@@WheresWaldo05your parents not give you enough attention or what? Btw crying about not getting attention isn't going to get you anywhere... And making comments like "I want Addie so bad" isn't gonna help you either ..
Yeah, right before his character calls to bring out Kerry's character. Then that blood is fake blood. But he was definitely bleeding lighting the cigarette.
Exactly, it's funny how there are always people in the comments that are adamant Leo rubbed his actual blood on Kerry's face. Kerry even said on the Drew Barrymore show it was fake blood being rubbed on her face. The shit storm that would happen if an actor rubbed their own blood over the face of another actor would be massive, especially a male on female.
I still maintain that Dr. Schultz and Col. Landa from "Inglourious Basterds" are basically the same character; the only difference is that the latter is written as a villain and the former is written as an antihero.
yeah that was such a satisfying scene that literally made me cheer the first time I saw it. I was a bit let down that it wasn't included, but otherwise a solid reaction video.
Leonardo DiCaprio had such a difficult time portraying his character properly, because he couldn’t act that “hateful”, which made it hard for him to get through some of the scenes until he talked to Jamie Foxx and Samuel L. Jackson, and they basically told him that it was fine, that he was just playing a role, and to pretty much “get over it”, so we have the amazing job that he did in this movie.
More specifically, Leo had a hard time saying the N word so much and being so hateful. They talked to him and Samuel L. Jackson said to him, "Get over here motherfucker.This is just another tuesday motherfucker, look who I am motherfucker." Jamie then said to him, "Leo, were not friends, this is just another day. Were not friends, we are your property. These aren't humans, they're property." Implying they are actors and doing their job. The next day Jamie tried talking to him saying hi and Leo went more method, embraced the role and ignored him.
I'm missing something. That's apples to oranges. Blazing Saddles was a COMEDY. If you want to talk about violence, um ok. The thought of Blazing Saddles as a violent movie never came across anyone. And the blatant racism in Blazing Saddles ("THE SHERRIF IS AN NI....") is used in the humor. That's unlike Django, where it's essentially the plot of the movie.
@@Jon_from_LI They are both anti-racist comedies, Django just has more vengeance and retribution. "A movie like..." doesn't necessarily mean "an identical film."
I hope you noticed that Django was wearing Calvin Candie's outfit when he showed back up to the house, that's why he asked if they liked his new duds. Reactors rarely pick up on that little nugget
"The D is silent." "I know." Jamie Foxx - Django 2012 Franco Nero - The original Django 1966 (AND A FREAKIN LEGEND) Sitting together at a bar and talk about THE name. Well done Quentin. Well done indeed.
One thing that I've come to appreciate about this movie after watching a couple times, is Stephens (Samuel Jackson) character. He talks like every other slave in front of Calvin and the rest of the White people. He shakes as if he has parkinsons, seems just like a geriatric old man with a cane. But when Django kills Ms. Laura and that's the last white person in the house, Stephen Drops his cane, is no longer shaking and even speaks more directly, without any sort of stutter or inflection like he would in front of Calvin. This shows that the whole time, even though he was "serving" Calvin as the house slave, he was playing everyone. All he cared about was himself, everything else was an act to survive. He didn't care that Django was black, that Calvin was white, etc; he knew what his situation was and adapted to play a role similar to how Django was playing his. It was like a chess match between the two the whole time and Django hit checkmate with the dynamite.
This is one of those righteous justice movies that just removes any guilt you might have about seeing these types of villains dispatched. It’s really cathartic.
A much more satistfying movie for me than most of his other works. Great reaction. You can see Christoph Waltz in Battle Angel Alita as well. This one is very rewatchable for me.
There was a brief cameo i love but no one seems to mention. The old man who ordered Django and Hildy to be sold separately was Bruce Dern, a great actor, the man who shot John Wayne in "The Cowboys", and also father of Laura Dern
Tarantino once said that as brutal and violent the depiction of slavery in Django was, he found in his research for the movie that the reality was far worse ...
How do you keep the men of a group of people cowed? You threaten not the men, but the children, women, and elderly. Much worse than has ever been depicted in any media to date.
@donyates7300 We ALL learned in school about genocides, nazi and Japanese experiments, and the brutality of slavery. This has ALWAYS been taught in public school. Yall legit just slow AF
@@khancrow7015 Public school barely touches these subjects. It was more about memorizing dates. There were almost as many number questions on a history test as a math test.
