Watching *DJANGO UNCHAINED* for the FIRST TIME

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 6 фев 2025
  • 🗳️ Vote in Polls + Full Movie Reaction: / alexhefner
    📱 Instagram: / alex_hefner
    🖥️ Twtich: / alexhefner
    🙊 Discord: / discord
    👕 Merch: alex-hefners-t...
    🎮 PapaStanky: / @morealexhefner
    🎸 Music Channel: / @alexhefner
    This video was edited by: / doubleaa_editor
    Watching DJANGO UNCHAINED for the FIRST TIME
    #django #movie #reaction

Комментарии • 2,2 тыс.

  • @tomcody2203
    @tomcody2203 Год назад +1422

    "The 'D' is silent" "I know"
    "Waddya mean 'I know'?"
    The actor is FRANCO NERO, who played the original "DJANGO" in Sergio Corbucci's 1966 classic.

    • @eclat4641
      @eclat4641 Год назад +27

      I like that movie also

    • @MasterVideoStudios
      @MasterVideoStudios 9 месяцев назад +1

      honestly best part in the movie

    • @badlilkitty96
      @badlilkitty96 5 месяцев назад +5

      Oh wow!!! I ddn't know that. Going to go look up the original. 🫶🙏🏻

  • @thatsato
    @thatsato Год назад +720

    22:50 Fun fact: The guy asking Django about his name, is the same actor that played the original Django in the 1966 Movie.

    • @binkzyhoops
      @binkzyhoops Год назад +35

      Was hoping someone would point this out, there is a reason he knows the name

    • @miscellaneousmedia3753
      @miscellaneousmedia3753 Год назад +11

      whoa never knew that, sick!

    • @LoneWolfTony
      @LoneWolfTony 11 месяцев назад +10

      Django unchained is how I found out about the original Django

    • @BizzBizz69
      @BizzBizz69 11 месяцев назад +13

      Watched this movie 6 times and thats the first Im hearing about this. Thats so cool

    • @thesniperjoe5119
      @thesniperjoe5119 11 месяцев назад +18

      Fun fact, the reason Dr King rides around in the cart is because Christoph Waltz fell from a horse during training for the film and dislocated his pelvis. Rather than delay shooting and potentially miss their filming window they gave Dr. King the dentistry cart, and it worked out beautifully.

  • @sofiasatta7677
    @sofiasatta7677 Год назад +691

    22:55 the man who talks with Jamie Foxx in this scene is the original Django.
    Quentin Tarantino payed homage to the original Django movie from the 60s hiring the main actor (Franco Nero) and putting this scene as a little nod to the first movie and spaghetti movies in general because it's one of his favourites movie genre if I'm not mistaken

  • @BrysonWooden
    @BrysonWooden Год назад +640

    The acting from Leo after he smashes his hand with glass, bleeding everywhere, rubs his own blood on Hilde, doesn't stop to fix his cut up hand, and just continues to NAIL the scene perfectly. Incredible.

    • @melanieswritingplans
      @melanieswritingplans Год назад +68

      That’s one of my favorite things about his rile in this movie. Leo was actually injured, but he kept acting and Tarantino kept filming. Brilliance!

    • @SentientPotatoXIII
      @SentientPotatoXIII Год назад +27

      That's dedication to his role and character. Leo definitely deserved an award just for that performance.

    • @BigWeenisEnergy
      @BigWeenisEnergy Год назад +109

      I'm almost positive they cut before he smeared the blood on her. The scene wouldn't have happened that way if he hadn't cut himself and kept acting, but rubbing actual blood over someone's face is not only far from cool, it's literally illegal, acting, or not.
      The blood was real up until he rubbed her face.

    • @JoelMiller0609
      @JoelMiller0609 Год назад +59

      It wasn’t real blood. It was changed and made fake after he really cut himself from the glass because that’s disgusting. It also would break a health violation because it’s illegal. Leo is an incredible actor but he cares about his cast. He wouldn’t do that

    • @JoelMiller0609
      @JoelMiller0609 Год назад +5

      @@BigWeenisEnergy 👍🏻

  • @KingdomCome257
    @KingdomCome257 Год назад +663

    Leo actually smashed one of those glasses and cut his hand up, freaked everyone out proper but he kept in character and it was SO intimating to our pair of heroes.

    • @John-X
      @John-X Год назад +46

      in case anyone was wondering, $5,000 in 1858 is equivalent to $187,040 in 2024

    • @cthulhuz0
      @cthulhuz0 Год назад +32

      To add on that he didn't actually use the same blood (hís) to smear on her face so it was a cut and added fake blood for this next scene. Would otherwise be highly unethical and unhygienic anyway

    • @chanceneck8072
      @chanceneck8072 9 месяцев назад +8

      37:51 Allegedly the whole room erupted into standing ovations for Leo after this take. 😅🤭🥹🥰

    • @Toren8002
      @Toren8002 6 месяцев назад +6

      I feel like this is the "You know, Viggo Mortenson broke his toe when he...." moment for this movie. =D

    • @Mr.Potato420
      @Mr.Potato420 5 месяцев назад

      @@Toren8002 AHHHHHHHHH was from real pain

  • @DoubleAA_Editor
    @DoubleAA_Editor Год назад +1409

    Editor here! Saw a decent amount of comments saying how hard this must’ve been to edit, so I want to thank you all for watching!
    I did try to include as much as possible WHILE keeping it fun and engaging, so I hope you enjoyed it!
    Much love as always!

    • @ps5_c0de
      @ps5_c0de Год назад +36

      You could copy n paste your comment for every video Alex hosts 😂
      Good luck with hateful 8, and pulp fiction lol

    • @cameronsunken844
      @cameronsunken844 Год назад +12

      You did an amazing job! Love this video and love this movie

    • @TheStarkiller96
      @TheStarkiller96 Год назад +9

      Did you had to remove the N-word ? It is part of the movie after all? I get the shooting and the blood. etc.
      Or is Yt now strict on words too?

    • @DoubleAA_Editor
      @DoubleAA_Editor Год назад +22

      @@TheStarkiller96might’ve been able to get away with leaving it in but we wanted to play it safe just in case!

    • @TheStarkiller96
      @TheStarkiller96 Год назад +2

      Yeah the sad thing is. This movie was intended to make the problem around the word visible. Nowadays it is even inside it forbidden. (or better to be left out) @@DoubleAA_Editor

  • @qrowing
    @qrowing Год назад +463

    "I like the way you die, boy." man, that line is so dang cold. Chills every single time.

