Avenge That *LIKE* & *SUBSCRIBE* Button kzbin.info - *Full Reaction* Watch Along & MORE For *SS* Rejects: www.patreon.com/thereelrejects - Follow Us On Socials: instagram.com/reelrejects/ www.tiktok.com/@thereelrejects?lang=en
@tbrrrdmnАй бұрын
Robert Rodriquez gets no love from this channel! I wanna see the whole Grindhouse(Planet Terror n Death Proof) with the trailers.
@kaenopiАй бұрын
Django blowing up the director and giving himself a surprise 4th act is such a nice touch, i love it
@leecameron9226Ай бұрын
Damn I never of it like that pretty genius take
@DiamondWoodStudiosАй бұрын
Him walking out of the smoke of Tarantino is iconic because out of Tarantino we got Django ❤
@TobyC96Ай бұрын
Sam jacks performance as Steven is unbelievable! I love it when he drops the walking stick and stands up straight showing that he really was a master manipulator and one the most intelligent characters in the movie.
@danholmesfilmАй бұрын
no one talks about his character shifts both with the cane and with his voice and tone earlier with calvin in the backroom
@mitchellmelkin4078Ай бұрын
@tobyc96bt39, He's absolutely THE power in Candieland.
@wzrdmstrАй бұрын
He was playing a character the same way Django was
@thesilverbaby4880Ай бұрын
The holes in the bag scene is so good LMAOOOO
@Coolguy6783Ай бұрын
The guy that asks Django if he knows how to spell his name, is actually the original Django actor from the spaghetti western!
@TheRadScientist_Ай бұрын
Don Johnson’s character trying to articulate how to treat Django as someone in between a slave and a lower class white person is honestly hilarious. Tarantino’s ability to take something as dark as slavery and incorporate humor while also displaying how convoluted and ridiculous the idea of slavery/classism is is masterful.
@Lola-di8fqАй бұрын
I don't think they enjoyed the funny parts a much as they should have, but I get it
@shanejohn-lewis3715Ай бұрын
The nances make it hilarious
@taylorrussell3158Ай бұрын
The issue is they are both so obsessed with feeling some sort of misplaced guilt that they can't enjoy the story. This is just a movie , try to enjoy it.
@Youtube_Street_DrifterАй бұрын
Didn't the lower class white person had mental issues I thought that's what he was talking about.Dont treat him like a slave or a high society white man but a person who's kinda off but not fully retarded
@michaeloftaoismАй бұрын
@@taylorrussell3158completely agree
@jordangoings1177Ай бұрын
100% need more Tarantino on this channel!
@miquonkАй бұрын
More Tarantino, Scorsese, Villenueve, Chazelle, just more classic filmmakers instead of the repetitive superhero stuff, it’s get so boring
@dIggl3rАй бұрын
@@miquonk Glad you said Villeneuve, brilliant director, love his movies!!
@Kevmaster2000Ай бұрын
Andrew did Kill Bill Volume 1 & 2 on the Cinepals channel a while back.
@wibliАй бұрын
and less ring the bell
@shania991Ай бұрын
@@wibliget over it or don’t click the video literally tired of y’all losers tryna bully Tara into not being herself, try being less of an A hole.
@lachlanyoung6403Ай бұрын
The dialogue between Waltz and DiCaprio about Alexandre Dumas goes down as one of the greatest moments of screenplay for me. What a film!
@sproductionsincАй бұрын
It's such a great example of racism in general. I think the "raid" scene is great as well.
@miquonkАй бұрын
I’m glad that people agree this legitimately one of the greatest screenplays ever crafted. Such a dynamic, fresh, bold, and poignant story from start to finish
@bradcha5413Ай бұрын
Can someone explain, my dumbass was lost and didn't know shit, I don't understand how it got under candy's skin
@Timothy1987Ай бұрын
@bradcha5413 what you mean... he was mad they were giving him the run around about buying a fighter...
@bradcha5413Ай бұрын
@Timothy1987 No, when Schultz explained who Alexandre Dumas was, it triggered mr Candy for some reason
@erikelliott8015Ай бұрын
Literally one of my favorite movies ever, also my favorite Tarantino. The acting, the cinematography, the disturbing moments, the drama, the romance, the action and the humor all work for me.