Tarantino's movies all kind of exist within the same universe, there is always something that ties each movie together. In Kill Bill Vol. 2 Beatrix is buried alive in the grave of Paula Schultz. Leading some to speculate that Paula Schultz is related to Dr. King Schultz, Django's partner. Maybe his mother, sister or perhaps he was married at some point.
Oh, Addie is not prepared for this one...and I am 100% here for that. 😱🤣 One of Tarantino's finest and a truly tour-de-force performance by Christoph Waltz (and Fritz).
I love Django Unchained. This movie has so much going for it. Christoph Waltz is, of course, fantastic, and it's refreshing to see him play such a charming, lovable character as opposed to the usual charming yet horrifying ones he plays. Jamie Foxx nails the role of Django, embodying both the hero and a believable gunslinger with raw determination. Leonardo DiCaprio delivers a disturbing performance as the despicable Calvin Candie, faking charm while oozing evil, and Samuel L. Jackson absolutely shines as Stephen, an unnerving and sinister take on the Uncle Tom archetype. The first half of the movie is one of the best westerns I’ve seen in years, blending comedy, tension, and action in a way that keeps you hooked. The second half transitions into a heist, tragedy, and revenge story, with a darker tone that weighs heavily on you. The only thing that keeps me from watching it more often is the brutal depiction of slavery, especially the violence at Candie-land. The subject matter is hard to stomach, and while it's necessary to the story, it makes the film emotionally challenging.
Great reaction! I only first saw this myself a few months ago, it's my favourite 10 movies. Personally i love the squishy sounds and blood squirts when people get shot in this, lol.
I remember when this came out, there was a segment of people upset with Tarantino for making a Spaghetti Western out of a uniquely wretched American experience that was slavery. The thing is, the brutality, while over sensationalized, it purposely did not make the institution seem lighthearted or gloss over the extremities of it like many assumed it would. Some things in this movie are unconfirmed, anecdotal or apocryphal but there's no glossing over forcing your will over another human being without their consent. It was bad here. It was worse in reality because it didn't end and it was an actual horror millions had to endure.
11:36 my grandparents bought a house for $17K in 1967. 7K in 1858/59 was A LOT of money. A plow cost about $25 according to Little House on the Prarie (1890s)
I hope you watch Four Rooms. I think you would really like the cast. Now that you've watched this, I really hope that you watch A Million Ways To Die In The West. I think you'll like the cameos and why, once you've seen it. And, there's an end credit scene.
The guy Django spelled his name "The D is silent" is Franco Nero, the original Django. He also appeared in John Wick 2 as the owner of the Rome Continental. For another fatherly mentor role of Christoph Waltz, you gotta check Alita: Battle Angel. It also has a star-studded cast with lots of familiar faces.
When they went to meet Mr. Ca di and the guy at the bar asked Django what his name was and after he said the D was silent and the guy said I know he is the original Djang series actor from the late 60s. TERRANTINO has always been a fan and brought him here as an omage to him and thw original series
Hi Addie. The bloodlust continues because I'm so glad that you enjoyed Django: Unchained (2012). This is one Quentin Tarantino movie that I must watch soon, although I've only seen the scene where Django whips the crap out of "Big" John Brittle and beats the crap out of Little Raj, which I found very satisfying. BTW, you've also seen Christoph Waltz in the Daniel Craig James Bond movies Spectre (2015) & No Time To Die (2021).
This movie was just wrapping up and Jamie went to another set where they were filming "A million ways to die in the West". Django makes an appearance in a post credit scene in that movie.
"You didn't have to tell Candie any of this!" I think you missed that Stephen is the brains behind Candie and revels in his position as the head of Candie's household. Candie is a bigoted cruel idiot, while Stephen is not only intelligent, but equally cruel and feigning infirmity to understate his position of power, not only over Candie's slaves, but Candie himself. Stephen is one of the most evil characters Sam Jackson has played.
The only thing that bothered me throughout this film is the big ruse of pretending to be interested in purchasing a fighter, and involving Django in the act. Had Dr. Schulz just put out word in town that he was willing to pay $1,000 for a German speaking slave, the Candie folks would have gladly sold her off to him. No ruse required, no acting needed, just a simple transaction between a German speaking doctor and a plantation owner that feels lucky to have a rare commodity that's worth many times what he originally paid.
