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Posted

Quentin Tarantino's new film 'Django Unchained' is one of the most anticipated of this year!!! make%20it%20clap.gifmake%20it%20clap.gifmake%20it%20clap.gifmake%20it%20clap.gifmake%20it%20clap.gif

The first official trailer for Quentin Tarantino’s next film, “Django Unchained,” was just released and it’s an all-out hoot. This “Southern,” starring Christopher Waltz, Jamie Foxx and Leonardo DiCaprio, is a tribute to Spaghetti Westerns with enhanced Tarantino splatter.

The trailer opens with Johnny Cash singing Ain’t No Grave (Can Hold My Body Down) from his classic, late American VI album. From the soundtrack and Waltz’s first, arch interaction with Foxx, you know right away that the tone is perfect. In two-and-a-half minutes, Tarantino lays out the story of a slave turned enthusiastic bounty hunter. It seems to have elements of the Fred Williamson’s blaxsploitation parody, “Boss Nigger,” mixed with the light hearted buddy comedy of Mel Brooks’ “Blazing Saddles.”

Here’s the complete synopsis for IMDB:

Set in the South two years before the Civil War, DJANGO UNCHAINED stars Academy Award
®
-winner Jamie Foxx as Django, a slave whose brutal history with his former owners lands him face-to-face with German-born bounty hunter Dr. King Schultz (Academy Award®-winner Christoph Waltz). Schultz is on the trail of the murderous Brittle brothers, and only Django can lead him to his bounty. The unorthodox Schultz acquires Django with a promise to free him upon the capture of the Brittles dead or alive.

Success leads Schultz to free Django, though the two men choose not to go their separate ways. Instead, Schultz seeks out the Souths most wanted criminals with Django by his side. Honing vital hunting skills, Django remains focused on one goal: finding and rescuing Broomhilda (Kerry Washington), the wife he lost to the slave trade long ago.

Django and Schultzs search ultimately leads them to Calvin Candie (Academy Award®-nominee Leonardo DiCaprio), the proprietor of Candyland, an infamous plantation. Exploring the compound under false pretenses, Django and Schultz arouse the suspicion of Stephen (Academy Award®-nominee Samuel L. Jackson), Candies trusted house slave. Their moves are marked, and a treacherous organization closes in on them. If Django and Schultz are to escape with Broomhilda, they must choose between independence and solidarity, between sacrifice and survival

Foxx plays the title character, his name an homage to “Django,” the 1966 Italian-made Western directed by Sergio Corbucci. In an inside aside, the trailer shows Foxx telling his name to a mysterious stranger, who turns out to be none other than Franco Nero, who plays Django in the original movie. “My name is Django.” Foxx says “The ‘D’ is silent.”

(Forbes) http://www.forbes.co...lazing-saddles/

I cannot wait to see Waltz and DiCaprio OWN this!!!! DiCaprio playing a Tarantino villain, oh my make%20it%20clap.gifmake%20it%20clap.gif :wub2: :wub2: :wub2: :wub2:

My heart almost can't take it! Lol

Posted

Very excited for this one! :thumbsup: can't wait for more trailers and tv spots to be released, I'm really hoping we'll get more footage of Calvin Candie as I was kind of disappointed with his lack of presence in the trailer (though I know he's not one of the "main" characters).

  • 3 months later...
  • 2 months later...
Posted

The first issue (out of 6) of the official 'Django unchained' comic has been floated online. Apparently, this comic is a rendition of the original DU story before it was changed into a different version. Not knowing anything about the film or the book, I checked it out and found it composed of hilarious black (...) :dance: humor, dialogue, and high quality artwork. The purest form of satire, just like "Inglorious Basterds". :thumbsup: The southern racists are the villians, and portrayed as sickedly sick caricatures just like the Nazis in IB were. Borderline offensive, but a glimpse into a world that was once real.

Here's a sample (Warning, N word is used):

The movie now has my interest.... :) +It has been doing very good with reviews.

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Posted

Pasting my review of the film from leos thread..

My opinions on the film..

first thing, Leonardo really stole the show. his scenes were very intense, and very sadistic, and almost kinda funny in a sick way. Definetly one of leos best performances. I was a little upset though because some of the scenes from the trailers of calvin were cut from the movie, so that kinda sucked. :/ But the scenes leo did have were great! And that whole scene you've all heard about where leo cut his hand...pure. oscar. gold.

