*DJANGO UNCHAINED* made me HAPPY I Movie Reaction/Review I First Time Watching

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Published 2023-11-26
I watch Django Unchained for the first time and it was a wild one for sure. With amazing performances and a brilliant plot, Quentin Tarantino shows why he's a legend in the film game. Follow along as I experience Django (the D is silent) and all of its madness. Thanks for Watching! Like and Subscribe!

#djangounchained #firsttimewatching #moviereaction

All Comments (21)
  • @sidneyjacques.
    if you're reading this I thank you for watching! Wishing you a great day! đŸ€žđŸżđŸ˜
  • @Turnabout
    You'll notice that when violence is perpetrated against the bad guys (slavers, bounty targets, and so forth) that the violence is extremely graphic, but when violence is perpetrated against slaves it is almost all out of shot. That's deliberate and it's one of my favorite things about Tarantino. He recognizes the fun of cinematic violence against people nobody can defend (Nazis, slavers, killers, Manson family cultists) but doesn't take joy in violence inflicted on the innocent. A lot of critics miss that vital element.
  • @veronicab9253
    The horse at the end doing the dance steps is Mr. Fox's horse. When he was offered the role he asked, " Can my horse be in the movie too?" 😂😂😂
  • @NecramoniumVideo
    Fun fact about Django's blue suit, Jamie Foxx did some research for the role, and found out that slaves were not allowed to wear clothing with colors that made them stand out. So when he went to wardrobe, he picked out the most colorful outfit he could find.
  • @Myst1crobbii
    The fact Shultz was so disgusted with the cruelty in which the slaves were treated and the abuse they endure that even tho it would be smarter for them and Django’s wife to leave,he genuinely couldn’t help but kill Calvin just to simply get rid of a vile and torturous human being,even if it cost him his own life and potentially Django’s as well.it goes to show how much he despises slavery and slavers as a whole,and just the king of person he was,one of my favorite characters ever.
  • @johnt8636
    Fun fact: In the Mandingo fighting scene. The guy talking to Django at the bar is Franco Nero, who played Django in the original movie in 1966.
  • @Andrew04291
    I like that Schultz is Django’s savior without being a “White Savior.” He buys Django for an unethical yet practical reason, and giving him his freedom isn’t some grand gesture because it’s just a baseline decent person thing to do. But he feels that sense of responsibility for Django after doing so, and likes the kid anyway, and just follows that feeling. Their relationship after Django is freed is one of equals, despite their mentor/mentee-father/son-big/little brother dynamics.
  • @andromidius
    I do like the subtle things in this movie. Candy's sister playing FĂŒr Elise by Beethoven slightly off-key being the trigger breaking Schultz's will to restrain, for example - playing a piece of music that's entrenched in his mind as being part of his home and identity by people he detests during a moment he's at his lowest being a personal slight on his honour. He couldn't hide it anymore when Candy insisted on shaking his hand.
  • @mikemustdash
    "I like the way you die boy" will go down as one of my favorite lines in cinema.
  • @EtruskenRaider
    “Alexandre Dumas is black” is one of my favorite all time lines. Historical note Alexandre Dumas’ father, born to an enslaved woman in what is now Haiti, rose to become a highly decorated cavalry general in Napoleon’s army.
  • @A_Wild_Dyzzy
    I love that first scene. “Speak English, god dammit.” Is so ironically funny. Schultz is German, and yet his English is far better than any of the slavers and racists in this film. I loved every minute of his interactions.
  • @snorpenbass4196
    Yes, Schultz did shoot the sheriff. But you'll note he did not shoot the deputy. >.>
  • @kapelski104
    When Django shoots ms Lara and she goes flying, that's a reference to old western movies where when women got killed they were quickly yanked out of the frame. That's because people thought it would be "inappropriate" if women dying was shown on screen.
  • @shadowgam3
    The part when Leonardo DiCaprio slammed his hand on the glass. That's what really happen while preforming. Even after being stabbed in the hand. He keep in character and kept preforming.
  • @jamesm1
    This movie was the best theater experience I've ever had. People were losing it at the bag mask part.
  • @meanmutton
    One of the things this movie does is rip the covers off how horrific slavery was. It was a disgusting, inhumane, horrific institution and Southerners were so desperate to keep it that they launched a war of treason to murder as many Americans as possible to keep slavery.
  • @enokii
    I actually like that you call out actors that you recognize, I definitely think it's a skill but keep doing you.