@@Mr.Ekshin No, the ruse was actually necessary. Remember, the only reason Calvin was willing to sell Hilde at $1000 was because he was expecting another $12000 from King's fighter purchase. If he approaches Candie directly to purchase Hilde, slave purchases work on haggling, the owner can set a minimum sales price, if he knows how valuable Hilde is to King, he could easily have set that minimum price to $20000, maybe more, and then set his opening price even higher, because, in Candie's mind, King is either able to afford such a luxury item, and make him 20K richer; or, he's not. Either way, he now knows that Hilde is significantly more valuable than he previously thought, meaning her price stays high, he may even outright refuse to sell her, a german-speaking slave is rarer than gold, after all. If he'd put word out he was willing to pay $1000 for a german-speaking slave, and someone OTHER than Candie puts forth an offer, King can't rightly refuse to see them, they have what he's looking for, and if he refuses to buy from them, when all he's looking for is a german-speaking slave, it looks suspicious, and plantation owners TALK, meaning word is going to get to Candie that King is looking for a SPECIFIC german speaking slave, and he can then jack his price up to high heaven. By going in looking for a fighter, something Candie is much more used to and comfortable with, his guard is lowered, he's not considering the idea that King and Django came there for Hilde, and he can ask for her as an ancillary gift, a side-purchase, a nice little extra as a token of a well-struck main deal. Calvin wouldn't refuse that, this nice man just dropped an unreasonable $12000 for ONE fighter that would normally go for $500ish each, another grand for a servant who can speak his native language, well, that's a generous gift to a very wealthy customer whom he is hoping will be back for repeat business.
@@scotthadden9816 - Don't approach him directly asking about it... just float the idea around town. Go to a bar where Candie's men are drinking and over a few beers, mention that he's been looking to buy a house servant, and wonder aloud how hard it would be to teach one German. Candie's guys would of course say that they have one that already speaks it. Then he could float an offer to buy her for $500 (and let Candie try to haggle him up from there). But anything more than a couple thousand, he can say it would be easier to teach one to speak German. And besides, he obviously speaks very good English, so having a German speaking girl isn't a necessity to him, just a convenience. Besides, Hildie seems to be more of a disciplinary problem to Candie than a benefit, so he would probably be eager to get rid of her.
@@Mr.Ekshin I think you missed the fact where he's only speaking to them about selling a slave after he hears the $12.000 dollars offer, before that he was not interested
"I think you missed that Stephen is the brains behind Candie" I'm pretty sure she meant that if Stephen didn't tell Candie about it, Candie wouldn't have known and they could've left without a problem not in the meaning that Candie didn't need Stephen to tell him that...
My favorite line: "I can't see f*ckin' sh*t! And: "Hold on, I'm f*ckin' with my eye hole".. The whole comic relief scene is gold, I'm so glad they kept it in the final edit!❤
10:05 the bagged man who says ''Not too good. If I don't move my head I can see you pretty good'' is Quentin Tarantino. Close your eyes and you can totally hear the voice even with the southern drawl accent.
Some people who are "strangely" unaware of their country's history (no, not Dr. Schultz, that doesn't come until 1933-45) need tutoring about how "educated, fair and well-mannered" the South was and perhaps in parts still is .
This man knows how to make an excellent Western. This movie is easily in my top 3 movies of his. Another movie you'd enjoy of his is another western called The Hateful 8.
Great film and a big Tarantino fan. This, Pulp Fiction, Once Upon a Time In Hollywood and Reservoir Dogs are my favorites. Your reactions and facial expressions are priceless :) It is a common theme in his films that the violence is always "satisfying" even if brutal. I remember seeing this in the theater and this was a nice refresher since I hadn't seen it in a while. I would now recommend The Hateful Eight staying on the western theme. So many interesting characters in a pretty much enclosed setting, but sure keeps your interest. Waltz won an Oscar for this film and Inglorious Basterds.
Christoph Waltz won two Oscars, one for playing a racist German Nazi, if you will pardon the redundancy, and another for playing an anti-racist German.
Leo did smash the glass and cut himself on the one take and they kept it in for that scene since it was the best take. After that scene they rushed him to the hospital and then for consistency they used fake blood for the rest of the scene with the face rubbing
23:40 the original scene where he smacks the table and smashes the glass was his blood, but the shot where he rubs it all over her face was shot later with fake blood, as DiCaprio had to go straight to the hospital right after filming the first part lolll
Blood was real DiCap juice. He accidentally slammed his hand down on a glass "SOLD!" and cut himself badly, but continued with the scene. What a champ.
