Fun fact. When Leo slammed his hand down on the table with the skull, he actually hurt his hand pretty bad and the blood was real. He was so into his character that he decided to keep going and use the injury to make the scene that much more authentic. He needed stitches, the cut was pretty deep.
@@anthonydrypen8596 He did cut his hand in the scene and kept going, but he 100% did not wipe his real blood on her face. That would never be okay to do, it was just a rumor.
@@IamKindness im guessing after leo did that whole smashing the table thing and him actually hurting his hand the director got the idea of leo rubbing the blood off her face
Maybe someone already said it, but the scene where Franco Nero asked Django if he could spell his name was important because there was a 1966 spaghetti western titled 'Django' and Franco Nero was the original Django character. Tarantino was probably thrilled as hell to get THE Django in his film for that one scene. The 'Django' song at the opening of this film was also the theme song for the 1966 film.
Also notice here his character wears gloves all the time and never takes them off, because the OG django ended up with his hands smashed by the bad guys
Django is actually my english teacher’s favourite movie. After we watched it, he would explain the symbolism in the 3 killings by the sleeve gun. In all of these deaths, the characters where shot in the heart. They all wore a certain object near their heart while getting shot. These objects were symbolising different things: 1. The first character killed was the sheriff. He was wearing a sheriff badge which symbolises killing in the name of law. 2. The second one was killed by Django. The one whom he told „I like the way you die, boy”. He held a bible near his heart which symbolises killing in the name of religous fanatisizm. 3. The third death was Calvin Candie. When he got shot in the heart by Schultz he was wearing a flower near his heart which symbolises killing for fun. By that the movie critisizes the attitudes represented by these evil characters.
If you liked Cristoph Waltz, you 100% can't miss Inglorius Bastards, his best role and 2nd best Tarantino movie after Pulp Fiction. This Austrian guy got his Oscar's statues for a reason.
P.S Leo was REALLY uncomfortable with the amount of "N" word he had to say, and had to be reassured that nobody was taking offence. It really bothered him. Stellar acting.
@@Gumgumgamer009 yep he had to reassure him we’re professionals, this is our job, and it’s historically accurate. After that convo whenever Leo had doubts again he would lock eyes with Sam L and Sam would give him a little nod. Basically saying remember what we talked about. That is what got him thru the filming. Leo also took solace in the fact his character would be killed
Yeah, I was thinking when I watched that film ALL the white actors were probably super uncomfortable with the number of times (and the often extremely derogatory manners in which) they had to say that word. Because the white CHARACTERS are very much using that word as a slur, too. They mean it in an offensive way. But, you know. In a way, you'd rather they be uncomfortable with it - because while yeah, it's a professional set and it was fine in this context, you never want people to be TOO comfortable using slurs. The fact that Leo was uncomfortable using it, even in this context where it was totally fine and he had the go-ahead from several black peers - that speaks to his character. It means you know he's not throwing that word around casually with his friends.
He scales the mountain, because he's not afraid of it. He slays the dragon, because he's not afraid of him. And he walks through hellfire... because Broomhilda's worth it.
Aside from Quentin just having superb lines in almost all his movies with Django this line just kills me every time "I think, that we all think, that the bags was a nice idea, now I'm not pointing any fingers but they could've been done better..." lol 😆
Sam Jackson's character is known as a "house slave". They are given special privileges over the other slaves for managing them. This term is often used for people who have a similar energy. Where you sell out your own people for a little extra cheese, a traitor. That's why he's the greatest villain.
He's MORE then a house slave, he is a PERSONAL Slave, He's the Head Slave, he was Calvin's Daddy's most trusted slave who personally took care of Calvin while he was growing up. He thought of Calvin as much as his kid as he did think of him as his master
Fun fact - the horses that fall down in the film were "fall horses"; horses trained to safely fall over on command. You can actually see when Foxx drags the guy off of his, the horse actually falls _before_ he pulls it down.
@@TrackpadProductions Preesh homie I only noticed that thanks to your comment. I knew about fall horses I just never took stock of when the horse moved versus the guy.
Girl I feel you, the song is I got a name by Jim Croce. One of my all time faves. I got lyrics tatted onto me to honor my father who passed. He would’ve loved Django. It was spoiled for me that this song was in the movie but when it came up… my god the emotions.
I'm willing to bet it had something to do with "racism" but either way everyone who's seen the film knows Leo absolutely fukkin nailed his part with flying colors. 10/10 he's won an oscar in our hearts lol, even if the role was a villain.
As good as Christoph Waltz is in this movie. Leo, imo, stole the show and absolutely deserved a nomination over Waltz. Again, not trying to hate on Waltz, I just think Leo killed his role.
On the role Samuel L. Jackson plays… you often find that when a group is oppressed or enslaved, a few individuals from that group are recruited into an overseer position. They are often fiercely loyal because they have something to lose, and are responsible for keeping the others in line.
Although the movie is not a historical event, the movie is an accurate depiction of what life was like in the American south during the late 19th century. At that time, people of color were not considered human. They were objects, posestions, property. They were bought, sold and traded based on their value as a worker of some sort. Young males often worked the fields to produce cotton. The lighter complected women who had visible characteristics that people of the time considered sexually enticing were used in the houses as maids, cooks and prostitutes (known then as comfort women). Sand means courage, guts, intestinal fortitude. Unflappable in the face of danger.
Guys, this is one of the most entertaining movie I've seen, but still you two are even more fun to watch, I'm only half through the movie and I'm dying 😂
@@justtrustash please react to these movies The Proposition (2005) Appaloosa (2008) The Hateful Eight (2015) No Country For Old Men(2007) Overlord(2018) The Wolfman Unrated Edition (2010) The Others(2001) Snatch(2000) It Follows (2014) Ong Bak The Thai Warrior (2004) Ong Bak 2 The Beginning (2008) The Protector (2005) The One(2001) Kiss Of The Dragon (2001) Sin City (2005) V For Vendetta (2006) Watchmen The Director's Cut (2009) Kingsman The Secret Service (2014) Kingsman The Golden Circle (2017) The King's Man(2021) Mortal Kombat (2021)
39:41 that's real blood too, Leo accidentally smashed a glass object on the table and continued staying in character, It's the shot QT went with in the movie. You can clearly see Mr. Moghe startled after Leo smashed the glass.
