme Court allows investors’ class action to proceed against microchip company Nvidia
- Dick Van Dyke credits neighbors with saving his life and home during Malibu fire
- Morgan Wallen sentenced after pleading guilty in Nashville chair
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- KISS OF LIFE reflects on sold
Ranking
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Most reports ordered by California’s Legislature this year are shown as missing
- Albertsons gives up on Kroger merger and sues the grocery chain for failing to secure deal
- Albertsons gives up on Kroger merger and sues the grocery chain for failing to secure deal
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Albertsons gives up on Kroger merger and sues the grocery chain for failing to secure deal
- North Dakota regulators consider underground carbon dioxide storage permits for Midwest pipeline
- Alex Jones keeps Infowars for now after judge rejects The Onion’s winning auction bid
Recommendation
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
Sabrina Carpenter reveals her own hits made it on her personal Spotify Wrapped list
'Maria' review: Angelina Jolie sings but Maria Callas biopic doesn't soar
'Mary': How to stream, what biblical experts think about Netflix's new coming
The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
Netizens raise privacy concerns over Acra's Bizfile search function revealing citizens' IC numbers
Through 'The Loss Mother's Stone,' mothers share their grief from losing a child to stillbirth
Save 30% on the Perfect Spongelle Holiday Gifts That Make Every Day a Spa Day