Luke Cage debuted over the weekend, and as Netflix subscribers eagerly binge the latest entry into the Marvel Universe, they’re finding plenty of references that will please comics lovers, music geeks, and film nerds alike. Here are eight Easter eggs, callbacks, and references you might have missed in Season 1. Spoilerphobes, beware.

Tarantino

Back when he was doing publicity for The Hateful Eight, Quentin Tarantino told Yahoo that he was such a fan of the Luke Cage comics that he considered doing a movie about the invulnerable hero. “I ended up doing Pulp Fiction instead. So I think I might have made the right choice,” Tarantino joked at the time. He has yet to give any feedback on the Netflix version, but he did say in 2015: “Well, frankly, to tell you the truth, I might be one of the pains in their asses because I love the way the character was presented so much in the 70s.”

Netflix’s Luke Cage may not be set in the 70s, but Tarantino may be mollified by the number of references to his work in the show. There’s Tone comparing the shootout at Pop’s barber shop to “Django at Candyland . . . call Quentin!” And there’s Diamondback’s glowing crate, which has to be an homage to Marsellus Wallace; we don’t see the contents of the crate until the villain later puts it on. Finally, while Tarantino himself surely took the snake names of his assassins in Kill Bill from Luke Cage’s Diamondback and Cottonmouth, the Netflix show closes the feedback loop by continuously using the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad siren on its soundtrack.

Suit Up

Speaking of heroes who wear bright yellow, Mike Colter is mostly spared from wearing the hokey costume his character wore in the early comic-book days. But the Netflix series did find a way to briefly put Cage in the yellow shirt, jeans, and, oh yes, tiara of his initial on-the-page persona. And he wasn’t the only one to wear a version of a book costume. In her last shot, we see Simone Missick’s Misty Knight out of her sensible cop blazers and back undercover, wearing one of Knight’s most iconic looks: tight red turtleneck, big hair, and hoop earrings. The only thing missing? Misty Knight’s bionic arm from the books. But the show found a way to briefly work that in as well: