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WHATACHINGA!! #FRIDAYFAVORITES #mariosalazar

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One of the most shocking moments in Pulp Fiction was created using one of cinema's oldest editing tricks. The scene where Vincent Vega plunges an adrenaline needle into Mia Wallace’s chest to revive her from an overdose was incredibly difficult - and potentially dangerous - to pull off. Tarantino, however, found an ingenious way to make it work. The crew first planned to use an artificial chest plate on Thurman for the effect. But Tarantino felt it looked too fake up close, so he dropped that plan. That left Thurman's chest exposed -which was a major problem, as he needed Travolta to swing that needle down with enough force so it realistically looked like it was breaking through her ribcage. So Instead, he used an old filmmaking trick: shooting the scene backward. Travolta rested the needle tip right above Thurman's chest. Then, on cue, he yanked it straight up and away as hard and fast as he could. Since he was pulling away from her body instead of stabbing toward it, he could go full-force with no risk of hurting her. When they played that footage in reverse, the fast upward pull turned into a violent, high-speed downward plunge - exactly the effect they wanted. Tarantino's editor Sally Menke cut away right before the needle would've touched skin - jumping straight to a close-up of Thurman's eyes snapping open. The sound team added a heavy "thud" at that exact moment, which sells the impact perfectly, tricking the audience into believing they'd just watched a real puncture, even though they never actually saw it happen.

Gangster Cinema Central

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