- Violence and humor scenes, clever dialogues.
- He was a video clerk. He learned everything by this and not by a normal method of film-school. When he studied film in Video Archives, Manhattan Beach, at the same time he was an actor and he used to write his own screenplays.
- Reservoir Dogs was very criticized because it was said that the move was very similar to City on Fire. Also because it had very unnecessary violent scenes.
- Horror gerne.
- Trunk shot:
this is a low angle shot and creates the feeling that the audience is in the trunk of the car and those characters of the shot are looking to it. It makes the audience wonder what's inside the trunk.
(In Reservoir Dogs: Mr Brown, Mr pink and Mr White looking at Marvin Nash)
Corpse POV:
as the trunk shot, is a low angle shot in which creates the feeling of loss of power.
(In Jackie Brown: Jackie and Ray looking at Ordell dead)
"God eye" POV:
it's an extreme high angle shot which shows more than what the character can see, it creates the sense of control as the audience can see everything clearer.
(In Jackie Brown: Jackie Brown hides money in her bag at the airport's toilets)
6. Mirror shot:
(In Kill Bill: the Bride in the bathroom looking at her stomach)
It's a shot in which the character has intimacy and privacy in which it thinks and talks to himself.
7. a) Mexican standoff is a shot in which two or more characters are staring at each other with guns.
b) The term comes from "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly", a Sergio Leone's film from 1966.
c) The Good, the Bad and the Ugly:
Three Kings:
d) Reservoir Dogs:
Pulp Fiction:
8. a) MacGuffin is a plot element that catches audience atention. The main characters want to do or obtaing something and can sacrifice everything to get it, like money for example. This pushes foward the plot. It's a common element in the thriller films.
b) The MacGuffin in Pulp Fiction is the suitcase.
c) Mission Impossible 3:
Star Wars:
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