@carsonc8285Ай бұрын
That horse that Jamie Fox was riding at the end was his own horse. So him riding bareback wouldnt be that surprising.
@mikemckague9506Ай бұрын
Jamie Fox seems like a horse guy just like Sylvester Stallone
@GangstaStan010Ай бұрын
Yeah, Jamie said he grew up riding.
@CharifRockaАй бұрын
@@mikemckague9506 Straight outta Terrell, Texas.
@thiagoteixeira6537Ай бұрын
Well that explains it!
@dabreal82Ай бұрын
@@CharifRockaKaufman county Bois!!!
@GhostKyngАй бұрын
One of the hardest movies out there. Great soundtrack and acting all around. I was cheering during half of this movie in theaters.
@SubzeroBlack68Ай бұрын
I had mad respect for Schultz that he RATHER DIE than shake Calvin Candies hand.
@Lola-di8fqАй бұрын
@SubzeroBlack68 you know I saw that totally different. I saw it as YT ppl always only looking out for their feelings and want they want ultimately. He didn't consider Django or what happens next
@NeleCBАй бұрын
@@Lola-di8fq nah that's bs
@Lola-di8fqАй бұрын
@@NeleCB selfish act
@DeePolar.Ай бұрын
Tough
@RAPPEMupWRIGHTАй бұрын
I was mad as shit when he died but it’s a QT movie o I wasn’t one of the hero’s died
@thedarkknight2221Ай бұрын
Quentin Tarantino took Jamie Foxx’s cell phone and other Hollywood swag away from him and kept them in his trailer so that way he would focus more on the surrounding environment to get into character, because slaves would never have had any of these luxuries. And Jaime said it REALLY helped him out. One of the reasons he gives one of the best performances of his career in this movie.
@joshuaminke6629Ай бұрын
fun fact: Leo cutting his hand on the glass was not part of the script. it was an accident. that is actually his blood. but he stayed in character and finished the scene
@LunarrMystАй бұрын
fun fact: you didn't watch this whole video before commenting this
@joshuaminke6629Ай бұрын
@LunarrMyst I assume they mentioned it in the ending discussion. I never watch those lol
@LunarrMystАй бұрын
@@joshuaminke6629 indeed they did lol
@shania991Ай бұрын
By the way they actually do cut at some point I don’t believe he rubs the blood on Kerry Washington’s face
@ivankawnartistАй бұрын
Fun fact: Patrons already told them.
@ChaneyyyyАй бұрын
Samuel took uncle ruckus to the next level🤣
@bigo1107Ай бұрын
Played that part way too good lmao
@afroahmed3989Ай бұрын
He was much worse than uncle ruckus, he was basically Drake 😂😂
@clayparker9197Ай бұрын
@@afroahmed3989 ???
@ChaneyyyyАй бұрын
@@afroahmed3989 not drake🤣🤣idk man ruckus had the rope ready🤣🤣
@gabrielleroux2333Ай бұрын
I don’t get that reference
@rolling-roadkillАй бұрын
When I first saw this movie I instantly felt chills when Stephen showed up. That character is brilliantly written and played. He really made me feel uneasy. One of my absolute favourite evil characters. He has no redeeming qualities at all but still doesn't come across as one dimentional or cartoony.
@walridarАй бұрын
These 2 are trying so hard to be socially correct this whole reaction is coming off extremely disingenuous. Cmon guys we know you feel bad, there were some funny bits in the movie you could've laughed at without everyone thinking you're racist.
@AtkirbyАй бұрын
13:25 is sooo funny but no they to scared to show emotions bc canceled!!
@ZTXMUSICAАй бұрын
I know right? That shii was so fucking annoying like lighten the fuck up jesus
@clevelandcbi21 күн бұрын
Worst one I ever saw was 2 bozos saying Crocodile Dundee SA'd the tranny 😂😂😂
@brandonpowell325418 күн бұрын
So disappointing. We all know slavery is and was bad. It's so crazy that a movie made, especially the guy reacting, WINCE EVERYTIME. Not commenting on the story, or acting when it a scene had the word in it. The virtue signaling is so ridiculous and nauseating
@appropriate2515 күн бұрын
I laughed many times in this film but, why be mad that someone is extra not-racist? I grew up in rural SC around blatant racists and I wince at that word because I've heard it used in earnest. Be mad that people are still racist not that people actively try to be not-racist.
