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OT: Spike Lee rips "Django"

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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#261 » by Jmonty580 » Tue Jan 8, 2013 1:47 am

j4remi wrote:
Jmonty580 wrote:
j4remi wrote:How did it make a joke of it? The jokes were always focused on mocking the slave owners' ignorance. The two most intelligent characters in the flick are slaves that take advantage of their "owners" to a point where Dr. King goes on a suicide mission and Stephen is the real decision maker over Candie. When the violence happens it's gritty and horrific to a massive degree too.


Mostly of slave like situations. I dont know, the movie is half comedy half super hero to me. Something about taking something like slavery and turning it into that type of a movie was just slightly uncomfortable. Im sure its refreshing for a bunch seeing Django get revenge on slave owners.

I honestly didnt have any problems with the movie, but I can see why some would. It makes entertainment and light of something that alot of people are still very emotional about.


Honest question, did you think the same thing of Inglorious Basterds? In Django he actually shows the brutality toward the slaves in a very visceral manner...in IB you never even get exposed to the horrors that Jewish people faced...so which is worse?


Never seen it.
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips 

Post#262 » by j4remi » Tue Jan 8, 2013 6:02 pm

Governor Dudley wrote:
Rasho Brezec wrote:I hope people will be as enraged next year when Spike Lee ruins the art of Korean revenge movies with his remake of Oldboy.


They arent remaking the film. The are adapting the manga that the korean film is based On.

Sent from my GT-I9100 using Tapatalk 2


Just got a look at some major spoilers...never read the manga, did see the movie and this remake is absolutely gonna ruin it.
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#263 » by IMAN5 » Tue Jan 8, 2013 7:40 pm

I Saw Django and I liked it. I've liked Tarentino's past work, with the Kill Bills, and Ingl Basterds was alright.

I'm all for action and violent movies, but even for myself there were certain parts that were a little too much.

For anyone who has seen it, the dogs part was too much.
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#264 » by Gold Chain » Tue Jan 8, 2013 7:48 pm

Well, he's probably mad that QT will go down as a great,
and although he's done some good stuff,
he comes off as a whiner and someone who is not all that interested in anyone else's opinion.

Gee, Spike, Jamie Foxx was okay with it, so you can can it.
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#265 » by RutgersBJJ » Tue Jan 8, 2013 8:41 pm

I actually was surprised at how little gore there was in this movie. Seemed like QT was much more tame because of the controversial subject matter, or he went way too over the top and had to edit out a ton of stuff. Cut away when D'artagnan rips the other fighter's eyes out of his socket, cut away to Candie and Django staring at each other during the dog scene, it's not Foxx's dick that Billy Crash molests, nothing is shown when Crash is dismembered, Leo has the least violent QT death outside of Bill in Kill Bill, Schultz somehow doesn't split in two when he takes an 8-gauge shotgun to the chest, and no bone is shown protruding out of the leg when Stephen is "knee-capped" twice.
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#266 » by cgmw » Tue Jan 8, 2013 9:17 pm

j4remi wrote:
Sprewell4Three wrote:If this movie offends you then you gotta another thing coming. Seriously.
You probably are the types that are serious during a Dave CHappelle and Paul Mooney comedy act.

The movie basically is a satirical take on how stupid those racist white folk were back in the day...

Most of the black people / slaves were as serious as can be..


Exactly! Even King, a clever and calculated character, is outsmarted by Samuel L's character. None of the brutality toward slaves was made light...there were jokes at the expense of the racist characters throughout but that's about it.

Just saw it. I'm not offended by the movie. But I get why Spike said he wouldn't see it. To me, QT's movies are all fluff. Or pulp. It's just cheap blood and guts revenge with lighthearted comedic touches. To tell that kind of story against the backdrop of something as serious and stark as slavery is absolutely offensive IMO. I'm just not sure many people in the world still care, and I personally am way too thick skinned and jaded to GAF.

To me the real story is that somebody in this thread said it wasn't as gory as expected. Spoiler alert: Just about every last character is murdered. And those that aren't are shot a dozen times for effect. Also, do slave owners need to be satirized in 2013? Don't we already understand how ridiculous those people were?