The thing that broke Shultz really? When he heard Candy playing music from his home country. He couldn't take music of his own culture being used here. On top of everything else
Did u notice the australian actress and stuntwoman Zoe Bell? She was Uma's (The Bride's) stuntwoman in Kill Bill and herself in another Tarantino movie (Death Proof). Here, she had a small cameo role as one of the slave trackers (she appeared briefly in bandana, you could only see her eyes). Alwas be on the lookout for small "easter eggs" in Tatrantino movies. :)
Stephen is a very believable villain, there's someone like that in any kind of group. Someone who will screw anyone else over for their own benefit. He lives a very comfortable life there living in a mansion, drinking wine and likely enjoys the power he has over the other slaves, making him feel important, like he is better than them. And he clearly is pulling the strings on his boss. He keeps making sure he is very useful to Calvin since that keeps his position secure, and he directly benefits from Calvin's wealth and success, and no doubt prefers to keep him in a good mood too. Officially Stephen owns nothing and is a slave after all. Calvin is his meal ticket. He's also an old man stuck in his ways, with Calvin dying comes a lot of uncertainty, which is likely why he cried since he wouldn't have thought to outlive him. Never had to worry about other owners who he might not be able to puppeteer as well.
Yes when leos hand was bleeding during the dinner was real and not intended but he never broke character so everyone kept rolling with it and it just made the scene that much more intense for a lot of people
The Italian man who asks Django to spell his name is actor Franco Nero who played the original Django in 1966
"I know"
That’s why he said “I know” 😉
He's also General Esperanza in Die Hard 2. He also plays Julius, the manager of the Italian Continental in John Wick 2.
13:36 Came here to say the same thing. The "Django" film series was originally spaghetti western style.
@@bryanrhenderson6510DUH
I feel like Addie will put up with any amount of violence to see the horse bow haha.
Fritz is a delightful horse
Hahaha this is true!
@@LordVolkov He's truly a proper gentleman.
@@WheresWaldo05your parents not give you enough attention or what? Btw crying about not getting attention isn't going to get you anywhere... And making comments like "I want Addie so bad" isn't gonna help you either ..
@@WheresWaldo05 quit while you're behind.
I believe the script for the movie actually says “Miss Laura flies backwards despite being shot on an angle” 😂
"I couldn't resist" one of the best last word for a protagonist character.
Christoph Waltz as Dr. King is beyond perfect.
Hildy’s last name is VonShaft. Quentin said that their descendant is the character of John Shaft in the “Shaft” films.
Leo cut himself on the glass and was bleeding. But the scene cuts, and it's not his blood being smeared on her face.
Yeah, right before his character calls to bring out Kerry's character. Then that blood is fake blood. But he was definitely bleeding lighting the cigarette.
Exactly, it's funny how there are always people in the comments that are adamant Leo rubbed his actual blood on Kerry's face. Kerry even said on the Drew Barrymore show it was fake blood being rubbed on her face. The shit storm that would happen if an actor rubbed their own blood over the face of another actor would be massive, especially a male on female.
I love the friendship/partnership between Django & Dr. Schultz. ☺
I still maintain that Dr. Schultz and Col. Landa from "Inglourious Basterds" are basically the same character; the only difference is that the latter is written as a villain and the former is written as an antihero.
It's not in the edit, but the scene with Django whipping the Brittle brother is so satisfying.
yeah that was such a satisfying scene that literally made me cheer the first time I saw it. I was a bit let down that it wasn't included, but otherwise a solid reaction video.
"I count 6 shots...."
"I count 2 guns...."
Oh, so that's why they call you Two-Gun Pete! /Dave Allen 😆
Leonardo DiCaprio had such a difficult time portraying his character properly, because he couldn’t act that “hateful”, which made it hard for him to get through some of the scenes until he talked to Jamie Foxx and Samuel L. Jackson, and they basically told him that it was fine, that he was just playing a role, and to pretty much “get over it”, so we have the amazing job that he did in this movie.
More specifically, Leo had a hard time saying the N word so much and being so hateful. They talked to him and Samuel L. Jackson said to him, "Get over here motherfucker.This is just another tuesday motherfucker, look who I am motherfucker." Jamie then said to him, "Leo, were not friends, this is just another day. Were not friends, we are your property. These aren't humans, they're property." Implying they are actors and doing their job. The next day Jamie tried talking to him saying hi and Leo went more method, embraced the role and ignored him.
"You can't make a movie like Blazing Saddles today."
Tarantino: "Hold my stick of dynamite..."
Any time some idiot says you can't make something like that today I cringe to death
@@GeorgeTropicana As you should.
I'm missing something. That's apples to oranges.
