I Really Hope You All Enjoy The Video! Like And Share, Helps Ya Boy Out.... I Do The Watermark To Show You Longer Scenes And To Keep From Copyright. THE ONLY TARANTINO MOVIES I'VE SEEN IS "THE HATEFUL 8" AND "PULP FICTION".... NEXT MOVIE REACTIONS FOR FEBRUARY: GLORY THE COLOR PURPLE
Another fun fact: The woman who flies off when shot at the end of the movie is a hat tip to old western films, where a woman would never die on screen, only off screen.
I think that is also the reason why Brunhilde is such a Peach Princess type of character lol. Even her last scenes, where all she does is to react to what is going on, are almost cartoonish
Didnt like that he killed candys sister. Didnt like that german guy died because of pride. Rhink they shoulve had something else to cause him to shoot candy like maybe have candy threaten them or something but after having german guy play a smart cool character all movie the one time somebody out smarted him he couldn't take it and it almost costed all 3 of thier lives. Seemes outta character.
@@tylerhughes5420 He knew they wouldn't make it out alive either way. Candie had everything he needed. He could have ordered them shot and disposed of somewhere on his property. This way he gave Django and Brunhilde a fighting chance. Slim but it was there.
@@Exodon2020 i respect your opinion but totally disagree. Candie couldve done that anyways but i dont think he wouldve went through the trouble of filling out the bill o sale anf everything if he was just gonna kill them all. And the movie made no clues that he was gonna murder them. In my opinion they shouldve had candy say he wasnt gonna sell and attempt to murder broomhilde to prove a point then have a shootout ensue.
@@HelloMellowXVI Since you like actors acting in a group there is another movie Christophe Waltz was in, CARNAGE, directed by Roman Polanski. I'm not sure if it would be good for a reaction video but it's basically 4 actors in a room. I thought it was really good.
@@HelloMellowXVI I would definitely check out the original Django with Franco Nero. It's a damn good movie that had a bunch of unofficial sequels with an official one finally coming out in 1987 with Nero again in the role. Of all the unofficial sequels the best one was Django, Prepare a Coffin with Terrence Hill IMO.
“Selling cheap” means it lowers the class of buyer. So they end up in usually the worst plantations, or even properties. Often seen less valuable then livestock. Thats why its more of a threat than a insult.
As distustingly ruthless and calculating as it may sound: If you were sold at a high price there would be less of an incentive to just work you to death so the probability of being relatively well-fed and kept in a somewhat healthy physical state would be higher. Still a bad situation within a disgusting institution but there's always a way for things to get even worse.
@@Exodon2020 kinda like how slaves in the Caribbean and Brazil died by disease, working to death etc. Way more than the south but because slaves in the US lived long enough they calculated that they could incentivize natural population growth so they could sell their kids which is fucked up and evil in its own way
100% true. Being sold cheap meant you would go to a small often impoverished farm with horrible conditions on bad land God knows where. And because of the low price and brand on his cheek he would have been avoided by larger, better off plantations. In Michners "Chesapeake" there's a dirt poor farmer that gets by in part by having the large plantations send him problem slaves. He would work them from sun up to sun down 7 days a week 365 days a year, including Christmas. They lived in squalor either baking or freezing, nearly starving.... Etc. The point was to make it so bad that when they were sent back they'd live in fear of ever getting shipped off again. And the farmer was paid for it. That's the kind of place he was going.
I absolutely love the scene where the KKK is all bickering and complaining. It's such a great way to belittle them, while also keeping in touch with the overall feeling of the film.
@@slowerthinker also pedantically, the film also predates the 1860 Henry rifle, the Remington Derringer that Dr. Schultz uses, the darkened glasses that Django wears, and the Interstate Law Enforcement Act of 1873 which gave bounty hunters legal authority to cross state lines to capture suspects.
I love that scene, too. My friend Chris plays the guy, Willard, whose wife made the masks. hahah. He is in a later scene, too, the shootout in the house, playing a different character. Oh, and the scene with Kerry Washington in the hot box.
It was a glass he cut his hand on. And they stopped shooting to clean the blood but saw it was really cool so they added more fake blood once they got him cleaned up, it wasn't some long cut he kept acting through.
