scholarly journals PULP FICTION (UCUZ ROMAN) FİLMİ VE SİMGELEŞMİŞ KOSTÜMLER

2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (13) ◽  
pp. 223-233
Author(s):  
Ayşegül TÜRK
Keyword(s):  
CALL ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandy Agung ◽  
Dadan Rusmana ◽  
Lili Awaludin

This research discusses the narrative discourse structure in Quentin Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction movie script. Pulp Fiction (1994) Pulp Fiction is known as one of the best crime and drama genre movie. Pulp Fiction directed by Quentin Tarantino. Quentin Tarantino and Roger Avery wrote the script. The movie presented many drops of blood, fights, and gun in the scenes. This movie also provides us with many “nigga” words. The researcher used Gerrard Genette’s narrative discourse theory. This study was conducted into two research problem; 1. What are the kinds of voice that consist in Quentin Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction movie script? 2. What are the kinds of frequency that consists in Quentin Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction movie script? The result of this research shows that in this movie there are two kinds of voice. Moreover, there are some data that show frequency that exist in Quentin Tarantino’ Pulp Fiction movie script.


2018 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 294
Author(s):  
Wilson Oliveira Da Silva Filho ◽  
André Souza Parente
Keyword(s):  

<p class="Resumo">Esse trabalho visa refletir o gif como um fenômeno visual do contemporâneo. Ao mesmo tempo muito rotineiro nas redes, os gifs animados remontam ao cinema de atrações, a experiência fotográfica serial e ao cinema expandido, aqui pensado como estendido em uma visada mcluhaniana<span>. </span>Nessas três dimensões os gifs se relacionam aos experimentos de Muybridge e Marey, as repetições que vão dos filmes gráficos e experimentais dos anos 20 ao cinema estruturalista. Também passeiam por imagens que ganham sobrevidas em filmes narrativos pela simples transformação de um plano emblemático para quem cria ou descontextualiza - a exemplo da famosa inserção do personagem Vincent Vega de John Travolta em “Pulp Fiction” passeando ou rodando por outras imagens que lembram o vídeo. O gif nesse sentido cria sobrevidas à imagem como o atual cinema de arquivo. A repetição ou loop se tornam ferramentas de um filme que gira sobre si próprio e possibilitam novos (micro)cinemas, sobrevidas repetições imagéticas.</p>


2012 ◽  
Vol 48 ◽  
pp. 385-396
Author(s):  
Oliver Logan

The successful and highly authoritative Jesuit opinion-journal La Civiltà Cattolica was founded in 1850 to assert Catholic values in the face of ‘the Revolution’, an allegedly nefarious process that had begun with the Revolution of 1789 and was seen by the Jesuit writers as continuing with the 1848 revolution in Italy and the ongoing Risorgimento movement; this called the temporal power of the papacy into question and also entailed wider issues of secularization. For these writers, the periodical press was a dangerous new force and the only way to combat it effectively was on its own ground. The serial novels which ran in the fortnightly journal from 1850 until 1927 were evidendy written in the belief that the devil should not be left with all the most gripping yarns. The dangers to morality posed by romantic novels were constantly emphasized in the journal’s own fiction. The dominant tone of this fiction was polemical. The villains represented the forces of Jacobinism, the secret societies of the early Risorgimento, and Freemasonry. Conspiracy was a constant theme. Indeed, the leitmotifs of anti-Jesuit polemic depicting the Society of Jesus as an occult conspiratorial organization were in turn deployed by the Jesuit writers against Freemasonry. In the present study, however, the emphasis will be primarily on what the works of Antonio Bresciani (1798–1862), the pioneer Jesuit novelist between 1850 and 1861, had to say about Christian life and values. This, in fact, has most relevance to the genre of the romantic novel.


Author(s):  
Andrew Schopp
Keyword(s):  

Andrew Schopp argues that the representation of morality and history in Inglorious Basterds (2009), Django Unchained (2012) and The Hateful Eight (2015) is a particularly complicated and distinctly post-modern one, inherently connected to the American vision of the world after 9/11. His analysis of Tarantino's texts from the perspective of justice, civilisation and revenge make an invaluable contribution to existing commentaries on Tarantino's work. He also considers their status as allohistorical narratives (commonly referred to as alternative history) which encompasses an awareness of the fact that Tarantino’s films are seemingly divided into a unified diegetic world in which a significant number of his characters reside (see Reservoir Dogs [1992], Pulp Fiction [1994], Inglorious Basterds, Django Unchained and The Hateful Eight) and the films that these characters might go to see in this alternate universe (Death Proof [2007], Kill Bill: Volume One [2003], Kill Bill: Volume Two [2004]). On the surface a range of interrelated strands connect his films like the branding of Red Apple cigarettes, characters being related to each other i.e. the Vega brothers in Pulp Fiction and Reservoir Dogs, Sergeant Donny Donowitz in Inglourious Basterds being the father of filmmaker Lee Donowitz in True Romance (1993), and recently ‘English’ Pete Hickox in The Hateful Eight being an ancestor of Archie Hickox in Inglorious Basterds, but this fluidity is complicated even further both by Tarantino’s liberal appropriation of material from other sources as inspiration and they way the films seem to both reflect, engage and even comment on each others' narratives.


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