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re: Django Unchained: Holy crap, OMG, don't know how to express my emotions

Posted on 12/28/12 at 7:00 am to
Posted by SW2SCLA
We all float down here
Member since Feb 2009
22826 posts
Posted on 12/28/12 at 7:00 am to
I rewatched Basterds yesterday after I saw Django.
Posted by Rittdog
Yesterday, all my troubles seemed
Member since Oct 2009
9955 posts
Posted on 12/28/12 at 10:48 am to
Django Unchained...Movie connections

Django connections
quote:

We know that Quentin Tarantino, armed with his prodigious and encyclopedic knowledge of movies and TV, likes to quote pop culture in his films. So, what are the references in Django Unchained (which is reviewed here by David Edelstein)? Here’s what we’ve found. Holler below in the comments if you've identified any that we missed.

Australian accents: Tarantino’s Australian accent as an employee of the LeQuint-Dickey Mining Company is probably meant as a shout-out to the Ozploitation films the writer-director likes so much, but we also have a crazy alternate theory: It might also be a nod to James Mason’s famously awful southern accent in the infamous Mandingo (see under: Mandingo Circuit) — an accent so bad it actually sounds Australian.

Bell, Zoe: One of the trackers is played by Bell, the stuntwoman who had a lead role in Tarantino’s Death Proof. She’s not exactly recognizable, as her face is covered by a red mask. She also doesn’t do much in the film, besides look through a stereopticon and wield an axe, which may or may not be the result of some late cuts to the film.

Broomhilda von Shaft: Tarantino has said elsewhere that Django and Broomhilda are supposed to be the great-great grandparents of John Shaft, from the Shaft movies. While her name is meant to be inspired by the mythic German female warrior Brunnhilde, "Broom-Hilda" is also the name of a witch from the American comic strip of the same name created in 1970.

Candyland: The ironically playful name of Calvin Candie’s horror-show plantation might be an obvious reference to the popular board game, especially considering that Tarantino himself is a huge board game buff and collector. It could also be a subtle joke, in that Christoph Waltz’s character is a dentist.

Corbucci, Sergio: Though not as well-known in the U.S. as Sergio Leone, Corbucci was a prolific director whose Spaghetti Westerns — many of which number among Tarantino’s favorites — were often darker, more violent, and more politically pointed than Leone’s. Films like Django, The Mercenary, Companeros, and The Great Silence tackled issues such as racism, class warfare, and the law’s protection of the privileged against the powerless.

Dentist: The famous Bob Hope comedy-Western The Paleface (and its Don Knotts–starring remake, The Shakiest Gun in the West) is about a dentist from the big city who travels out West and winds up tangled up with gunfighters and outlaws.

Django: As many viewers already know, Django was originally the name of a 1967 Spaghetti Western starring Franco Nero, which spawned a number of pseudo-sequels. In classic Spaghetti Western fashion, these were “sequels” only in that lots of other filmmakers simply named their characters Django — not unlike Tarantino did in this film.
Fritz the Horse: The tricks that Fritz the horse does may seem odd, but they're likely a reference to Roy Rogers's horse Trigger, who did similar tricks and was featured prominently in films Rogers did with the director William Witney, one of Tarantino's favorite unsung auteurs.
Hoods: While the sight of a posse of armed men with hoods obviously evokes the KKK (which didn’t form until post–Civil War Reconstruction), it’s also likely a reference to the original Django, in which the titular gunfighter did battle against a group of white supremacists who sported red bags over their heads. It’s also worth noting that the eye-holes in the original Django villains’ bags were also rather small, prompting some viewers to wonder how they could ever see out of them.

The Hot Box: The hot box is an actual torture device used in the South, often in prisons. It was also featured famously in the film Cool Hand Luke. (“Any man forgets his number spends a night in the box … Any man loses his spoon spends a night in the box … Any man not in his bunk at eight spends the night in the box … ”)

Horsley, Lee: The star of the eighties private eye show Matt Houston shows up as Sheriff Gus.

Johnson, Don: Though known primarily for playing Crockett in the original Miami Vice TV series, Johnson also starred in L.Q. Jones’s bizarre 1975 post-apocalyptic cult flick A Boy and His Dog, a Tarantino favorite.

The Law: Dr. King Schultz is scrupulous in his respect for the law. This is reminiscent of Klaus Kinski’s Loco, another law-abiding bounty hunter (and also played by a German) in Sergio Corbucci’s evocative and dark snowbound Western, The Great Silence. He was confronted in that film by a mute gunfighter named Silence (Amour’s Jean-Louis Trintignant), who was similarly law-abiding.

This post was edited on 12/28/12 at 10:52 am
Posted by Hugo Stiglitz
Member since Oct 2010
72937 posts
Posted on 12/28/12 at 11:13 am to
quote:

I rewatched Basterds yesterday after I saw Django.

I did this too.

Still think Basterds is the superior film by far.

(No bias lol)

Posted by Funky Tide 8
Tittleman's Crest
Member since Feb 2009
52924 posts
Posted on 12/28/12 at 5:36 pm to
haha same here
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