For a film, explained a young Quentin Tarantino in one interview, “the real test of time isn’t the Friday that it opens. It’s how the film is thought of thirty years from now.” It just so happens that Pulp Fiction, which made Tarantino the most celebrated director in America practically on its opening day, came out thirty years ago last fall. That provided the occasion for the video essay from YouTuber Dodford above, which tells the story of how Tarantino became a filmmaker, assembled for the most part out of Tarantino’s own words — and in the not-quite-linear chronology with which people still associate him.
As Tarantino’s body of work has grown, it’s come to seem less defined by such sliced-and-diced timelines, or even by the obsessions with pop culture or graphic violence the media tended to exaggerate when first he rose to fame. “They thought it was far more violent than it was,” he says of the public reaction to his first feature Reservoir Dogs in a Charlie Rose interview from which this video draws. He could take that as a testament to his understanding of cinema, a form that draws its power just as often from what it doesn’t show as what it does.
Tarantino began cultivating that understanding early, throughout his movie-saturated childhood and his stint as a video-store clerk in Manhattan Beach. Contrary to popular belief, however, Video Archives didn’t make him a movie expert: “I was already a movie expert; that’s how I got hired.” It was during that period that he commenced work on My Best Friend’s Birthday, which he meant to be his first film. Though he never completed it even after three years of work, he did notice the artistic development evident in a comparison between its amateurish early scenes and its more effective later ones.
That failed project turned out to be “the best film school a person could possibly have,” and it prepared him to seize the opportunities that would come later. After writing and selling the script for True Romance, he was in a position to work on Reservoir Dogs, which eventually made it to production thanks to the interest of Harvey Keitel, who would play Mr. White. When that picture got attention at Sundance and became an indie hit, Tarantino went off on a European sojourn, ostensibly in order to work on his next script — and to figure out how to beat “the dreaded sophomore curse,” something with which he’d had much second-hand experience as a disappointed moviegoer.
The fruit of those labors, a crime-story anthology called Pulp Fiction, first seemed, incredibly, to promise little box-office potential. But one senses that Tarantino knew exactly what he had, because he knew his audience. It’s not that he’d commissioned intensive market research, but that, as he once put it, “It’s me; I’m the audience.” And so he’s remained over the past three decades, drawing ever closer to completing what, as he’s often said, will ultimately constitute a ten-picture filmography. Actually stopping there would, of course, risk the disappointment of his many fans, who only want more. But when a filmmaker keeps at it too long, as the cinephile in Tarantino well understands, he runs the far more dire risk of disappointing himself.
Related content:
Quentin Tarantino Explains How to Write & Direct Movies
My Best Friend’s Birthday, Quentin Tarantino’s 1987 Debut Film
An Analysis of Quentin Tarantino’s Films Narrated (Mostly) by Quentin Tarantino
Quentin Tarantino & Roger Avary Rewatch Cult-Classic Movies on Their New Video Archives Podcast
Why Quentin Tarantino Will Only Make 10 Movies
Based in Seoul, Colin Marshall writes and broadcasts on cities, language, and culture. His projects include the Substack newsletter Books on Cities and the book The Stateless City: a Walk through 21st-Century Los Angeles. Follow him on the social network formerly known as Twitter at @colinmarshall.