Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Biblical References in Pulp Fiction Essay -- Film Movie Quentin Tarant
 Pulp Fiction        Throughout the movie Pulp Fiction, directed by Quentin Tarantino, there are  many hidden references to religion and the Bible. The movie starts off,  introducing our two main characters, Vincent Vega and Jules Winnfield, as two  cheap hitmen in search of a package belonging to their boss, Marcellus Wallace.  The package is retrieved, and they then began their job of returning it to their  boss. Along the way, they ran into difficulties, such as Vega's so-called  "date" with his boss' wife, Mia, during which she overdosed on heroin, and Vega  was forced to take her to the drug dealer's house to save her life, as well as  the robbers in the restaurant, who try to take the suitcase from Winnfield, but  were unsuccessful. The whole movie serves as a warning to all mankind to avoid  the temptations of the Devil, as well as a warning to not try to play God,  because the two boys who stole the suitcase play the role of the Devil, as do  the drugs, and they were almost the downfall of the whole attempt.         The movie wasted no time in introducing the first biblical reference  when the two men try to retrieve the suitcase containing Wallace's belongings.  When Vega opened the suitcase, he used the combination "666" to open the  suitcase, and when he opened it, the contents glowed a golden-orange color.  This was obviously an introductory attempt to show the audience that the  suitcase held Marcellus' soul. Perhaps Tarantino was trying to show that the  people that stole the suitcase were the devils pawns, and these two hitmen were  angels trying to retrieve stolen property.    After Vega and Winnfield had obtained their "treasure," Winnfield quoted  the Bible, specifically Ezekiel 25:17, the passage about destroying the evil  members of the society that try to harm others for no reason. Part of that  passage was "..and you will know my name is the Lord, when I lay my vengeance  upon thee." This quote shows that Winnfield sees what he is doing as heroic, or  maybe angelic, and by carrying out his duties, he is following the word of the  Lord. As Winnfield shot the boy, Brett, an orange-golden glow enveloped the  screen, representing Brett's soul leaving his body. This whole part of the  movie is to warn the evil-doers of the world to cease their wrongdoings, because  there are people out there who will stop them.         The next main scene of...              ...od, sometimes what he does is not right,  and he is trying to be the one that always does the right thing: the shepherd.  This is another reason why Jules is not killed off. He realized that he cannot  play God, and therefore he is forgiven. Vincent, however, never fully realized  this, and he is punished at the end of the story by being killed by Butch.         Although cleverly hidden, the signs of biblical inference and the power  of God are extremely prevalent in the film. Elements of the plot such as the  realization of wrongdoing by Jules, the general feeling that the Wallaces are  trying to be all knowing and all powerful, the drug dealer being the downfall as  well as the savior for Mia, and the way that Jules and Vincent try to control  others lives and are punished for it all show us something. These signs show us  that we must do as we think we should, and not try to control anyone but  yourself, because if you are busy trying to control others, you may not be  tending to yourself, leaving yourself wide open to manipulation by others like  yourself. If we mind our own business and take care of ourselves, the world  would go a lot smoother, and have many fewer conflicts.                       
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