    • @PROVOCATEURSK
      @PROVOCATEURSK Год назад +3

      I wonder how many young thugs were inspired by this movie.

    • @derpina8330
      @derpina8330 Год назад +7

      ​@@PROVOCATEURSKTrump was inspired by this movie

    • @joaoluizfonseca6914
      @joaoluizfonseca6914 Год назад +2

      yeah, quentin knows what he does 😂

    • @MrChaotic4
      @MrChaotic4 9 месяцев назад +4

      I love Pulp Fiction, I love Reservoir Dogs and I love Inglorious Basterds. But Django Unchained is the best film that Tarantino has ever directed. (Notice I said directed, because as far as I'm concerned, the best film he's ever written is True Romance.)

  • @fyraltari1889
    @fyraltari1889 Год назад +833

    As for why Schultz couldn't shake Candy's hand there's several things. He's not from around there and absolutely is not desensitized to this horror. He's shown consistently throughout the movie to react more strongly than Django to the treatment of slaves because for him it's new and horrible, for Django it's monday. Right before this he was thinking of what happened to Dartagnan. It was weighing heavily on him that he stood there and did nothing while an innocent man was mauled to death. So he really hates Candy. He hates him even more because Candy makes a mockery of his home continent, to try to appear refined with nothing but a surface understanding of European culture (styling himself Monsieur without speaking French, naming his slaves after characters created by a Black man, his sister playing a Beethoven piece when Beethoven was a strong egalitarian). Candy is everything he loathes and hates and he wants him to shake his hand? To act like they are equals, friends, and to be good sport about losing? Schultz is a violent man, his works is killing, it is much much easier for him to resort to violence than most people. So when pushed to his limits, he kills.
    But also, Shcultz's plan was stupid. Had they rode off to Candyland to buy Brünhilde, odds are they easily could have, even if for more than market value. But Schultz is a theatral man, who needs to show how clever he is by outsmarting everyone. So he came up with this plan to fool Candy, to get one over him. He does this because, despite being an ally, Schultz is still coming at this from a position of privilege. It isn't his struggle. For him it's an occasion to play out his romantic ideal, helping a knight rescue a princess, and in doing so he inadvertently centers himself. Because he is removed from this. But to Django this isn't a game, it's his life, it's the love of his life. So Django never takes his eyes off the prize, he is ready to do anything it takes to save Brünhilde. Which is why, despite his best intentions, Schultz is the one to mess it up and die, while Django has to clean up his mess and dets to ride off into freedom. Because beating candy did not matter to Django.
    To me this is about allyship, it's telling allies not to make the fight about themselves, those who are oppressed have to lead the way, we are just to help however we can.

    • @Tomameeify
      @Tomameeify Год назад +73

      Love this read of the film. I totally agree.

    • @rrebecaa
      @rrebecaa Год назад +79

      Bro. Write a book already. Your story insight is insane.

    • @christopherelsworth9559
      @christopherelsworth9559 Год назад +31

      Very nice take, my friend. Another thing I love about Tarantino’s movies: the depth is unreal. Great to talk about with people

    • @K1NG0FW0LV35
      @K1NG0FW0LV35 Год назад +11

      excellent! simply excellent!

    • @triceyg2014
      @triceyg2014 Год назад +12

      Beautiful perspective! Thank you so much for sharing ❤️

  • @melanieswritingplans
    @melanieswritingplans Год назад +217

    Can we talk about how AMAZING Kerry Washington was in this movie!?!? I feel like her role is overshadowed by some of the other major players in the cast. Her raw emotion is just heart-wrenching.
    But like Alex mentioned several times, I can’t help but wonder what the cast members felt while portraying these characters. Imagine the places you had to go to mentally! Such a great movie.

    • @joaoluizfonseca6914
      @joaoluizfonseca6914 Год назад +31

      firstly yes, kerry is SURREAL in this movie
      secondly, leo had a hard time saying the n-word, but sam jackson just said “this is just another tuesday muthafucka” and jamie foxx encouraged him to view them as “his property, not his friends” whenever in character…. as for kerry herself, she did go to therapy for a while after this film 😅 she loved making it, and said she’d done it in honor of her father, from a time where black heroes in movies didn’t exist

    • @melanieswritingplans
      @melanieswritingplans Год назад +10

      @@joaoluizfonseca6914 This literally was a perfect cast, even for the supporting characters as well! I might have to find some old interviews with the key players, because I feel like for Sam and especially Leo these were not "typical" characters for them to play, imo.

    • @johnhurtme
      @johnhurtme 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@joaoluizfonseca6914I saw an interview with Mr. Jackson where he parlayed this story. The had already had to cut several times because Leo was stumbling over the word, not missing the lines, but unable to bring himself to the level of comfort needed with the word to convincingly portray monsieur candy. Least of all for their perfectionist director. Sam was sick of burning daylight, and pulled him aside. Great story, and one of the few n-word cards I've ever even heard of being given. Haha

    • @serial92989
      @serial92989 4 месяца назад +1

      Which is why imo i hope they have good therapists bc getting into the mindset for a role can be daunting especially method actors.

  • @panzerwolf494
    @panzerwolf494 Год назад +85

    Steven, the house manager, lots of them were that way. they normally had it pretty good and had a secure spot where they were treated somewhat human. Anything that shook that pedestal they stood on however was a threat to their security. You see why Steven was mad when it came to Django and Hildi.

    • @Afreshio
      @Afreshio Год назад +6

      Steven is the representation of the Uncle Tom trope, which is based upon American slavery history.
      Although the trope in literature of the slave being smarter than the master is as old as time. I've just read that in a play by Plautus (born more than 2000 years ago) just portrays a slave being conniving and way clever than his master and other patricians.
      From an anthropological perspective it makes sense for this to be a very old dynamics as being from the noble class is more often than not, in any caste-based society based in bloodlines. And basing on genetics the position of an individual as a leader doesn't guarantee anything.

  • @bluejjay
    @bluejjay Год назад +207

    2:45 Actually the Django opening song was not made specifically for this movie, it was from the original Django movie from 1966, starring Franco Nero. The man who asks Django about the spelling of his name is actually Nero himself, making a cameo appearance. His white gloves are a reference to the way the original Django got his hands maimed at the end of Django 1966.