I'm glad I saw it, glad QT made it, but it was pretty much exactly what I expected with very little surprise and very much gratuitous hero gore.
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#267 » by j4remi » Tue Jan 8, 2013 10:44 pm

cgmw wrote:
j4remi wrote:
Exactly! Even King, a clever and calculated character, is outsmarted by Samuel L's character. None of the brutality toward slaves was made light...there were jokes at the expense of the racist characters throughout but that's about it.

Just saw it. I'm not offended by the movie. But I get why Spike said he wouldn't see it. To me, QT's movies are all fluff. Or pulp. It's just cheap blood and guts revenge with lighthearted comedic touches. To tell that kind of story against the backdrop of something as serious and stark as slavery is absolutely offensive IMO. I'm just not sure many people in the world still care, and I personally am way too thick skinned and jaded to GAF.

To me the real story is that somebody in this thread said it wasn't as gory as expected. Spoiler alert: Just about every last character is murdered. And those that aren't are shot a dozen times for effect. Also, do slave owners need to be satirized in 2013? Don't we already understand how ridiculous those people were?

I'm glad I saw it, glad QT made it, but it was pretty much exactly what I expected with very little surprise and very much gratuitous hero gore.


Here's a definite props to QT thing...the two most brutal scenes where I had the most trouble looking at the screen were the ones where he took the camera off the actual action...he forced you to imagine it.

Satirizing slave owners isn't necessary, but is a satire ever actually called for? Making a mockery of slave owners and racists is fine by me...And the brutality toward the slaves was visceral and could possibly give a new generation an opportunity to understand just how harshly the slaves were treated. At no point is slavery itself taken lightly. I think the best dialogues in the movies were

1) the discussion about Django being a free man but not being treated like a free man.
2) Candie's insane justification for slavery.

I understand people feeling that the tone of the movie wasn't suitable for it's plot but only to an extent...and I don't think he took slavery lightly at all.
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#268 » by cgmw » Wed Jan 9, 2013 12:09 am

Yeah, that's a good point about informing another generation. As a Jew, I definitely raised an eyebrow at Inglorious B. Especially the silly ending. It's tricky territory when you've actually met people (and are related to them!) who suffered through unimaginable sh*t. Nothing in either movie is remotely unsympathetic to Jews or African-Americans, but then again both movies can arguably be categorized as comedies or maybe even farce. I don't know how my dead grandmother would have reacted to seeing a gory adventure comedy about a Jew Hunter, but then again she survived Hogan's Heroes just fine.

Personally, Django was straight up entertainment. I rolled my eyes like a good movie snob when Django mowed down twelve white guys or when special cameo actors explode, but it was good fun.

I do think there were touches of historical accuracy that people can learn from. But for a major budget movie set in slavery, they'd be hard pressed to spend any less time or money on depicting the realities. To me, the love vengeance/rescue story is so played out that I never once felt any emotional connection to Django and Hildy.

About as much as I felt for Mario and the princess in Donkey Kong. Or the Kung Fu guy and his girlfriend in the classic nintendo game Kung Fu.
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#269 » by cgmw » Wed Jan 9, 2013 12:15 am

Also I think it cheapened the Kristof Waltz character that he basically played the opposite as the character from Ingolorious Basterds. I pretty much understood from the get go that his character was going to be some kind of race martyr.

Again, this underscores the point that QT's style of broad strokes with minimal emotional connection might not be everyone's cup of tea when dealing with highly charged emotional subject matter.
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#270 » by j4remi » Wed Jan 9, 2013 12:30 am

Yeah, it was definitely a cliched story with the only twist being that it was slavery...Imo, the inaccuracy of IB was worse than this one...the opening scene of IB showed that QT could have really gone for something with greater depth on that one. I think if you really analytically approach Django though, there are some themes and symbols that run deeper (Dr. King being a symbol for white guilt; the whole Stephen dynamic raising the question of who truly owns who by the end of the film; etc.)...With IB, I don't see any deeper meanings, jut a revenge flick...a Kill Bill set in a dark time where he rewrites his own history. My hope with both IB and Django though is that the generation X'ers who hardly even realize that racism was powerful and fairly blatant even in the 80's, or that there are Jewish people living today who can tell stories about the atrocities they've faced, might actually turn around and look into these things further. One thing about QT's boldness is that he scratches at things a lot of people would much rather brush under the table. In that respect, without my researching this I'll guess that he's had the biggest movies acknowledging the holocaust or slavery since Schindler's List (Might be that Italian movie on a critical scale but popularity wise) and Roots (Rosewood was set well past slavery and was a commercial flop).

