DJANGO UNCHAINED (2012) FIRST TIME WATCHING (THIS WAS UNREAL!)
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024
- DJANGO UNCHAINED (2012) MOVIE REACTION FIRST TIME WATCHING
Full reaction on / jayveetv
Also join this channel as a member:
/ @jayveetvreacts
SUBSCRIBE and turn on my Post Notifications so you’ll never miss an upload from me!
Follow my socials
► INSTAGRAM: / jayveetv
► Twitter: / jayvee_tv
► Facebook: / jayveetv1
Original Movie: Django Unchained
*Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED. All rights belong to their respective owners.
One Easter egg in this movie is:
The guy in the bar in the master room who asks Django "Django, what's that name"
is Franco Nero. He is the actor who played Django in the old spaghetti westerns.
I never noticed that , brilliant
Wait really?
@@fighterx9840 Yes 🤠
ruclips.net/video/ue6NZWU9pWU/видео.html
Samuel L. Jackson actually had to convince Leonardo DiCaprio to say the "N" word in full character without hesitation because Leo felt horrible for needing to say it.
Yep, cause it's okay to say it if you're a rich and white and get paid...just like how Alec Baldwin just murdered someone and he's out walking freely.
@@MisterDevos Alec Baldwin wasn’t at fault for that, it was the propmasters failure, and you saying this shows how racist you actually are, racism is racism, no matter the color of skin
@@jongakong9935 yeah it was the armory too, there shouldn’t have been a live round, it happens all the time especially when working with things like blanks. He’s just the actor who ended up holding it
@@MisterDevos here’s that attention you were looking for
@@MisterDevos Wow you're clueless
I would suggest "The Hateful Eight" too. Just as wild a ride as Django but without the silent "D."
Very good movie
However I would suggest the extended version of “The Hateful Eight”
It’s the complete story broken into four separate chapters/episodes
@Miles Doyle that’s a pretty boring and unoriginal sermon
Try this one next time:
The righteous need not cower before the drumbeat of human progress. Though the song of yesterday fades into the challenge of tomorrow, God still watches and judges us. Evil lurks in the internet as it lurked in the streets of yesteryear. But it was never the streets that were evil.
Or perhaps this
And so we return again to the holy void. Some say this is simply our destiny, but I would have you remember always that the void EXISTS, just as surely as you or I. Is nothingness any less a miracle than substance?
Lastly you might appreciate this
Men in their arrogance claim to understand the nature of creation, and devise elaborate theories to describe its behavior. But always they discover in the end that God was quite a bit more clever than they thought.
Cheers n God bless
(Try not to judge people so much cause, well, you know why)
Pretty hypocritical if you ask me!
@@mpalfadel2008 said: @Miles Doyle that’s a pretty boring and unoriginal sermon.
(Try not to judge people so much cause, well, you know why)
@@B-a-t-m-a-n lol
If you do watch, just don't eat or drink during Chapter 4.
The reason for the shift in Schultz's coolheadedness is the reality of what Candieland is and the horror of it. Schultz knew vaguely, but he didn't understand just how bad it was, and it shook him. Django had been used to seeing what people did to slaves, so he was able to keep composure.
I wonder how Schultz would react to his homeland during the 1930's and 40's?
@@Sweet_Venom0027 The actor is actually Austrian, not German and hus accent is very clear. But Tarantino likes him as German. Even in "Inglorious Bastards".
@@ellenhofrath I was referring to the character, not the actor.
Who could resist killing Calvin?
@@ellenhofrath I'm pretty sure at the start of Inglourious Basterds Landa mentions being Austrian
Inglorious bastards is another good one by the director of this. Has waltz in it too
Yes he is the star of that movie
It is a must watch!!!