The blood that he wipes on her face is his actual blood, after he smashes the glass you can see him give his hand a subtle look. They didn't stop rolling until after the scene, her reaction is 100% genuine because she didn't know he was going to wipe it on her face and got his actual blood wiped on her face. I'm sure there's an interview or something where she talks about it
@@odysseus48 They didn't stop rolling film when he cut his hand, he kept going with the cut on his hand and used it to make the scene more intense. Where ever you got your information it's wrong friend. www.google.com/search?sxsrf=ALeKk01RqskbvC6l72IP2or4_PAZueYtvQ%3A1613611255101&source=hp&ei=98AtYJfDA-iMggf08IHoBA&iflsig=AINFCbYAAAAAYC3PB2PeR5ZmJGNRA0IBjAbTjObwnwxR&q=leonardo+dicaprio+cuts+hand+filming+django&oq=leonardo+dicaprio+cuts&gs_lcp=Cgdnd3Mtd2l6EAMYATICCAAyAggAMgIIADIGCAAQFhAeMgYIABAWEB4yBggAEBYQHjIGCAAQFhAeOgcIIxDqAhAnOgQIIxAnOgUIABCRAjoLCC4QsQMQxwEQowI6CAguEMcBEKMCOggILhCxAxCDAToICAAQsQMQgwE6BQgAELEDOgUILhCxAzoICC4QsQMQkwJQvQ9Y7Ctg5UJoAXAAeACAAWiIAcYGkgEDOS4xmAEAoAEBqgEHZ3dzLXdperABCg&sclient=gws-wiz
@@jaakumitsukai8682 no. He did play through the scene with his hand bleeding. But not when he rubbed it on her face. That was a separate take with fake blood. Just watch the dvd commentary. Your explanation was wrong. He really cut his hand. But he did not rub real blood on her face.
I for some reason enjoy that moment as well. Not sure really why, maybe its the aesthetic of how the beer looks. or just the context that he feels the power of freedom and exploring new things. Idk. maybe someone else can help me with this analysis.
@@steverogers6572 Probably also being treated as an equal by someone who is not also a Slave for the first time in his life. I mean Schultz even served him the beer.
Please pay tribute to this awesome scene at 14:09. The man standing next to our Django at the bar is the original Django back from 1966. And the fact that Django explains to him that the "D" in his name is spoken silent and the Original replies "I know"... Absolutely geniouse!!!
When slave families were split up and sold off the chances of them seeing each other again were beyond astronomical. She likely, and understandably, thought her husband was dead at the very least.
That slavery still exists in some places today depresses me. That said, it's come a long way from most people living like them, so we're heading in the right direction.
@@danielramsey6141 not in the US. Mainly these poorer countries and communist and socialist countries. It's still prevalent. Human and sex trafficking is still around worldwide.
@@Mr.Potato420 no it wasnt. i dont think she would be comfortable with that. i know that quentin goes some far ways to get a good scene but i dont think he would rub blood on an actress
@@_grimleythesequel he did actually cut his hand during one of the takes and it ended up being the take making it into the movie as Tarantino said it was the most realistic one as, well, it was real, real reactions of real disgust and real flow of blood. They explained it in an interview with ABC News
The dinner table scene where Leo and Sam figure it out and flip out on them is amazing. Leo cut his hand badly and kept going, he slammed the table and broke a glass. That was all unscripted and that was real blood, when he grabbed her head she had no clue he was going to do it. She was legitimately terrified, crazy movie and an absolute classic
@@twdclementine11 ...no, it isn't. Yes, he did injure himself, but it would be against OSHA/SAG rules to do that to another actor for the unknown health risks involved. He was bandaged up and Quentin used fake blood afterwards.
I was going to say the same. I'm glad someone else knew this story. Tarantino said he and the crew and cast gave a massive ovation to Leo and everyone else after he said "cut" for staying in character.
One of my favourite scenes is when Django gets to dress himself for the first time in his life, and just goes with the most outlandish outfit in the world😂
The rumor is true that QT wanted to do a crossover between Django and Zorro, but he ended up making it into a graphic novel instead. Worth picking up, I thought.
He still wants to make it into a movie and try and get Antonio Banderas to play Zorro again. I would definitely watch that if they end up making it happen.
He actually didn’t have any intention of making it a movie - it was specifically developed as a graphic novel. Then he decided a movie based on the graphic novel could be cool.
Mr. Waltz is an actor that can play them all. Funny, he never let's the interviewer know his real personality. He leaves that to close families and friends.
It makes sense that you love the score of this movie, since you have "The Ecstasy of Gold" form The Good The Bad and The Ugly as your background music! Ennio Morricone is an incredible composer, and his influence on movie soundtracks is a big part of what gives Westerns their flavor.