Even if people don't like what he did with those films, at least he's willing to acknowledge them. I also find it funny when people claim he's racist...His youth was surrounded by every race especially black people, hence his deep affinity for blaxploitation films. It's an uninformed opinion. Whether he's TOO comfortable with them, maybe that's a different story.
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#271 » by Stannis » Wed Jan 9, 2013 1:06 am

j4remi wrote:
Oscirus wrote:Stephen was a kiss ass hypeman who was nowhere near as evil as SLJ likes to think and Django pretty much relied on Schultz to get his bride. Don't get me wrong I enjoyed the movie but let's not pretend this was anything other then tarantino using a gimmick for his spaghetti western


Nah, Stephen runs the show. He raised Candie, he played at being weak to make Candie feel in control but every bad deed Candie does once Stephen's in the picture is thanks to Stephen. He's the one who figures out the plan, he's the one tells Candie about it and gets him into the mode to get revenge...he plays dude the whole way. The dropping of the cane is symbolic as hell in that regard.

In this movie, I thought Stephen was viewed a wiser man than Candie, because Stephen is older, and in this situation, has more chemistry with the slaves.

I still thought he was a "kiss ass" who showed too much loyalty to his master/former master.

Spoiler alert: That scene when Candie Ddes, Stephan bursts out crying and screaming, which my entire theater thought was hilarious. I thought it was funny too, but it pissed me off to see Stephan's loyalty.
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#272 » by Stannis » Wed Jan 9, 2013 1:32 am

I did enjoy Django. I will probably watch it a few more times once it comes out on Blu-Ray/DVD. Like most Tarantino movies for me, they get better the more I watch them.

I do not really think Tarantino is a racist. He just does not care. People of all races use the n-word like it is nothing. I never thought Tarantino made blacks in particular look bad. If you get offended easily, he pretty much makes all races look bad.
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#273 » by cgmw » Wed Jan 9, 2013 1:34 am

Tarentino clearly has ADD. He's a dude. He likes explosions, blood splatter, cool weapons, violent killings, more violent killings, catchy songs, cool panoramas, action camera shots, provokative ladies, bare balls, and will go out of his way to find outrageous ways to display violence. What he doesn't do is create any sort of emotional depth to his characters. I think he tries, but IMO fails almost completely. Instead what you get is a bunch of cool stuff overlaying a simple, often cliched, and entirely predictable hollywood plot line.

For a cool movie with no emotional depth, I think Django does in fact cheapen the unfathomable emotional significance of slavery. Problem is, nobody will go see a movie that conveys the true emotional depth of such a serious and depressing subject. Remi, I think you're right that Django if nothing else reaches a wide audience and gets them thinking and talking. But IMO it reaches a wide audience the same way as a blurb on the wrapper of a Big Mac or McRib.

Ok, maybe a Wendy's Baconator. Those things are amazing.
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#274 » by cgmw » Wed Jan 9, 2013 2:16 am

Just saying, no movie review would be complete without mentioning that the white male filmaker felt compelled to use a big fake black c*ck & balls in a castration scene.

Did anyone else catch the size of the fro on the bottom of Django's nutsack? Wow.
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#275 » by j4remi » Wed Jan 9, 2013 2:17 am

cgmw wrote:Tarentino clearly has ADD. He's a dude. He likes explosions, blood splatter, cool weapons, violent killings, more violent killings, catchy songs, cool panoramas, action camera shots, provokative ladies, bare balls, and will go out of his way to find outrageous ways to display violence. What he doesn't do is create any sort of emotional depth to his characters. I think he tries, but IMO fails almost completely. Instead what you get is a bunch of cool stuff overlaying a simple, often cliched, and entirely predictable hollywood plot line.

