Well one I am capable of...
From time to time a film director changes western cinema so signicantly that it is never the same again. So Orson Welles in
Citizen Kane (still regarded by most observers as the "greatest" film ever made), Ingmar Bergman, Akira Kurosawa, Sergei Eisenstein, Jean-Luc Godard, probably Michelangelo Antonioni, Federico Fellini, maybe Sergio Leone,...if you go way back to 1915 and
Birth of a Nation then DW Griffith.
We have had gangster or
film noir films since the 1930s with many great films made by great directors along the way but experiencing
Pulp Fiction is like stepping into an avalanche of new cinematic experience within that
genre.
And
Pulp Fiction was such a step change that such a huge change cannot be made again within that
milieu.
It isn't necessary to like Tarantino's films to recognise his importance and, as I said, his best days are behind him. But that applies to most iconoclasts, once you have torn down one temple tearing down another one is just a bit
deja vu
.