@sv564708Ай бұрын
Andrew, that “flower” the blood sprayed on was cotton, an important bit of symbolism. It’s one of the most memorable images from the film.
@Glasskey10Ай бұрын
Thank you, that was bothering me. I actually said out loud, "it's not a flower, it's cotton."
@thedarkemissaryАй бұрын
@@Glasskey10 well.... it's a cotton FLOWER. That's literally what it is.
@theascendunt9960Ай бұрын
Alright, chill out. You people are little sensitive-ass pansies, getting all worked up about a small oversight.
@trevorkirtley4208Ай бұрын
@@thedarkemissaryikr, like are y'all dense or something. Cotton is a type of flower. If it is NOT a flower then please do tell what it is then?
@trevorkirtley4208Ай бұрын
@@jonathanbrown4315that is a cotton FLOWER my dude. He didn't say anything wrong/false
@marcusmoses574Ай бұрын
20:50 Those were not flowers, those were bols of cotton. Cotton was one of the big three harvests that Africans held in slavery raised and collected. My family was one of those held in that institution of slavery.
@tomcody2203Ай бұрын
Okay, now I feel old. Almost NO ONE of those young KZbinrs recognizes FRANCO NERO at the bar ("The 'D' is silent" "I know!"). He was the original DJANGO in Sergio Corbuccis movie in 1966.
@JellyfishHellАй бұрын
Hey- im 22 and i recognized him
@carl_anderson9315Ай бұрын
It has nothing to do with your age. Spaghetti Western has a very specific audience. I’m sure even back in the 70s most of Americans didn’t know who he was.
@marcusmcgill4423Ай бұрын
Beat me to it. I'm glad QT had him make a cameo. I used to watch the original with my grandfather all the time. He was also the manager of Rome's Continental Hotel in John Wick Chapter 2.
@krackawoody2556Ай бұрын
@@carl_anderson9315 I had heard the term Spaghetti Western used before but I never had actually looked into it until I first saw Django and its such a unique corner of cinema
@alexanderthegreat5649Ай бұрын
@@carl_anderson9315 Yup! I'm a movie fan and hadn't seen the film, however because I read so much about cinema, and follow productions especially one's I'm interested in like this one from the time they're announced until well after they've released. I had known who he was fron reading about his scene/cameo and that he was the original Django.
@AtkirbyАй бұрын
You guys should be laughing so hard at this movie don’t be afraid to show emotions!
@magisystemАй бұрын
Yeah a couple moments that were played for comedy they just sat there almost intentionally not laughing lol You don't have to virtue signal that hard guys, the movie has comedy in it.
@believeume122Ай бұрын
Yea that's what I was just saying. This movie has some hilarious parts but Jeff spends so much time trying to show us how offended and mad he is he misses it. He wasn't a good fit for this reaction. He tends to pander a bit too much in reactions like this.
@orlandoruizjr3834Ай бұрын
Now, more than ever, we need a reaction to PULP FICTION.
@KarlSumner-cn3dsАй бұрын
If they don't talk over great dialogue, again. If they get better with that, I'll subscribe.
@allanpye1326Ай бұрын
Yeah that and Jackie Brown
@orlandoruizjr3834Ай бұрын
@@KarlSumner-cn3ds It'll never happen. I keep waiting for them to let up on that.
@stefanc4520Ай бұрын
Honestly find it funny how sensitive you guys are to the language cansidering the violence is waaaaaaaay worse 😂😂😂
@Ahh-Kuma9 күн бұрын
Personal observation: Candy isn't Django's villain, he's King's villain because they are diametrically opposed characters. Django's villain is Stephen for the exact same reason.