For a cool movie with no emotional depth, I think Django does in fact cheapen the unfathomable emotional significance of slavery. Problem is, nobody will go see a movie that conveys the true emotional depth of such a serious and depressing subject. Remi, I think you're right that Django if nothing else reaches a wide audience and gets them thinking and talking. But IMO it reaches a wide audience the same way as a blurb on the wrapper of a Big Mac or McRib.

Ok, maybe a Wendy's Bacon Cheeseburger. Those things are amazing.


I wouldn't argue about QT being more glamor and less depth with most characters...In Reservoir Dogs and in True Romance (which he wrote), I think you could connect with characters more than in his works since mainly because he introduces a ton of characters instead of building a small core of strong ones. His most developed characters are ALWAYS his villains and the strongest emotion you get is a serious dislike for those characters whereas rather than relating to most of his protagonists, you just kinda think "that's a cool ass character."

However, I don't think his inability to create a powerful emotional connection cheapens slavery...I just don't. If you didn't feel disgusted by Candie and Stephen, sympathetic toward Dartanian and Hilda or at least some admiration for Django and Schultz...Well then yeah the impact of his narrative is lessened...but I doubt anyone will forget the dog scene, the mandingo fight or the whip scars. Had he built a stronger love story (and I admire his attempt this time what with Django picturing her and a damn good performance from Washington) then yes, the emotional impact would match the visual impact...but I don't think it cheapens it. That's pretty harsh imo.

As far as the attention to slavery being equivalent to a snapple fact, no way. Just the fact that you have Spike Lee and some others complaining about it, this takes on a whole new significance. Anyone who takes a while to look up if that's really how slaves were treated (something I could picture happening at least to some extent in this wikipedia age we live in) is going to feel things that QT couldn't manage in his script. Granted, slavery was more a back drop and the themes of Django focused more on love story and action scenes...but just calling attention to it for almost three hours and reminding people that it was THAT UGLY gives it some kind of impact. I think one issue here, which easily could lead to complaints and being offended, is that there's no real message about slavery in the flick besides "it's bad." But what statements about slavery are there to be made? That's partially why it's such a difficult topic. Plus, like you said, if someone tried to make a movie that matches the serious and depressing points of slavery...they likely wouldn't get any production money. I don't know that anyone could make a script that could ever actually live up to all that.

An Aside: I think it's interesting that there was no outcry over the Catcher Freeman episode of Boondocks in light of how offended people have been about this having a lot of comedy in it. That episode was all jokes, had no real depth and dealt with slavery as well...I guess smaller audience = less reaction.
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#276 » by j4remi » Wed Jan 9, 2013 2:20 am

Shpati21 wrote:In this movie, I thought Stephen was viewed a wiser man than Candie, because Stephen is older, and in this situation, has more chemistry with the slaves.

I still thought he was a "kiss ass" who showed too much loyalty to his master/former master.

Spoiler alert: That scene when Candie Ddes, Stephan bursts out crying and screaming, which my entire theater thought was hilarious. I thought it was funny too, but it pissed me off to see Stephan's loyalty.


Stephen pretty much raised Candie, so I think that's part of his big loyalty. Dude ran that mansion. He's chillin' in the big chair with a glass of wine in that private library...and commands an army of white guys mindlessly firing their guns on Django...he was a boss. I'd love to hear QT and Samuel talking about his background more, I think the character change he has when it's just him and Django is really telling even though it only happens in two short scenes.
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#277 » by cgmw » Wed Jan 9, 2013 2:27 am

To be clear, I'm not offended by Django in the slightest (except for Jaime Foxx's fake scrotum afro wig). I just understand where Spike's coming from and agree with his general point.

To me, the violent scenes you mentioned came off primarily as cool movie scenes and secondarily about slavery. I can imagine Tarantino story boarding them out, excited like a little boy, "yeah we'll have f*cking Mandingo Fighting on the parlor room floor with a f*cking eye gouge and a hammer, and then f*cking dogs will f*cking tear a Mandingo Fighter limb from limb..." It comes off as gratuitous. He's good at staging these scenes, and obviously has a lot of fun with it. Even to the point where he self-efacingly packs himself with dynamite and blows himself up with a single perfectly placed Django bullet.

