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GarlicPudding mistakes like, you see that ellie guy riding across a field, and the angle he is shot at is completely different from the angle king shoots!
"You're sure that's him?" "Yeah" "Positive?" "I don't know." "You don't know if you're positive?" "I don't know what positive means." "It means you are sure." "Yes" "Yes what?" "Yes I am sure that's Ellis Brittle." *Bang* "I'm positive he dead." Now that is why Tarantino is hailed the King of Dialog.
If the movie was shot in our time - "you don't know if you're positive?" ; "I'm only showing 2 symptoms, they did the swab, results should be back tomorrow"
I laughed the first time I watched the movie when he delivered that line. Totally unexpected and calm. I had expected something like "No Django! Now we have to run!"
@@user-p7up8l4k i do not know much, but I believe Christians would say the prophets were jews from Abraham onward until Christ. And they could also say, the Koran was not revealed until even more recently. I would hear how you answer that.
genuinely, i think jamie foxx should have won something for this performance. it's stunning how well he plays the more campy and exaggerated parts of this film while also being so grounded and intense when he needs to be. he brings so much believability to his role, you can tell that he cared about it like it was his baby.
@@lumberjackofalltrades You don't "pull" a trigger on a rifle unless you want to miss. You caress it and the shot goes off like a rod of glass breaking, and smooth as silk...
i love the implication that he already had the trigger half pressed and the range figured out to the point of adjusting the diopter on the fly. hard to make someone look that competent as an actor
@@SignalFlowers the definition of cinematography is “The art of making motion pictures” Is this not a movie made of moving pictures that is so well made it can be considered art
This scene is the most symbolic part of the movie in my opinion. First of all, Django is dressed in aristocratic European clothes. This is definitely not for laughs, though it's meant to be nostalgic by all means. John Brooks has a bible passage over his heart; the bible was a means of justification for slavery. So by Django wearing European clothes, and shooting John Brooks's bible passage and heart, he is single handedly de-rooting slavery directly from its backbone. Not even to mention the white blood splattered all over the cotton. What a gorgeous scene, my favorite scene.
@@agnosticpanda6655 That's imo was the best outcome. Anytime I see Will Smith my mind instantly tells me I'm watching a comedy. Not that this movie didn't have its moments, but it was never a comedy. Will Smith as Django is a bit cursed.
The way that Schultz keeps asking Django if he's sure really lets us know that he values life and wants to avoid any innocent casualties, truly a good man to the end
He certainly didn't want to kill the wrong man, but that was partly because if he did the landowner would have hanged him; he only had a warrant for three specific men.
Hunting humans down who have done terrible things isn't morally wrong unless you are against the death penalty, but that's a different topic. Schultz doesn't want to kill an innocent man as he's a decent person who doesn't want to kill innocent civilians.
The blood squibs in this movie were absolutely hilarious. Even if you were just seeing the movie for the insane amount of blood - it would be worth it.
One of my favorite blood squibs scene has to be the executive at ocp getting blown away by ED 209... oh and the escalator scene in the orginal Total Recall
Honestly its not really that much. Humans have a loooooooot of blood. Even the stereotypical puddles around the person in some movies or games are usually on the low end
@@alexander-mauricemillamlae4567 They actually have a lot less than you'd realize. Cutting off a hand can rapidly bleed you to death. Unless of course it's high caliber which would throw meaty chunks around, not just blood.
@@LordVader1094 Oh I know full well how much blood humans have from personal experience. And before you think I am a SK or something i can alleviate your fears, failed suicide attempts of aquaintances. I attempted thrice as well but only once by exsanguination.
@@alexander-mauricemillamlae4567 sorry, i dont mean to be rude. Glad youre still around, truly. But cutting your wrists and such in no way makes you know how much blood you really have or how much blood would apear if someone is shot etc etc. About the same thing as me breaking an arm and knowing the exact way the human skeleton is build up and connected.
When people say something is “most legendary in history” they’re almost always unqualified to be talking about the entire history of whatever it is they’re talking about
@@CesarinPillinGaming he meant evilness, not a bad performance of acting. Hans landa is probably the best character of tarantino films and christoph waltz made a flawless interpretation
Y'know, I ain't normally a fan of gratuitous violence--pain and cruelty just don't sit right with me. But this scene put a smile on my face. Very cathartic.
