Reservoir Dogs/Trivia

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


  • Actor Allusion:
    • Eddie Bunker, whose appearance as Mr. Blue was little more than a cameo, was a real life bank robber, drug dealer, forger, and extortionist, and became famous through his crime books. Lawrence Tierney also had a checkered criminal past.
    • Joe says at one point that Mr. Blue is "as dead as Dillinger". Tierney's first major film role was playing John Dillinger in the titular 1945 film.
  • Banned in China: It's illegal to own a copy and/or import the video game in New Zealand. Australia also banned it.
  • Cast the Expert: Eddie Bunker lived as a criminal and thief many years before becoming a writer. He plays Mr Blue.
  • Hey, It's That Voice!: Comedian Steven Wright provides the voice of the radio DJ.
  • No Budget: Originally planned to be shot for just $30,000 until Harvey Kietel saw the script and came on as Mr. White & the executive producer, which increased the budget to $1.2 million.
  • Reality Subtext: Note in the opening scene when the gang are discussing Madonna, Nice Guy Eddie keeps out of the discussion. His actor, Chris Penn, deferred from saying anything on screen about his former sister-in-law.
  • Throw It In: Everything after Mr. Blonde cuts off the ear was ad-libbed by Michael Madsen.
    • In his Hot Fuzz commentary with Edgar Wright, Tarantino reveals the gesture Mr. Brown makes at the end of the opening scene is not from the character at all, but Tarantino the director, telling everyone to just leave after finally getting a good take out of Lawrence Tierney.
  • What Could Have Been:
    • Tarantino was originally just going to write and act in the film -- the person he actually wanted to direct was Monte Hellman, who had directed some cult films way back in the '60s and '70s, but was way past the best of his career by that stage - his last film had been the abysmally poor Silent Night, Deadly Night III, for perspective. A Hellman-directed version of Reservoir Dogs might not have been a total disaster, but it's hard to see it being anywhere near as good as what we ended up with. Fortunately, Tarantino eventually summoned up the courage to direct the film himself.
    • Samuel L. Jackson auditioned for the role of Mr. White -- being cast as Jules Winfield was a favor for not getting the part. One would expect that the naming scene would have included some objections over a black man getting the name Mr. White.
    • Tarantino wanted James Woods to act in the film, but Woods' agent turned it down...without consulting Woods himself, for which he was fired. It's not clear which role Tarantino had in mind, though most fans suspect it was Mr. Orange.
    • Timothy Carey was considered for the role of Joe, and evidently liked the script a great deal. Reasons vary as to why he was not cast. On one DVD extra, Tarantino (who dedicated the Dogs script to Carey, among others) claimed that he felt the famously difficult to direct Carey would have been more trouble than he was worth, before admitting that "Timothy Carey at his worst could not possibly have been more difficult than Lawrence Tierney." Another story holds that Carey auditioned, but was vetoed by Keitel, acting in his capacity as producer.
  • Word of God: Tarantino says that the briefcase from Pulp Fiction was originally supposed to have contained a cache of diamonds before Tarantino decided that keeping the contents of the briefcase ambiguous made it more interesting. Since Pulp Fiction and Reservoir Dogs take place in the same universe (Vic and Vincent Vega, major characters in both films, are brothers), it's been theorized that the briefcases in both films are actually the same briefcase, which would mean that someone in the criminal underworld sold the diamonds to Brett and his gang before the police could return them to their rightful owners.