@800Ms-k6nАй бұрын
I hope to see Christoph Waltz in a Quentin Tarantino again just for him to get a third Oscar. Seems like the only way for Waltz to win an Oscar is if he's in a Tarantino movie 😅
@gabrielleroux2333Ай бұрын
Or just, you know, pick better projects 😅 even if he would’ve given the best performance of his life, he wouldn’t have been nominated for Alita or green hornet 😂🤣
@fishonthefly2278Ай бұрын
I love this movie for so many reasons, but the most is the use of my late German grandmother's name, Broomhilda. My grandmother grew up in the slums of Berlin in WW2 and is the strongest person I've known. To see a character of her namesake escape hell like she did with so much strength is so beautiful to me.
@Tater4200Ай бұрын
I'd like to see one reaction without the forced "flabbergast" lol. It's like people feel like they HAVE to act super super offended on behalf of fictional characters. Just enjoy it for what it is and stop worrying about what people think
@magisystemАй бұрын
If they had pearls they would have clutched them lmao
@Timothy1987Ай бұрын
That was actually Jamie Fox bareback riding his own horse( in real life) incredible.. people dont understand the skill that takes... glad yall said something about that 😊
@electriccherry3618Ай бұрын
So fun(ny) fact: DiCaprio didn't feel comfortable saying thr n-word so Jamie Foxx and Sam Jackson had to force him too. Once he got REALLY into character, he was unstoppable!
@YokaiSteve9 күн бұрын
They didn't "force" him at all, they reassured him that it was a word they used on each other on a day to day basis and it helped ease that discomfort. Read up on the facts first buddy.
@800Ms-k6nАй бұрын
You know this movie is a legendary classic when it had the director in a cameo role just for the lead character to blew him up 😂😂
@LunarrMystАй бұрын
first tarintino film? he ALWAYS puts him self somewhere doing so wild shit lol
@shania991Ай бұрын
I mean this is something Tarantino is known for so it’s nothing new he’s in almost all of his movies still cool though.
@iblamegravity2341Ай бұрын
@@LunarrMystNot "ALWAYS"
@kvrmv4k476Ай бұрын
@@iblamegravity2341hence the word “almost”.
@alexdavies3132Ай бұрын
Large on screen letters "WALTON". Andrew: I love WALTER. Clearly not that much.
@clevelandcbi21 күн бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@zrcarrick87Ай бұрын
Andrew eye rolling at every N word in a Django is going to be a fun drinking game.
@andrewgordon7662Ай бұрын
Haha
@goldfishPACIFIERАй бұрын
@@zrcarrick87 I think I’m already drunk from all the eyerolling
@jamalbryant8099Ай бұрын
I guess he won't like none of the 2pac movies
@andrewgordon7662Ай бұрын
@@goldfishPACIFIER glad to hear drink lots of whiskey!!!
@ninipookieАй бұрын
@@andrewgordon7662not a good thing to encourage ha!
@DefunctGamesАй бұрын
Tara understands that no animals were harmed in the making of this movie, right?
@dontbstingy3587Ай бұрын
Don't worry, she just reminds herself that it died quickly...
@nickyutzy4788Ай бұрын
she saw the comment at the end of the movie and comments on it
@shania991Ай бұрын
Duhhh but it still dies in the film 😂 common sense babe people get sad when animals “die” in movies we know the dog in John Wick isn’t really dead didn’t stop us from hating the characters.😂
@rayvinkrossingАй бұрын
Alright, I'll be this guy lol. During the dinner scene, when Leo slams the table, he hit a glass and actually cut his hand open and was bleeding everywhere. Everyone, including Tarantino, was so stunned that he didn't think to call cut, and they just continued with the scene. (For the record, the moment when he rubs blood over Kerry Washingtons face was not with his own blood.)
@bijoybiswas1932Ай бұрын
Never talk over a scene when two Tarantino characters are exchanging words. NEVER.
@MacMiittensАй бұрын
Don’t watch any videos with Andrew he will ruin that every time
@bijoybiswas1932Ай бұрын
@@MacMiittens obnoxious dude
@krackawoody2556Ай бұрын
Shultz is one of my alltime favourite characters.
@adeviantproductionАй бұрын
No one says "Walton", but I see you editors, and I appreciate you.
@JordanDC87Ай бұрын
Amazing video. Everytime I watch this I get so many emotions, crying and cheering. The woman with the red bandana is Zoey Bell, she's a stunt woman, she was Uma thurman's stunt double in kill bill, and she's in Death proof . You should definitely watch more Tarantino movies and the grind house double feature, death proof and planet terror.