Blazing Saddles was a COMEDY. If you want to talk about violence, um ok. The thought of Blazing Saddles as a violent movie never came across anyone. And the blatant racism in Blazing Saddles ("THE SHERRIF IS AN NI....") is used in the humor. That's unlike Django, where it's essentially the plot of the movie.
@@Jon_from_LIidk, sounds like movies got better 🤷🏼♂️
@@Jon_from_LI They are both anti-racist comedies, Django just has more vengeance and retribution. "A movie like..." doesn't necessarily mean "an identical film."
I hope you noticed that Django was wearing Calvin Candie's outfit when he showed back up to the house, that's why he asked if they liked his new duds. Reactors rarely pick up on that little nugget
Addie the horse Jaimie rode in this movie was his own personal horse who he trained for the movie
‘The horse bows!’
"The D is silent."
"I know."
Jamie Foxx - Django 2012
Franco Nero - The original Django 1966 (AND A FREAKIN LEGEND)
Sitting together at a bar and talk about THE name.
Well done Quentin. Well done indeed.
One thing that I've come to appreciate about this movie after watching a couple times, is Stephens (Samuel Jackson) character. He talks like every other slave in front of Calvin and the rest of the White people. He shakes as if he has parkinsons, seems just like a geriatric old man with a cane. But when Django kills Ms. Laura and that's the last white person in the house, Stephen Drops his cane, is no longer shaking and even speaks more directly, without any sort of stutter or inflection like he would in front of Calvin. This shows that the whole time, even though he was "serving" Calvin as the house slave, he was playing everyone. All he cared about was himself, everything else was an act to survive. He didn't care that Django was black, that Calvin was white, etc; he knew what his situation was and adapted to play a role similar to how Django was playing his. It was like a chess match between the two the whole time and Django hit checkmate with the dynamite.
I feel he has this shift with candy and some of the slaves, but largely yes, especially in regards to his disability
I mean Stephen was arguably smarter than Candy. By a large margain. He just hid it, like you said, for his own good
He didnt just do it for survival, he outright ran candyland. He pulled candies strings like a puppet
25:48 - Addie turning into Snow White for a sec is the best 🤣
🤣
How giddy you got the 2nd time Fritz bowed and your little clap is everything.
I like that the dentist keeps his money in a tooth cavity.
This is one of those righteous justice movies that just removes any guilt you might have about seeing these types of villains dispatched. It’s really cathartic.
That combination of faces you pulled between 13:34 and 13:36 were priceless. 😂
"Poor Frosty"!
You're the best Addie!
A much more satistfying movie for me than most of his other works. Great reaction. You can see Christoph Waltz in Battle Angel Alita as well. This one is very rewatchable for me.
The guy he spelled his name to is the original Django, a western Franchise from the 70s or so.
There was a brief cameo i love but no one seems to mention.
The old man who ordered Django and Hildy to be sold separately was Bruce Dern, a great actor, the man who shot John Wayne in "The Cowboys", and also father of Laura Dern
Samuel L. Jackson was Top Tier. 😀
As always
Tarantino once said that as brutal and violent the depiction of slavery in Django was, he found in his research for the movie that the reality was far worse ...
How do you keep the men of a group of people cowed?
You threaten not the men, but the children, women, and elderly.
Much worse than has ever been depicted in any media to date.
@donyates7300 We ALL learned in school about genocides, nazi and Japanese experiments, and the brutality of slavery.
This has ALWAYS been taught in public school. Yall legit just slow AF
@@khancrow7015 Public school barely touches these subjects. It was more about memorizing dates. There were almost as many number questions on a history test as a math test.
@@innocuousalias6632 Negative, you obviously didn't pay attention.
@@khancrow7015 Because you remember my life better than I do, right? You're either a donkey or that googles answers algorithm.
Tarantino's movies all kind of exist within the same universe, there is always something that ties each movie together. In Kill Bill Vol. 2 Beatrix is buried alive in the grave of Paula Schultz. Leading some to speculate that Paula Schultz is related to Dr. King Schultz, Django's partner. Maybe his mother, sister or perhaps he was married at some point.
When Leo cuts his hand, that was not planned and not fake. They did clean him up and use fake blood for when he puts it on her face.
Oh, Addie is not prepared for this one...and I am 100% here for that. 😱🤣
One of Tarantino's finest and a truly tour-de-force performance by Christoph Waltz (and Fritz).
16:34 I do this every time I visit my sisters house with our family 😂😂😂
The horse that Django rides is actually Jamie Foxx's horse in real life. It's name is Cheetah.
the saloon scenes in the beginning are the best! enjoyed your reaction 👍☺
All of the performances in this film are next level! It's such an impressive movie..
