With Generation X, whose coming of age coincided with a seismic shift in Hollywood, cinema moved from the 1970s blockbuster era to the gritty independent boom of the 1990s. That shift helped shape a generation defined by rebellious, cynical, and groundbreaking films with undeniable swagger.
According to Collider, there’s one film—a Royale with cheese, if you will—that captures all of the above and more: Quentin Tarantino’s 1994 gem, Pulp Fiction.
Released inOctober 1994, Pulp Fiction is a crime thriller told through four primary vignettes out of chronological order. Set in Los Angeles over two days, it scrambles the lives of hitmen, a boxer, a mobster’s wife, and diner thieves into a fragmented narrative that embodies the irreverent spirit many associate with Gen X.
Written and directed by Tarantino, whose résumé already included Reservoir Dogs and the screenplay for True Romance, Pulp Fiction brought together a Who’s Who of Hollywood, with John Travolta, Samuel L. Jackson, Bruce Willis, Uma Thurman, Tim Roth, and many others embodying a “new kind of cool.”
“No movie captured this sensibility with more swagger, and its impact was immediate and seismic,” the outlet says. “Pulp Fiction influenced countless filmmakers and reshaped how audiences thought about storytelling. Its meta quality, referencing scores of movies and shows, also resonated with a generation who had grown up with home video and easy access to cinema's classics.”
“I never understood what the hell [surf rock] had to do with surfing,” Tarantino told Rolling Stone. “I don't see the connection between this music and surfing—to me, it sounded like rock and roll spaghetti western music. What I don’t want to do is, and I see it happen in a lot of movies, [is] just turn up the soundtrack to create a false energy.”
From Dick Dale’s "Misirlou," The Centurians' "Bullwinkle Part II," and Link Wray’s “Ace of Spades,” to Chuck Berry’s “You Never Can Tell,” Urge Overkill's “Girl, You’ll Be a Woman Soon,” and Dusty Springfield’s “Son of a Preacher Man,” the needle drops became as memorable as the dialogue itself.
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Now 32 years later, Pulp Fiction is still wearing the crown. If every generation has that one defining movie, Gen X has never needed a second choice.
Related: 1996 Film That Inspired One of Alternative Rock’s Most Haunting Ballads Became a Cult Classic
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