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Quentin Tarantino's 'Pulp Fiction' to leave Peacock at end of month

Quentin Tarantino's 1994 crime film 'Pulp Fiction' will depart the Peacock streaming service at the end of the month. The move is part of the platform's standard rotation of licensed library content.

TVGEN Newsdesk··1 min read
Quentin Tarantino's 'Pulp Fiction' to leave Peacock at end of month

The streaming departure

Quentin Tarantino's influential 1994 film 'Pulp Fiction' will leave Peacock's streaming library at the end of the month, a scheduled change in the platform's licensed content. The crime anthology has been a fixture on the NBCUniversal service for a limited run, and its departure highlights the routine churn of third-party movie rights in the streaming ecosystem. A new streaming home for the film has not yet been announced.

'Pulp Fiction' is a cornerstone of Tarantino's filmography, following his breakout with the 1992 feature 'Reservoir Dogs.' Its departure from a major service typically precedes a brief period of digital unavailability before it reappears on another platform, as rights holders cycle their assets across the market. Peacock has not commented on whether the film might return to its library in a future deal.

A landmark of 90s cinema

The film is widely regarded as a watershed moment for independent cinema in the 1990s. Its nonlinear narrative, which interweaves the stories of mob hitmen, a boxer, and a gangster's wife, redefined crime genre conventions and influenced a generation of filmmakers. The film revived the career of John Travolta and cemented the star status of Samuel L. Jackson and Uma Thurman, all of whom earned Academy Award nominations for their performances.

Upon its release, 'Pulp Fiction' was a critical and commercial success. It won the prestigious Palme d'Or at the 1994 Cannes Film Festival, a rare honor for an American director. The film went on to secure seven Oscar nominations, winning for Best Original Screenplay for Tarantino and co-writer Roger Avary. Its sharp dialogue and pop-culture-infused style have maintained its place in the modern cinematic canon for three decades.

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