I love Django Unchained. This movie has so much going for it. Christoph Waltz is, of course, fantastic, and it's refreshing to see him play such a charming, lovable character as opposed to the usual charming yet horrifying ones he plays. Jamie Foxx nails the role of Django, embodying both the hero and a believable gunslinger with raw determination. Leonardo DiCaprio delivers a disturbing performance as the despicable Calvin Candie, faking charm while oozing evil, and Samuel L. Jackson absolutely shines as Stephen, an unnerving and sinister take on the Uncle Tom archetype.
The first half of the movie is one of the best westerns I’ve seen in years, blending comedy, tension, and action in a way that keeps you hooked. The second half transitions into a heist, tragedy, and revenge story, with a darker tone that weighs heavily on you. The only thing that keeps me from watching it more often is the brutal depiction of slavery, especially the violence at Candie-land. The subject matter is hard to stomach, and while it's necessary to the story, it makes the film emotionally challenging.
2:15 "That was so bloody"
Great reaction! I only first saw this myself a few months ago, it's my favourite 10 movies. Personally i love the squishy sounds and blood squirts when people get shot in this, lol.
In my favourite 10 movies i meant to say.
Remember the grave that Uma was buried in Kill Bill was Paula Shultz......guess a descendant of Dr Shultz here....
Christoph Waltz is truly incredible.
I remember when this came out, there was a segment of people upset with Tarantino for making a Spaghetti Western out of a uniquely wretched American experience that was slavery.
The thing is, the brutality, while over sensationalized, it purposely did not make the institution seem lighthearted or gloss over the extremities of it like many assumed it would. Some things in this movie are unconfirmed, anecdotal or apocryphal but there's no glossing over forcing your will over another human being without their consent. It was bad here. It was worse in reality because it didn't end and it was an actual horror millions had to endure.
11:36 my grandparents bought a house for $17K in 1967. 7K in 1858/59 was A LOT of money.
A plow cost about $25 according to Little House on the Prarie (1890s)
You gonna hear some words in this one haha
$7,000 in 1858 would be $268,728 today.
Now you have to watch A Million Ways To Die In The West.
leo really bled in that scene, but he didnt rub real blood on her face
Django makes a small cameo in the end credits scene on the movie "A Million Ways to Die in the West".
Go bills.
Yes, Leonardo Dicaprio actually cut his hand in that scene but stayed in character and kept going, so they just kept filming.
I hope you watch Four Rooms. I think you would really like the cast. Now that you've watched this, I really hope that you watch A Million Ways To Die In The West. I think you'll like the cameos and why, once you've seen it. And, there's an end credit scene.
The advantage in doing a cameo in a movie that you direct, 29:01 you get to have a spectacular death scene 😲.
This movie is definitely in my Top 10. 💖
The guy Django spelled his name "The D is silent" is Franco Nero, the original Django. He also appeared in John Wick 2 as the owner of the Rome Continental.
For another fatherly mentor role of Christoph Waltz, you gotta check Alita: Battle Angel. It also has a star-studded cast with lots of familiar faces.
One of my favorite movies excited about this
"Gentlemen, you had my curiosity but now you have my attention."
When they went to meet Mr. Ca di and the guy at the bar asked Django what his name was and after he said the D was silent and the guy said I know he is the original Djang series actor from the late 60s. TERRANTINO has always been a fan and brought him here as an omage to him and thw original series
Hi Addie. The bloodlust continues because I'm so glad that you enjoyed Django: Unchained (2012). This is one Quentin Tarantino movie that I must watch soon, although I've only seen the scene where Django whips the crap out of "Big" John Brittle and beats the crap out of Little Raj, which I found very satisfying. BTW, you've also seen Christoph Waltz in the Daniel Craig James Bond movies Spectre (2015) & No Time To Die (2021).
This movie was just wrapping up and Jamie went to another set where they were filming "A million ways to die in the West". Django makes an appearance in a post credit scene in that movie.
Addie's so cute. "history must be different!" 😅 It was worse, sadly. But, we love u.
This was a great reaction ✌🏽💪🏽💯👍 I’m gonna go jango on most of society cause they deserve it I love this movie
Bloodthirsty nervous giggle Addie is best Addie... X D
"You didn't have to tell Candie any of this!"
I think you missed that Stephen is the brains behind Candie and revels in his position as the head of Candie's household. Candie is a bigoted cruel idiot, while Stephen is not only intelligent, but equally cruel and feigning infirmity to understate his position of power, not only over Candie's slaves, but Candie himself. Stephen is one of the most evil characters Sam Jackson has played.