@justinjernigan1365Ай бұрын
James Remar played a double role in this film because back then they didn’t have enough actors so they would cast the same person playing a different role in the movie. QT was filming for the classic version of a spaghetti western.
@justinjernigan1365Ай бұрын
He took inspiration from the old westerns.
@AtlantaGunsАй бұрын
My wife spent allllll night cutting these eye holes for y’all 🤣🤣🤣
@sproductionsincАй бұрын
I have no doubt that it was actually like that lol
@GarudaLegendsАй бұрын
He was super offended about that and left. Funny scene
@ГригорийКузярин-т1ъАй бұрын
Fun fact: it's even funnier in Russian dub where this guy is voiced by SpongeBob voice actor. Imagine hearing SpongeBob say "Fuck y'all, you ungrateful sons of bitches"
@bobcobb3654Ай бұрын
James Remar played 2 separate characters. It’s a nod to how spaghetti westerns, often faced with limited resources and actors, would have the same actor playing multiple parts in a series of films, and in some cases, the same movie.
@guitogalindoАй бұрын
Yes! Tarantino!!!! 🤘🤘 This and Inglorious Basterds are my favorites… also Pulp Fiction, Death Proof and the Kill Bill movies… Reservoir Dogs and Once Upon a Time… The Hateful Eight… Damn it’s really hard to rank them and choose a favorite… 😂
@thedarkemissaryАй бұрын
Not just Alita. Waltz character in Inglorious Bastards was also essentially a bounty hunter.
@zachnotzack4Ай бұрын
I love this reaction. Side note 📝 Jackie Brown is QTs most underrated and under appreciated film imo. Definitely react to that please
@rodriga1985Ай бұрын
Yea, def the weakest out of all his films.
@zachnotzack4Ай бұрын
@@rodriga1985 agree to disagree on that for sure
@rodriga1985Ай бұрын
@zachnotzack4 well, you're entitled to your wrong opinion, but that doesn't negate the fact, that it is factually his weakest in box office and story telling. He even admits it himself. You can like it all you want, but in the end, it is the weakest of his 10 directorial films.
@zachnotzack4Ай бұрын
@@rodriga1985 dude it’s my opinion so it’s not wrong. The movie didn’t do well in the box office bc it went head to head with Titanic which hit $1B. I love the movie and your insults aren’t gonna make me feel any different about the brilliance of it.
@clevelandcbi21 күн бұрын
@@rodriga1985Definitely his weakest.
@YvonneBeard-zh5uwАй бұрын
Y'all to politically correct for me...y'all gotta remember it's a movie...have some fun
@DomCoreLeonАй бұрын
Yea half the reaction was homie on the left making sure the audience knew how not racist he is. Like bro we get it, bordering savior complex
@Taylorswiftfan13308Ай бұрын
Just started watching: this movie has a ton of classic moments so I may be back, but before I forget, I just have to mention I nearly chuckle-spat my drink through my nose when Tara laughed at Fritz's trademark greeting neigh. 3:11 As many innocents do in this one... Thus confirming what we already knew: That she is not a heartless mercenary, a Slaver, nor deviant sister of a deviant Slaver. But in fact, she is a good soul! ❤
@michaelhickman9667Ай бұрын
Dr King Shultz is my favorite character in the entire Tarantino franchise 💯
@cheappoetry2798Ай бұрын
This is in my top 4 favorite films. I will never miss an opportunity to rewatch it ❤️
@DynamicSystemАй бұрын
I am pretty sure it was cotton and not white flowers that were splattered with blood.
@AntoineRideaux-wd1zkАй бұрын
Cotton is a white flower
@harmontpАй бұрын
Brunhilda von Schaft. As in Shaft. That's right, this interpretation of Django was Shaft's ancestor. Private Detective John Shaft, played by Richard Roundtree in 1970.
