DJANGO GETS REVENGE ON THE BRITTLE BROTHERS - DJANGO UNCHAINED

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 10 вер 2022
  • From the Academy-Award winning film, Django Unchained.
    In 1858 Texas, brothers Ace and Dicky Speck drive a group of shackled black slaves on foot. Among them is Django, sold off and separated from his wife Broomhilda von Shaft, a house slave who speaks German and English. They are stopped by Dr. King Schultz, a German dentist-turned-bounty hunter seeking to buy Django for his knowledge of the three outlaw Brittle brothers, overseers at the plantation of Django's previous owner and for whom Schultz has a warrant. When Ace refuses to sell Django to Schultz and levels his gun at him, Schultz kills him and shoots Dicky's horse in order to pin him to the ground. Schultz insists on paying a fair price for Django before leaving the other slaves to kill Dicky. Schultz offers Django his freedom and $75 in exchange for help tracking down the Brittles.
    While Big Daddy Bennett and Dr. Schultz discuss terms, Django is given a tour of the plantation by a house slave. During the tour, he asks the slave if three brothers by the name of Brittle are employed at the plantation. The slave is confused but says that three brothers named Schaffer were recently employed. Django spies one of the brothers overseeing the field slaves and another brother who is about to whip a slave for breaking eggs. Django has flashbacks to when the Brittles whipped Broomhilda while Django pleaded with them to not do it
    After his ruse is discovered and Dr. Schultz is killed, Django is sent to be work in a limestone quarry for the rest of his life, but he escapes and returns to Candieland to avenge Dr. Schultz and D'Artangan. He ambushes the slave trackers.
    Tarantino uses the plot device of actors doing something in rhythm like the ticking of a clock. The crack of the whip. This foreshadows that their time is running out and that bloodshed will ensue.
  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 6 тис.

  • @othukeumukoro6244
    @othukeumukoro6244 Рік тому +20657

    I'm always grateful that Will Smith rejected this role. Jamie f//king killed it!

    • @hawaiiboiskeezah8084
      @hawaiiboiskeezah8084 11 місяців тому +1332

      Reall talk could never see will being django he’s to bubbly imho

    • @Skiller131
      @Skiller131 10 місяців тому +908

      Will Smith is an atrocious actor and an even worse human being. I sincerely believe the movie would've tanked with Fresh Prince as Django Unchained. Jamie Foxx was born to play this role

    • @hopelesslyoptimistic8231
      @hopelesslyoptimistic8231 10 місяців тому +524

      @@Skiller131 I do think his roles have been roles bogged down by his name and celebrity status, but he is by no means a bad actor. Will Smith has been in a variety of roles, and unlike other celebrity actors like Kevin Hart or The Rock, he is actually good at playing different types of people other than himself. I’m not the biggest Will Smith fan, but I do remember the Pursuit of Happyness being a fantastic role for him. Will Smith would of been capable of doing the role but his inherent personality lacks the swagger and pride that Jamie Foxx has-which fits the role better for an escaped slave gaining the skills to fight his oppressors. I would make the argument that Will Smith is a better actor than Jamie Foxx overall. Jamie Foxx is good at playing one character and it’s a prideful and swag character; when he doesn’t you get things like the Amazing Spider-Man 2’s Electro, and he was retconned to be more like Jamie Foxx in No Way Home.

    • @stephenfowlie742
      @stephenfowlie742 10 місяців тому

      Will Smith will forever be remembered as Will Bitch.

    • @DoctorFurioso
      @DoctorFurioso 10 місяців тому +217

      @@Skiller131 He's an Oscar-winning actor. I'm sure he'd have been fine and the movie would have been good. But, Jamie Foxx is much better than just fine in this role-- he nailed it.

  • @balrog322
    @balrog322 Рік тому +28850

    Django is a good student of language. Five seconds after learning a new word, he uses it perfectly.

    • @solidghost1337
      @solidghost1337 Рік тому +779

      I mean...in that context it has the same exact meaning as sure. All you have to do to use it correctly is replace sure with positive.

