What’s it about?
Before the outbreak of the American Civil War, slave Django (Jamie Foxx) meets dentist/bounty hunter Dr. King Schultz (Christoph Waltz). Schultz frees Django and agrees to help him rescue his wife (Kerry Washington) from the clutches of seedy plantation owner Calvin Candie (Leonardo DiCaprio) and his sly house slave (Samuel L. Jackson). Also, racism.
What did we think?
Mitch says: Q-ball has done well everything he usually does well, and done poorly some things he usually does well, too. The humour and pacing is there – for the first half . Then Django transitions into territory that is dangerously close to being an outright two-dimensional mute.
I’ll skirt past the elephant in the room – the debate over whether Tarantino’s use of slavery and racism in pre-Civil War America amounts to anything meaningful or is just thinly veiled exploitation – because otherwise we’ll be here all day. Essentially, it’s the second one. And it’s violent as hell.
That said, Waltz, Foxx and DiCaprio are excellent and Tarantino has delivered a fitting tribute to the Westerns of old, soaked in irony and a genuine respect for the genre. It’s glorious, but no Inglourious.
It’s bizarre that a movie that is an hour too long has a rushed ending but Django Unchained is anything but ordinary. Good story, great characterisations, solid entertainment, lots of violence… and at some point it turns into a slightly self-indulgent movie that robs the film of some of its gloss.
Worth seeing but could have been so much more.
Well scripted movie supported by a great mix up of cast who match up and play their characters very well. Expect the unexpected. You won’t be disappointed. Twists and turns that you won’t predict that will keep you wanting more. Smoothly flowing at times but prepare for immediate switches to full on action, followed by a calmer before the storm.
Great finish leaves you wanting more.
Well worth the money at the movies.