    • @abbyr8766
      @abbyr8766 Год назад +4

      Yeah. I love both those movies. Django Unchained was what got me into watching Django and all other Sergio Corbucci Films

    • @balmybull7852
      @balmybull7852 Год назад +1

      I'm actually glad he went in not knowing it was a Remake or Reimagining

  • @christopherlyons4923
    @christopherlyons4923 Год назад +380

    If I remember correctly, Leo had a hard time committing to this role. He and Jamie had a long discussion that brought him around.

    • @Dabberdans
      @Dabberdans Год назад +115

      yea there's an interview of Jamie talking about it and I think Samuel as well, and Sam was like, "Just say the motherfucking word!" had me dying

    • @A_Wild_Dyzzy
      @A_Wild_Dyzzy 11 месяцев назад +51

      Yep. Jamie and Sam had to tell him “We aren’t your friends right now. We’re your property. Now let’s film this movie.”

    • @Lloyd00
      @Lloyd00 5 месяцев назад +5

      Search Roy wood Jr white ally. You're welcome

    • @patrickevans9604
      @patrickevans9604 5 месяцев назад +4

      It's just another Tuesday to us mothfuqa

    • @kc759
      @kc759 2 месяца назад

      @@Dabberdans Sam Jackson doesn’t see ent o really see the word as harmful as some other people. I remember seeing an interview where he tried so hard to get the guy interviewing him to say it lmao.

  • @SillyPom
    @SillyPom Год назад +90

    People were dying in the theater I first saw "Django" in during the bag-head scene. This is absolutely one of Tarantino's best films and an unmistakable gem of cinema. A stylish, multifaceted, and refined gem you just want to admire again and again. "Inglorious Basterds" was certainly his most mature work, and "Once Upon A Time In Hollywood" is a modern fable taking his tried-and-true style while applying every aspect of his craft that he has refined over the years in a commendable way. "Django Unchained" is just a straight-up celebration of classical filmmaking that takes very real, serious and unflinching subject matter and proves that not only can it be used to tell an inspiring tale, but a heroic one, a legendary one, and a bloody entertaining one.

    • @joaoluizfonseca6914
      @joaoluizfonseca6914 Год назад +5

      what i like about that “kkk-esque” scene is that if anyone else did it, i’m sure it’d be done in very bad taste, but quentin masterfully turned THAT into a comic segment so subtly

  • @kameronseay3861
    @kameronseay3861 Год назад +20

    10:50 this was actually something that would happen. Southern slavers/slave owners would go to free states with warrants for missing slaves and would be able to force them back into slavery. This was predominantly done to runaway slaves but many freed slaves and black people who were never slaves in the first place were placed in custody and forced back into slavery.

  • @JustCallMeMeghan
    @JustCallMeMeghan Год назад +129

    Anyone else finding it so hard to believe Alex was ever a practicing lawyer with his sense of humor? LMAO.

    • @andrewcook2625
      @andrewcook2625 Год назад +4

      Ya I had to rewind to make sure I heard him right

    • @billionaize247
      @billionaize247 Год назад +20

      its also hilarious since after almost every horrible southern impression he yells “stfu!!” as if that humor is coming from a completely different person inside him

    • @reptiliannoizezz.413
      @reptiliannoizezz.413 Год назад +16

      ​@@billionaize247 Bro gives his intrusive thoughts the right to free speech xd

    • @Dad......
      @Dad...... 9 месяцев назад +7

      You need to meet more lawyers lol.

    • @PascalM83
      @PascalM83 9 месяцев назад +5

      So true bet he is or was an awesome lawyer

  • @seancain2216
    @seancain2216 Год назад +1928

    The best thing you've ever done is get an editor. Takes stress off you, and he's FUCKING HILARIOUS. Thanks for being awesome, both of you.
    BTW: The best theory I've seen for the violence in this movie is this. Anything done to a white person is pretty over the top, because it didn't happen. Every scene of violence towards a slave is VERY realistic, because it absolutely happened.

    • @Plantoffel
      @Plantoffel Год назад +79

      I think that the violence towards the black characters is a LOT less bad than it actually was tbh

    • @rakimallah7777
      @rakimallah7777 Год назад +31

      The editor is funny, welcome addition

    • @nathancollins1715
      @nathancollins1715 Год назад

      ​@@PlantoffelThere are no records of black slaves ever being fed to dogs or forced to fight to the death for their owners amusement, so I'm gonna have to call cap on that one.

    • @MrSmexyPain
      @MrSmexyPain Год назад +51

      Another theory that I think is far more accurate... Is that it's a filmmaking decision. The movie is VERY heavy emotionally and tackles uncomfortable subjects.
      The over the top violence pulls people out of the movie a bit a bit. Kind of a like a comic relief character that you kind of hate in your favorite shows. Except here it's used really well to pull us out of the movie a bit and not get too engrossed in how terrible the topics are.

    • @nathanmcdowell4731
      @nathanmcdowell4731 Год назад +5

      ​@@Plantoffelegh

  • @LordAngelVII
    @LordAngelVII Год назад +192

    Fun fact. Leo actually cut his hand in the table scene but kept on going like the champ he is.. the way he looks his hand is not acting.. he realised then and there that he sliced it but didnt flinch like a boss!!

    • @BrandonWestfall
      @BrandonWestfall Год назад +1

      Fun? It's just a fact.

    • @BlackSun6393
      @BlackSun6393 Год назад

      However the scene with him rubbing blood on her face is with fake blood.

    • @RollingxBigshot
      @RollingxBigshot Год назад +20

      @@BrandonWestfall please look up the definition of “fun fact”. You’ll be doing yourself a favor.

    • @BrandonWestfall
      @BrandonWestfall Год назад +1

      @@RollingxBigshot Definition? It’s two words, a phrase at most.
      It’s just a fact.

    • @RollingxBigshot
      @RollingxBigshot Год назад +12

      @@BrandonWestfall in case you didn’t know well known phrases like “fun fact” or “bloody hell” also have definitions……..

