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Continuing to go from strength to strength, Quentin Tarantino managed to provide a fresh take on the Western genre with Django Unchained.
In tribute, during a montage sequence in “Django Unchained” where the titular freed slave and bounty hunter Dr. King Schultz (Christoph Waltz) spend several months teaming up to take down ...
Django Unchained is Tarantino’s eighth film if you count Kill Bill: Volume 1 and Kill Bill: Volume 2 as two separate features. The story follows a German bounty hunter named Dr. King Schultz ...
After Sergio Corbucci's Django popularized Spaghetti Westerns in 1966, he made another epic Western just as entertaining the ...
Quentin Tarantino rewrote the ‘Django Unchained’ ending at the last minute After considering several actors for his titular character, Tarantino landed on Oscar-winner Jamie Foxx as Django.
The tale is actually explained in the film, but the metaphor fuels "Django" loosely from beginning to end. I say "loosely," because, well, there's just no cramping Tarantino's distinctive style.
David Edelstein, New York Magazine: "For all its pleasures, 'Django Unchained' feels too easy, too dead-center in Tarantino's comfort zone. He's not challenging himself in any way that matters.
“Django Unchained” is Quentin Tarantino’s greatest exploration of the human condition, from its idea of what is right to its heinous moments of evil.
Django Unchained is literally all over the place. It twists and turns over an unbridled two hours and 45 minutes, giving history (and your stamina) a serious pounding.
Total disclaimer: I didn't like Django Unchained. My dislike had nothing to do with the controversial subject matter, copious N-word usage, or slavery. It just sucked. This surprised me because I ...