@@cw.8421 Yeah, the Oscars could use a new category, a misc category for parts that don't fit anywhere else. In best supporting though, Leo would have been up against Christoper Waltz for the same movie, and nobody was going to beat that. Though, Leo was just as good. IMO.
He did really cut his hand (by accident), but before he smeared his hand in Kerry Washington's face, they cut and cleaned up his hand to put fake blood on it. I don't think any producers on earth would let you smear real blood in someone's face these days.
The scene where he smashes his hand on the glass was the only "real" moment. After that they paused shooting to stitch up his hand as there was a lot of blood. When they got back to shooting, Leo took the opportunity to apply the fake blood onto her face. Her reaction was genuine as it wasn't scripted, however everyone on set knew it was fake blood.
Glad you guys checked out this one. PS. The guy that asked Django to spell his name was Franco Nero, the guy who played the original Django in the 1966 film that this was partially inspired by ;)
Did i hear Hannah asked "who wrote this?" QT writes all his own movies.. that's why they're so brilliant. He's got it all mapped out in his head from the very start.. even the music
Leo did play a villain before, in a movie called "The Man in the Iron Mask" (1998) I highly recommend that one. Good drama. I think it got Oscars, but I'm not sure.
@@AndyMatts44 well, I didn't want to spoil anything, but since we're here, we need to clarify that he plays 2 characters, one of them being the villain.
DiCap deserved every bit of an Oscar. When he stared into Django's eyes, testing him, ignoring the dogs tearing apart that man, I believed it. Astounding villain.
Satisfying is the perfect word to describe it, glad you guys liked it! Inglorious Basterds has a really similar vibe if you haven't watched that yet, you'd love that too.
"u read like Django now.." got me in tears - great reaction to one of my all time fav movies! Christoph Waltz is simply amazing - as a few others already said, u guys need to watch Inglorius Bastards! Keep up the good work and of course, stay healthy 🙂
Everyone talking about Leo's hand but no one has mentioned Kerry Washington really got whipped (lashed) because she wanted to know what it felt like and what her ancestors went thru. Her reaction was the real deal
@@briez9648 no ma'am, Vast majority on Google says it's fake, ya simple mongaloid. Now ring your bell for your mum to feed you your tit milk and tv dinner, before she passes, you dunce.
39:42 - Leo actually accidentally sliced his hand IRL when they filmed this scene and he kept going, even though he was in a lot of pain. So that was his real blood.
First off, the gun Schultz uses is a modified Derringer .45. Two shot, break action pistol. Secondly, the glasses in 12:04 help treat the light sensitivity effects of syphilis.
By showing the reaction you did to Leo's character in this movie proves just how phenomenal an actor he is. He was actually really bothered by the way he had to act towards the African American cast and went to talk to Samuel L. Jackson about it and he said something along the lines of "Hey, this is just another Tuesday for us."
When Leo yelled and slammed his hand on the table he accidentally slammed down on a shot glass cutting him. He stayed in character for the entire scene and that was his real blood he smeared on her face. Everyone applauded him after the take and Leo needed 8 stitches
Trivia: The only law broken by Dr. Schultz in this movie was when he shot Calvin Candie. Everything else he did was legal for those days. Trivia: Being a dentist in the 19th century was an extremely hazardous profession, as antibiotics and other medicines weren't available back then. The mouth is actually one of the most bacteria-laden parts of the human body, and it's easy to get an infection from messing around in it. Being a bounty hunter was likely less hazardous than being a dentist back then, so Dr. Schultz's change in profession would be logical. Trivia: Leonardo di Caprio had a lot of trouble using the word "n*gger" throughout this movie, particularly to the black cast members, until Samuel L. Jackson took him aside and told him: "It's just another m*therf*cking Tuesday, okay?" 9:07 It's a derringer - a very small pistol which, due to its size, was easily concealable and was the favored offensive weapons of assassins. 9:50, 30:27 He spat out some chewing tobacco. This was common in 19th century America and was also why taverns always had spittoons, so customers would spit their 'baccy into these, rather than on the floor. 21:07 Hoo boy. Ash, you is in trouble now, boy. :-P (To be fair, I'd probably make the same mistake, as I'm also a Nutella nut). 38:00 Steven is probably the most powerful man of the estate - probably even moreso than Candie, as Steven knows EVERYTHING that goes on there - so he'd like to stay where he is and protect his own, personal interests. 42:37 "Look at all this blood!" Well, this IS a Quentin Tarantino movie. . . .
Not really. That was not how Bounty Hunting worked. You couldn´t just walk up to the wanted and shot him in the face. Only in self defense. But than, i guess when nobody else was around, who is gonna tell the authoritys.
@@vincentvega9983 Well, it was really depending on the target AND your own skills... E.g. some people were wanted alive, some "dead or alive" and some of them were considered that dangerous you HAD to take them down before turning their corpse in to the autorithies as proof. Minor crimes, where you would just get in prison or other punishments were "capture and turn in". The authorities (sherriff and/or state marhall) wanted those people alive, 'cause there was no need to kill 'em. Usually they were not violent or dangerous to other people and guilty of things like light assault, trespassing, burglary or cattle rustling. Major crimes, like heavy assault, homicide, murder, arson, kidnapping, etc. got criminals the "dead or alive" status, which usually meant a judge or court official already had declared them guilty and sentenced them to death. So bringing them in alive meant they would be hanged anyway; shooting them at sight spared work for the state and was more secure. A dead body can't try to kill you and run away. Although depending on time period and state you were working for, there were a few exceptions were you got a higher reward, when you turned them in alive, but as I said it was a higher risk for the bounty hunter as well. The third group "Kill on sight" was literally the top criminals of their time: robbers (be it banks or stage coaches), murderers and arsonists, who not only killed a lot of people on purpose, but most of the time avoided being captured, escaped prison and/or killed for a long time; usually killing state officials like sherriffs and marshalls (and bounty hunters) on their way. Getting them alive was NO option anyway, so they were declared as too dangerous and you just had to turn their corpse in as proof.
