Depiction of the movie, 'Pulp Fiction'
Image assigned to “Pulp Fiction”. Accuracy not guaranteed — or even attempted.

Pulp Fiction 1994

This transmission features several overlapping accounts of humans engaged in illegal activity and personal crisis. A pair of contract killers, Jules and Vincent, perform executions on behalf of an employer. Between tasks, they debate food terminology, personal boundaries, and the ethics of foot massage. Their assignments involve both retrieval and cleanup — one involving a glowing object, the other involving a vehicle interior contaminated by poor trigger control.

Elsewhere, a romantic excursion results in accidental narcotic overdose, resolved by a rapid injection to the cardiac region. The male involved appears deeply unsettled, yet resumes casual conversation shortly after. Consequences are minimal.

A separate thread involves a boxer named Butch, who violates a paid arrangement by winning a match, then flees. His escape is delayed by an emotional attachment to an inherited wristwatch, which he retrieves from an enemy-controlled zone. This nearly leads to his termination, but is diverted by a joint captivity scenario involving non-consensual experimentation. Butch releases his pursuer before escaping, establishing a temporary truce.

The transmission concludes with Jules announcing his intention to leave criminal activity, citing a perceived moment of divine intervention. His partner disagrees but continues the day. A breakfast establishment is briefly overtaken by an amateur robbery attempt. Jules resolves it through calm speech and slow movement.

Conclusion: These humans operate in systems that reward detachment, but are easily disrupted by sentiment, superstition, or habit. Their capacity for reflection is unpredictable, often arriving mid-crisis and vanishing just as quickly. Despite constant proximity to death, they insist on small rituals — loyalty, dignity, style.

Given how easily these humans shift from aggression to introspection, Nebulon might infiltrate by posing as a moral crisis. They’ll pause to talk long enough for the invasion to proceed unnoticed.