Tarentino not only makes phenomenal movies, he always has amazing actors.. And his choice for the soundtracks are just as brilliant.. Only he could put a Tupac / James Brown mash up in a western.. And it fits perfectly.
Had the privilege of seeing this in a theatre. Most exciting moviegoing experience since I went to see Pokemon: The First Movie with my whole first grade class.
I own the Zorro/Django comic and it's great. In it, Django actually becomes the new version of Zorro for a time and it's sorta perfect. I hope they make a movie.
Although Christoph Waltz was the supporting actor, he became the movie's star playing one of the dearest characters in the history of cinema "Dr. King Schultz". On the other hand, Quentin's scripts are pure gold, no one writes like him, which makes Tarantino unique in what he does as a moviemaker.
Leo really slashed his hand open when he broke the glass on the table but stayed in character and finished the scene while everyone watched with stunned looks on their faces. He was in the zone and nobody was going to interrupt, even Quentin didn't want to cut for medical care.
The scene where he first kills one of the brothers and the blood splatters on the white flowers is one of the most incredible scenes I've ever seen! I love Quentin Tarantino he is the master of cinematography! This movie was so beautifully done with the music the acting the sets everything
“What’s eating Gilbert Grape” is probably favorite DeCaprio role to this day. That movie is not only amazing but it has some of the best acting from pretty much everyone in the film.
One thing about Tarantino film's, it's essentially food porn. I remember first seeing that scene with the beer in Django and thought a ice cold frothy one would go down a treat right now.
If you enjoy Tarantino, do Inglorious Basterds next, my personal favorite of his. Keep up the great work, I love your reactions! Fun Fact: When Leo cut his hand at dinner, that was real, but he just kept the scene going even though he was actually bleeding.
The "Two weeks in Boston" joke it's funny the Candie and Stephen because Boston was at that time a major hub of the Abolitionist movement, while Mississippi was the polar opposite of that being a huge slaver state
the Harp part is so important because Walz's character is putting on a show all the time and can't stand to see his culture appropriated by these monsters.
Didn’t recognize that at all him having ptsd from the dogs tearing apart the slaves and hearing the imposters play a German composers piece was almost like shitting on his character
I LOVE how Tarantino had that blue suite go from comical to legit badass (credit to Jaime too for the physical acting part of that transformation too). I saw this movie in a packed theater that was about 50/50 white and black, was the most fun I've ever had seeing a movie. This elderly african american couple sitting next to me almost fell out of their chairs laughing at the Jonah Hill raid scene lol.
@@antoniotorres3754 The part where he rubbed the blood on her face was done on a later take with fake blood. Remember that he had glass shards in his hand...
Jamie Foxx and Christopher Waltz did such an amazing job with their roles! Oh and you can't forget about Fritz🙂. Every time he introduces his horse it's so cute
Everytime I watch this movie I noticed something that I hadnt before. The mosr recent time I saw it I finally heard what Django said to those ranch hands who he shot in the small house at the end. He was avenging the poor slave who got mauled to death
The reverb choice at 8:43👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 I'm a big fan of all the interesting things you happen to notice and your personality, but even the attention to detail in your own editing bro... Youre becoming my favorite reacter tbh🔥🔥🔥
The scene where Candy smashes his hand down and cuts his hand on a glass, that wasn't meant to happen. I mean, he was meant to smash his hand down, but he wasn't meant to cut his hand. Leonardo Di Caprio actually DID cut his hand in whilst they were filming it, that's real blood, not fake, and the reaction from the others was genuine. Instead of stopping, however, he kept on going with the scene, using it to his advantage.
Fun facts for you on two things you commented on liking in the film... 1. The blood effects - Tarantino makes his own squibs, double the gunpowder charge and double the goop. Makes for an extra messy and graphic hit. Not practical, but very much his own style. 2. Leo's acting - in the dinner scene where he shatters the glass, he acidentally shattered the glass and really did cut himself, that's him actually bleeding on screen and he just carried on with the scene.
Decaprio really messed his hand up in that last monologue scene and kept his shit together! He should have been given an Oscar nod for that alone. Not the win, but a nomination
Love re-watching movies through a person with fresh eyes. Especially with a person who has great insight and infectious laughter. Thx for the content and I can't wait for The Hateful Eight.