    • @jonnybrav0
      @jonnybrav0 Рік тому +441

      Its a movie genius.
      Jamie fox understands the English language.

    • @danieldevito6380
      @danieldevito6380 Рік тому +398

      Django is that 1 N in 10,000..

    • @cheap25
      @cheap25 Рік тому +147

      It’s a movie and a violent dark comedy at that. So if you’re taking everything literally you’re not all that intelligent. Sorry, did I pronounce intelligent correctly?

    • @JohnDough-yr2zt
      @JohnDough-yr2zt Рік тому +112

      @@danieldevito6380 exactly. He is exceptional in many ways. He was an expert with a firearm the moment he touched one, for example.

  • @silvagto
    @silvagto 10 місяців тому +750

    “I like the way you die, boy.”
    One of my favorite lines 😂😂😂

    • @merahputih2550
      @merahputih2550 4 місяці тому +3

      Yahahahahahhaa

    • @DavidLister77
      @DavidLister77 2 місяці тому +7

      Your perfect use of punctuation is my favourite line. In this world where no one seems to care, it really stands out.

  • @SchrodingerMil
    @SchrodingerMil 10 місяців тому +2370

    I will never get over the fact that Schultz doesn't assume they're the Brittle Brothers. He shows up, Django killed two people and he just goes "Who were they?"

    • @zombieregime
      @zombieregime 8 місяців тому +300

      I like that, unlike literally everyone else Django would have encountered in his past, even if they were partnering him for some reason or another, Schultz's first response was not '(uh oh nigga gone crazy and shot some white folk) What did you do?!' it was "(back up on scene, area secure. Well, they must have at least deserved it...) ....Who were they?" Like, didnt even take a guard stance with his rifle in regard to Django, simply slightly up but ready incase someone came around the barn with a gun or something. It shows how separated from the concept of slavery and inherent superiority Schultz was. Really good subtext conveyed in simple body language acting choices that flew over most peoples heads.

    • @wuchunmeng
      @wuchunmeng 7 місяців тому

      Schultz is that token white dude you want on your side.

    • @filipedias7284
      @filipedias7284 7 місяців тому +27

      Who knows how many folks would owe this mf back in the day LMFAO

    • @jordankgraham
      @jordankgraham 7 місяців тому +79

      I think Schultz knew the two dead white men on the ground were the Brittle Brothers but since he didn't know what they looked like (assuming Django didn't inform Schultz of their physical appearance sometime during their search) he had to make sure he knew which corpse belonged to which name. Hence him asking of Django, "Who are they". This way he would have a better time convincing Big Daddy of their bounty hunting once he shows up to question the bloodshed.
      Just my interpretation though.

    • @LucDutra92
      @LucDutra92 5 місяців тому

      Django was a strange black man walking around a cotton plantation in the deep pre-war south. It could be assumed that he had to kill someone to defend himself or something . Besides, the plan was to Django to point out the brothers and Schultz do the killing

  • @ScottDLR
    @ScottDLR Рік тому +8010

    The blood sprayed on the white cotton is a brilliant touch

    • @glasshalffull4061
      @glasshalffull4061 Рік тому +100

      I thought so too!

    • @johnmcmahon8513
      @johnmcmahon8513 Рік тому

      YES I love to see Democratic Party Slaves masters blood splattered.. we need to see that every DAY!! 👍🇺🇸😅🪓

    • @MW-no8vq
      @MW-no8vq Рік тому +22

      Nice.

    • @AverageAmerican_
      @AverageAmerican_ Рік тому +5

      *YO* 🇺🇸👨🏿‍🌾
      ua-cam.com/video/ifidIi7su8c/v-deo.html

    • @milehighgambler
      @milehighgambler Рік тому +74

      Make the white man pick it, and I'll pay $1000 per yarn

  • @lainwakura
    @lainwakura Рік тому +14901

    "I'm positive he dead."
    Best line in the whole movie.