Fun fact; When DiCaprio smashed the glass and rubbed blood on Kerry Washington's face it was unscripted. He actually did cut his hand up and her disgust was genuine. Really a masterclass on all fronts. Loved how they ditched the "white savior" element by having Schultz actually seriously mess things up by killing Candy; it allowed Django's character to shine through in the end. Always a pleasure man, great reaction!
That's not a masterclass in acting, that's an asshole move. You don't wipe real fucking blood over someone's face that didn't know it was happening.
I had heard the same thing, but I was corrected on part of it: yes Di Caprio really cut his hand by accident and had real blood on it, but there was a break in filming before he wiped his hand in Kerry Washington's face, and when he did that, it was fake blood. These days I'm sure no producers would knowingly smear someone in the face with real blood. If you look into it, you'll find the same thing. The injury was an accident at first, but Tarantino decided to use it once it happened.
@@Curraghmore That would make sense. Here's hoping that's the case honestly, it'd be a health and safety nightmare.
Wrong. Fake news
@@chand911 The masterclass in acting stands. The blood, however, was wiped clean and replaced with fake blood as DiCaprio wanted to incorporate the wound into his scene.
Because, obviously you don't wipe real blood into somebody's unexpecting face.
The miner carrying the dynamite that exploded when Django shot him was Quentin Tarantino, making a cameo appearance.
When watching a Tarantino movie, you must prepare for, blood lots of blood, violence people have and are capable of doing to one another, comedy, and his pure genius in being able to bring out the best performances of the actors in the telling of his stories. You have to admit, when it comes to his movies, you'll either see it out of curiosity, or your a fan of Tarantino's work, or you'll never watch one of his again, but you will never forget the impact it had on you!
Huge Fan, even if I have to close my eyes on certain parts the stories are incredible 👏 👏👏
The worst was at 22:47 when the white cake got hit.
I Hope he never stops producing movies, hes unique
Doc Holiday was a dentist, never disrespect someone who can inflict a lot of pain.
Lol
Is it safe?
Amen
"When I was younger, just a bad little kid..."
No spoiler.
Tarantino loved old Italian films (the ones they call Spaghetti Western ") and pays homage to them by inserting songs in the soundtrack.
In this film, in the final scene, the song "Trinity" plays which is the opening song of an old Italian film that you should react to. In English it is called "They call me Trinity".
You will like it.
Sorry for google translate.
and the "you uppity son of a..." is right out of The Good the Bad and the Ugly, a few parallels there you should check that one out if you're interested on the channel or in your free time
@@darionirwin4138 I'm Italian, I know those soundtracks and those films from which Tarantino draws.
@@stef8073 talking to the uploader/ anyone going to see this in the future. Glad you enjoy those spaghettis.
The scene with the proto-Klansmen is so hilarious. Them critiquing the hoodies and then the guy getting offended on behalf of his wife that made them still kills me. And then as they ride to attack the bounty hunter and Django they can’t see shit 😂 it’s too good.
I wanted to see more of his reaction to that part
Stephen is Calvin Candie's consigliere. He and Calvin are partners in everything that happens at Candieland. He pretends to be a slow old man in public, but when he speaks to Calvin in the library the pretense is gone; he is no longer playing a role. This is much like the relationship between Dr. King Schultz and Django. At the climax of the film Stephen again drops his old man persona along with his cane which is just a prop for his character.
The lines Stephen utters at the end are an homage to the film 'The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly." They are based on Tucco's final tirade to Blondie who he rides away with his share of the gold and leaves Tucco in the cemetery tied up without a horse (but with his share of the treasure.)
Not really partners.. he 100% manipulates Calvin. He's in charge.
The blood on Leonardos hand is his real blood. He accidentally slammed down on a shot glass and never broke character.
The scene where he goes back to the plantation with Christoph Waltz character and he confronts the guy who was his boss when he was a slave and then shoots him is one of my favourites. The way he delivers the "remember me?" before shooting him gives me chills.
You didn't mention Christoph Waltz, he was the best character in this movie.
