Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Django Unchained a western with southern discomfort only Tarantino could conjure up
Here's a great drinking game. Sit through a Quentin Tarantino movie and every time you catch a reference to another movie, specific or oblique, identify the allusion and take a shot.
Of course, the trouble with the game is that, if you're at all familiar with the history of cinema, you'll be blotto after 20 minutes.
That would be a particular shame in the case of Django Unchained, a movie that sees Tarantino finally tackle the western genre. It's a runaway stagecoach of a movie, suspenseful, shocking and grimly funny.
As always with Tarantino, it is wildly referential. (Hey, that zoom shot is right out of The Wild Bunch! Hey, I recognize that music from Two Mules for Sister Sarah!) But as usual, the disparate references add up to something entirely unique.
Tarantino has toyed with the genre before. The whole opening scene of Inglourious Basterds, in which Christoph Waltz's Nazi "Jew-hunter" terrorizes a farm family, is a homage to spaghetti western director Sergio Leone, and his suspenseful staging of similar scenes in films such as The Good, the Bad and the Ugly and Once Upon a Time in the West.
The amoral universe of the spaghetti western should nicely dovetail with Tarantino's own portrayals of the criminal milieu (Reservoir Dogs, Kill Bill, and just about everything he's done, really).
Yet Tarantino, bless his perverse soul, eschews the usual violence for revenge, profit and fun. There is lots of that, to be sure. But his hero is on an entirely righteous mission.
Django (Jamie Foxx) is a slave who finds himself suddenly free when he is rescued from a couple of slave traders by an unlikely saviour, Dr. King Shultz (Christoph Waltz again), a dentist-turned-bounty hunter. Shultz is tracking a trio of fraternal killers, the Brittle brothers, and he partners with Django, who can identify them. That goes well, and the two men form a formal partnership with the stipulation that Django will be free to pursue his own mission, to rescue his wife from the plantation of debauched southern aristocrat Calvin Candie (Leonardo DiCaprio).
As it happens, Django's German-speaking wife (Kerry Washington) is named Broomhilda. The good Dr. Shultz cannot resist joining Django on his mission as it echoes the Teutonic mythology of Siegfried enduring dragons and hellfire to rescue his Brunhilde.
Tarantino loves to reward actors with their own wonderful scenes: DiCaprio offers an indelible portrait of villainy with a lecture on the bogus science of phrenology. As an elderly house slave who aids and abets Candie's genteel depravity, Samuel L. Jackson glowers over our hero with a discussion of the worst possible punishments. Waltz gets to exercise his considerable charm in a less unnerving context than his Nazi villain in Basterds. Even Don Johnson gets in on the act as a southern plantation owner caught in an outrageously comic debate on the design flaws of a Ku Klux Klan hood.
The only actor who doesn't really benefit from Tarantino's largesse with actors is its star. Jamie Foxx demonstrates some expert pistol play and guts when it comes to taking on some of the story's more outré moments. (One can see how Will Smith would not have been able to take on this role as written.) But Foxx does not quite make Django the cool hero this movie deserves.
Like the "D" in Django, Foxx's star quality is silent.
randall.king@freepress.mb.ca
OTHER VOICES
Excerpts of select reviews of Django Unchained:
"Tarantino lives to cross the line. Is Django Unchained too much?... It wouldn't be Tarantino otherwise."
- Peter Travers, Rolling Stone
"I've always wondered whether Tarantino would finally grow up. But after seeing his latest spectacular, bloody mess of a movie, frankly, I don't give a damn."
- Cameron Meier, Orlando Weekly
"Tarantino, with lip-smacking down-and-dirty subversive gusto, rubs our noses in the forbidden spectacle of America's racist ugliness."
- Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly
"An immensely satisfying taste of antebellum empowerment packaged as spaghetti-western homage."
- Peter Debruge, Variety
"A pastiche that's nearly as funny as it is long, and quite as politically troubling as it may be liberating, Django Unchained is pure, if not great, Tarantino."
- Richard Corliss, Time
"Bold, original, mesmerizing, stylish and one hell of a piece of entertainment."
- Rex Reed, New York Observer
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition December 22, 2012 G1
More Movies
- Back to Top
- Return to Movies
More Movies
(1 of 25 articles for this week)
Film review: 'The Hangover Part III' dares to end comic trilogy on a darker note
5:13 PM 0Poll
Most Popular Movies
- Film review: 'The Hangover Part III' dares to end comic trilogy on a darker note
- 'Trek' does $70.6M but falls short of studio hopes; 'Iron Man 3' tops $1B worldwide
- Difficult bandmate, terrible husband, amazing drummer
- Second instalment of sci-fi reboot lacks Khan-do attitude
- McConaughey excels in tale of Southern masculinity
- The point? What point?
- MOVIES
- In Coen brothers' Cannes hit 'Inside Llewyn Davis,' Oscar Isaac gets his big break
- 'Epic' director balances detail with fantasy for nature-set spectacle
- Comedy covers sex from A to Z... by way of S&M
- McConaughey excels in tale of Southern masculinity
- Second instalment of sci-fi reboot lacks Khan-do attitude
- Difficult bandmate, terrible husband, amazing drummer
- Free Press chats with producer Klymkiw before doc screens
- 'Trek' does $70.6M but falls short of studio hopes; 'Iron Man 3' tops $1B worldwide
- Matthew McConaughey says 'Mud' avoids stereotypical view of U.S. South
- Subtle horror unwinds in psychological film
- The point? What point?
- Comedy covers sex from A to Z... by way of S&M
- MOVIES
- Medical community lauds Jolie's courage, while pointing out that her solution is not for all
- There's some big, dumb fun to be had in comedy caper, but the laughs come at a queasy cost
- McConaughey excels in tale of Southern masculinity
- Second instalment of sci-fi reboot lacks Khan-do attitude
- Futuristic Colony bleak inside and out
- Director takes ‘Roaring ’20s’ literally with loud, garish Gatsby adaptation
- Tony Stark doesn't suit up as often, but sequel still packs in action
- Catherine Zeta-Jones checks into mental health facility for treatment of bipolar disorder
- Reese Witherspoon says she's 'deeply embarrassed' by arrest; Atlanta hearing rescheduled
- Comedy covers sex from A to Z... by way of S&M
- Second instalment of sci-fi reboot lacks Khan-do attitude
- Free Press chats with producer Klymkiw before doc screens
- Difficult bandmate, terrible husband, amazing drummer
- Medical community lauds Jolie's courage, while pointing out that her solution is not for all
- Second instalment of sci-fi reboot lacks Khan-do attitude
- Movie looking for boy with 'open, honest face'
- Open casting call for part of young boy in Winnipeg-shot film
- Six Israeli secret service chiefs and one inescapable conclusion
- Tony Stark doesn't suit up as often, but sequel still packs in action
- Imax to go out way it came in
- Manga: it's not just for kids anymore
- Cut out the jargon: Alan Alda centre at NY college teaches scientists to keep it simple
- Winnipeg-born actress Deanna Durbin dies at 91
Ads by Google












You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
Have Your Say
New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010.