That's why Schultz's big racial epiphany at the end rung hollow. I didn't believe for a second that a professional killer would be shaken by dogs ripping apart a man. No. I knew Tarantino just needed a reason for yet another gratuitous killing scene. It's why his movies have no true emotional depth.

Tarantino paints in broad simple strokes. Good guys are good. Bad guys are bad. Those who need to die die and those who need to walk off into the sunset do. He uses simplistic, hackneyed, familiar storytelling as a vehicle for cool, clever, fun, snappy, outrageous, funny, and most-of-all violent scenes.

There's depth to these characters, but not the kind of depth that makes people relate on an emotional level. Or at least not me and my cold dead heart, anyway. Telling a story in this style about one of humankind's most deeply emotional subject matters should in fact ruffle some feathers.
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#278 » by prophet_of_rage » Wed Jan 9, 2013 3:38 pm

He is a talented B-movie maker. Nothing more nothing less.

And for all you who says: "Everybody says the N-Word, it's no big deal." Then why don't you write it out and stop using nonsense like "the N-word?" That's because it is a big deal.
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#279 » by j4remi » Wed Jan 9, 2013 3:50 pm

cgmw wrote:To be clear, I'm not offended by Django in the slightest (except for Jaime Foxx's fake scrotum afro wig). I just understand where Spike's coming from and agree with his general point.

To me, the violent scenes you mentioned came off primarily as cool movie scenes and secondarily about slavery. I can imagine Tarantino story boarding them out, excited like a little boy, "yeah we'll have f*cking Mandingo Fighting on the parlor room floor with a f*cking eye gouge and a hammer, and then f*cking dogs will f*cking tear a Mandingo Fighter limb from limb..." It comes off as gratuitous. He's good at staging these scenes, and obviously has a lot of fun with it. Even to the point where he self-efacingly packs himself with dynamite and blows himself up with a single perfectly placed Django bullet.

That's why Schultz's big racial epiphany at the end rung hollow. I didn't believe for a second that a professional killer would be shaken by dogs ripping apart a man. No. I knew Tarantino just needed a reason for yet another gratuitous killing scene. It's why his movies have no true emotional depth.

Tarantino paints in broad simple strokes. Good guys are good. Bad guys are bad. Those who need to die die and those who need to walk off into the sunset do. He uses simplistic, hackneyed, familiar storytelling as a vehicle for cool, clever, fun, snappy, outrageous, funny, and most-of-all violent scenes.

There's depth to these characters, but not the kind of depth that makes people relate on an emotional level. Or at least not me and my cold dead heart, anyway. Telling a story in this style about one of humankind's most deeply emotional subject matters should in fact ruffle some feathers.


Two things, Spike didn't see the movie...so his power to comment on it is severely undermined and if you don't know how QT boarded it out...it's tough to comment on how those scenes came about.

Schultz's epiphany was built up from extremely early on if you paid attention to all the cues. A professional killer spent the movie justifying his murder by saying "they're bad people" ...the dog scene haunted him bc when he went to save an innocent man, Django drew the parallel between Schultz and Candie. Schultz sees himself in Candie when he realizes they're both murderers, it a multi-level moment when he shoots Candie...he's committing suicide literally AND figuratively.

QT does indeed paint in broad simple strokes, but there are still layers to his storytelling. He cut a ton from the original script, apparently he had a lot of time dedicated to fleshing out Hilda that he had to drop. I think that could have gone a long way toward giving the love story more depth but it also would have hurt the profitability of the film.

And you're right, telling any story set within the times of slavery should ruffle feathers. But the fact that people would be happier to brush it under the rug and just accept it as "well it's too controversial to write about, talk about or try to work within" is upsetting to me. Like I said, even if someone hates the movie...at least he's willing to acknowledge a time in our history that exposes how ugly our treatment of others can be rather than just ignore it or pretend it never happened...and at the very worst at least he spawned a discussion about the pain and suffering that happened rather than taking the "we have a black president now...clean slate"

prophet_of_rage wrote:He is a talented B-movie maker. Nothing more nothing less.

And for all you who says: "Everybody says the N-Word, it's no big deal." Then why don't you write it out and stop using nonsense like "the N-word?" That's because it is a big deal.