How the F does this not have more likes. Great reaction you 2. You are so good at this now! But this, KillBill, Deathproof, Inglorious Basterds, they are all so good. Even Hateful Eight and Once Upon A Time were fun. Quentin is just on another level and he's getting better. Keep it up, Ash!
Just came from the "Green Mile" reaction to get a happier reaction and you guys nailed this one as well. Such a satisfying movie. So many get what's a coming to them. Tarantino has delivered this one, "Inglorious Basterds", and "Once Upon a Time In Hollywood" to the fans with extremely satisfying movie endings to historically horrible people. Great reaction guys.
With this movie and with Inglorious Bastards I love that Tarantino took childhood fantasies that any decent person has had and turned them into epic masterpieces. I remember vividly as a dorky white teenager having day dreams about being alive in slave times and just going Rambo on the slave owners and freeing slaves. This movie is literally my childhood daydreams transferred to screen.
Christoph Waltz is a legend. The one roll that could redeem his incredible performance as a DESPICABLE nazi. That being said, it goes without saying that Jamie Foxx is unbelievable as well. Everyone to be honest. One off my favorite films of all time. Now, y'boy knows that it's been said at least once in the comments but I don't have the time to go through them and I'm an insufferable know-it-all. So, in the scene where Leo gives his Shakespearean monologue, he actually cut his hand badly. And, being the consummate professional he is, he continued on with the scene and covered Kerry Washington's face. She instantly realized the blood was real and her reaction was genuine horror, surprise and disgust. And, being an equally consummate professional, she continued the scene to it's cut. I love those kinds of bts stories and I loved y'alls reaction as per usual. Keep bringing the heat!!!!
Another fun fact: @9:28, the town Marshal is played by Tom Wopat, best known as the O.G. Luke Duke from "The Dukes of Hazzard" TV series. (My wife and I met him at Hazzardfest in northeast Tennessee in July 2019.)
Loved this reaction, as usual. Can't decide who makes me laugh more: your sister or your girlfriend. Both are great foils! PS: Tarantino/Samuel Jackson/Robert De Niro: "Jackie Brown" (1997). Tarantino's third movie, one of his best, and there are so few reactions for it. Definitely put that on your list!
@@thinkhector Well, Simone from Cinebinge, Sam from TBR Schmitt and Shree Nation all quip at the end of THEIR reactions to "Jackie Brown" : "I think that's my favorite Tarantino!" And there are others that loved it, James Vs. Cinema being one of them, so right there, there's four members of the "younger audience" who loved it (I actually haven't seen a reaction to the movie that DIDN'T like it).....and of course, I myself saw it in my 20s (ditto my girlfriend) and we had no problem with it, so........(PS: And both me and my girlfriend didn't like "Kill Biill", which also came out in our 20s, so......movies are not "one size fits all".)
About the guy who asks him to spell his name. He did not actually belittle him. It is just a small nod to another film named Django. The guy is an italian actor named Franco Nero, the actual Django from the 1966 spaghetti western movie Django. So when Django says "D is silent.", he says " I know."
Great film, great reaction from you two. Not sure if you've reacted together before or not, but it's the first time for me to see you both watch a movie together. Funny as fuck to get some real banter between you. Makes me feel like I'm back home in the UK. Keep it up and looking forward to more reactions with both of you in 2022!
I have a hard time picking “favorites” of anything but this is definitely my favorite movie. When Leo smashed his hand on the table, he actually cut himself on that glass and was really bleeding but kept on acting.
Late reply but I remember laughing my ass off during an interview where the cast talked about Quentin's confused and slightly horrified reaction to that happening. If you can get that reaction out of Quentin Tarantino of all people, you deserve an award.
In that scene where leo was talking with the skull and calling them out. he actually cut his hand when he slammed his hand on the table and it was not part of the scene but the take was so well done that they left it in. so when you see his hand bleeding it was an accident but he kept going with the scene. Leo Is just amazing!
In all honesty, since I watched original Django movies when I was a kid, for long time I refused to watch this movie - I grew up on westerns and I did not like the idea of reboot spoiling that memory. But when I saw Franco Nero (actor that played original Django) interacting with Jamie Fox in the saloon, my jaw just dropped. Turned out to be one of the best westerns I ever watched, and probably the best Tarantino movie ever.
The scene where the Spanish man asks django to spell his name, he asked because he was the original django from 1966, thats how he knows how django is spelt
I watched all your john wick reaction videos and haven't liked or subscribe. Then i jumped to this video, skip the intro and got caught out😂 said to myself "right that deserves a like and subscription". Love that you kept it real with your reaction. My favorite pun when seeing shot or cut "Bolognese".
Another fun fact: The first man Shultz kills at the beginning of the film is played by James Remar... who plays a different character later in the film... who kills Shultz near the end of the film!
When Leo smashes the glass at the dinner table scene all that was improvised. He actually had a ton of blood and everything on his hand when he cut himself but he kept the scene going. Amazing….
@38:40 is the house slave vs the field slave complex that has been crafted by white folks into black people since slavery. The house slave sleeps in master's house, eats part of master's food, gets treated just a little bit better etc. So now the house slave develops a love and attachment to the master (Stockholm syndrome). He is now the one to fight harder for the slave master against his own people. If the field slaves want to escape and kill the master the house slave will sabotage the plan because he doesn't want the man who has treated him just a bit better to be destroyed.
Great reaction both of you, i really loved it haha! Another great movie people don't seem to recommend is: 12 Years a slave. The story is based on the autobiography of Solomon Northup, a free black man who was kidnapped in the North and sold into slavery.
The horse that Jamie Foxx rides during the film, including during the bit after the house blows up, is Jamie's own horse, that he trained himself, even doing the fancy hoofwork!!!
I'm not even half way through the reaction yet, and I already love the way you too react together. Thanks so much for this great reaction! Ash, I can't wait for your next reaction to "Spartacus: Vengeance"
Hey guys, for real: i´m following certain people on RUclips reacting to movies and series and i like them all! But you two always brighten my day, you´re the perfect couple. The way you interact, talk and argue with each other and your personalities result in an absolutely great reaction and that everytime!!! Thank you for this and please don´t you ever dare to break up because this would make me pretty sad😙 Now to the scene where Django is getting questioned what´s his name: the old man who is asking was Frankco Nero, the original Django from 1966.
