Django Unchained
Directed and written by Quentin Tarantino
With Jamie Foxx, Christoph Waltz, Leonardo DiCaprio, Samuel
L Jackson, Kerry
It is two years before
the Civil War, and Dr King Schultz(Christoph Waltz) is a German bounty hunter
looking for some stagecoach robber killers.
Django is a slave who happens to know where they are. He is filthy, in chains, wearing rags. Dr Shultz buys his freedom and they join
forces to find(kill) the bounty hunter’s quarry. In payment, Dr Shultz Offers to help Django
find his wife, Broomhilda, a slave who has learned to speak German—thus the
name Broomhilda. Shultz is a
businessman, but he also has a sense of humanity, unlike most of the other players in this
film. He has a distaste for slavery but
thinks nothing of cold-bloodedly killing the bad guys for whom he receives
bounty.
The film is a simple narrative of Django and Shultz’s bounty
hunter partnership and revenge on those who enslaved Django and Broomhilda. Because this is a Tarantino film, the violence is over the
top as the two ruthlessly kill the ‘bad guys.’ The
viewer doesn’t feel bad because ‘they had it coming.’ Geysers of blood abound throughout Django,
almost as in a comic strip. Also, the
‘N’ word is heard constantly, over 100 times.
Remember it was in the 1850’s and that word was in constant use.
It is good versus evil, and the evil is really evil. You see the relentless brutality used towards the slaves.
So when revenge is exacted, you want to cheer. You have witnessed what it is like to be
somebody’s property, not protected by the law. One particularly violent Southerner is Calvin Candie(Leonardo DiCaprio)
a wealthy plantation owner who watches his slaves fight to the death or perhaps
thrown to his dogs to tear apart.
Django is not just an action entertainment. It is a complex film with a message. The performances are excellent. Christoph Waltz is a sublime Dr.Schultz, often
subtly moved by emotion. Jamie Foxx is
great as the single minded freed slave who will liberate Broomhilda, no matter what the obstacles which
include dozens of Calvin Candie’s henchmen and the formidiable Uncle Tom,
Samuel L Jackson, who is the House Slave, for Mr Candie. Baby faced Leonardo DiCaprio is the
quintessential Southern Gentleman, polite and sadistic all at once.
Django has plenty of cruelty, violence, vengeance. After all, Quentin Tarantino is the
unchallanged expert of brazen bloodshed.
There is also a lot of silliness, as when the hooded Klu Klux Klaners can’t
get their hoods on straight. The point
to the film is ethically on target.
Slavery was an arrangement full of pain for the servants. The standoff at the conclusion is astoundingly
bloody. But, remember they had it
coming.