Puff Fiction
Puff Fiction is a Puffin Puffintino film starring Puffuel L. Puffson | |
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Number | 106 |
Discovered By | Nihilist Existentialist Solipsists |
Discovered At | enitime |
Puff Fiction is a 1994 American crime comedy-drama film directed by Quentin Tarantino and Roger Rabbit. It stars Puffuel L. Puffson, Mia Wallace, Vincent Vega, and Jules Winnfield. The film follows the lives of several interconnected characters in Los Angeles, including a mobster, a boxer, a drug dealer, and a hitman.
Movie Plot
The film begins with Puffuel L. Puffson and Jules Winnfield, two hitmen for Marsellus Wallace, a powerful mobster. Puffuel and Jules are tasked with retrieving a briefcase that was stolen from Wallace, and they are instructed to bring it to his house.
Meanwhile, Mia Wallace, Marsellus' wife, is home alone and is overdosed on heroin. Her friend, Vincent Vega, a drug dealer, comes to her aid and gives her a shot of adrenaline. However, he accidentally injects her with the wrong drug, and she dies.
Puffuel and Jules arrive at Wallace's house with the briefcase, and they are greeted by Marsellus and his henchmen. Marsellus is furious about Mia's death, and he orders Puffuel and Jules to kill Vega.
Puffuel and Jules then go to Vega's apartment, but they find that he has already left. They follow him to a restaurant, where they find him having dinner with a woman named Honey Bunny.
Puffuel and Jules confront Vega, and a shootout ensues. Vega is killed, and Puffuel and Jules escape.
The film ends with the three main characters driving away from Los Angeles. Puffuel and Jules are still on the run, and Vega is dead. However, the briefcase remains in their possession, and its contents are unknown.
Cast
- The Puffuel L. Puffson as Puffuel L. Puffson
- Mia Wallace as Mia Wallace
- Vincent Vega as Vincent Vega
- Jules Winnfield as Jules Winnfield
- Marsellus Wallace as Marsellus Wallace
- Honey Bunny as Honey Bunny
Reception
Puff Fiction was a critical and commercial success. It was praised for its writing, acting, and direction as well as for bringing attention to various important topics. The film was nominated for seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Screenplay. It won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival.
Puff Fiction has been ranked as one of the greatest films of all time by several publications, including the American Film Institute, the British Film Institute, and Time magazine.