Leo was so uncomfortable saying the N word at first. He asked Samuel Jackson for advice and apologized. Sam said something like “man, you gotta get over saying the motherfucking thing. This guy was a slave owner. He doesn’t view us black people as people. We are inferior to him. Less than dogs.” The next day, Jamie Foxx tried to talk to Leo and Leo completely ignored him the rest of filming trying to stay in character.
When Billy gets shot I'm the nuts the actor really sells it with his absolute bloody murder screech. When anybody hears that type of scream they know someone just lost their nuts
If you didnt know, the guy who django blew up with the dynamite near the ens was tarantino himself😂 i just found it funny how he blew himself up in his own movie
9:49 that was spit from his Tobacco leaves, that’s where the term “chew” comes from (in regards to tobacco) because you literally have to chew the leaves to be able to spit and get the flavor. Companies still make their chew like this like Redman for example.
The guy that Django says "The D is silent" to, is the Original 1966 Django. That's why he says "I know"
I was about to point that out but you beat me to it. 28:00
I’ve seen this movie dozens of times and I can’t believe I’m just now hearing this lol
yes, its Franco Nero, he pulled a machine gun in a coffin behind himself
His name is FRANCO NERO.
Fun fact. When Leo slammed his hand down on the table with the skull, he actually hurt his hand pretty bad and the blood was real. He was so into his character that he decided to keep going and use the injury to make the scene that much more authentic. He needed stitches, the cut was pretty deep.
that's also why when he rubbed the blood on her face she looked so repulsed because it was really his real blood he was swiping on her. Crazy.
@@anthonydrypen8596 He did cut his hand in the scene and kept going, but he 100% did not wipe his real blood on her face. That would never be okay to do, it was just a rumor.
@@IamKindness im guessing after leo did that whole smashing the table thing and him actually hurting his hand the director got the idea of leo rubbing the blood off her face
Damn, you beat me by 4 days lol
@@IamKindness Yeah, it would never be allowed for obvious reasons.
Maybe someone already said it, but the scene where Franco Nero asked Django if he could spell his name was important because there was a 1966 spaghetti western titled 'Django' and Franco Nero was the original Django character. Tarantino was probably thrilled as hell to get THE Django in his film for that one scene. The 'Django' song at the opening of this film was also the theme song for the 1966 film.
The original Django movie is badass
The comment I was looking for. 👍
Another piece of info I didn't know, thanks!
Also notice here his character wears gloves all the time and never takes them off, because the OG django ended up with his hands smashed by the bad guys
I always wondered why the scene made him seem like a big character. Very clever to slip something like that into the film.
Django is actually my english teacher’s favourite movie. After we watched it, he would explain the symbolism in the 3 killings by the sleeve gun. In all of these deaths, the characters where shot in the heart. They all wore a certain object near their heart while getting shot. These objects were symbolising different things:
1. The first character killed was the sheriff. He was wearing a sheriff badge which symbolises killing in the name of law.
2. The second one was killed by Django. The one whom he told „I like the way you die, boy”. He held a bible near his heart which symbolises killing in the name of religous fanatisizm.
3. The third death was Calvin Candie. When he got shot in the heart by Schultz he was wearing a flower near his heart which symbolises killing for fun.
By that the movie critisizes the attitudes represented by these evil characters.
I never even thought of the symbolism, thanks for that.
Damn 🔥
I feel like that’s an over analyzing it...
@@dragonskizi7681 it’s not though.. have you even watched the movie?
@@dragonskizi7681 maybe it is, maybe it isn't. But it's fun to think about, right?
If you liked Cristoph Waltz, you 100% can't miss Inglorius Bastards, his best role and 2nd best Tarantino movie after Pulp Fiction. This Austrian guy got his Oscar's statues for a reason.
He's Austrian, not German
@@15blackshirt agh I'm sorry, you are right.
@@Sindamsc respect for actually changing it instead of just ignoring it 👍
I’m glad you put pulp fiction above it
@@15blackshirt He is both, his mother is from Austria and his father from Germany. He has both citizenships, the Austrian since 2010.
P.S Leo was REALLY uncomfortable with the amount of "N" word he had to say, and had to be reassured that nobody was taking offence. It really bothered him. Stellar acting.
Yup true story Samuel L. Had to pull him aside and say “ this is what we do.”
@@Gumgumgamer009 yep he had to reassure him we’re professionals, this is our job, and it’s historically accurate. After that convo whenever Leo had doubts again he would lock eyes with Sam L and Sam would give him a little nod. Basically saying remember what we talked about. That is what got him thru the filming. Leo also took solace in the fact his character would be killed
Samuel Jackson took him to the side and said “ this is just another Tuesday for us”
Yeah, I was thinking when I watched that film ALL the white actors were probably super uncomfortable with the number of times (and the often extremely derogatory manners in which) they had to say that word. Because the white CHARACTERS are very much using that word as a slur, too. They mean it in an offensive way.
But, you know. In a way, you'd rather they be uncomfortable with it - because while yeah, it's a professional set and it was fine in this context, you never want people to be TOO comfortable using slurs. The fact that Leo was uncomfortable using it, even in this context where it was totally fine and he had the go-ahead from several black peers - that speaks to his character. It means you know he's not throwing that word around casually with his friends.
It's true - he was really upset with the number of n-words he had to say. He eventually got over it after Tarantino added a few more to the script.
He scales the mountain, because he's not afraid of it. He slays the dragon, because he's not afraid of him. And he walks through hellfire... because Broomhilda's worth it.
Aside from Quentin just having superb lines in almost all his movies with Django this line just kills me every time "I think, that we all think, that the bags was a nice idea, now I'm not pointing any fingers but they could've been done better..." lol 😆
Sam Jackson's character is known as a "house slave". They are given special privileges over the other slaves for managing them. This term is often used for people who have a similar energy. Where you sell out your own people for a little extra cheese, a traitor. That's why he's the greatest villain.
