Jackie Brown (film)
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Jackie Brown | |
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Directed by | Quentin Tarantino |
Produced by | Lawrence Bender |
Written by | Quentin Tarantino, Elmore Leonard |
Starring | Pam Grier Samuel L. Jackson Robert Forster Robert De Niro Michael Keaton Bridget Fonda Michael Bowen Chris Tucker |
Editing by | Sally Menke |
Distributed by | Miramax |
Release date(s) | December 25, 1997 |
Running time | 154 min. |
Language | English |
Budget | $12,000,000 |
All Movie Guide profile | |
IMDb profile |
![Tarantino's trademark trunk shot.](../../../upload/thumb/6/62/QTTrunkJB.jpg/200px-QTTrunkJB.jpg)
Jackie Brown is a 1997 motion picture written and directed by Quentin Tarantino. The film stars Pam Grier and Robert Forster, Robert De Niro, Samuel L. Jackson, Bridget Fonda and Michael Keaton.
The screenplay is based on the novel Rum Punch by American novelist Elmore Leonard, although Tarantino made considerable changes to the story line and characters. Pam Grier plays Jackie Brown, a middle-aged airline flight attendant who gets coerced by ATF agent Ray Nicolet (Keaton) to help them bring down arms smuggler Ordell Robbie (Jackson) and his accomplices Louis Gara and Melanie Ralston (De Niro and Fonda). In true Tarantino form, this film has a substantial amount of violence and profanity. Also noteworthy was the casting of Grier and Forster in lead roles. Both were veteran actors, but neither had performed a leading role in many years. Jackie Brown revitalised both actors' careers, Grier's to a greater degree. De Niro and Keaton were major stars, but were cast in supporting roles. The film is in some respects a homage to earlier blaxploitation films, many of which also featured Pam Grier, and the movie's soundtrack is reminiscent of those earlier films as well. It received several major awards nominations, with Robert Forster earning an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor and Samuel L. Jackson and Pam Grier nominated for Golden Globe Awards.
Jackie Brown was released on a two-disc Collector's Edition, with the first one being the movie, and the second one titled 'The Perks', with many special features for the movie.
As with other Tarantino movies, music features prominently pre-existing popular/cult songs. Many of the songs in the film were released on its soundtrack.
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[edit] Plot
Jackie Brown (Pam Grier) is a flight attendant for a small Mexican airline, the latest step down for her career in the airline industry. Despite the low pay, the job enables her to smuggle money from Mexico into the United States for Ordell Robbie (Samuel L. Jackson), a gun runner under the close eye of the ATF.
Early in the film, Robbie learns that another of his workers, Beaumont Livingston (Chris Tucker), has been arrested and, fearing that he will talk to authorities in order to avoid jail time, Robbie arranges for Livingston’s bail and shoots him. Acting on information Livingston had indeed shared, ATF agent Ray Nicolette (Michael Keaton) catches Brown as she arrives in the US with Robbie’s cash. She initially refuses to deal with Nicolette and is sent to prison pending trial.
Robbie, sensing Brown may be just as likely to inform as Livingston had been, arranges to bail her out. He returns to Max Cherry (Robert Forster), the same bail bondsman he used to arrange Livingston’s release, to bail out Brown. Cherry arranges for Brown’s bail and, only partly masking his physical attraction, offers to help her determine her legal options. Later that night, Robbie shows up at Brown’s house, presumably to eliminate her, but using a gun she stole from Cherry, she cuts a deal whereby she will pretend to help the authorities while still managing to smuggle $500,000 of Robbie’s money.
To carry out this plan, Robbie employs several others, including his girlfriend, Melanie Ralston (Bridget Fonda), his former cellmate who befriends Ralston, Louis Gara (Robert De Niro), and a naïve Southern girl, Sheronda (Lisa Gay Hamilton). With Brown’s help, Nicolette arranges a sting to catch Robbie, though Brown and Robbie plan to double cross him by diverting the actual money before Nicolette makes an arrest.
Unbeknownst to Nicolette or Robbie, Brown plans to deceive them both with the help of Cherry in order to keep the $500,000 for herself. After a dry run, during which Nicolette could observe the operation, the stage is set for the actual event. Set in an LA mall, Brown stops in a dressing room before the official exchange to swap bags with Ralston and Gara, supposedly passing off the $500,000 under Nicolette’s nose, but in fact only giving Ralston $50,000 and leaving the rest behind in the dressing room for Cherry to later pick up. Brown then feigns despair as she calls Nicolette out from hiding and claims Ralston took all the money and ran.
Nicolette leaves assuming Robbie has escaped with the money through little fault of Brown’s. Ralston grows on Gara’a nerves, leading him to shoot her while making his escape. When Robbie later discovers that Gara has only delivered $50,000, he shoots Gara and determines that Brown had his money. Cherry and Brown ultimately lure Robbie back to Cherry’s office to claim his money, but Robbie is shot by Nicolette who was hidden in the office. The movie ends with Cherry declining Brown’s invitation to join her as she leaves the country with Robbie’s money.