The only thing that bothered me throughout this film is the big ruse of pretending to be interested in purchasing a fighter, and involving Django in the act. Had Dr. Schulz just put out word in town that he was willing to pay $1,000 for a German speaking slave, the Candie folks would have gladly sold her off to him. No ruse required, no acting needed, just a simple transaction between a German speaking doctor and a plantation owner that feels lucky to have a rare commodity that's worth many times what he originally paid.
@@Mr.Ekshin No, the ruse was actually necessary.
Remember, the only reason Calvin was willing to sell Hilde at $1000 was because he was expecting another $12000 from King's fighter purchase. If he approaches Candie directly to purchase Hilde, slave purchases work on haggling, the owner can set a minimum sales price, if he knows how valuable Hilde is to King, he could easily have set that minimum price to $20000, maybe more, and then set his opening price even higher, because, in Candie's mind, King is either able to afford such a luxury item, and make him 20K richer; or, he's not. Either way, he now knows that Hilde is significantly more valuable than he previously thought, meaning her price stays high, he may even outright refuse to sell her, a german-speaking slave is rarer than gold, after all.
If he'd put word out he was willing to pay $1000 for a german-speaking slave, and someone OTHER than Candie puts forth an offer, King can't rightly refuse to see them, they have what he's looking for, and if he refuses to buy from them, when all he's looking for is a german-speaking slave, it looks suspicious, and plantation owners TALK, meaning word is going to get to Candie that King is looking for a SPECIFIC german speaking slave, and he can then jack his price up to high heaven.
By going in looking for a fighter, something Candie is much more used to and comfortable with, his guard is lowered, he's not considering the idea that King and Django came there for Hilde, and he can ask for her as an ancillary gift, a side-purchase, a nice little extra as a token of a well-struck main deal. Calvin wouldn't refuse that, this nice man just dropped an unreasonable $12000 for ONE fighter that would normally go for $500ish each, another grand for a servant who can speak his native language, well, that's a generous gift to a very wealthy customer whom he is hoping will be back for repeat business.
@@scotthadden9816 - Don't approach him directly asking about it... just float the idea around town. Go to a bar where Candie's men are drinking and over a few beers, mention that he's been looking to buy a house servant, and wonder aloud how hard it would be to teach one German.
Candie's guys would of course say that they have one that already speaks it. Then he could float an offer to buy her for $500 (and let Candie try to haggle him up from there). But anything more than a couple thousand, he can say it would be easier to teach one to speak German.
And besides, he obviously speaks very good English, so having a German speaking girl isn't a necessity to him, just a convenience.
Besides, Hildie seems to be more of a disciplinary problem to Candie than a benefit, so he would probably be eager to get rid of her.
@@Mr.Ekshin I think you missed the fact where he's only speaking to them about selling a slave after he hears the $12.000 dollars offer, before that he was not interested
"I think you missed that Stephen is the brains behind Candie" I'm pretty sure she meant that if Stephen didn't tell Candie about it, Candie wouldn't have known and they could've left without a problem not in the meaning that Candie didn't need Stephen to tell him that...
My other favorite line that Editor Addie didn't leave in is Samuel L Jackson saying:
"Oh, yes sir! I misses you like I misses a rock in my shoe" 😂😂
like a baby miss mammy's titty!
My favorite line: "I can't see f*ckin' sh*t!
And: "Hold on, I'm f*ckin' with my eye hole"..
The whole comic relief scene is gold, I'm so glad they kept it in the final edit!❤
While I question how many people would've actually talked like that back then, I agree that the whole scene is hilarious in today's context.
Such a great film.
Another Christoph Waltz movie that is good and directed by Tim Burton is Big Eyes
29:00 Tarantino really gave himself a Classic death in this one.🤣
liking and commenting before because Miss Addie is the best !
Last scene of A Million Ways to Die in the West will make sense now
I'm expecting a lot of "Addie stubbing her toe"/"Addie entering an ice bath"/"Addie stepping on a Lego" noises in this reaction, lol
10:05 the bagged man who says ''Not too good. If I don't move my head I can see you pretty good'' is Quentin Tarantino. Close your eyes and you can totally hear the voice even with the southern drawl accent.
"..but next time, we do the bags right then we go full regalia." Always makes me laugh.
