Tag: Screenplay

Quentin Tarantino – Pulp Fiction | Review

Title: Pulp Fiction

Author: Quentin Tarantino

Type: Fiction

Page Count/Review Word Count: 200

Rating: 4.5/5

 

 

I mean, you pretty much know what you’re getting here. This is literally the screenplay for the Tarantino movie, and because of that it’s hard to give it anything below a 4.5/5. It’s a fantastic movie and the screenplay is just as good on its own.

Better still, it comes with a bunch of photographs included in there as well as some scenes that were either removed or changed for the final thing. It’ll probably help if you’ve seen the movie at least a couple of times because you’ll be more familiar with that and you’ll start to understand why those decisions were made.

I ended up reading it and then watching the movie in the same day, and that’s probably the best way to go about it if you ask me. I had lots of fun with it and I’m glad that I read it, but it helped that I was a fan of the movie already and that I’ve studied screenplays and even written one of my own before. What more do you want me to say?

 

 

Click here to buy Pulp Fiction.


Charles Bukowski – Hollywood | Review

Title: Hollywood

Author: Charles Bukowski

Type: Fiction/Non-Fiction

Page Count/Review Word Count: 268

Rating: 5*/5

 

Charles Bukowski - Holiday

Charles Bukowski – Holiday

 

I’ve been kind of saving this one because it was the only Bukowski novel that I hadn’t read. But then I saw Paperback Junky on YouTube talking about Bukowski and it made me want to pick it up and tick it off.

It was worth the wait. If you’ve read Bukowski before and you’re familiar with his history then you’ll even be able to tie this book back to the events that it covers. Bukowski wrote the autobiographical screenplay for a movie called Barfly starring Mickey Rourke and Faye Dunaway, and this novel basically covers the period of his life around the writing of the screenplay, the shooting of the movie and its eventual release.

Of course, we’re also told all of this through the persona of Hank Chinaski, and Bukowski has always blurred the lines between fact and fiction in his work. Nevertheless, if you’re interested in his unique style of writing or if you want an honest book about Hollywood life then you’re going to enjoy this one, and if you haven’t watched the film then it’ll increase your enjoyment if you watch it after reading the book.

All in all, I enjoyed this book just as much as I expected to, and that’s saying something because I went into it with high expectations. I probably wouldn’t recommend it as your first Bukowski novel because it’d work best if you read them in chronological order, but I read them out of order and still loved it. It was excellent.

 

Charles Bukowski

Charles Bukowski

 

Click here to buy Hollywood.