Actually Jackson's character would be an uncle tom, anyone can be a house slave they preferred light skinned women though.
He's MORE then a house slave, he is a PERSONAL Slave, He's the Head Slave, he was Calvin's Daddy's most trusted slave who personally took care of Calvin while he was growing up. He thought of Calvin as much as his kid as he did think of him as his master
Also house n word
@@iwi2042 considering all of them where referred to by that word, this was obvious so no point in posting it.
@@Yugioh420 sawy :(
He didnt try to belittle him. That man right there is the original Django.
The horse that Django rides is actually Jamie Fox’s own personal horse.
Fun fact - the horses that fall down in the film were "fall horses"; horses trained to safely fall over on command. You can actually see when Foxx drags the guy off of his, the horse actually falls _before_ he pulls it down.
@@TrackpadProductions Preesh homie I only noticed that thanks to your comment. I knew about fall horses I just never took stock of when the horse moved versus the guy.
Girl I feel you, the song is I got a name by Jim Croce. One of my all time faves. I got lyrics tatted onto me to honor my father who passed. He would’ve loved Django. It was spoiled for me that this song was in the movie but when it came up… my god the emotions.
The whole "Jonas Hill" dialogue had me cracking up man hahahahahha
I think she was saying Jonah's Hill, as if it were a famous hill.
The biggest shame about this movie, is that Leo didn’t win an Oscar for it!
Nor was he nominated, absolute disgrace.
I'm willing to bet it had something to do with "racism" but either way everyone who's seen the film knows Leo absolutely fukkin nailed his part with flying colors. 10/10 he's won an oscar in our hearts lol, even if the role was a villain.
As good as Christoph Waltz is in this movie. Leo, imo, stole the show and absolutely deserved a nomination over Waltz. Again, not trying to hate on Waltz, I just think Leo killed his role.
To true😃
Yep
"What was that? Did he just regurgitate his food?" Almost made me spit my dip out with that one.
On the role Samuel L. Jackson plays… you often find that when a group is oppressed or enslaved, a few individuals from that group are recruited into an overseer position.
They are often fiercely loyal because they have something to lose, and are responsible for keeping the others in line.
“I don’t know, babe, that’s why I’m watching the movie.”
😂😂😂😂😂 You two are adorable and this has made my day!
Although the movie is not a historical event, the movie is an accurate depiction of what life was like in the American south during the late 19th century. At that time, people of color were not considered human. They were objects, posestions, property. They were bought, sold and traded based on their value as a worker of some sort. Young males often worked the fields to produce cotton. The lighter complected women who had visible characteristics that people of the time considered sexually enticing were used in the houses as maids, cooks and prostitutes (known then as comfort women). Sand means courage, guts, intestinal fortitude. Unflappable in the face of danger.
Guys, this is one of the most entertaining movie I've seen, but still you two are even more fun to watch, I'm only half through the movie and I'm dying 😂
Hahaha love you mate!!
@@justtrustash Guys can you watch a movie called city of god..its my favorite movie ever its crazy and i rarely see people react tot it...
@@phar0ahad3 yes city of god is amazing
@@justtrustash please react to these movies
The Proposition (2005)
Appaloosa (2008)
The Hateful Eight (2015)
No Country For Old Men(2007)
Overlord(2018)
The Wolfman Unrated Edition (2010)
The Others(2001)
Snatch(2000)
It Follows (2014)
Ong Bak The Thai Warrior (2004)
Ong Bak 2 The Beginning (2008)
The Protector (2005)
The One(2001)
Kiss Of The Dragon (2001)
Sin City (2005)
V For Vendetta (2006)
Watchmen The Director's Cut (2009)
Kingsman The Secret Service (2014)
Kingsman The Golden Circle (2017)
The King's Man(2021)
Mortal Kombat (2021)
@@justtrustashBEST MOVIE REACTION EVER
The man at the bar who asks Django's name and spelling, is the original Django from the western.
39:41 that's real blood too, Leo accidentally smashed a glass object on the table and continued staying in character, It's the shot QT went with in the movie.
You can clearly see Mr. Moghe startled after Leo smashed the glass.
I’m disappointed he didn’t win an Oscar for his performance in this. But the revenant was phenomenal regardless
@@cw.8421 Yeah, the Oscars could use a new category, a misc category for parts that don't fit anywhere else. In best supporting though, Leo would have been up against Christoper Waltz for the same movie, and nobody was going to beat that. Though, Leo was just as good. IMO.
He did really cut his hand (by accident), but before he smeared his hand in Kerry Washington's face, they cut and cleaned up his hand to put fake blood on it. I don't think any producers on earth would let you smear real blood in someone's face these days.
@@Curraghmore Especially someone like Leo who has 5 girls in his bed every night.
The scene where he smashes his hand on the glass was the only "real" moment. After that they paused shooting to stitch up his hand as there was a lot of blood. When they got back to shooting, Leo took the opportunity to apply the fake blood onto her face. Her reaction was genuine as it wasn't scripted, however everyone on set knew it was fake blood.
Glad you guys checked out this one. PS. The guy that asked Django to spell his name was Franco Nero, the guy who played the original Django in the 1966 film that this was partially inspired by ;)
This. Was. SUCH a good idea! 😂 I love u 2 for this! 👏🏾
“Sand” is slang for grit, toughness, tenacity
Appreciate the support and love as always my brother ❤️
Wow! You did it again mate! I think what people enjoy among other things is the banter when reacting together...it's the bee's knees!
"The Hateful Eight" is also a Tarantino masterpiece!
That and Inglorious Basterds.
They shouldn't eat during Chapter 4, because... well, you know.
Definitely Hateful 8 and most every Tarantino in its own way, but Inglourious Basterds and Django are the two "big" masterpieces
I love that movie. Kurt Russell is boss!!
@@desmondpowell3205 he was brutal and hilarious
Did i hear Hannah asked "who wrote this?" QT writes all his own movies.. that's why they're so brilliant. He's got it all mapped out in his head from the very start.. even the music
Leo did play a villain before, in a movie called "The Man in the Iron Mask" (1998)
I highly recommend that one. Good drama. I think it got Oscars, but I'm not sure.
