Movie · 1992 · Crime, Thriller · 1h 39m · R · English
Curator score: 8.9/10 (2.7M ratings)
Every dog has his day.
Overview
A botched robbery indicates a police informant, and the pressure mounts in the aftermath at a warehouse. Crime begets violence as the survivors -- veteran Mr. White, newcomer Mr. Orange, psychopathic parolee Mr. Blonde, bickering weasel Mr. Pink and Nice Guy Eddie -- unravel.
Ratings
Curator score: 8.9/10
IMDb: 8.3/10
Letterboxd: 4.14/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 90%
Metacritic: 81
TMDB: 8.1/10
Director
Quentin Tarantino
Production
Live Entertainment, Dog Eat Dog Productions
Cast
Harvey Keitel, Tim Roth, Michael Madsen, Chris Penn, Steve Buscemi, Lawrence Tierney, Randy Brooks, Kirk Baltz, Edward Bunker, Quentin Tarantino, Rich Turner, David Steen, Tony Cosmo, Stevo Polyi, Michael Sottile, Robert Ruth, Lawrence Bender, Linda Kaye, Suzanne Celeste, Steven Wright
Where to watch
Peacock Premium, Peacock Premium Plus
Curator Review
Verdict
A lean, vicious debut that turns a failed heist into a pressure-cooker of mistrust, bravado, and sudden brutality. Its appeal is less about plot mechanics than the escalating tension, sharp dialogue, and the way every character seems one bad sentence away from collapse.
Best for
fans of tense crime chamber pieces
viewers who like dialogue-driven violence
people interested in early 1990s indie crime cinema
audiences drawn to betrayal, paranoia, and moral rot
Skip if
you want a fast-moving action thriller
you dislike stylized violence and profanity
you prefer sympathetic characters
you need a broad, plot-heavy crime story
Overview
Reservoir Dogs is the kind of crime film that feels like a sealed room slowly filling with smoke. The robbery itself is mostly offscreen; what matters is the aftermath, where suspicion spreads and every man in the warehouse starts sounding like a suspect, a liar, or both. The setup is simple, but the tension comes from how carefully the film lets ego, fear, and wounded pride do the damage.
Worth noting
What still stands out is the confidence of the writing and the harsh clarity of the performances. Tarantino builds character through talk, then uses silence, panic, and bursts of violence to puncture the swagger. The result is funny in a nasty way, then suddenly cruel, with a rhythm that made the film feel new in 1992 and still makes it feel sharp now.
Bottom line
It is not a warm movie, and it is not especially interested in redemption. But if you like crime stories where the real heist is trust being stolen from everyone in the room, this remains a foundational watch. It is compact, nasty, and hugely influential without feeling like a museum piece.
Top Letterboxd reviews
kayla (5★) · 17948 likes
I feel like if this were made today Nice Guy Eddie would be played by Jonah Hill
mia lee vicino (4.5★) · 16260 likes
what if we kissed in an abandoned warehouse after our jewelry heist went bust and i tenderly held you in my arms and combed your hair as you slowly bled to death from an agonizing gutshot that was kind of my fault 😳 ⁽ᵃⁿᵈ ʷᵉ ʷᵉʳᵉ ᵇᵒᵗʰ ᵇᵒʸˢ⁾
andrea🌹 (4.5★) · 12599 likes
wish i could tell white men apart
sophie (5★) · 11100 likes
for a dollar, name a woman
ciara (4.5★) · 7823 likes
tim roth: literally just dies on the floor for an hour
me: wow... WOW.....
1998 · Crime, Drama, Thriller · 2h 1m · R · Curator 8.0/10 (147.9K ratings) · Where to watch: Amazon Prime Video, MGM Plus, Amazon Prime Video with Ads
A slow-burn descent into mistrust and self-destruction after a criminal windfall goes wrong.