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By Ray Pride DECEMBER 29, 1997: Everyone who exposes themselves to the drizzle of publicity and movie lore and personalities on parade knows that Quentin Tarantino is an excitable boy. What's new and notable is the calm and gravity at the center of his third, newest job as director of "Jackie Brown." Working from Elmore Leonard's novel, "Rum Punch," the 33-year-old director, after almost four years away from directing features, still plays with his customary devices: inspired casting, sudden bursts of violence, outrageous and profane comic monologues, non-linearity of time. But the effect is more melancholy than kinetic. At over two-and-a-half hours, this genre riff will wear out most audiences, but it's a strong career move from someone who's realized he shouldn't try to top "Pulp Fiction." Tarantino's script celebrates Leonard's standard roster of deceitful, double-crossing, down-and-dirty losers and losers on their way back. Heading up the latter camp is Pam Grier, fine as stewardess Jackie Brown, who finds herself in trouble after getting caught coming up from Mexico with $50,000 in her flight bag. She's carrying it for small-time arms dealer Ordell Robbie, who's played by Samuel L. Jackson as a smooth and utterly deluded ex-con. Jackson is regal, commanding the screen, even when his words reek of trademark Tarantino-isms. Robert Forster is superb as Jackie's smitten bail bondsman; among the other actors getting in on the loopy digressions are Robert De Niro, Michael Keaton and Bridget Fonda.
He says he grew up enjoying Pam Grier on-screen. "I saw 'Coffy' when I was like 13, and like every other boy my age, I had a big old thing for her." He followed her work as he imbibed other movies. "Her work in 'Fort Apache, the Bronx,' was great character work. It's just great, great character work and no kind of acting knocks me out more than character work, leaving the person behind and diving into the character. If it's not one-hundred percent pure, then you've got some crink in your armor somewhere along the line in the movie." After a fashion, he sees Grier's Jackie Brown as an everywoman. "After nineteen years in the service industry, she's worked her way down the ladder. There's a whole lot of people in America stuck doing the same thing because at the moment when they should have left that job and gone to another one, they stayed with what they knew. And the next thing they know, they're 45 and they're the working poor. That's where Jackie Brown is, all right? Casting a black woman in her forties as this character gave it a depth. She really didn't have any options. There's a whole lot of people in America scared for the exact same reason. I could have been that if I had stayed in the video-store business. Pam brings a weight to that. She's lived life and Pam also is gorgeous. She looks like she's 35 and has a quality where she looks like she can handle anything. She can keep her cool when the situation gets hot. All right? Well, Pam has that in spades. That is Pam Grier." Sam Jackson's Ordell is a regal cock-of-the-walk, and as Jackson jokes, "I say nigga a lot in this movie. One time, I even say nigga five times in one sentence and that's pretty hard to do!" Tarantino's covered this ground before. After some hesitation, he answers, "Do I have the right to write characters other than me, other races, and do I have the right to know these characters, do I have the right to have these characters talk in the truth of who these people are? I know who Ordell is because I wrote him. There's a form of racism, strong racism when it comes to that question. If a black guy wrote 'Jackie Brown,' they might ask that question but they would ask it in a different way. I feel that's racist. I feel that as a writer I have the right to create my characters. I am hindered only by my talent. And I have a talent for writing black characters all right, because they are me. These characters are me and I know the truth of me and I am writing me, all right? I will not lie. That is the number one thing I won't do. I will not tell a lie when it comes to my characters. 'Oh, maybe it's okay if you use the word "nigga" eight times, but not as many times as you did.' Well, I didn't realize I had a nigga allowance and I spent it all up, all right? My characters are talking and they ain't counting their words. They say muthafucka,' they do what they do. That's my answer on that." But, I wonder, how are these characters "you" as a person or as a writer? Tarantino becomes more reflective, but doesn't slow down. "If I hadn't been an artist, with an artistic drive and an artistic spirit, I probably would have ended up like Ordell. I didn't even finish high school, all right? I probably would have been a criminal. I doubt I would have been a bank robber, I doubt I would have been a killer, but in a weird way, I understand Ordell. I didn't go down that life, but I could've and I understand it. And that's one the thing I had to offer to my art. Thank God I can do it in my art."
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