Directed by: Quentin Tarantino
Premise: A group of jewel thieves turn on each
other when a heist goes bad and they suspect one among them is a police
informant.
What Works: To fully appreciate Reservoir Dogs, it is important for audiences to understand how
different the film was from anything else being made at the time. The previous
decade of film had been marked by the rise of a new studio system that exerted
corporate control over studio product, and film production partially returned to
an assembly-line mode, where artistic expression was sacrificed for the sake of
wide audience appeal. Reservoir Dogs was among a handful of films that broke through the malaise of studio films,
shaking up the cinematic form and breaking free of genre conventions. The film
has an almost punk rock attitude about what it’s doing to cinema; the unusual
camera angles, the nonlinear sequences, extreme violence, and colorful dialogue
were a rejection of the cinematic norms of the time. A good example of this is
the now infamous torture scene, which is disturbing because it sets light
hearted pop music against extremely violent scenes of cruelty and the result
makes audiences enjoy and even laugh at things they know they shouldn’t be
laughing at. Aside from the historical context it was created within, Reservoir
Dogs remains an entertaining and impressive piece of film. Its scenes are
staged and edited together quite well and they pop with a chaotic energy that
the film still emits. The performances are also very strong, especially Steve
Buccemi as Mr. Pink, Harvey Keitel as Mr. White, and Michael Madsen as Mr.
Blonde.
What Doesn’t: Reservoir
Dogs is a little clunky in parts. Tarantino’s dialogue requires actors who
can convey its rhythms but in Reservoir Dogs the actors don’t always find that rhythm. Some of
it may be due to dialogue that is so long and strung out that it’s hard to
deliver, and Tarantino smoothed out these issues in later films.
DVD extras: The 15th Anniversary edition
includes a commentary track, a documentary, featurettes, tipping guide, deleted
scenes, and interviews.
Bottom Line: Reservoir Dogs remains one of Quentin Tarantino’s best films. Although it is not as ambitious as his later work, it is much more focused and has fun with the gangster genre while also delivering a solid story.