@YeraveragemoronАй бұрын
“So uneducated” 😂😂 bro, it was the mid 1800’s - everyone was pretty much uneducated 🤦🏾♂️
@brandonpowell325418 күн бұрын
Virtue signaling at it's finest. Talk and wince at the n word even though it's a movie... every white character is horrible and disgusting, uneducated.... they need to let the world know what side they're on and how virtuous they are even though we all know slavery is bad. But you'll never once hear them talk about how slavery is more common now that it was in 1858. No posts or dialogue on that. Just all white people bad.
@kendallbrown2904Ай бұрын
HELL YES!!! Im so here for this!!! Y’all been having Tara watch some great movies!! Edit: also someone else may have pointed this out but the part where DiCaprio slams him hand on the table when he’s yelling and his hands starts bleeding wasn’t scripted. He actually cut his hand for real and when he wiped his hand on Django’s wife’s face her disgusted reaction was genuine because DiCaprio wiped his actual blood on her. That’s also why his hand is wrapped up in the next scene
@ML-lx4suАй бұрын
To me, Kerry Washington's physical acting is what sells the movie. Completely convincing with barely any speaking lines.
@Lightswitch002Ай бұрын
I have a feeling that your reaction to a slave movie will be pretty insufferable.......Let's find out
@okthen442Ай бұрын
Shut up
@megafoxyawesomehot69Ай бұрын
I’m 10 mins in and it’s a little insufferable lol. They’re trying too hard to not get canceled lol. Like how are you surprised that a slave movie uses the n word? 😂
@MrMikeyfromstlАй бұрын
😂😂😂
@clevelandcbi21 күн бұрын
You get the gold 🥇
@misshellАй бұрын
This movie has SO MANY great lines. It's basically half the movie, you can recite any line and anyone who's anyone will know it's this movie 🎉
@TheGustavFTWАй бұрын
It's a word, yes it's unpleasant but the trained behaviour to cringe is a bit much.
@rager__Ай бұрын
Bro on the left was getting too hung up on the bad words. It was like watching an adult watch their first rated r movie
@jotairpontes13 күн бұрын
One of my fav movies of all time, seen it a bunch of times, seeing a bunch of reactions... always amazing. A masterpiece.
@ML-lx4suАй бұрын
Here's a weird thought: Calvin Candie is not really particularly racist (relatively speaking). He respects Stephen, and views and treats him as (at least) an equal. He instantly accepts Django as a member of his circle, and does not dispute his place at the table (literally and figuratively). Everyone else doubts and dismisses both Django and Stephen, but Calvin doesn't care. Nobody else can't see past the skin color, but that doesn't even slow Candie down. Evil, yes. Racist? Probably, but much less so than everyone else.
@vasyarogov4131Ай бұрын
Exactly. Calvin is a horrible person, but for totally different reasons than racism. He's equally psycho to everyone XD
@SonOfMutaАй бұрын
17:31 Cotton, not flowers
@SmileySaidItАй бұрын
Very symbolic. 😢
@deathninja16Ай бұрын
We love trading blood for other resources at least, it seems we used to. @@SmileySaidIt
@kvrmv4k476Ай бұрын
@@SmileySaidItexactly. I wish they noticed this.
@DrGrammarPCАй бұрын
It's sad that people don't recognise Franco Nero, the original Django. No one watches old movies anymore. People will probably don't remember Leo 70 years from now.
@JasonAkersMusicАй бұрын
THE HORSE DIDN'T DIE. NEITHER DID THE PUPPY IN JOHN WICK. In fact, none of the animals in movies today die generally. So take a breath, guys.
@ReconWafflezАй бұрын
Yeah, they know this. Some people just don't like watching animals get hurt.
@JasonAkersMusicАй бұрын
@@ReconWafflez When I was little I grew up on a farm and we killed animals to be able to eat. So maybe I can’t expect other people to be as used to the idea of animals dying as someone who’s got a lot of experience with it.
@Naramiss2396Ай бұрын
@@JasonAkersMusic wow you realized everyone isn’t just like you, what a crazy conception
@JasonAkersMusicАй бұрын
@@Naramiss2396 Sarcasm is fun huu?
@thedarkknight2221Ай бұрын
Samuel L Jackson said that Stephen is the most despicable character he has ever played in his life because he’s a slave who actually loves slavery. Like a somehow more believable Unkle Ruckus from The Boondocks, or Justice Clarence Thomas.