Love this movie. So many great moments/scenes, I think the most underrated/missed is 27:51 - bursts in there shouting out D'Artagnan's name to avenge his death, gets me every time. Great reaction mate
Sam Jackson is in a handful of Quentin's movies: Pulp Fiction, Jackie Brown, cameo in Kill Bill Vol 2, narrator in Inglorious Basterds, Django Unchained, The Hateful 8. Also a movie not directed by Quentin but written by him called True Romance
Watching this and remembering how much I loved watching Django the first time it came out. I was younger and working at a movie theater. Watched it from the projection room behind a stunned packed audience. It was so awesome :) Side note: I felt so bad for the horses being shoved and tripped and shocked half to death in this but didn't care when the people were being killed lol. But I don't think I'm weird for that given the nature of the yt characters.
This movie (as most of Tarantino’s films) is an absolute masterpiece!! Tarantino is crazy good and the amount of detail in the dialogs and acting is insane.
@23:25 When Leonardo DiCaprio slams his hand on the table he cut his hand badly wasnt part of the script but Leo kept going and never broke character and it was such a great addition to the scene so they left it in.
thers a lot of reaction fliks but i like your responses your not a dummy like the others you seem to understand human suffering,i saw that in privete ryan,,keep up the good work..jim from mtl canada.
23:25 Leonardo hit the table with his hand and accidentally smashed a shot glass and needed 8 stitches and he kept acting the scene!! That was his blood. The other actors erupted in applause him after they cut the scene.
Absolutely love your reactions and commentary over the video! Can you please watch inglorious bastards next. That’s Waltz’s best performance, the performance o all actors in that movie is amazing.
Just found this channel and I love the little comedy edits that you add into the reaction !! Makes it 10x better ! Definitely gonna check out more of your content 👍🏽
Scene at the end when he's doing the horse tricks is phenomenal Jamie Foxx actually rode the horses in this movie. He's definitely shown some phenomenals skills at the end
First time I watched this movie purely to piss off Twitter because they were crying over it being a racist movie. It's rare I do something purely for spite but this one paid off in spades, not a single principle actor in this movie is phoning it in and the handful of people we're meant to focus on we're bringing the top of their game to the table and that's just in front of the camera, the coloring, effects, sound engineering and whatnot was all top tier too. I've seen this movie 5 times so far, it's great every time. Now you have to see A Million Ways To Die In The West (it has an end credit scene)
@MellVerse Fun Fact: The Italian man that Django sits next to and spells his name for, is a legendary Italian actor name Franco Nero, who is perhaps best known for playing the lead in a classic 60's spaghetti western called...DJANGO, which is also where the theme song from the beginning comes from. I love it when Tarantino makes callbacks to these obscure cult movies like that. Really gives them a vitality and new appreciation from future generations of filmgoers and makers.
the fact that DiCaprio actually cut his hand & was bleeding whilst acting makes the scene even better. Especially as the actress wasn't expecting real blood to be smeared on her face but still went with it
how this is weird. I watched this for the 1st time today and when i finished i instantly wanted to see peoples reactions lol and you uploaded this today
Fun fact about that scene with Leo forcing them to buy Hildi. When he slammed his hand on the table. He actually hit and broke a glass. That's him really bleeding, it required like 6 or 7 stitches. And Leo kept the scene going as his hand gushed blood.
5:06 When slave is sold cheap, It usually meant the buyer is a man who can't afford more. Broke man= man who is going to force you into the work much more and you will never get a good care because he can't afford that.
@@Simple1Jack That is similar to what I said and I agree, I just said it in less... extreme way. Forcing to work harder=working to death. Beatings=part of bad care.
Leo slapping his hand into the table, cutting his hand on the broken glass and then just continueing the scene blows my mind every time. What a legend.
DiCaprio had a hard time saying “niger” because of its offensive nature as well as playing a deeply racist character. The actor Samuel L. Jackson, not his character, straighten him out for him to say niger as well as to play cruelty racist knowing that if he softened up his character it wouldn’t come out well.
23:24 Accidentally in this scene Leonardo DiCaprio really hurt himself with the glass. The blood on his hand is real. Actually, he was only supposed to hit the table. But he continued the scene professionally. Great actor.
Yo you did my request holy fuck! Awesome! Honestly if you were looking for a follow-up on Jamie Foxx I would love to see you do Baby Driver, he plays an absolute nutbar in that one.Take special note to listen to the music if you do, there's a lot of points where they synch it to the action, bass beats with gunshots, stuff kinda like that.
The scene with Leonardo smashing the skull he actually cut his hand wide open with his own blood and he stayed in character and they kept rolling than last few lines he said were off script and he smeared his own blood on Kerry Washington’s face. Totally Boss for staying in character while injured and it stayed on the final cut of the movie.