  • @ZrankFappaH
    @ZrankFappaH Год назад +121

    Hey Alex the man who said “I know” when Django said “the D is silent” is actually the man who originally played Django. It’s a bit of an inside joke Tarantino put in there just for his own enjoyment 😂

  • @Anino_Makata
    @Anino_Makata Год назад +94

    As for any of the actors who had difficulty getting into their characters, funnily enough, Jamie and Leo were the only ones that were named to have troubles with their roles. Jamie wasn't filling in the act of a slave that smoothly, as he was so accustomed to playing headstrong badass characters. It took Tarantino pulling him aside and emphasize to him that while Django is written to be a badass, that comes later and must be grown into his character organically. After a little bit of filling in with some retakes, Foxx stepped up and killed it.
    As for Leo, he had a deep discomfort of playing such a vile and racist character (in fact, its stated that Calvin Candie is the first and so far only character Quentin has written for a film that he absolutely despises), especially when he held such high respect for his peers. But this time, it was Jamie who pulled him aside and convinced him to commit to the role, saying that in the world of this movie, they weren't friends. Leo was a slave master, Jamie a slave. After that pep talk, DiCaprio got so into the character that even before shooting, he wouldn't greet any of the other talents on set.

    • @Dad......
      @Dad...... 9 месяцев назад +5

      Hard to be such a ruthless asshole if you're being friendly between takes. I totally get that.

    • @deadsetondreams1988
      @deadsetondreams1988 9 месяцев назад +5

      If I remember correctly Leo had a hard time, especially using THAT word and Samuel L. Jackson helped him.

    • @MrChaotic4
      @MrChaotic4 9 месяцев назад +2

      I stand by my statement that True Romance had the best story that Tarantino's ever written. But Django Unchained had the best characters he's ever written.

  • @marksutter182
    @marksutter182 Год назад +20

    I used to work for a hardware company that sold old fashioned items like oil lamps and skillets. I took the order for this production personally and was pleased to see some of the props I sold featured so prominently in the film.

  • @ArmandoTheWanderer
    @ArmandoTheWanderer Год назад +75

    When an actor like Christoph Waltz and Leo can make you love a character and absolutely despise a character it shows how talented they truly are. Hateful 8 soon please lol

  • @pickthestickup
    @pickthestickup Год назад +35

    A tinker was a person who traveled from place to place mending metal utensils or making minor mechanical repairs.
    A tinker's dam is a small piece of dough or putty that was fashioned to hold molten solder in place while the tinker was repairing pots and pans. After use, the dam was tossed because it's worthless. They were also reputed to swear habitually, which would make a "tinker's damn," as well as his "dam," be of little significance.
    This gave rise to the phrase, "Not worth a tinker's dam" and later on, "I don't give a tinker's damn"

  • @marcospman9396
    @marcospman9396 Год назад +35

    This is my favorite Tarantino film. It's so well written, with an excellent cast, the technical aspects are exceptional and the historical context was used very well. I consider Tarantino's peak as a director and screenwriter.

  • @QuayNemSorr
    @QuayNemSorr Год назад +16

    The intro "Django" song was made for the original Django movie from 1966 (The main character from then was played by the other rich guy in the mandingo fight)

  • @wilsonrono10
    @wilsonrono10 Год назад +15

    Leo's a great actor, he really cut his hand on that table slam scene. He hit a glass that cut his hand and continued to act and improvise.

  • @mikewest5796
    @mikewest5796 Год назад +113

    The Hateful Eight definitely needs to be next. Netflix has an extended version of it (split into 4 one hour episodes). Outstanding characters and dialogue heavy. Beautifully filmed.

    • @ladycwin07
      @ladycwin07 Год назад +4

      My fav Q movie

    • @jabbathehutt83
      @jabbathehutt83 Год назад +9

      Hateful 8 is so underrated, it showcases just how phenomenal Tarantino's dialogue really is.

    • @AdamGee8
      @AdamGee8 Год назад +2

      Great movie but still little too long for me.

    • @B3BULLIES
      @B3BULLIES Год назад +2

      Extended version is unnecessary. Normal one is perfect

    • @nsasupporter7557
      @nsasupporter7557 Год назад +3

      @@jabbathehutt83no it’s not! Would everybody please shut up about calling everything “underrated.”
      Hateful 8 was one of the worst movies ever

  • @SmallFryBrii
    @SmallFryBrii Год назад +31

    36:52 the way Leo embodied this role… the disgusting bloody hand story just validates this man’s commitment to his talent.

  • @mckenzie.latham91
    @mckenzie.latham91 Год назад +28

    Also the reveal of stephen being the power behind the scene as well as the fact he fakes his limp to make him lookweaker than he is
    Is one of the best reveals in the film

    • @nickkerber1145
      @nickkerber1145 11 месяцев назад +4

      It's also symbolic. He's hidden his true self most of his life, pretended to be a crippled, simpleminded slave, while running things from behind the curtain until there's nobody left to see. When it's just him and Django, he drops his cane and stands tall, showing that he's more than that, but by pretending to be that, he's *become* the monster he pretends to be, and so Django shoots him in the knee, making his fake injury real, just like how his fake subservience became real over time.

  • @FRENCHIZE420
    @FRENCHIZE420 Год назад +64

    Christoph Waltzs performance in this movie is untouchable. I saw inglorious bastards first then right after saw this movie & to see him go from probably one of the best antagonist roles EVER to this was MIND BOGGLING. So hyped for this👍🏼

  • @douglassantana7653
    @douglassantana7653 Год назад +24

    Almost an hour of Alex having the time of his life watching Django and time flew by. Just another testment as to why this movie is awesome.

  • @RevanXIII
    @RevanXIII Год назад +21

    Alex: "ooh, it stings to hear that word!"
    me: "oh buddy, this will be a painful experience then"

  • @nickkerber1145
    @nickkerber1145 11 месяцев назад +1

    10:58 that happened fairly often, both by bounty hunters acting under the Fugitive Slave Act, and during the war, Confederate soldiers in Union territory. Most famously, Lee's army of Northern Virginia kidnapped free black people across Maryland and southern PA as they marched north in the lead up to the battle of Gettysburg. Cases like Django's happened occasionally too, one of John Brown's raiders at Harper's Ferry joined the attack in the hope that the uprising would provide him the opportunity to free his wife from the plantation where she was enslaved.