Think about context here...it's a movie set in the times of slavery with a bunch of slave owners in it...what do you expect?
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Re: OT: Spike Lee rips "Django" 

Post#280 » by prophet_of_rage » Wed Jan 9, 2013 4:21 pm

j4remi wrote:
cgmw wrote:To be clear, I'm not offended by Django in the slightest (except for Jaime Foxx's fake scrotum afro wig). I just understand where Spike's coming from and agree with his general point.

To me, the violent scenes you mentioned came off primarily as cool movie scenes and secondarily about slavery. I can imagine Tarantino story boarding them out, excited like a little boy, "yeah we'll have f*cking Mandingo Fighting on the parlor room floor with a f*cking eye gouge and a hammer, and then f*cking dogs will f*cking tear a Mandingo Fighter limb from limb..." It comes off as gratuitous. He's good at staging these scenes, and obviously has a lot of fun with it. Even to the point where he self-efacingly packs himself with dynamite and blows himself up with a single perfectly placed Django bullet.

That's why Schultz's big racial epiphany at the end rung hollow. I didn't believe for a second that a professional killer would be shaken by dogs ripping apart a man. No. I knew Tarantino just needed a reason for yet another gratuitous killing scene. It's why his movies have no true emotional depth.

Tarantino paints in broad simple strokes. Good guys are good. Bad guys are bad. Those who need to die die and those who need to walk off into the sunset do. He uses simplistic, hackneyed, familiar storytelling as a vehicle for cool, clever, fun, snappy, outrageous, funny, and most-of-all violent scenes.

There's depth to these characters, but not the kind of depth that makes people relate on an emotional level. Or at least not me and my cold dead heart, anyway. Telling a story in this style about one of humankind's most deeply emotional subject matters should in fact ruffle some feathers.


Two things, Spike didn't see the movie...so his power to comment on it is severely undermined and if you don't know how QT boarded it out...it's tough to comment on how those scenes came about.

Schultz's epiphany was built up from extremely early on if you paid attention to all the cues. A professional killer spent the movie justifying his murder by saying "they're bad people" ...the dog scene haunted him bc when he went to save an innocent man, Django drew the parallel between Schultz and Candie. Schultz sees himself in Candie when he realizes they're both murderers, it a multi-level moment when he shoots Candie...he's committing suicide literally AND figuratively.

QT does indeed paint in broad simple strokes, but there are still layers to his storytelling. He cut a ton from the original script, apparently he had a lot of time dedicated to fleshing out Hilda that he had to drop. I think that could have gone a long way toward giving the love story more depth but it also would have hurt the profitability of the film.

And you're right, telling any story set within the times of slavery should ruffle feathers. But the fact that people would be happier to brush it under the rug and just accept it as "well it's too controversial to write about, talk about or try to work within" is upsetting to me. Like I said, even if someone hates the movie...at least he's willing to acknowledge a time in our history that exposes how ugly our treatment of others can be rather than just ignore it or pretend it never happened...and at the very worst at least he spawned a discussion about the pain and suffering that happened rather than taking the "we have a black president now...clean slate"

prophet_of_rage wrote:He is a talented B-movie maker. Nothing more nothing less.

And for all you who says: "Everybody says the N-Word, it's no big deal." Then why don't you write it out and stop using nonsense like "the N-word?" That's because it is a big deal.


Think about context here...it's a movie set in the times of slavery with a bunch of slave owners in it...what do you expect?


I do think about the context. This is QT a shockmaster, making a spaghetti western in slavery times, treating the deep south as if it were the Wild West. This is QT who is infamous for his licence with the word nigg@r using it 110 in a film and saying "Well, it's slavery times so it's authentic." Well, what about your other films where the use is gratuitous? Especially the films where there are no Black people? Reservoir Dogs, for instance? Why have it 38 times in Jackie Brown? There is a larger issue here.

Spike's argument is that slavery is not something to make a comedy about. QT has made a comedy about slavery. He has not made a serious film. He remade a B-movie. That's it. And my original point about the n-word was for people who were saying that it should have no power or impact because people (currently) say it all the time. My question then is if it is acceptable why do we use nonsense terms like the "N-Word?" And we all know why because the term is offensive.

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