Yes! I love that movie so much. It's DEFINITELY worth the watch.
Yeah, but he's also the hero in that one, so not quite the same.
@@AndyMatts44 well, I didn't want to spoil anything, but since we're here, we need to clarify that he plays 2 characters, one of them being the villain.
DiCap deserved every bit of an Oscar. When he stared into Django's eyes, testing him, ignoring the dogs tearing apart that man, I believed it. Astounding villain.
Satisfying is the perfect word to describe it, glad you guys liked it! Inglorious Basterds has a really similar vibe if you haven't watched that yet, you'd love that too.
Will do mate, appreciate the love ❤️
Another fun fact: The man seated at the bar speaking to Jamie Foxx in an Italian accent was actor Franco Nero who originally portrayed Django in 1965.
Also known as the real " Italiano "
"u read like Django now.." got me in tears - great reaction to one of my all time fav movies! Christoph Waltz is simply amazing - as a few others already said, u guys need to watch Inglorius Bastards! Keep up the good work and of course, stay healthy 🙂
We will do mate, appreciate you legend ❤️
26:50 the old guy, is Franco Nero, the original Django (1966),
one of the big legend from spagetti westerns.
Big respect.
Everyone talking about Leo's hand but no one has mentioned Kerry Washington really got whipped (lashed) because she wanted to know what it felt like and what her ancestors went thru. Her reaction was the real deal
It was a fake whip.
Yeah, sure. Foh.
@@rukus9585 its a googleable fact with accompanying interviews.... I think I'll stay right here.
@@briez9648 no ma'am, Vast majority on Google says it's fake, ya simple mongaloid. Now ring your bell for your mum to feed you your tit milk and tv dinner, before she passes, you dunce.
@@briez9648 Tell that inbred c*nt of a mother to you to hurry up with your tit milk. I'm waiting babygirl...
"Dr. Schnitzel!"
It was killing me so hard 😂😂
If you like Christopher Waltz he’s great in Inglorious Bastards. Which is another Quentin Tarantino movie.
Aaaa... wait for the reaction
39:42 - Leo actually accidentally sliced his hand IRL when they filmed this scene and he kept going, even though he was in a lot of pain. So that was his real blood.
Small guns attached to the wrist under the sleeve with a spring to extend it into the palm of the hand were a real thing.
First off, the gun Schultz uses is a modified Derringer .45. Two shot, break action pistol.
Secondly, the glasses in 12:04 help treat the light sensitivity effects of syphilis.
By showing the reaction you did to Leo's character in this movie proves just how phenomenal an actor he is. He was actually really bothered by the way he had to act towards the African American cast and went to talk to Samuel L. Jackson about it and he said something along the lines of "Hey, this is just another Tuesday for us."
Love your reaction i live this movie along with all his movies. SO BRILLIANT
I loved y'alls reaction!! Django is like a superhero to us! 😂❤
Also the best looking and dress superhero? Appreciate you mate ❤️
@@justtrustash the song you and Hannah heard at 21:30 was I got a Name by Jim Croce which came out in 1973
I love reactions with her! When the dude spit she almost lost it... and I laughed real good 😏. A++
Cheers mate ❤️
@@justtrustash that was chewing tobacco he spit out 🤣🤣
Fun fact Leo actually smashed his hand on that glass and he kept going like it was supposed to happen, master of his craft.
yer i was going to comment this hey. and he put his blood all over that chicks face like his actual blood haha why she looks so shocked.
@@alexkillagain1638 he didn't rub his actual blood on her face, they cut and replaced it with fake blood haha. He'd get sued for that!
@@jamiexiv looks like a one take but you may be right :)
the connection between you two , it's amazing
Haha we appreciate you mate, thank you ❤️
I fuckin love this channel i swear Ash x Hannah's energy together is UNDEFEATED 💯👑
Just found your Chanel and already love you guys. you have a new fan from australia. keep up the great work
Mad love to you and thank you for finding us haha ❤️
Being born in Knoxville Tennessee I get few chances to brag, but Quentin Tarantino is one of them
When Leo yelled and slammed his hand on the table he accidentally slammed down on a shot glass cutting him. He stayed in character for the entire scene and that was his real blood he smeared on her face. Everyone applauded him after the take and Leo needed 8 stitches
He really cut his hand open, he however didn’t smear his blood on her it was cut and added after he was stitched.
Trivia: The only law broken by Dr. Schultz in this movie was when he shot Calvin Candie. Everything else he did was legal for those days.
Trivia: Being a dentist in the 19th century was an extremely hazardous profession, as antibiotics and other medicines weren't available back then. The mouth is actually one of the most bacteria-laden parts of the human body, and it's easy to get an infection from messing around in it. Being a bounty hunter was likely less hazardous than being a dentist back then, so Dr. Schultz's change in profession would be logical.
Trivia: Leonardo di Caprio had a lot of trouble using the word "n*gger" throughout this movie, particularly to the black cast members, until Samuel L. Jackson took him aside and told him: "It's just another m*therf*cking Tuesday, okay?"
9:07 It's a derringer - a very small pistol which, due to its size, was easily concealable and was the favored offensive weapons of assassins.
9:50, 30:27 He spat out some chewing tobacco. This was common in 19th century America and was also why taverns always had spittoons, so customers would spit their 'baccy into these, rather than on the floor.
21:07 Hoo boy. Ash, you is in trouble now, boy. :-P (To be fair, I'd probably make the same mistake, as I'm also a Nutella nut).
38:00 Steven is probably the most powerful man of the estate - probably even moreso than Candie, as Steven knows EVERYTHING that goes on there - so he'd like to stay where he is and protect his own, personal interests.
42:37 "Look at all this blood!" Well, this IS a Quentin Tarantino movie. . . .
it's amazing that Leonardo DiCaprio can take moments that weren't in the script and put it in the movie
You say trivia one more time I'm changing your name to Alex Trebek lol
@@Fatherofheroesandheroines *Jeopardy theme plays* :-D
Not really. That was not how Bounty Hunting worked. You couldn´t just walk up to the wanted and shot him in the face. Only in self defense. But than, i guess when nobody else was around, who is gonna tell the authoritys.