I saw this and was like "Addie hasn't seen Django??" like we homies or cousins
At 11:38, since you're probably wondering how much that would be in 1858, $7,000 in 1858 is equivalent to about $268,728.29 today
Some people who are "strangely" unaware of their country's history (no, not Dr. Schultz, that doesn't come until 1933-45) need tutoring about how "educated, fair and well-mannered" the South was and perhaps in parts still is .
never seen addie so giddy from the get go haha
25:35 .... the age of pacifist Abby is Long Gone 😂😂😂
26:16 « There is so much blood »
Welcome to the universe of Tarantino, Addie 😆.
Everytime I watch this scene, I also say « stop it! Too much blood » 😅
This man knows how to make an excellent Western. This movie is easily in my top 3 movies of his. Another movie you'd enjoy of his is another western called The Hateful 8.
The story is real because it’s cleverly hidden but there’s a slight cut between when he stops talking and when he moves to rub it on her face
Great film and a big Tarantino fan. This, Pulp Fiction, Once Upon a Time In Hollywood and Reservoir Dogs are my favorites. Your reactions and facial expressions are priceless :) It is a common theme in his films that the violence is always "satisfying" even if brutal. I remember seeing this in the theater and this was a nice refresher since I hadn't seen it in a while. I would now recommend The Hateful Eight staying on the western theme. So many interesting characters in a pretty much enclosed setting, but sure keeps your interest. Waltz won an Oscar for this film and Inglorious Basterds.
Django is a Love story or Rom Com! LOL!
Christoph Waltz won two Oscars, one for playing a racist German Nazi, if you will pardon the redundancy, and another for playing an anti-racist German.
Please continue with Star Trek.
Leo did smash the glass and cut himself on the one take and they kept it in for that scene since it was the best take. After that scene they rushed him to the hospital and then for consistency they used fake blood for the rest of the scene with the face rubbing
23:40 the original scene where he smacks the table and smashes the glass was his blood, but the shot where he rubs it all over her face was shot later with fake blood, as DiCaprio had to go straight to the hospital right after filming the first part lolll
Muy buena pelicula te mando saludos desde Argentina😊
I didnt knew it, but my first reaction when he shot the brother at the begin was : What the hell? Is that a Tarantino movie???
Blood was real DiCap juice. He accidentally slammed his hand down on a glass "SOLD!" and cut himself badly, but continued with the scene. What a champ.
It is his blood up to a point. It is fake blood that he smears on her face.
Great reactopm Addie to a tarantino classic big thumbs up
The thing that broke Shultz really? When he heard Candy playing music from his home country. He couldn't take music of his own culture being used here. On top of everything else
Thank you Addie, Perfect as always. Kind regards Chris (UK)
Addie singing opera at 25:48 😂🤣
I wanna stand in front of Addie an say "hey little trouble maker".... i doubt id have the same effect.
Willard’s love for his wife saved his life. He was ride or die for Jenny. Criticize, criticize, criticize. That’s what they get.
Did u notice the australian actress and stuntwoman Zoe Bell? She was Uma's (The Bride's) stuntwoman in Kill Bill and herself in another Tarantino movie (Death Proof).
Here, she had a small cameo role as one of the slave trackers (she appeared briefly in bandana, you could only see her eyes).
Alwas be on the lookout for small "easter eggs" in Tatrantino movies. :)
Hey Addie, there's a reason my profile picture is of Django.
Stephen is a very believable villain, there's someone like that in any kind of group. Someone who will screw anyone else over for their own benefit. He lives a very comfortable life there living in a mansion, drinking wine and likely enjoys the power he has over the other slaves, making him feel important, like he is better than them. And he clearly is pulling the strings on his boss.
He keeps making sure he is very useful to Calvin since that keeps his position secure, and he directly benefits from Calvin's wealth and success, and no doubt prefers to keep him in a good mood too. Officially Stephen owns nothing and is a slave after all. Calvin is his meal ticket.
He's also an old man stuck in his ways, with Calvin dying comes a lot of uncertainty, which is likely why he cried since he wouldn't have thought to outlive him. Never had to worry about other owners who he might not be able to puppeteer as well.
Yes when leos hand was bleeding during the dinner was real and not intended but he never broke character so everyone kept rolling with it and it just made the scene that much more intense for a lot of people
If Candy wanted 500$ for 5 fights he got 4 wins so he only needed 100 to be reimbursed
"SOLD AMERICAN"!!!
The guy talking in 10:06 is Tarantino
My second favourite Tarantino movie after the whole Kill Bill saga.
Hi Addie, thx for the excellent reaction. Cheers