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  1. Joseph "Joe" Cabot is the main antagonist in Quentin Tarantino's 1992 directorial debut film, Reservoir Dogs. He was a criminal mastermind and crime boss that specialized in armed robberies, hijackings, and moving and selling stolen property. Joe putted together "jobs", along with his son "Nice Guy" Eddie Cabot, by recruiting different career criminals and planning out the details of each ...

    • Mr. Pink. We are inclined to dislike Mr. Pink practically from the start. Everyone at the diner but Pink kicks in a dollar to tip the waitress. As he explains it, he doesn't like rewarding people for what should be their job.
    • Mr. Orange. The most remarkable thing about Mr. Orange is how good of an undercover cop he is. The fact that he is a cop at all is one of the film's highlights.
    • Mr. White. Mr. White is the closest thing we have to a main character in the ensemble film. Played with cool confidence by Keitel, it's almost impossible not to like him.
    • Joe Cabot. Joe Cabot is the bloated spider at the center of this web. We never get the particulars of his organization, but the mere fact that he has an organization probably tells us all we need to know.
    • Colin Mccormick
    • Mr. Blonde. Tarantino has always excelled at creating fascinating villains and his first movie is a perfect example of this. Mr. Blonde is introduced as the sort of laidback and smooth member of the crew.
    • Nice Guy Eddie. Nice Guy Eddie is the son of the heist's boss, Joe Cabot. Though he is not calling the shots on his own, Eddie does know how to keep the other criminals in line when things start to turn upside down.
    • Joe Cabot. In a room full of devious and violent criminals, it says something about Joe Cabot that he can be the toughest among them. The old, gruff man oversees the whole operation and runs things with an iron fist.
    • Mr. Brown. Tarantino himself played one of the lesser-known members of the crew, Mr. Brown. The first scene allows Mr. Brown to take the spotlight as he goes on a long and rambling rant about the true meaning of Madonna's song "Like a Virgin."
  2. Oct 26, 1992 · Tierney plays Joe Cabot, an experienced criminal who has assembled a team of crooks for a big diamond heist. The key to his plan is that his associates don't know one another, and therefore can't squeal if they're caught.

  3. Reservoir Dogs. Reservoir Dogs is a 1992 American neo-noir crime film written and directed by Quentin Tarantino in his feature-length debut. It stars Harvey Keitel, Tim Roth, Chris Penn, Steve Buscemi, Lawrence Tierney, Michael Madsen, Tarantino, and Edward Bunker as diamond thieves whose heist of a jewelry store goes terribly wrong.

  4. Joe : No way, no way. Tried it once, it doesn't work. You get four guys all fighting over who's gonna be Mr. Black, but they don't know each other, so nobody wants to back down. No way. I pick. You're Mr. Pink. Be thankful you're not Mr. Yellow. Mr. Brown : Yeah, but Mr. Brown, that's a little too close to Mr. Shit.

  5. Jan 20, 2017 · Joe Cabot: ‘Let’s go to work.’ Reservoir Dogs premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, US independent cinema’s Mecca, on 21 January 1992 and became an immediate word-of-mouth sensation. Tarantino somewhat smugly referred to subverting what he called “either the Sundance ‘how-do-we-save-the-farm?’, y’know, regional movie, or the ...

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