FOH
Him and Leo is why I couldn’t stop watching this movie. They just couldn’t been any better in their roles. Slave movies are so overdid and cliché, but this hast be the greatest slave movies ever made. Comedy, revenge, action and brilliant acting. The movie got 5 out of 5
To get a little perspective, at the start of the movie, Dr. Schultz gives Django his freedom and $75 - which is about $1260 today. The $12,000 dollars they were going to pay for Eskimo Joe, and ultimately paid for Broomhilda with, is equivalent to just over $200,000 today. That's crazy.
Man I saw this in the theatre. The whole audience wents nuts watching it. Was a wild experience.
01:55 Look up a man named Doc Holliday... He was a dentist back in the old west (late 1800's) but was also one of the deadliest people of that time period...
Love this movie so damn much. Quentin said that in his mind, Django went on to have kids, and his great grandson would be one bad mother... shut your mouth. According to QT, Django is the kin of John Shaft.
Stephen ran that plantation. Candie was as dumb as a box of rocks, Stephen only dropped the "uncle rukus" act when it was just him and Calvin. When he first drops it to tell Calvin that Django and Dr. Schultz weren't slave owners, then the final confrontation when he drops the cane and limp and accent and everything. Calvin was Stephen's puppet. Masterful.
Jackie Brown is a great movie by Quentin Tarantino. Some great 70s music in it too.
That has some of the funniest, foul-mouthed dialogue I've seen - though my Black friend who I first saw it with didn't appreciate the constant use of the 'N' word.. It's still a taboo word to a lot of us in the UK, I don't know anyone who uses it the same way as in the USA - between Black people I mean. I know the argument about "reclaiming", that's not for me to comment as I'm not Black. Similar to gay people who use "Queer" in the same way - used as an insult, they reclaimed it.
The whole cast in this movie were amazing...
This movie is my SHIT. Love this movie. The blood on the cotton, on the white horse...Leo character super nutty. This movie got me interested in learning more about free Black slave owners.
"if there's blood on the roots then there's blood on the branches".. "strange fruit hanging from the poplar tree's, blood on the leaves"
Maybe one day Hollywood will acknowledge that there were many white slaves too instead of pumping out more propaganda claiming most white people had black slaves when that was not the case. Less than 5% of people had slaves.
Only director I know who can make a movie that is so sad, so brutal and so funny.
Really. Not to mention layered, with the whole theme being slavery, but calling the main plantation "Candyland"?... Chills.. and a love story to boot! Gonna be watched in history classes for years to come, bet on that, just as relevant today as for the time the movie itself takes place in. Pure genius
Django makes an awesome cameo in A Million Ways to Die in the West.
This is a wild ride!! Can't wait to watch!
Doc Holliday was a dentist and was one of the most notorious gunmen of the west
I struggled to watch about the first 90%, but man it is interesting. (It took me a few times starting and stopping to finally get through). Glad I did.
"Ain't no way a dentist could do all this"
Allow me to introduce you to Doc Holliday.
Terintino doesn't hold back as per usual.
Many rebellious slaves were castrated because they were rebellious. You should read & watch some movies that show ADOS - American Slave Descendants - history.
Roots -1977
Birth of a Nation -2016
Malcolm X -1992
It helps to know how to talk to the authorities. Whether or not they are right. Mostly when they are not.
I love this reaction. Two minutes in and I'm already dying. Yes, he's a dentist. So was Doc Holliday. A lot of people were decent with guns at that point in time...
"I count six shots"....
"I got two guns". hahaha
$12 000 then is around $200 000 now.
I love the fact that Quentin Tarantino played the guy who Django blew up with the dynamite.