@rolling-roadkillАй бұрын
Yeah. The likeness between Stephen and Clarence is uncanny. They have the same disdainful/hateful look in their eyes.
@raptordan166Ай бұрын
Normally I'd be bothered by political jabs, but in the case of Justice Clarence Thomas, the guy is very much against the interest of the people. He's entirely unapologetic with the decisions he rules over in regards to people's civil rights.
@thedarkknight2221Ай бұрын
@@rolling-roadkill I swear I’m like 90% certain that it’s like in Get Out where someone took the brain of a racist old white man and put it in Clarence’s head.
@braxtonthartabrigАй бұрын
Or Mark Robinson
@thedarkknight2221Ай бұрын
@@braxtonthartabrig I swear those two guys are almost proof that what happened in Get Out might be actually happening IRL. That or it truly is an Unkle Rukus situation where they were almost raised to be the incredibly offensive and racist bastards that they are.
@Tac0maAr0maАй бұрын
Jamie Foxx is so insanely talented
@TheNukedNachoАй бұрын
17:17 extremely minor but yall talking over the "Positive" talk is kinda painful
@Cherokee9898Ай бұрын
Would highly recommend reading “The African” by Olaudah Equiano. He was a slave who got his freedom and played a major role in the abolition of slavery in Britain working with William Wilberforce. Cannot recommend it enough.
@mayapeterson3072Ай бұрын
It's so great that you did this movie, I love it so much. It has a lot of heart for being an exploitation film (among a couple other genres). I love how you guys talk about Django's character being adaptable and able to read people. Jamie Foxx put so much personality in this character. Schultz is also a great character, but there is so much resilience and intelligence in Django.
@CurraghmoreАй бұрын
That was well spotted that the masked character who had no lines was a woman. That was Zoe Bell, who also appeared in 'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood' as Kurt Russell's wife. She also appears in 'The Hateful Eight' and had a big part in 'Death Proof' which is not QT's most popular film, but I think it's underrated and is great. Zoe Bell was also the stunt double for Uma Thurman in the 'Kill Bill' films, before QT gave her roles on screen in the later films that she appeared in.
@lindapowers8592Ай бұрын
The old guy that sold them off was actor Bruce Dern actress Laura Derns father. The blood spray was on cotton plants 😂 Love your analysis of the history trauma and characters.
@MrInuhanyou12322 күн бұрын
Django is my favorite tarentino movie. Not just because it's a good movie. But because the importance of it's message about dehumanization and bigotry and racism and systems of oppression never go away and only becomes more relevant in real life.
@besupaaaАй бұрын
Praper was having fun with you guys in this one ahaha.
@LunarrMystАй бұрын
the fucks that even mean?
@sebagonzalezmusicАй бұрын
Django Unchained is by far my favorite Tarantino movie🍿🎥🎬😎. It’s so fun, rewatchable, and the performances are incredible🙌🏼.
@charliehume5342Ай бұрын
From what I understand the horse Django rides bareback in the last act is Jamie Foxx's horse in real life
@Kidapollo926 күн бұрын
The funny thing is that as clever as Stephen is he is forced to play second fiddle to Miss Candy. Stephen is the one who caught on to the act Django and King Schulz are putting on to get Broomhilda. This is the opposite of Django, who has status out in the open but is forced to play a role to gain what he wants. Sprhen can be himself could be in private with Calvin but not in the open.
@duck-ew5zsАй бұрын
I forgot how much Tarantino break the immersion of this movie when he appeared. Full of very great performances and bro just appears like a guest in a sitcom
@mikefetterman6782Ай бұрын
The "old man" around the 11:00 minute mark is Bruce Dern, an accomplished actor and father of Laura Dern (Jurassic Park)
@mikefetterman6782Ай бұрын
Quentin is a huge fan of movies of the 70s. That "grainy" film pops and actual film movements (instead of digital) make a more classic look. Plus, before the civil war, the KKK did not exist. It was in the aftermath of the war that the organization was created.
@deathninja16Ай бұрын
The actor that was shot in the beginning was the same one who was working with Calvin candy they used to do that in Old Spaghetti Westerns they reuse actors that were killed off as other parts because they didn't have access to as many extras or actors at that point, and it was cheaper.
