Jackie Brown

Jackie Brown(1997)

R
12/25/1997 (US)Crime, Drama, Thriller2h 34m
7.4

"This Christmas, Santa's got a brand new bag."

Overview

Jackie Brown is a flight attendant who gets caught in the middle of smuggling cash into the country for her gunrunner boss. When the cops try to use Jackie to get to her boss, she hatches a plan — with help from a bail bondsman — to keep the money for herself.

Quentin Tarantino

Screenplay

Quentin Tarantino

Director

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Media

Imprint 4K UHD Trailer

Imprint 4K UHD Trailer

Trailer

25th Anniversary Official Trailer

25th Anniversary Official Trailer

Trailer

Jackie Brown (1997) Official Trailer - Samuel L. Jackson, Quentin Taratino Movie HD

Jackie Brown (1997) Official Trailer - Samuel L. Jackson, Quentin Taratino Movie HD

Trailer

Jackie Brown director Quentin Tarantino on writing dialogue - AFI Movie Club

Jackie Brown director Quentin Tarantino on writing dialogue - AFI Movie Club

Featurette

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A review by Eky

Written on June 16, 2012

Quentin Tarantino, a genius who brought us Pulp Fiction and Reservoir Dogs returned with Jackie Brown, a tale of deception in the world of drugs-smuggling business. Heavily inspired by the 1970’s blaxploitation flicks, it tells the story of a stewardess, Jackie Brown (Pam Grier) who was pinned inside the cash-smuggling business as she’s tormented between two choices, becoming a cash-mule and in the end snitching her own boss or being smart by keeping the money for herself. It’s quite rare to see a film where the leading role is a female. Even though the plot relies quite much on Elmore Leonard’s novel Rum Punch, Tarantino really did great in giving his own personal touch to the existing materials by adding up a fine composition of clever dialogue, dark humor, and even the ultra violence in the forms of gun-battling badasses, drugs, and absolutely very graphic language, making it absolutely a typical Tarantino flick.

This film also possessed its own controversies that put Tarantino in the prosecuted seat because of his frequent use of the word “nigger”. This serious accusation was made by Spike Lee who furiously (while busy counting) noted that was used 38 times, excessively, throughout the film and he claimed that it’s an abuse and definitely an insult to black people. Apart from the above accusation, in my opinion, Jackie Brown, with its strong casts from Pam Grier, Bridget Fonda, Robert Forester, and Samuel L. Jackson, Michael Keaton and Robert De Niro really add up to the greatness of the film. The way I see it, every cast here is given a complex set of character for us to study. Both De Niro and Keaton, despite their small roles, they remain favorable and memorable.