  • @JankedBeef
    @JankedBeef Год назад +4

    At 22:50, that character is played by Franco Nero, who played the original "DJANGO" in the 1966 classic. Which is why he says "he knows" how to spell Django

  • @huntermurrell
    @huntermurrell Год назад +45

    Since you enjoyed Django (which is my favorite Tarantino movie btw), you’d probably really like The Hateful 8. I personally think it’s severely underrated and it takes place in a similar time period. It was originally written by Quentin as a play so it has a really unique vibe within his filmography. Stacked cast, too

    • @leafiiloran
      @leafiiloran Год назад +6

      I watched it when it came out with my family and they didn't like it because they thought it was too long, but I really liked it. Even though a movie is long, as long as it's compelling I have no problem with it

    • @leohirtsabit1772
      @leohirtsabit1772 Год назад +5

      Hateful 8 is SO underrated. It has you captivated from beginning to end I liked it so much I watched the extended version

  • @kellygilbert736
    @kellygilbert736 Год назад +18

    The aussie actor in the scene with Quentin Tarantino is John Jarret, the bad guy from the aussie horror flick Wolf Creek, loosely based on real events.

  • @dreppper
    @dreppper Год назад +115

    easily leos best performance ever, incredible acting from everyone but my god the scene where he actually slams the glass and cuts his hand is amazing

    • @ianbrewster8934
      @ianbrewster8934 Год назад +9

      Yeah that's apparently real blood on her face and her reaction is legit.

    • @dreppper
      @dreppper Год назад +13

      @@ianbrewster8934 yeah he actually cut his hand open on the glass when he slammed the table and just went with it and tarantino loved it so much he kept the take in the film how Leo didn't get an oscar for his performance as Calvin candy still baffles me, im just glad christoph waltz got the oscar for best supporting

    • @AdamGee8
      @AdamGee8 Год назад +6

      I agree but damn the Revenant is definitely up there. Almost felt his pain when the bear was attacking him.

    • @nicolewhite6030
      @nicolewhite6030 Год назад +4

      Still pissed he won an Oscar for th revenant other than EVERYTHING ELSE HE WAS IN!!

    • @dreppper
      @dreppper Год назад

      The duality of Leo fans 😂

  • @fishinwithq3959
    @fishinwithq3959 Год назад +3

    Fun Fact about 14:30 Quentin Tarantino in a podcast stated that he wanted to this film to feel like a super hero type of movie because all other movies depicting slavery showed black people as lower than dirt.

  • @jjcondado
    @jjcondado 7 месяцев назад +8

    HOW did i not notice that he's wearing calvin candies clothes. I thought he bought those clothes. This is infinitely so much better in my eyes

  • @terrelgeer7298
    @terrelgeer7298 Год назад +7

    Her name is Brunhilde von Schaft. They are the great-whatever grandparents of Shaft. Yes, the blacksploitation movie hero. Also, Dr King Schultz is widowed. 150-whatever years later, in Kill Bill Vol 2, Beatrix Kiddo was buried alive in his wife's grave.

  • @blazcraz6992
    @blazcraz6992 Год назад +21

    9:55 Historically, that did happen and was Fredrick Douglas' out for his time. As he was technically never free for a minute of his life, he was able to convince the government that he was not technically alive so he was technically never someone's property. Something like that, he was able to say "I'm not liable to anyone's property because I was never owned in the first place". Something along those lines happened back then and ever since a free slave would follow it as a model. Until the 1980s.
    Fredrick Douglas was never fully free, they just could never take him back to The South without breaking a couple laws. He was free in all but name. That for back then, was the best you could hope for.

    • @grabble7605
      @grabble7605 Год назад

      ....But he was technically alive. They weren't talking to nobody.

    • @blazcraz6992
      @blazcraz6992 Год назад +2

      ​@@grabble7605 In the legal definition of the word, back then he was not considered a whole person. Therefore he was not considered "living" or alive as you and me would be. He argued if the courts and society at large considered him not alive then he couldn't be owned, stolen or traded.
      That'd what I remember anyway. I may have gotten some things wrong in regards to his specific case.

  • @888theinmostlight
    @888theinmostlight Год назад +13

    From IMDB ''When Calvin Candie (Leonardo DiCaprio) smashes his hand on the dinner-table, DiCaprio did accidentally crush a small stemmed glass with his palm and did really begin to bleed. He ignored it, stayed in character, and continued with the scene. Quentin Tarantino was so impressed that he used this take in the final print, and when he called cut, the room erupted in a standing ovation. DiCaprio's hand was bandaged, and he suggested the idea of smearing blood onto the face of Kerry Washington. Tarantino and Washington both liked this, so Tarantino got some fake blood together.''

  • @samapedemantis3248
    @samapedemantis3248 6 месяцев назад +4

    Every single actor in this movie is amazing. Even the small parts acted their friggin hearts out

  • @2lostsouls
    @2lostsouls 7 месяцев назад +5

    whats crazy is $7,000 in 1858 is worth $268,107.68 today, we all wouldve pulled the trigger lmao

  • @cx3valenz421
    @cx3valenz421 Год назад +21

    Alex, the guy at the bar was the actor who played Django in the original 69s/70s spaghetti western Django. This Tarantino version is part remake, part new stuff. That’s why “he knows”. It’s a meta joke.

  • @produde33
    @produde33 Год назад +7

    The fact that you adorable man put movies that you haven’t even seen on for your puppy child just makes me love you infinitely more. Totally a gem of a RUclips channel I’m so glad i found you 😂

  • @TheJabbate1
    @TheJabbate1 Год назад +16

    Fun fact: Django is a legacy character. There was a whole series of spaghetti westerns featuring Django. He was originally playing by Franco Nero in 1966. Nero also played the Italian Mandingo owner who asked Django his named.

  • @melabec
    @melabec Год назад +4

    Quentin Tarantino has said that in his mind, Django takes his wife's last name of Vonshaft. And one of their decendants shortened the name to just Shaft. He implies that Django is John Shaft's ancestor.

  • @ScorpishEriksson
    @ScorpishEriksson Год назад +8

    For you info Alex when Leo smashes his hand on the table and starts to bleed its not ment to be. He really cut his hand and used it to improv.

    • @timburger4754
      @timburger4754 21 день назад

      Though the blood smearing on Kerry Washington was done with fake blood after the fact, they reshot that scene to incorporate it.

  • @austinpena5605
    @austinpena5605 Год назад +43

    One of my top ten. Great cast and sequences with my favorite performance from Leo.

  • @louielouie22
    @louielouie22 Год назад +13

    Yea Leo received like 8 stitches for that, the crew gave him a standing ovation after the take for staying in character.

  • @AceOutlawCustoms
    @AceOutlawCustoms Год назад +7

    The person that asked what Django's name is, and then says "i know" when he says its silent is the original actor, Franco Nero, for the 1966 movie Django, where the intro score was made for in the first place as well.

