Quentin Tarantino gives us an interview on the set of “Jackie Brown” in 1996. Tarantino gives us an overview of his life and career thus far, starting by expressing his bitterness at being the child of a single mother (he has never met his father, actor Tony Tarantino), and he never finished high school due to his preference of focusing on an acting career. He landed a brief spot on an episode of “The Golden Girls”, but Tarantino’s time working at a video store alongside fellow film buff Roger Avary was what marked the beginning of his evolution. After selling a screenplay entitled “True Romance” to filmmaker Tony Scott, Tarantino launched a directorial career, beginning with “Reservoir Dogs” in 1992 (he dismisses accusations that the film was an act of plagiarism–this is a reference to cries that the film stole from Ringo Lam’s 1986 flick “City on Fire”). The success of “Reservoir Dogs” allowed Tarantino and Roger Avary to team up and create “Pulp Fiction” together; the film ended up launching the independent boom of the 1990’s. He regrets letting Oliver Stone direct another one of his screenplays, “Natural Born Killers”, largely because Stone rewrote most of the original screenplay and turned it into a politically allegorical tale of America’s obsession with criminals. Tarantino’s follow-up to “Pulp Fiction” was a segment of the 1995 film “Four Rooms”, with one of his co-directors being best friend Robert Rodriguez. The film, however, was not as successful with critics …