Django shows up in a post credit scene in " A Million Ways to Die in the West"
LOVE love love Tarantino's work! Inglorious Basterds, and Kill Bill (Volumes 1 *and* 2) are both must sees :DD And love your editing here, you don't get to show it much w the music reactions but this was nicely done :)
one of my favorite movies ever and Dicaprio was so good and believable as piece of ish and foxx and WALTZ was perfect combo
27:16 Quintin Terentino has played many parts in his films, this being one of them, he always seems to die horribly. if you're going to go out, might as well go with some style! great reaction to a great movie! 👍
didn't realize until i just lit up your comments section that this must be my favourite movie, thanks for reminding me. This video just showed up on my homepage, glad i clicked on, glad you enjoyed it too, bless u
Thank you 🙏🏾
Yes Steven is the house mam and back then the house help, helped the children which is Calvin, so Steven raised Calvin while working for his parents.
🇯🇲 Respect Breddrin 🇺🇸
The guy watching the fight with Leo DiCaprio was the original Django from the Italian westerns.
A movie you should react to Jayvee is Leon the Professional starring Jean Reno, Natalie Portman, Gary Oldman fantastic film.
THIS!!!!!!!! This movie is one of the first action movies I remember seeing as a child & it just completely blew my mind! It felt so dirty & so raw, I love it!
22:47 white cake gets shot.
He popped the director with the dynamite.
Samuel l jackson plays as uncle ruckus so well.
"that's suspect right there" lmfao
I think Quentin's used Samuel L.Jackson in at least 4 of his films now. 'Pulp Fiction', 'Django Unchained', 'The Hateful 8' & 'Jackie Browne'.....& there was a very small part at the beginning of 'Kill Bill Vol. 2'.
This is one of my favorite movies! So good and amazing actors!
this and billy madison my fav movies ever
I only seen a couple of your movie reactions and im a fan. Plz do more. Get it sorted out so you can react to 'fury' and 'the thin red line'
EVERY Tarantino movie EVER! Even ones he only wrote but didn't direct... this one is genius...
"Auf Wiedersehen" 😂
Doc Holliday was a dentist, probably where the inspiration came from.
I love this film, but I hate the way people treat each other, it's a shame even today.
You should check out the movie New Jack City its a great movie also
that's where New Jack got his name from. May he rest in peace
This was the BEST Django reaction I've ever watched!! Love your channels, Jayvee ( Javon..i hope i spell that right)!! Keep bringing the 🔥🔥🔥!!!💪💪💪
25:30 They hung the men upside down before they castrate them to keep them from bleeding out
27:20 The dynamite man was Quintin Tarantino
Every movie with a horse takes me to Red Dead Redemption 2
Leo deserved an Oscar for this.
Sure he did
He smashed the glass with his hand and bleeded everywhere for real and didn't even flinch let alone break character
Quentin Tarantino was the cowboy that blew up when he got shot in his escape. Quent is always in his movies.
I'm just now remembering that Quentin Tarantino was in the movie too, aside from directing it.
This is one of my favorite movies ever, might be the top. The slavery aspect is brutal but honest. the cinematography, acting, and plot arc simply does not get better than this movie
Cool reaction mate.
When I watched that movie for the first time, I felt as stimulated as the first time I watched Pulp Fiction. To me, Tarantino hadn't done such a major movie in more than fifteen years. Django is imo his best movie along with Hateful 8 and PF.
The bible has explicit instructions on how to obtain slaves, keep them, and treat them. Not a very moral lesson at all.
old and new testaments
Django should have became a super hero. 😂
Great movie! I would recommend the extended version of hateful 8, and the ridiculous 6, they’re both on Netflix
I had to remember your age in some of your comments to this one lol. I mean it’s Tarantino and he knows how to make the darkest material entertaining and comedic, but it’s still macabre.
The acting is top of the line in this movie.
FYI: SNOW BALL THE HORSE IN REAL LIFE IS JAMIE FOXES HE TRAINED HIMSELF.
ALSO the blood on Leo's hand was real he accidently cut himself in the scene when he slammed his hand down, but stayed in character, never missing a beat !