@@vincentvega9983 Well, it was really depending on the target AND your own skills...
E.g. some people were wanted alive, some "dead or alive" and some of them were considered that dangerous you HAD to take them down before turning their corpse in to the autorithies as proof.
Minor crimes, where you would just get in prison or other punishments were "capture and turn in". The authorities (sherriff and/or state marhall) wanted those people alive, 'cause there was no need to kill 'em. Usually they were not violent or dangerous to other people and guilty of things like light assault, trespassing, burglary or cattle rustling.
Major crimes, like heavy assault, homicide, murder, arson, kidnapping, etc. got criminals the "dead or alive" status, which usually meant a judge or court official already had declared them guilty and sentenced them to death. So bringing them in alive meant they would be hanged anyway; shooting them at sight spared work for the state and was more secure. A dead body can't try to kill you and run away.
Although depending on time period and state you were working for, there were a few exceptions were you got a higher reward, when you turned them in alive, but as I said it was a higher risk for the bounty hunter as well.
The third group "Kill on sight" was literally the top criminals of their time: robbers (be it banks or stage coaches), murderers and arsonists, who not only killed a lot of people on purpose, but most of the time avoided being captured, escaped prison and/or killed for a long time; usually killing state officials like sherriffs and marshalls (and bounty hunters) on their way. Getting them alive was NO option anyway, so they were declared as too dangerous and you just had to turn their corpse in as proof.
How the F does this not have more likes. Great reaction you 2. You are so good at this now! But this, KillBill, Deathproof, Inglorious Basterds, they are all so good. Even Hateful Eight and Once Upon A Time were fun. Quentin is just on another level and he's getting better. Keep it up, Ash!
Just came from the "Green Mile" reaction to get a happier reaction and you guys nailed this one as well. Such a satisfying movie. So many get what's a coming to them. Tarantino has delivered this one, "Inglorious Basterds", and "Once Upon a Time In Hollywood" to the fans with extremely satisfying movie endings to historically horrible people. Great reaction guys.
With this movie and with Inglorious Bastards I love that Tarantino took childhood fantasies that any decent person has had and turned them into epic masterpieces. I remember vividly as a dorky white teenager having day dreams about being alive in slave times and just going Rambo on the slave owners and freeing slaves. This movie is literally my childhood daydreams transferred to screen.
Christoph Waltz is a legend. The one roll that could redeem his incredible performance as a DESPICABLE nazi. That being said, it goes without saying that Jamie Foxx is unbelievable as well. Everyone to be honest. One off my favorite films of all time. Now, y'boy knows that it's been said at least once in the comments but I don't have the time to go through them and I'm an insufferable know-it-all. So, in the scene where Leo gives his Shakespearean monologue, he actually cut his hand badly. And, being the consummate professional he is, he continued on with the scene and covered Kerry Washington's face. She instantly realized the blood was real and her reaction was genuine horror, surprise and disgust. And, being an equally consummate professional, she continued the scene to it's cut. I love those kinds of bts stories and I loved y'alls reaction as per usual. Keep bringing the heat!!!!
Thank you for this message you legend ❤️
21:56 AYYYEEE just know that’s where I am so you guys got a watcher from that tiny place
This commentary lol😂 “he looks like Shakespeare. Let’s go, William!”
Such a good balance between the two of them.
12:18 “Maybe ‘sand’ refers to his sperm. He’s been aroused. He wants to have sex. We can’t have someone that wants that.”
I can’t breathe. 🤣
You two are hilarious! Your contrasting reactions to Candie's death and the following shootout was fantastic. WHERE'S YOUR HAT?! LOL
Another fun fact: @9:28, the town Marshal is played by Tom Wopat, best known as the O.G. Luke Duke from "The Dukes of Hazzard" TV series. (My wife and I met him at Hazzardfest in northeast Tennessee in July 2019.)
Loved this reaction, as usual. Can't decide who makes me laugh more: your sister or your girlfriend. Both are great foils! PS: Tarantino/Samuel Jackson/Robert De Niro: "Jackie Brown" (1997). Tarantino's third movie, one of his best, and there are so few reactions for it. Definitely put that on your list!
Yeah "Jackie Brown" is underrated because it's doesn't hit that well with a younger audience. It's a more mature story.
@@thinkhector Well, Simone from Cinebinge, Sam from TBR Schmitt and Shree Nation all quip at the end of THEIR reactions to "Jackie Brown" : "I think that's my favorite Tarantino!" And there are others that loved it, James Vs. Cinema being one of them, so right there, there's four members of the "younger audience" who loved it (I actually haven't seen a reaction to the movie that DIDN'T like it).....and of course, I myself saw it in my 20s (ditto my girlfriend) and we had no problem with it, so........(PS: And both me and my girlfriend didn't like "Kill Biill", which also came out in our 20s, so......movies are not "one size fits all".)
"Did he just regurgitate his food?"
That's chewing tobacco.
"It's a privilege to be in a horse" - Ash
😂😂 bro I’m cracking up
The original Django, is sitting next to Django, at the Candy house bar!
👍
My favorite line in the whole movie
“do you know what they going to call you… The fastest gun in the south”
That awkward silence at 23:30 after you hush Hannah is hysterical.
About the guy who asks him to spell his name. He did not actually belittle him. It is just a small nod to another film named Django. The guy is an italian actor named Franco Nero, the actual Django from the 1966 spaghetti western movie Django. So when Django says "D is silent.", he says " I know."
No way!! I need to watch original, appreciate you watching you legend ❤️
@@justtrustash I'm not a man to watch many reaction stuff, but loving you guys' energy mate, keep it up! Greetings from Turkey!
Great film, great reaction from you two. Not sure if you've reacted together before or not, but it's the first time for me to see you both watch a movie together. Funny as fuck to get some real banter between you. Makes me feel like I'm back home in the UK. Keep it up and looking forward to more reactions with both of you in 2022!
I have a hard time picking “favorites” of anything but this is definitely my favorite movie. When Leo smashed his hand on the table, he actually cut himself on that glass and was really bleeding but kept on acting.