    • @AverageAmerican_
      @AverageAmerican_ Рік тому +8

      *YO* 🌎👨🏿‍🌾
      ua-cam.com/video/ifidIi7su8c/v-deo.html

    • @allhavesaidtheirprayers3434
      @allhavesaidtheirprayers3434 Рік тому

      I'd dare to argue that maybe, " I like the way you die boy.", deserves consideration.

    • @hihunter7
      @hihunter7 Рік тому +272

      "Are you positive?"
      "I don't know"
      "You don't know if you're positive?"
      "I don't know what positive means"
      "Positive means you're sure"
      "I'm sure that's Ellis Brittle"
      *Fwping*
      "I'm positive he dead"

    • @SStupendous
      @SStupendous Рік тому +52

      @@hihunter7 Love the Sharps rifle in this film, Tarantino picks the best guns always.

    • @diegoalvarez64
      @diegoalvarez64 Рік тому

      I count two guns nigga

  • @russellstevens9927
    @russellstevens9927 10 місяців тому +1314

    That goofy fumbling with that gun knowing Django is going to kill him if he doesn't kill him first, gets me every time. 😂😂😂

    • @bernardsmith0
      @bernardsmith0 9 місяців тому +124

      His goofy ass was drunk as shit that’s why lol 😂😂😂😂

    • @ladela7348
      @ladela7348 4 місяці тому +65

      Everyone thinks they're Clint Eastwood until they actually have to draw their pistol

    • @earnem4175
      @earnem4175 2 місяці тому +4

      ​@@ladela7348I think I'm more like Franco Nero, considering his character is cooler and actually suffers damage. I think he's more badass. Despite his characters being beaten up all the time, he still continues to fight

    • @AoKodo
      @AoKodo 2 місяці тому

      “Gotdamn sunofvabitch!”

    • @ilyeser1708
      @ilyeser1708 Місяць тому +1

      Yeah I'm seriously wondering what kind of sane person would give a gun to this man 😂

  • @gojeta1982
    @gojeta1982 10 місяців тому +2275

    I have never felt more satisfaction in watching a character get his revenge than this. It's absolutely epic. And the music playing at 4.13 is perfect.

    • @kellysharp5724
      @kellysharp5724 9 місяців тому +24

      Ikr Django becomes judge jury executioner revenge is on great scene

    • @Stando-User
      @Stando-User 8 місяців тому +10

      4:13

    • @jeffwright7920
      @jeffwright7920 7 місяців тому

      ​@@kellysharp5724I😢 will 4😢😮will 888😮😮😮

    • @kitty-vk8ic
      @kitty-vk8ic 5 місяців тому

      Me too

    • @janesgems7
      @janesgems7 5 місяців тому

      100% yes

  • @Paulxj-
    @Paulxj- Рік тому +16786

    "you mean you wanna dress like that?" Cracks me up every time. The writing in this film is great.

  • @waifuking6608
    @waifuking6608 Рік тому +6480

    Love the zero hesitation to take the shot on the last brother when he got confirmation. Excellent scene.

    • @Deepingmind
      @Deepingmind Рік тому +197

      Trust your battle brother as you wish them to trust you. Through faith and fire.

    • @tommyt1971
      @tommyt1971 Рік тому +31

      It's a lot like that moment in Heat where Val Kilmer spots two of Pacino's guys across the street and instantly starts blazing away with his rifle -- the moment you're talking about -- like Kilmer's in Heat -- is a brilliant piece of acting and film & sound editing.

    • @jayvee4321
      @jayvee4321 Рік тому +56

      I always hate how most of the other protagonists doubt whether or not they'll kill the bad guy and that indecisiveness fucks them up badly. Django is smart for pulling the trigger

    • @dennisallen8333
      @dennisallen8333 Рік тому +2

      Ole bloodnofski is a good shot!

    • @fishboat6244
      @fishboat6244 Рік тому

      @@tommyt1971 similar scene, no hesitation or arguing what to do : ua-cam.com/video/wMgipTql_Vk/v-deo.html

  • @genuinesaucy
    @genuinesaucy 5 місяців тому +207

    "I'm positive he dead" is such a great post-mortem one-liner, not just because it's badass, but because it tells you something about Django as a character. He's uneducated, he doesn't know what "positive" means, but he's still incredibly smart; as soon as he learns a new word, he finds a way to make a snappy joke with it. Wonderful little moment.