  • @josuefuentes4047
    @josuefuentes4047 Год назад +14

    His reactions to the hard “r” gets me every time 😭

  • @tankeater
    @tankeater 7 месяцев назад +5

    11:40 your facial expression going from happy to mad had me DEAD!!! 🤣

  • @anthonynguyen5204
    @anthonynguyen5204 Год назад +7

    I love how he faced the explosion instead of the stereotypical slow motion walk away.

  • @juanumana5688
    @juanumana5688 Год назад +36

    Fun fact, the hand getting cut with the glasses happened for real. They kept the shot after everyone just held together and kept on acting.

  • @cannabunnyol
    @cannabunnyol Год назад +35

    There's interviews with Jamie Foxx and Samuel L Jackson where they talk about Leo having a hard time with the dialogue and all the slurs. SLJ basically told him to buck up and just do it.

    • @bobbymariani2839
      @bobbymariani2839 Год назад +2

      "It's just another Tuesday" lol

    • @krash2fast99
      @krash2fast99 Год назад

      To be fair, the hard R is very difficult for white people. Nobody thinks that way anymore and it’s hard to say such hateful things when it’s not in your heart because we all came after MLK and the civil rights movement. But Sam Jackson could whip my white ass into saying anything 😂
      Edit: un-corrected autocorrect

    • @Mate_Antal_Zoltan
      @Mate_Antal_Zoltan 6 месяцев назад

      >told him to buck up
      poor choice of words

  • @malytheson
    @malytheson 11 месяцев назад +5

    Dr King Schultz is one of the best movie characters ever written, he went out like a champ 🫡

  • @BraydonCalvert
    @BraydonCalvert 2 месяца назад +2

    6:16 I did my final presentation in my film studies class on the comparison between his two characters, and I got 100% in the course as a whole.

  • @Clairevoyant101
    @Clairevoyant101 11 месяцев назад +3

    10:46 actually that did happen a lot back in the day, free black men would get chased back into the south only to get kidnapped and put back into the slave trafe

  • @oleksandrbyelyenko435
    @oleksandrbyelyenko435 Год назад +26

    Man, that's a masterpiece. Watched a dozen times. Sometimes in a row

  • @lv.2073
    @lv.2073 4 месяца назад +1

    11:38
    The way your smile DROPPED the instant Don Johnson started talking was hysterical

  • @catsruleable
    @catsruleable Год назад +3

    "Unchain me!" At the beginning was so out of pocket. 😂 This is gonna be a fucking great video.

  • @TheEmery223
    @TheEmery223 Год назад +2

    Fun fact: Tarantino almost didn’t make this, as he thought it would be too offensive with him being white. However, Samuel L. Jackson and Quincy Jones, among other black film actors and directors, convinced him to go through with it, because they told him that if it weren’t offensive, it wouldn’t be historically accurate. And that aspect, story aside, was what mattered most to them, and Quentin finally understood.
    Also, the talent in this film is off the charts. So many excellent actors and actresses. Quentin not tiptoeing with the subject material in the script definitely overwhelmingly helped the screenplay, and that’s why it won an Oscar for Original Screenplay. And Christoph Waltz received the other for best Supporting Actor.
    Worth mentioning also: Dinner table scene when Candi broke a cocktail glass accidentally? That wasn’t scripted initially, and Leo improvised and maintained character despite his obvious injury. If you look closely, you see the scene getting cut, and Leo’s hand being stitched and bandaged. The blood later in the scene on Hilda’s face was obviously fake for theater, but Kerry Washington was not privy to a majority of the scene (it wasn’t in her script), so her reactions were genuine fear and disgust, which worked for the context.
    Speaking of Leo, yes, he almost didn’t accept his role because he couldn’t commit to the rawness of the script, but he pushed through because of Jamie’s encouragement.
    And the KKK scene was initially going to be strictly bonus footage and wasn’t going to be in the theatrical cut, but Samuel L Jackson convinced Quentin to keep it in the film to add comedy and levity in a film with such emotionally heavy content, which was a great idea.

  • @grabble7605
    @grabble7605 Год назад +2

    10:33 Sand. It's coarse and gets everywhere. That is to say, he's abrasive. Difficult. The man wants a _docile_ slave, not one that'll make trouble. Also can mean guts, grit...Same slang turns up in Gangs of New York which is another movie you should watch here if you never saw it.

  • @yumasairinen8978
    @yumasairinen8978 Год назад +47

    Django is such a good movie!

  • @joeschmoe233
    @joeschmoe233 Год назад +3

    The look on Schultz's face after Bettina asks Big Daddy if he should treat Django like white people is hilarious. One of them gestures agree and the other disagree. Christoph Waltz almost looked like he broke character here, he seemed to be smirking. LOL

  • @A_Wild_Dyzzy
    @A_Wild_Dyzzy 11 месяцев назад +3

    “Why does he hate black people?”
    Stephen is jealous of Django because while he might have a “nicer” life being the butler to Candy. He is still Candy’s slave. Stephen isn’t free, but Django is. So Stephen tries to win favor with Candy by catching Schultz and Django in their scheme. Hoping desperately to gain what little freedom he can grasp. Samuel plays that role to a T. Incredible acting.

  • @lonelyplanet1080
    @lonelyplanet1080 13 дней назад +1

    fun fact: DiCaprio really did cut his hand when he slammed it down on the table, and continued on with the scene.... respect

  • @Afreshio
    @Afreshio Год назад +2

    I watched this one with my ex (around that time we were just beginning our relationship) like four times in the span of 10 days, give it or take.
    We were so engaged with this maginificent work! And I will never forget the first time, we were marginally late for that late projection, I was walking first up the stairs, but I had to twist my neck like an owl because the initial opening credits sequence with that amazing song, that bass voice singing "DJAANGOOO! ... OOOH DJANGO!", the slaves marching in chain, the sun blazing the field. Amazing scene.
    Then the next scene at night with the incredible lighting and cinematography, Dr. Schultz cartoonish carriage moving, the slaves freezing exhaling vapor in cold. We were already sitting, barely touching the popcorns.
    I will never forget my first encounter with that movie. My ex-gf was enthralled too. We talked for years about that moment (same reaction with Interstellar, whom we also watched like three times in the same week!). It's amazing to share a passion with a person. This is way those reaction videos are a caress to our souls!
    We were together for ten years, and in a relationship for almost nine! Sadly, we had to part our ways as the partnership wasnt working for us anymore. But we shared hundreds of movies at the theater and hundreds more at many points. Either my bedroom, our our little apartment later when we could move out of our nests, then a crammed room with her sister and my cousin, sharing that little room in another country we usually rented for a night this motel. People were fucking and us watching some Sundance winner film. Also fucking later but, you know. It was funny. And after we saved enough (well, after SHE saved enough, she was amazing in business!) we moved to a big apartment when we moved to another district with roommates (same cousin, same sister, another sibling of her, and usually other two people).
    Miss her. Miss a lot the talking about movies, TV shows, animations, novels, media, memes, news. Anything. Part of me is watching these reaction as a remembrance, but also as replacing this thing I had for a decade and suddenly lost.
    I still have the movie tickets for this one, and dozens of other movies as I try to collect those since 2012.