The film itself: Very entertaining.it was nice to watch, and one of the better films I've seen in a while. I don't quite see where its getting best picture nods....but I'd definetly like to see it again. The film was quite brutal and violent (very much tarontino style) And the film was actually quite funny...I remember a few times where the whole audiance burst out loud with laughter. And Waltz did a very, very nice job as well, I'm happy hes getting praise for the role as well, cause he was great!

So overview: Leo scenes were awesome, one of his best performances, I hope he gets that oscar nod. And the movie itself, quite entertaining (even if you don't like westerns, which some people don't, this movie is still enjoyable) :)

Posted

I saw about 1:20 or so of the 2:45 running time (via CAM) and got through the key scenes of the film. I'm going to watch it again, but I'll wait until a better copy appears.

As I've seen: It's a good, original adventure story that follows IB's sort of style, and Jackson made the standout performance as the ratbag 'Uncle Tom' character. Watch it..

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Posted

You know Lindsey, I saw only half but (tentatively), so I'd say that all the key characters (Waltz, Dicaprio, Foxx, Jackson) did well for a Tarantino-style movie. In my view, Pulp Fiction was his best movie, and DU's actors rank with them. This main cast is cleaner than IB (which featured some bad acting, including Brad Pitt (probably the worst acting I've ever seen him in)).

Thinking about it again, I'd say that this movie was more story-like and serious than IB/Pulp Fiction, and could have had a more realistic casting decision. It's hard for me to say exactly, because the director has to straddle between a cartoonish world (which IB and PF certainly was) and a historically accurate depiction of the pre-13th amendment South (the film wasn't, of course, but it often pretended to be) and the actors/roles seemed a bit too cartoonish for the setting that was created.. For one, the main characters were too meticulously clean and dressed, while everybody else looked dirtier and uglier, and more fitting..

And I think, for instance, that Waltz as the 'German' bounty hunter was unnecessary- Waltz is a good actor, but I think that the film would have flowed better if an American actor was casted as the 'American bounty hunter' and more of a background story was built up for him.

Jamie Foxx did a good job, but honestly...he was too articulate and modern for an illiterate or near-illiterate slave of that time period & I couldn't help but feel a little awkward at hearing some of his lines. (uses big words and complex turns of phrase, etc.) Yea, I know that I should suspend disbelief, but at the same time, the director does aim to craft a believable world to some degree and it didn't fully match...

I think Dicarprio did the best he could (considering, lol, how he cut his hand in the actual film and continued acting..), and was compelling on screen. But personally, I've seen too many films where he's the good guy and there's a bit of type-casted residual memories going on...As far as evil slave owner goes, he is too much of a pretty man with playful words, and when he turns evil or does evil things, it doesn't fully jive with me.

My image of 'Candy' and of the sadistic Southern plantation owner would be that of someone who looked more like this (I have nothing against Stonewall, he was a product of his time..), and with the aura of the stereotypical rural small business man (or oilman) of the 1850s- paternalistic can hustle, can make money, tough and violent in speech but with uneven literacy and bottom pit cultural development...He would have these tendencies corrupted, perverted, and writ large.

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Posted

^See I actually loved that Waltz, the bounty hunter, was german. I thought it fit well with the story line, and I think Waltz is a fantastic actor ;) And I think Jamie wasn't that great (he wasn't terrible either, but I found his scenes weren't riveting or very entertaining) as well as Kerry Washington. She was ehh.

And I can see where your coming from with Dicaprio ;) Seeing him as the pretty boy, good guy all his films, then turned into an evil racist is a little hard to grasp. But I thought his scenes were among the best in the film (the full dinner scene with the anatomey of a skull, and him slicing his hand open? That was pure Oscar gold ;) ) Also add Jonah Hills whole scene was classic, I about died laughing :rofl:

I agree, Pulp Fiction was tarontinos best, and maybe its just me, but I can't quite see where its getting best picture nods. I thought it was a really entertaining movie (would love to see it again and get a different take on it) but best picture? I don't know :/

Posted

Django Unchained was a spaghetti western so I automatically knew it was going to be "cartoonish".

I will not lie, if I had to listen to Jamie Foxx talk in a deep southern slave accent, it would have drove me up the fucking wall. It would have taken me out of the movie. Pupl fiction is one of my favorite movies from this director but I loved Django Unchained. It was what it was supposed to be. A parody of the antebellum South.

When I want realism in a movie, I don't go watch Tarantino film. I would have seen Lincoln

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