In the Pulp Fiction clip "Butch Meets Vincent," Butch (Bruce Willis), looking for his father's watch which was abandoned in his old apartment, heats up some Pop Tarts in the toaster when he thinks the coast is clear; however, upon noticing that Vincent's (John Travolta) machine gun is on the counter, guns a shocked Vincent down after he exits the bathroom. The drama of this scene involves violence, the potential for discovery, suspense, and so on. The interior of the scene shows a combination of relief, surprise and fear (Vincent is caught literally with his pants down, and both characters are surprised that the other one is there). The exterior of the scene is very much 'urban jungle,' as the characters are navigating both social graces and the banality of grungy 20th-century city.
In the clip "The Gold Watch," Captain Koons (Christopher Walken) explains to a young Butch (mostly into the camera) about the legacy of his father's gold watch, before handing it to him. The drama of this scene involves both dark comedy and dramatic tension, as Koons runs him through the dark history of how many wars and people this watch had endured, before revealing the punchline of the entire dramatic story (his father keeping the watch up his ass while imprisoned in Vietnam). The interior of the scene is kindness, self-serious, reverent, as Koons displays all those qualities in imparting the watch (and the story) to Butch. The exterior of the scene is a quaint 1950s domesticity, as the scene takes place in Butch's childhood home, which is bright and colorful. This results in the scene being a dark comedy, just like the first scene in a way.