  • @dIggl3r
    @dIggl3r Год назад +27

    A Tanrantino movie NO ONE reacts to is *Four Rooms* (1995). He didn't write/direct the whole film, just a quater of it, but that film is a MUST SEE! If you could react to that, you would be one of the first if not the first on RUclips to react to!! 💙

    • @Fudgebreakfast
      @Fudgebreakfast Год назад +2

      An absolutely wild movie! Tim Roth is fantastic, as always

    • @TheJabbate1
      @TheJabbate1 Год назад +3

      Jackie Brown is underrated too! It’s uncharacteristically tame compared to the other movies Tarantino directed but it’s sooooo worth a watch or two.

    • @eclat4641
      @eclat4641 Год назад +1

      @@TheJabbate1i feel Jackie brown is super over rated .

    • @SICKYPOPP
      @SICKYPOPP Год назад

      i love jackie brown@@TheJabbate1

  • @SuperSpiderbite
    @SuperSpiderbite Год назад +17

    The Hateful Eight by Tarantino is Amazing Cinema!

  • @Pyrowith2os
    @Pyrowith2os Год назад +18

    This is my favorite modern western movie. Tarantino did an amazing job with this one

  • @ontheblockgod
    @ontheblockgod 3 месяца назад +1

    10:45 you just described the whole plot of "12 Years a Slave." It happened all the time.

  • @FlipperWolf
    @FlipperWolf Год назад +2

    23:37 In a interview it was explained that Leo couldn't act at 100% cause he wasn't comfortable saying the N word, then Samuel L Jackson gave him the N-pass.. And after that all went great 😂

  • @martin43427
    @martin43427 Год назад +7

    I’d recommend Jackie Brown. That’s my favorite Tarantino movie. It’s probably his most mature that doesn’t contain his more explosive elements but it’s rooted in great snappy dialogue and incredible performances from every single cast member. Also at its heart it’s a romance between two old adults trying to reinvent their lives. Pam Grier and Robert Forester are simply phenomenal.

  • @billsmith30
    @billsmith30 6 месяцев назад +4

    "Why not just shake his hand?" Pride and Dignity. You gotta think about everything leading up to that. Calvin named one of his slaves after the protagonist of Three Musketeers, written by a Frenchman. Calvin insists on being called "Monsieur" despite not speaking French and not even recognizing the names D'artagnan or Alexandre Dumas when brought up in conversation. While haunted by images of a slave eaten by dogs, he had to suffer through one of Calvin's servants playing Beethoven, one of the greatest musicians of his homeland Germany. The juxtaposition of a remembrance of both his home and the cruelty of the American slave trade was too much to handle.
    All of this coinciding to the realization that his plan was foiled by such an enormous fool. A rube. A pretend Gentleman lacking both class and intelligence. So the idea of having to shake the hand of such a man implying both respect and "good will"? That would be unbearable shame. He was willing to swallow his pride until the insistence on the hand shake but that was the breaking point.

  • @stefantsarev4442
    @stefantsarev4442 Год назад +12

    The Django Unchained Score was not exactly original.
    The Theme is from the original 1966 Django classic by Sergio Corbicci, starring Franco Nero (the guy who asks Foxx to spell the name).
    "His name was King" is a song from the 1971 Spaghetti western movie with the same name, starring the Great Klaus Kinski.
    The song which plays during the group's entrance in Candieland is called "Nicaragua" by the great Jerry Goldsmith, written for the movie "Under Fire" from 1983.
    The soundtrack is not all original, but is incredibly well mixed and makes the movie a musical masterpiece.

    • @tomcody2203
      @tomcody2203 Год назад +3

      Not exactly! "DJANGO" (1966) is NOT from Sergio Leone, but from Sergio CORBUCCI ("IL GRANDE SILENCIO", "IL MERCENARIO").

    • @stefantsarev4442
      @stefantsarev4442 Год назад +1

      ​@@tomcody2203, I guess I was mistaken. Thank you for correcting me.

  • @mityakiselev
    @mityakiselev 9 месяцев назад +2

    Fun fact: During Leo's monologue, no one had to act shocked. They were legit stunned because he actually cut his own hand on that glass but kept rolling. The blood was not a prop but genuine DiCaprio right there. He even decided to use it in an improv smear gesture. When the camera cut, everyone applauded him while he was escorted towards a paramedic for like 15 stitches. Absolute legend.

    • @Ignore14
      @Ignore14 7 месяцев назад +2

      The blood smear part wasn't real blood. They did a cut and continued the scene later. That would have been disgusting and probably illegal.

    • @mityakiselev
      @mityakiselev 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@Ignore14 Really? They modified the scene to fit the best accidental take? My bad then, I didn't know. TY

  • @mandyb2245
    @mandyb2245 5 месяцев назад +2

    Why Leo didn't get an Oscar for this role is beyond me. Candy is terrifying!

  • @fattymatty9319
    @fattymatty9319 Год назад +3

    Your tooth impersonation was freaking spot on!

  • @miguellabuguen125
    @miguellabuguen125 Год назад +3

    There was an interview that Jamie Foxx did about Leo struggling with certain words in the script that he was not at all comfortable saying. Jamie basically had a come to Jesus talk with Leo telling Leo that for the sake of this movie their characters are not friends. That Leo should look at Jamie like property which is reminiscent of how slaves were treated. As property. Jamie talked about how the next day Leo took his advice and flipped a switch and basically ignored him and looked down on him on set.

