Quentin Tarantino adapted his screenplay
from the Elmore Leonard novel Rum Punch, with unexpectedly
lackluster results. Jackie Brown has the flat, literal
look of a made-for-TV movie, and about as much style and charm.
Tarantino does show his great knack for working with actors
and making interesting casting decisions. Pam Grier--best known
from her roles in '70s blaxploitation flicks Foxy Brown and
Coffy--does a great job playing Jackie, a down-on-her-luck
flight attendant who's a hell of a lot smarter than everyone else
thinks. Bridget Fonda is funny as a stoned surfer chick who likes
to hang out with criminals, and Robert Forster is wonderfully
deadpan as the bail bondsman Max Cherry. But despite some good
performances, Tarantino seems restrained, and concerned with keeping
things slow, smooth, and real easy to understand. There's plenty
of exposition, as well as intertitles to tell us where we are,
just in case you go for popcorn during one of the long explanations.
It's as though Tarantino doesn't trust himself to tell this story.
Even the settings--mostly apartments, shopping malls and offices--seem
tired and bland.
--Richter
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Other Films by Quentin Tarantino
Pulp Fiction 
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