Have you seen Death Proof? It's great. A complete sicko makes a car that can survive any collision and gets his rocks off by hunting down young women on their own and crashing into their vehicles. I watched it with mounting unease as he completed a kill and I thought "I'm really not enjoying this" but then it turns out in the second half that he has just picked on the wrong set of young women...glorious vengeance is taken
Interesting, when he unloads the revolver, we can see only fives bullet are shot and then, nothing... If it is done with knowledge that most of those six bullet handgun were generally only loaded with five bullets (with empty chamber on the canon in rest) to avoid accident when the hammer is stroke accidently, that is pretty cool
Yea cause riding horses with them and running around with the rim fires was dangerous, or were they center fire by that point i cant recall but i know that was definitely a thing unless you rode with the half cock, i dont know any fuckin lunatics that would ride full cock that just seems like a way to get your horse killed or your femur shot
@@whensomethingcriesagain would that still have the same problem that if you accidentally hit the hammer too hard it could set off the cap and ignite the powder?
0:06 gives me goosebumps every single time i watch this movie. From the music to the way he is standing with his fists clenched just portrays Django as a superhero rather than a former slave. lol i still can't get over that shit, just blows me away
I always had that thought that Django's clothes were always meant to give that superhero vibe. Instead of simply fine clothes, a tux or whatever, he goes for the brightest color he can find in the most pompous ensemble available, making sure he's recognized and that he would stand out everywhere he goes.
This scene gets me every time. The cinematography is so varied and flows so well and is absolutely one of Tarantino's most effective moments. The shots of the slaves in the field and the horse riding away and then the next shot with the blood splatters on the virgin cotton echoing the first shot through the old testament scripture. It's emotionally moving, visually satisfying and proof of artistic mastery. Foxx is transcendent, the way he clenches his teeth and widens his eyes with insane but completely lucid, pure righteous rage, as he brings back the whip, about to detonate on the slaver, like a supernatural force of justice. Amazing.
Bro, you typed that shit like a movie critic. Imma go watch this movie again based on your immersive critique. Ahh, shit, immersive critique. You got me starting...
Judging by the number of shots from that revolver before running empty. It seems to be a Colt Patterson first revolver mass produced by Samuel Colt. There is an old saying "God made man, and Samuel Colt made them all equal".
nah, it's an 1851 navy - it was common practice to leave a chamber empty because leaving the hammer down on a percussion cap was a bad idea. I wouldn't pay too much attention to it, though - Django manages to get his hands on some 1858 Remingtons. Thing is - the Remington New Model Army is called the '58 because it was PATENTED in 1858, but it wasn't actually made until 1863.
@@jakubfabisiak9810 You can carry any Colt percussion revolver with all chambers loaded, it's the cartridge guns that required an empty chamber to carry safely. On an 1851 you can drop the hammer on the back of the cylinder midway between two nipples and there's a little nub on the cylinder that locks up with the notch in the hammer and keeps the cylinder from rotating. Granted it's a very minor technical error in a movie that never meant to be historically accurate.
This scene captures closure, vengeance, revenge, justice, and other related words so well for me. It's such a powerful scene for me that makes me feel good you know?
And the way he was using the whip wouldn't have done any damage, it would be like trying to hit someone with a piece of rope. You need the distance and crack to hurt someone.
Fun Fact : The reason the revolver runs dry after firing 5 shots instead of six is called the "cowboy load". Revolvers of the time were notoriously unsafe to leave a hammer on a loaded chamber. A bump or tap to the hammer could set off the gun. So only five cylinders would be loaded so the hammer could rest on the empty sixth. This trend continued with early cartridge revolvers until proper safety measures were invented.
ouch..i got a real expensive bullwhip..hit myself while playing around with it..it hurts pretty bad. Fun fact..the cracking sound you hear is the tip of the whip breaking the sound barrier..so you can imagine that it hurts pretty bad
***** I think that the whole mirror thing was just to show us that the black woman didn't know that the guy who was talking was a black person until she saw him whipping the other white guy.
1:01 nobody could have realize the intensity of the situation better than her,even without looking at......Classic thinking......A job very well done by the director......❤️❤️❤️
I saw this scene before I watched the movie itself, and it surprised me such a cathartic and powerful scene happens relatively early. The film has a really marvelous long pace that kinda moves from different episodes and arcs well.
This scene is so over the top I actually thought Django was just imagining it the first time I watched it in the theatre. Over the top in a very very good way!