    • @Samtastrophi
      @Samtastrophi 18 днів тому +2

      Also another great moment for Scholtz. With Scholtz, as here as it is later in the film, there's never a question of IF he's going to hit his mark. The question is "should he?"

    • @oliverl89
      @oliverl89 12 днів тому

      I appreciate the fact that you like the movie and the written dialogue but you don't need to state obvious things like this. To everyone else who isn't on the autistic spectrum the thing you wrote is so mundane and trivial to the movie that it makes your comment seem comical.

    • @Samtastrophi
      @Samtastrophi 12 днів тому

      @@oliverl89 Do you feel big and strong now?

  • @steph6498
    @steph6498 10 місяців тому +1563

    The way django is trying to reason with the brittle brothers is incredible acting! You can hear the desperation and whole “you know me long time now” and talking about how the boss won’t approve of a house slave having scars over her body it’s horrible because you know whatever he says makes no blind bit of difference. Seriously an amazing script.

    • @nasser314
      @nasser314 9 місяців тому +3

      The entire premise of the movie is that Slavery is an absurd ilogical system. When Jango tried to "reason" with the literal "cracker" it didnt matter, because no logical argument would ever matter, since slavery is absurd. This is even more obvious with Mr Candy, he is a "francophile" that doesnt speak french, or understand the french revolutionary principles of liberty, equality and fraternity, its illogical, but the point of being a francophile for him is to show of his status of superiority, much like the point of owning slaves instead of hiring a motivated workforce is for the status of owning people.

    • @iamkatykabha
      @iamkatykabha 8 місяців тому +34

      I was thinking the same thing. What a terrible and hopeless feeling he must have felt as he was reasoning.

    • @missbelled6700
      @missbelled6700 7 місяців тому +30

      @@iamkatykabha Seriously... complete debasement of the self trying to protect someone he loves; the feelings I get when they show the kiss bookended by all that terror are so powerful... I just can't understand how people can ever act this way to each other (and so often for something as stupid as differences our skin colors or birthplaces), it goes against everything in my heart and soul. Perfect filmmaking.

    • @epiphanyarina366
      @epiphanyarina366 7 місяців тому +6

      It brings me to tears

    • @almightywhitey6955
      @almightywhitey6955 5 місяців тому +5

      Tarrantino is indeed a master scriptwriter…can’t act 2 save his giant cranium but brilliant-at-the-pen HE IS!

  • @chrissycuz
    @chrissycuz Рік тому +6924

    I love how Foxx delivers “I like the way you die boy”… just perfect. Tarantino also a master of the use of music to enhance scenes

    • @Rushman666
      @Rushman666 Рік тому +43

      I loved this in theater lol

    • @lich.possum
      @lich.possum Рік тому +55

      It's such a good fucking line.

    • @lukewise1227
      @lukewise1227 Рік тому +17

      His use of music comes from the spaghetti western and exploitation culture of the movies he loved to watch in his youth working in a video rental store and watching it's stock of movies. Hence Ennio Morricone's soundtrack on 'The Hateful Eight'.

    • @janesgems7
      @janesgems7 Рік тому +17

      One of the most satisfying scenes in movie history.

    • @LameBoii2Suave
      @LameBoii2Suave Рік тому +7

      said it right before bro died too 🤧💕

  • @Katdancing
    @Katdancing 11 місяців тому +6433

    The flashbacks in this movie are so awesome. They give the audience immediate sympathy to Django and we want him to get his revenge

    • @MuhammadAshraf-oj6dr
      @MuhammadAshraf-oj6dr 11 місяців тому +13

      good things so nice off you please give me answer God bless you God protect you God save you this world and her after bay

    • @jeanmarc6517
      @jeanmarc6517 10 місяців тому +79

      @@MuhammadAshraf-oj6dr Even god couldnt help you with your writing...