@bugdrawsportraitsАй бұрын
Thank you for this, because I love that actor and I thought I was crazy because there's no way someone looks like him THAT much (but I never actually checked if it was him again)
@josephjasem7926Ай бұрын
Sam Jackson’s performance is nothing short of sublime in Django. And that’s saying something considering how amazing the rest are.
@denisem8356Ай бұрын
You talked through that am I positive part. It’s at about the 17.10 minute mark. It’s a great line. Go back and watch it.
@jessikat_17Ай бұрын
Flash, Dr Schultz, aka Christoph Waltz, is also the nazi Hans in Inglorious Bastards. I watched this first, fell in love with him, and then watched Inglorious Bastards and it was a whiplash! Waltz is such a great actor to play two very different characters that are basically opposites and both so believable, chefs kiss!
@TheRealCenturionАй бұрын
Love the Tarantino films , Keep it up guys. Loved the reaction!
@williamswiniuch7527Ай бұрын
Christoph Waltz won supporting and Tarantino won for screenplay. Nominated for Best picture, cinematography and sound editing
@charliel4817 күн бұрын
Leonardo deserves an Oscar for his performance at the dinner table
@AnnetteDennis-m6mАй бұрын
Great analysis guys
@NerdyBeardedCanadianАй бұрын
Tara having not seen kill Bill made me too excited 😂
@danholmesfilmАй бұрын
22:39 Tarantino would never use blue screen for a shot of mountains lol ;)
@15blackshirtАй бұрын
Other Tarantino films to watch include Pulp Fiction, Jackie Brown, Death Proof, The Hateful Eight and Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. His mom directing credits include True Romance, Desperado and From Dusk til Dawn. Christoph Waltz won his second Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his role in this. The man who asks Django how to spell his name played the same character in the Italian Western of the same name
@renecasillas1308Ай бұрын
You guys should watch "Natural Born Killers" and "True Romance" both written by Quinton Tarantino. He sold these movies so he he could direct Reservoir Dogs
@andrewgordon7662Ай бұрын
I would love to watch both of those films!
@alwayzchillin0714Ай бұрын
Cristoph Walz is amazing, Tarantino and him are a perfect combination. This is a close 2nd behind Inglorious Bastards for me.
@jasonlucejr6997Ай бұрын
Please ride this Tarantino train until the wheels fall off!!!
@Hotwheels0185Ай бұрын
Tara ABSOLUTELY should watch more Tarrantino. They are incredible movies, I just can't emotionally handle the subject matter
@LetsGetitBoahАй бұрын
Then toughen up.
@toughspitfireАй бұрын
18:33 I love this is almost everyone's reaction before we get the funniest scene in the movie.
@Monkeybear2008Ай бұрын
The dinner scene when Leo smashes his hand on the table resulted in a real laceration and real blood, yet Leo continued with the scene despite the pain to his hand. Masterclass performance.
@rockwellknuckles9425Ай бұрын
I would LOVE to see a Tarantino marathon from you two.
@patriot2805Ай бұрын
This film and Inglourious Basterds are my favorite Tarantino movies.
@SelfAwareFlamingoАй бұрын
Oh imma go walking in the moonlight with this reaction 🙌🏽
@Phoenixmercado91Ай бұрын
So just a fun movie fact the Spaniard who speaks to Django at the bar is actually the the original actor who played the roll of Django and he was a bounty hunter who dragged a coffin around with him by horseback and inside the coffin was a machine of death
@LokiDWolf7 күн бұрын
The blood sprayed on the cotton. Also, Quentin is known to use the same person for a couple of roles. Not every movie of course. That was Leo's real blood. He accidently cut his hand slamming it on table. They kept filming. Apparently he got a standing ovation from Quentin and everyone else for that scene when cut was called.
@BledAllOutАй бұрын
Kerry really was getting hit with that whip. She said she wanted it to be realistic. Now that's what you call getting into character 👌🏾
@theylied1776Ай бұрын
This just shows you the power of a great writer/ director and actor. Christoph Waltz has only made two movies with Quentin Tarantino. And he won Oscars for both performances.
@AnnetteDennis-m6mАй бұрын
That was cotton, not a flower that the blood splattered