Possibly my favorite movie of all time. Fun action scenes, satisfying cathartic moments, commentary on human nature, brilliant humor, the music choices are badass, gut wrenching sad moments, the list goes on. This is arguably the only western film that everyone can enjoy no matter who you are
I've felt things during this movie, that I haven't felt in a while. The gratification was intense. I've been spoiled by the gratification in movies like Basterds and Django that other films can't deliver. Tarantino is an unapologetic cinema genius.
When I watched this scene for the first time, It took me back to 1994. That is the year I watched the Lion King for the first time. I got the same feeling that I had when Simba shows up after scar bitch slaps his ma. That feeling that compels you to say "Oh shit, now you done fucked up"
What does Django say to pilots? I like the way you fly boy. What does Django say to babies? I like the way you cry boy. What does Django say to the burger king employee? i like the way you fry boy.
Many folks where im from despise this movie because of its historical inaccuracies. I find this movie to be a cinematic masterpiece honestly. I absolutely loved this film. And everyone where im from hates it! I dont understand!
I’m one of those people who are a stickler for truth and accuracy in certain movies. I’ve never seen this movie but even from this one scene it’s clearly not one of the movies to be a stickler about. This is obviously kind of closer in genre to John Wick where it’s a cathartic revenge/justice fantasy. What’s I don’t like is when movies *do* work the authenticity approach, and then find every excuse in the book to put in things that historically may have/could have hypothetically happened but were incredibly rare or unusual, and are filtered through modern perspective. That’s different and when it gets kinda gross.
@@Jackbarrany Revenge fantasy is a part of it, but that's underselling it. It's more a hyper-stylised, hyper-violent, pop fiction of deliberately rewritten history, done with a huge amount of cinematic depth. A style that Tarantino has been making in the past couple of decades with (Inglorious Basterds and Hateful 8 being the same). If people get annoyed at the rewritten history it's kind of like going to see a Star Wars film then complaining about it because you don't believe in aliens.
The hating on the movie for "inaccuracies" is likely an alibi, a high-minded cover for the actual complaints. Probably should not pry to closely, it may be ugly.
I love how he made very sure of his colleague’s confidence in target ID and that there was not a hint of miscommunication before taking the shot. Hell of a character. My brain started coming apart when he got shot at candyland plantation.
local321 Meh, I'm pretty positive that the feds have far more important things to worry about than some dude watching a movie on a bootlegged disc. Just a thought! ;D
Props also to the actor getting himself a whippin'! Couldn't have been easy to only have 1 line in the film and then proceed to have your ass handed to you by the lead.
This movie woulda been a hell of a lot shorter if the second guy’s hands weren’t coated in grease from the near-guaranteed pig-fucking going on around there
I love the small detail of the revolver Django grabs only having five shots in it. Old single actions had a tendency to misfire while in the holster so it was common to only load five shots instead of six and leave the empty chamber over the hammer to avoid any potential misfires.
I loved this film, and I'm so glad we the audience didn't have to watch lil Jodi get her peelin'. Seeing Miss Washington get whipped was bad enough for me. I always get choked up when i see that part. Even more than the dogs tearing Dartaran apart.
MC Gainey who played John Brittle, fell and died after being shot in the chest almost the same exact way in Justified Season 1 as he did here in Django. You couldn't help but be reminded of this scene.
2:12 0_0 Holy shit! I can't believe it! *Puts on merchant cap* ATTENTION SHOPPERS! WE HAVE A LIMITED SUPPLY OF RED COTTON IN STOCK! COME ON DOWN WHILE SUPPLIES LAST!
How a man that can't read or write, never held a gun or rode a horse can be transformed into a murdering machine with multilingual skills like this guy is truly up there on the faire tale list of records.
I just finally watched this movie... Have no idea why I waited so long to see it. Another awesome Tarantino flick. Amazing acting all the way through from everyone.
One of the best movies ever made. Christoph Waltz is absolutely class. Hard to beive that Will Smith turned down the part of Django because it wasn't the lead roll. What a mistake that was
@@andrewaevaliotis8769 You know, I'm actually fine with that though. This was a legendary movie, and clearly the better of the two movies by far. But I really do have a soft spot for Wild Wild West. Say what you want about it, but there's not enough steampunk universes out there on the big screen. I remember watching it and knowing it's flaws, but really I enjoyed it. The soundtrack was awesome, and yes, I'll even concede the fact that I loved the weird I wish rap remix they did.