Ah, man, you skipped the scene where they can't see out of the bags. That shit was hilarious.
They had repeating rifles back then that fired like automatics. Big calibur too.
Technically not in that particular time. The movie takes place in 1858. Repeating rifle wouldn’t be invented till around 1860 and wouldn’t be widely mass produced and distributed till around 1861.
In my opinion the dentist wasn't getting soft he has his eye on the prize which was to get his friend's wife back
That's Tarantino that gets blown up with the dynamite.🧨
LOVE THIS MOVIE. I TEARED UP AT THE END WHEN ALL WAS REALIZED🙂
One of my favorite movies. Easy top 5
Great reaction Jay. Hard to watch at times. Redemption is everything, even if it was fictitious. Quentin is great at giving us the endings that the world wants. Not the ones that actually happened.
Cheers.
Quentin Tarantino played the part of the bounty hunter who got blown up
Two minutes in and I'm enjoying myself. Subscribed bro very cool
P.S Leo was really uncomfortable with saying the n-word so much during filming but did it as it was true to the time... still sat badly with him.
$75 back then would be worth over $2,650 today.
This is like waiting for the kettle to boil 😆
This man said he respects Samuel Jackson's character in this
This film, if it weren't so hilarious and over the top, would be the MOST offensive!
Quentin Tarantino films have resuccistated the careers of the greatest actors and musicians! Go down the rabbit hole and watch them ALL!
The HORROR of slavery, the stereotypes, outrageous.
Jaime Foxx RULES.
Imagine a plantation named "Candyland" after it's owner.
I hope you have a generous sense of humor, because it's
genius.
How could you skip the whole bag scene? Shits insanely funny.
Quentin Tarantino was the one that got blown up when he escaped
Yeah, back then, $75 was a lot. In 1913, $75 was about $2,100 today. So if you were to apply that to 1858, that would be a pretty fair chunk of change!
Road Warriors - Irish Road Racing - Southern 100 Have a look at this you need balls of steel to do this
This movie messed me up, but was SO good. 🔥✌🏼👏🏼
12:48 that's something that Tarantino made up, like mandingo fighting. There were plenty of black cowboys on horses back then.
Nothing in this movie is made up. Some things were documented better than others, that's all.
Good choice Jay I will be waiting
Tarantino - Legend!
Did you understand the part when Django killed the white guys and the "slaves" just stayed in the cage waiting instead of fleeing to freedom?
i didn't 😔
right?.. cause how do you immediately embark on your own freedom when your whole life has been someone telling you what to do all day every day and being punished when you slip up... can lead a horse to water, housebroken pets, sheltered children that have their parents do everything for them, all that. even Django needed Shultz to help him in that first year, the outfit he picked on his own first was outrageous compared to everyone around him but damn, that's the point.. still looked great even tho the second choice was a drastic step up stylistically for fitting in at least. Iconic first choice tho lmao, really was like a superhero
It's called they were in shock...stop thinking too much into it and playing victim...
@@MisterDevos that is tru, the slave traders died so they werent in a rush or anything they were just in awe actually of the audacity of this mf. But still, where are they going now? were they in that their whole lives? what are they gonna do? Go eat a ham sandwich in Alaska with Mitt Romney? ... Go eat a ham sandwich in Alaska with Mitt Romney, see how fun that is
Trust me when I say that none of these actors need a raise
Cool reaction bro!! Maybe "The Hateful eight" later!
Okay, you and Sam L can hang out. Invite Leo. This was maybe the first movie with a nice German. All good, peace.
$75 at that time was worth the equivalent about $7,500 today incase you were curious
And $12,000 = $1,200,000
For the movie...DiCaprio had ttrouble-seriously- with racial slurs & saying the "N" word. Jackson told him during shooting--"Look, you have to do this! Play the part. Let people know what it was really like!"
Sams character is the real villain. That’s what makes this so great. He’s manipulating Calvin and everyone.