  • @kodykoolrocks
    @kodykoolrocks Год назад +13

    All the performances are amazing and 10/10, wouldnt change a thing except make it longer and let schultz live🥺🥺 plenty of funny lines but seeing candy’s sister fly like she did from the gunshot was hilarious😂😂

  • @CoolBreeze1232
    @CoolBreeze1232 2 дня назад

    No mention of Dr Schultz telling Django that his first handbill was good luck, only for that very handbill to save Django from the mines

  • @judecarpenter2990
    @judecarpenter2990 11 месяцев назад +2

    Besides Jodie Foster and Anthony Hopkins in Silence of the Lambs. And Travolta and Samuel Jackson in Pulp Fiction this is probably some of the best acting that I've ever seen

  • @alchemyrecords657
    @alchemyrecords657 Год назад +64

    For anyone who hasn't seen this movie, this is nowhere close to seeing it. If you have the stomach for it, absolutely watch it. Fuckin masterpiece

    • @nickspeyer8742
      @nickspeyer8742 Год назад

      Well said, have you seen QT talk about how people watched the film Joker? Its gold

    • @magus104
      @magus104 Год назад

      @@nickspeyer8742 the begining of joker was so god damn boring. so i just watched the reaction to it here figuring maybe it would be more tolerable in a condensed form.. it definitly wasnt as bad as the opening made it seem. still dont care enough about DC to ever go watch the full thing but it had some great moments.

    • @mikemorgan2211
      @mikemorgan2211 Год назад

      Not well said. Not needed to be said. Of course, it's not the same as watching the movie and no human with a working brain would think they are.

    • @mikemorgan2211
      @mikemorgan2211 Год назад +3

      ​@nickspeyer8742 what? No one can think a reaction is the same as watching a movie

    • @mikemorgan2211
      @mikemorgan2211 Год назад

      ​@@magus104you don't have an attention span long enough to watch a movie? Fucking sad

  • @Midv1322
    @Midv1322 Год назад +3

    Jamie Foxx was like the 5th choice to play Django. He wrote the role for Will Smith.

  • @svenheuseveldt7188
    @svenheuseveldt7188 Год назад +12

    The hateful eight is in my opinion one of his best. Seriously good for a movie taking place in just one room 90% of the screen time

    • @nsasupporter7557
      @nsasupporter7557 Год назад +1

      Disagree, Hateful 8 was one of the worst movies ever. I wanted to kill myself when I was watching it

    • @haga501.
      @haga501. Год назад

      While having our own taste in movies is what makes talking about them fun. I think you might have missed the essence for The hateful eight. Its one of Tarantinos best films, and very high on the best movies of all time list. I recommend to give it a second chance and take a look at the story telling, the script and the pure brillient acting.
      Since I know myself a bit, I know I would hate that movie alot when I was younger. So I will try to do the opposite of gatekeeping. PLEASE WATCH The Hateful Eight one more time and try to see it from a different aspective.
      But if you still hate it, its totally fine. Since...again. We all have different taste in film.@@nsasupporter7557

    • @aaa69200
      @aaa69200 Год назад

      @@nsasupporter7557 you should have just done us the favor

    • @svenheuseveldt7188
      @svenheuseveldt7188 Год назад

      @@nsasupporter7557 you should have

  • @danskegamerboys
    @danskegamerboys 11 месяцев назад +1

    Fun fact when they are sitting at the table and Leo gets angry and breaks a glass he did actually break a real glass and cut his hand and just kept going and they liked that take so much they kept it in the Movie so its Leos actual blood and is removing real glass from his hand.. kinda crazy and just shows how amazing an actor he is ps. the hateful 8 is also a pretty cool western movie by Quentin Tarantino

  • @JoeCensored
    @JoeCensored 9 месяцев назад +1

    Fun facts. Fox was riding his own horse through much of the movie. When Candy cuts his hand on the smashed glass, it was real. He just stayed in character as blood poured out of his hand and used it.

  • @Belnick6666
    @Belnick6666 Год назад +8

    $100 in 1858 is equivalent in purchasing power to about $3,740.80 today

    • @Belnick6666
      @Belnick6666 Год назад +1

      how much is an ar15?

    • @PROVOCATEURSK
      @PROVOCATEURSK Год назад +1

      In Africa they still sell slaves as cheap as 20 bucks.

  • @tjgnkc
    @tjgnkc Год назад +8

    Leo was nominated for supporting and he actually cut his hand on a glass for real when he slapped that table top in the dining room scene, yet kept on playing the scene - true professional. That is Jamie Fox’s own horse in real life too.

    • @markmaioli4
      @markmaioli4 Год назад +1

      It's was actually for The Hateful Eight

    • @tjgnkc
      @tjgnkc Год назад

      @@markmaioli4 that’s right! Thanks!

  • @BigSparkzy
    @BigSparkzy Год назад +5

    While I've watched almost all Alex's vids for years, i'm watching this one specifically to see just how much of a nightmare this episode was to edit lol.

  • @lukepatrick2032
    @lukepatrick2032 2 месяца назад

    Alex putting on movies for his dog while he went to work is one of the most wholesome things I’ve heard in a while.

  • @mr.nobody8811
    @mr.nobody8811 Год назад +1

    When Leo got hurt, it was no act, he really just carried on into acting and shows how prominent he is at his job

  • @robber233
    @robber233 Год назад +3

    To shake hands means to accept the system of slavery as a valid form of business. I don't think I could've done it either.

  • @saltymisfit6566
    @saltymisfit6566 Год назад +8

    Alex: He shot the Sheriff
    Me: But he didn't shoot the deputy

  • @Patriciareadss
    @Patriciareadss Год назад +11

    My mom absolutely hates violence in movies and she ate this movie up 😂

  • @julienbouchard-fontaine147
    @julienbouchard-fontaine147 10 месяцев назад +1

    Crazy thing is that at some point Dr Schultz completely forget about his bounty hunting to fully work on helping django get his wife back and even died while doing it . He could have just free django and go away.

  • @Enomra
    @Enomra 7 месяцев назад +1

    Fun(ish) Fact on the Boondocks reference: Uncle Ruckus' character is based off actual black people who endorsed slavery during slavery, in the way stephen is portrayed

  • @legendary8838
    @legendary8838 5 месяцев назад +7

    Leo didn’t feel comfortable saying the N word but Samuel L Jackson basically told him it’s ok and to just do his job.