    • @karaltar7914
      @karaltar7914 10 місяців тому

      @@MuhammadAshraf-oj6drshut

    • @colamity_5000
      @colamity_5000 10 місяців тому

      Why?

    • @silence-humility-calmness
      @silence-humility-calmness 10 місяців тому

      whats funny is that modern slavery actually got jamie foxx ,yeah sure everything the media doesn't like is a conspiracy and him being forced to take vaccine has 0 to do with him now being a vegetable🤣🤣🤣 the movie is great but i feel nothing for foxx as he helped along with modern white hatred

  • @rolloslicer1034
    @rolloslicer1034 Місяць тому +41

    “You mean you wanna dress like that?” Is brutal lmfao

  • @scottystcloud7086
    @scottystcloud7086 7 місяців тому +162

    The way he gets extremely intense once he finds out Little Jody is getting whipped always gets me. Django is a wonderfully drawn western-revenge archetype.

  • @KingGhidorah5464
    @KingGhidorah5464 Рік тому +12758

    This film perfectly captured the formula of an old school western. Creating a hero with a motivation you can sympathize with who satisfyingly wins in the end.

    • @adrianbelko7683
      @adrianbelko7683 Рік тому

      @@sydssolanumsamsys fantasy settings are always fun, reality makes degenerates cry, because they can't really kill folks and ideas of superior races, they satisfy themselves with doing in fantasy, it's pretty hilarious actually

    • @ballistic3666
      @ballistic3666 Рік тому

      @@sydssolanumsamsys fr

    • @Smarod
      @Smarod Рік тому +73

      Yep it's kinda like a western superhero film. Tho I didn't like the scare track before the fst dude gets shot. I feel like if it had no music it would've been more impactful

    • @whotftookthuurs
      @whotftookthuurs Рік тому

      @@sydssolanumsamsys only thing better than watching racists die is watching nazis die. Often they're the same.

    • @y.r._
      @y.r._ Рік тому

      @@sydssolanumsamsys And still, people call this a racist movie because it uses the n word.

  • @Worlock1993
    @Worlock1993 Рік тому +6657

    Christoph Waltz's acting talent is amazing, notice how Schultz is kinda indifferent to the killing of the first two brothers but at the thought of Ellis getting away and him losing part of the bounty makes his voice crack. Its the little details that give character meaning

    • @EF-ci6yq
      @EF-ci6yq Рік тому +203

      I didn't notice it until I saw your comment... He really is a talented actor. And his act from his previous movie 'Inglorious Basterds' was also fucking great

    • @thomasgriffin2326
      @thomasgriffin2326 Рік тому +45

      Yeah he stole the show in this movie

    • @ModeratelyAmused
      @ModeratelyAmused Рік тому +209

      I think you kind of missed it. He is indifferent to the killing of two unknown men. He does not know they are 2 of the 3 brothers. But he respects Django by asking who they are instead of asking why or if he had to kill them. He assumes Django was in the right and was just curious who they were to Django.

    • @eddiecail-ka4lec561
      @eddiecail-ka4lec561 Рік тому +22

      I did not realize he was Dr. Blofeld in Spectre. And No Time To Die. A talented actor indeed

    • @anitanotonegoro8611
      @anitanotonegoro8611 Рік тому +6

      4:03

  • @ghoraxe9000
    @ghoraxe9000 9 місяців тому +648

    That whip scene was done too dam well... Made me tear up..I can't believe our people survived this level of oppression.. it's a miracle.

    • @brandonspencer7093
      @brandonspencer7093 6 місяців тому +5

      You didn't. Its an incredibly stylized view of it. In reality, slaves lived better and were more protected by the law than modern blacks in their ghettos.

    • @yonavfx7309
      @yonavfx7309 6 місяців тому +46

      @@brandonspencer7093bro wtf

    • @brandonspencer7093
      @brandonspencer7093 6 місяців тому

      @yonavfx7309 There is alot of false history being spread by basketball Americans and their political benefactors. Modern urban blacks live in for worse conditions than enslaved blacks did. They're obese and never do anything productive.