[edit] Trivia
- Quentin Tarantino has a cameo as the electronic voice on Jackie's answering machine.
- The poster above is a direct reference to the poster of Foxy Brown; it even includes the same "brown sugar and spice" quote.
- In the first mall scene, Max Cherry is seen exiting a movie theater while the music for the ending credits of the movie he just saw is playing. The music is the same music used in the ending credits of Jackie Brown.
- The suit that Jackie buys is the same one that Mia Wallace wears in Pulp Fiction.
- Jackie's car is the exact same car driven by Bruce Willis in Pulp Fiction.
- Tarantino's only brush with "real" crime was an arrest for shoplifting Elmore Leonard's novel The Switch, which marks the first appearance of the characters of Louis and Ordell.[citation needed]
- Pam Grier is mentioned in Tarantino's directorial debut, Reservoir Dogs.
- The intro titles to Jackie Brown are a careful homage to the intro titles to The Graduate. Where Dustin Hoffman passes wearily through LAX past white tiles to a sombre folk soundtrack, Pam Grier walks past the same spot years later to a soaring soul soundtrack ("Across 110th Street" by Bobby Womack) — even the tiles are multi-colored. This neatly illustrates the nature of the cultural change in Los Angeles in the intervening years.
- Michael Keaton reprises his role as the character of ATF agent Ray Nicolet in the Steven Soderbergh film adaptation of Elmore Leonard's Out of Sight starring George Clooney and Jennifer Lopez. Samuel L. Jackson also appears in the film.
- In a homage to a Burt Reynolds film, the song "Street Life" by the Crusaders is used in a scene where Jackie is en route to the climatic set up in Del Amo Mall. This song also opened the Burt Reynolds film Sharky's Machine (1981).
- In yet another homage to a film with actor/director Burt Reynolds, the scene where Ordell and Louis contemplate who took the money in the VW van, is linked to a comparative shot in the 1985 film Stick which is also based on an Elmore Leonard novel.
[edit] Differences between the novel and film
- The events in the novel take place in West Palm Beach, Florida, whereas the film is set in Los Angeles.
- The main character is named Jackie Burke rather than Jackie Brown.
- In the novel Jackie is caucasian, not black.
- Jackie and Max Cherry have a much closer relationship in the novel, developing into a full-blown affair rather than simply a good understanding of each other and a kiss at the end, as was shown in the film.
- The novel features a sex scene between Max and Jackie.
- Ordell Robbie was described as a light-skinned black man, nicknamed "Whitebread."
- Louis Gara has no moustache in the novel.
- Melanie is older than portrayed in the film
- In the novel, Ordell and Louis met at a bar in Detroit, not in prison. It was in that bar that they both discovered they had served time in the same prison, but on different occasions.
- The reader learns that Max Cherry is separated and that Jackie has been married three times; in the film, the viewer knows only that Jackie has been married once before. Max's wife Renee is a secondary character in the novel.
- In the book, Louis Gara actually worked for Max Cherry by bringing in criminals who had forfeited their bail. Louis unofficially quits this job by stealing a pistol and shotgun from Max's office. In the movie, Louis is only shown to work for Ordell Robbie.
- Ordell's money is in Jamaica in the book, not Mexico as in the film. Also, both Mr. Walker and Beaumont are Jamaicans, whereas in the movie, Beaumont was from Kentucky.
- The film was different from most adaptations of Elmore Leonard's work in that it actually has somewhat less violence. In the book there is a scene where several of Ordell's "jackboy" henchmen are trapped in a warehouse full of weapons by ATF agents led by Ray Nicolette; they attempt to blast their way out with an anti-tank rocket launcher, but are too illiterate to read the instructions about how to operate it, and are captured. This would seem to be a scene tailor-made to Tarantino's sense of humor, but was not included in the film, perhaps for budgetary reasons or perhaps in an attempt to concentrate on the realistic and dramatic angles of the story.
[edit] Cast
- Pam Grier as Jackie Brown
- Samuel L. Jackson as Ordell Robie
- Robert Forster as Max Cherry
- Bridget Fonda as Melanie
- Robert De Niro as Louis Gara
- Michael Keaton as Ray Nicolette
- Chris Tucker as Beaumont Livingston
The films of Quentin Tarantino |
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Directed: My Best Friend's Birthday • Reservoir Dogs • Pulp Fiction • Four Rooms • Jackie Brown • Kill Bill • Grindhouse • Inglorious Bastards • The Vega Brothers Written: True Romance • Natural Born Killers • From Dusk Till Dawn |
[edit] External links
Categories: Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | Films directed by Quentin Tarantino | 1997 films | Blaxploitation films | Crime films | Drug-related films | Drama films | Thriller films | Films based on fiction books | Independent films | Neo-noir | Heist films | American films | Fictional flight attendants | English-language films | Miramax films