Late reply but I remember laughing my ass off during an interview where the cast talked about Quentin's confused and slightly horrified reaction to that happening. If you can get that reaction out of Quentin Tarantino of all people, you deserve an award.
In that scene where leo was talking with the skull and calling them out. he actually cut his hand when he slammed his hand on the table and it was not part of the scene but the take was so well done that they left it in. so when you see his hand bleeding it was an accident but he kept going with the scene. Leo Is just amazing!
Alright I'll say it, this is Tarantino's best movie. Basterds and Pulp fans will come for me and they have a right to, but this is the hill I die on.
Pulp Fiction and Django reign supreme
Reservoir dogs the best one for me
Kill Bill is up there for me too. It's one thing to make one good movie, but 2 movies is hard to do.
In all honesty, since I watched original Django movies when I was a kid, for long time I refused to watch this movie - I grew up on westerns and I did not like the idea of reboot spoiling that memory. But when I saw Franco Nero (actor that played original Django) interacting with Jamie Fox in the saloon, my jaw just dropped. Turned out to be one of the best westerns I ever watched, and probably the best Tarantino movie ever.
You two are hilarious 😭😭😂😂😂 I feel like I got an episode of I Love Lucy in between the movie reaction are so funny because you're both so genuine 🥰🥰
I have no idea what “I love Lucy” is but I’m binging that now 😂 we appreciate you so much mate ❤️
The scene where the Spanish man asks django to spell his name, he asked because he was the original django from 1966, thats how he knows how django is spelt
I watched all your john wick reaction videos and haven't liked or subscribe. Then i jumped to this video, skip the intro and got caught out😂 said to myself "right that deserves a like and subscription". Love that you kept it real with your reaction. My favorite pun when seeing shot or cut "Bolognese".
Hahaha appreciate it my brother ❤️
Another fun fact: The first man Shultz kills at the beginning of the film is played by James Remar... who plays a different character later in the film... who kills Shultz near the end of the film!
When Leo smashes the glass at the dinner table scene all that was improvised. He actually had a ton of blood and everything on his hand when he cut himself but he kept the scene going. Amazing….
@38:40 is the house slave vs the field slave complex that has been crafted by white folks into black people since slavery. The house slave sleeps in master's house, eats part of master's food, gets treated just a little bit better etc. So now the house slave develops a love and attachment to the master (Stockholm syndrome). He is now the one to fight harder for the slave master against his own people. If the field slaves want to escape and kill the master the house slave will sabotage the plan because he doesn't want the man who has treated him just a bit better to be destroyed.
Great reaction both of you, i really loved it haha! Another great movie people don't seem to recommend is: 12 Years a slave. The story is based on the autobiography of Solomon Northup, a free black man who was kidnapped in the North and sold into slavery.
The horse that Jamie Foxx rides during the film, including during the bit after the house blows up, is Jamie's own horse, that he trained himself, even doing the fancy hoofwork!!!
I was captivated for every second of this movie, couldn't look away!
You guys have such great reactions and are such a cute couple! 🥰
I love how you both support Dicaprio's character over Waltz's
I'm not even half way through the reaction yet, and I already love the way you too react together. Thanks so much for this great reaction! Ash, I can't wait for your next reaction to "Spartacus: Vengeance"
Appreciate the love as always you legend ❤️
@@justtrustash any time bro. And don't worry, Liam Mcintyre, (Spartacus 2) is gonna do you proud, trust me
Hey guys, for real: i´m following certain people on RUclips reacting to movies and series and i like them all! But you two always brighten my day, you´re the perfect couple. The way you interact, talk and argue with each other and your personalities result in an absolutely great reaction and that everytime!!! Thank you for this and please don´t you ever dare to break up because this would make me pretty sad😙
Now to the scene where Django is getting questioned what´s his name: the old man who is asking was Frankco Nero, the original Django from 1966.
Leo was so uncomfortable saying the N word at first. He asked Samuel Jackson for advice and apologized. Sam said something like “man, you gotta get over saying the motherfucking thing. This guy was a slave owner. He doesn’t view us black people as people. We are inferior to him. Less than dogs.”
The next day, Jamie Foxx tried to talk to Leo and Leo completely ignored him the rest of filming trying to stay in character.
12:17 This monologue that cut off his girl is the funniest part of the whole vid i stg😭
That was easily one of the best reaction videos I ever watched.
When Billy gets shot I'm the nuts the actor really sells it with his absolute bloody murder screech. When anybody hears that type of scream they know someone just lost their nuts
Walton Goggins is one of the best around!
@@bucy21 I like him as Laugher in American Ultra
Me: *Skips intro to save my data plan*
Ash: "Why are you skipping the intro?"
Me: *Sweating, rewinds back to the intro*
21:44 Hannah instantly feeling guilty and apologising is so relatable 🤣
"Sand" is like he's got a fighting spirit or grit
That 'regurgitation' in the "I shot the sheriff" scene was chewing-tobacco. One of popular products of that time🤷♂️
Fun fact: They're in the process of making a Django/Zorro crossover! ⚔
Relatable shit. "Did you drop a thing? Well.. It belongs to The Room now."
Quinton Tarantino is a master storyteller
If you didnt know, the guy who django blew up with the dynamite near the ens was tarantino himself😂 i just found it funny how he blew himself up in his own movie
My favorite insult ever is “YOU MUPPET” 😭😭😭😭♥️♥️
Same here haha
“We’re literally Netflix and chillin’”
“My stepdads doing drillin’”
You guys gotta start rapping mate, straight fire 🔥😎😂
Hannah's right. The music in this, like in any Tarantino film mind you, is amazing.
17.15 “what is he, a Middle Eastern dad”
I died right there 🤣 💀
: not .
I've watched dozens of reactions on this and I just loved your reaction🤗🤗💗
Wow it’s an honour to have you on our channel..thank you for the love mate ❤️
9:49 that was spit from his Tobacco leaves, that’s where the term “chew” comes from (in regards to tobacco) because you literally have to chew the leaves to be able to spit and get the flavor. Companies still make their chew like this like Redman for example.