#10 — Pulp Fiction
Box Office: $107.9M- John Travolta as Vincent Vega
- Samuel L. Jackson as Jules Winnfield
- Uma Thurman as Mia Wallace
- Bruce Willis as Butch Coolidge
Pulp Fiction landing in the 1994 top 10 is one of the clearest signs that this was not just a year of conventional crowd-pleasers. It is the strange, stylish, talky, nonlinear outlier that somehow still became major mainstream business. That alone tells you how alive the movie culture still was.
Tarantino’s real trick is not merely coolness. It is control. The structure looks loose until you realize how precisely every piece is placed to create suspense, irony, rhythm, and aftershock. The dialogue is flashy, but the movie lasts because the architecture underneath it is so sharp.
It also matters because it turns performance into event energy. Travolta gets his career reset, Jackson becomes unavoidable, Thurman becomes iconic, and the whole cast starts behaving like they understand they are inside something that knows exactly how much voltage it carries.
In the context of 1994, the film matters because it proves that a movie could still feel indie-adjacent, structurally playful, and aggressively voice-driven while crashing into the commercial mainstream anyway.
For Gen X, it remains one of those movies that did not just succeed. It changed how people talked about movies, quoted movies, and imagined what mainstream-cool looked like.