    • @493HZ
      @493HZ 6 місяців тому

      @@yonavfx7309 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @kbtriplesix
      @kbtriplesix 6 місяців тому +60

      @@brandonspencer7093 ceo of racism

  • @earlygray4456
    @earlygray4456 10 місяців тому +195

    The dolly shot of Django standing triumphantly after calling out to John Brittle as the frame goes from full a body hero pose to a classic cowboy shot cut off above the knees. With the horns blaring out, is just such a great representation of the character coming into power. The slave turned apprentice, now finally becoming the hero of his own story. About to avenge the pain of his loved one. So much emotional subtext.

    • @Roloki454
      @Roloki454 3 місяці тому +6

      It’s both cool and goofy cause of what he’s wearing

    • @DFMotat
      @DFMotat 3 місяці тому +2

      Nice lecture

  • @hepfarms9101
    @hepfarms9101 Рік тому +1132

    The blood spraying the cotton is a stroke of genius. Great job Q!

    • @Lowekinder
      @Lowekinder 10 місяців тому +85

      Blood on the white page of the Bible, the white cotton, and Candy's white flower. There's something there. The blood stained reality of religion, commerce, and the upper class?

    • @mcgrewforms5069
      @mcgrewforms5069 8 місяців тому +16

      @@LowekinderChristianity is blood stained with the blood of Christ ❤️✝️

    • @ServantOfTheSouth
      @ServantOfTheSouth 8 місяців тому

      @@mcgrewforms5069and the blood of countless lives the christians have spilt throughout history

    • @DeepfriedBeans4492
      @DeepfriedBeans4492 8 місяців тому

      @@mcgrewforms5069and millions of other people…

    • @niavellir7408
      @niavellir7408 7 місяців тому

      ​@@mcgrewforms5069Chrisianity caused so much pain and destruction in the world, did you know these slavers justified what they did because of the bible

  • @cb-9938
    @cb-9938 Рік тому +1363

    The almost horror music as Django is walking up to the Brittle brothers is perfect. Shows how angry and excited he is to finally confront them

    • @neftalimorales5449
      @neftalimorales5449 10 місяців тому +2

      What's the title of the music?

    • @kevinwillems8720
      @kevinwillems8720 10 місяців тому +13

      @neftalimorales5449 the whole thing is La Corsa, it's from the original Django film.

    • @MrDjsmooth87
      @MrDjsmooth87 7 місяців тому +7

      From the camera angles to the quickening of his determined pacing were genius. Definitely aided the growing anticipation/tension.

    • @mencobasukses97
      @mencobasukses97 7 місяців тому +1

      this the same one they play on spongebob right?

    • @GuardianAngel..
      @GuardianAngel.. 3 місяці тому +1

      The Music sounds more heroic than horror if You ask Me

  • @ianl.4470
    @ianl.4470 9 місяців тому +459

    There are very few movie scenes that can make my blood boil with rage, eyes tear up with sadness and vengence, and then satisfyingly resolve those emotions within 6 minutes. A real masterpiece - thank you Tarantino. This movie, along with others like Schindler's List, Saving Private Ryan.... will be part of my kid's education on the depths of human depravity.

    • @thomasperez3201
      @thomasperez3201 8 місяців тому +7

      read up on the barbary corsairs and the fate of some of the people they sold into slavery, particularly the galley slaves.

    • @vanillabatcave5677
      @vanillabatcave5677 8 місяців тому +5

      If he's old enough consider showing your child Apocalypse Now

    • @ianl.4470
      @ianl.4470 8 місяців тому +6

      @@thomasperez3201 just read the wikipedia on the Barbary Corsairs. Super informative.... Had always known slavery existed in other countries and civilizations long before the Atlantic slave trade but didn't know that particular period 👍

    • @nezahualcoyotlarrieta-rey3341
      @nezahualcoyotlarrieta-rey3341 7 місяців тому

      You had me until you brought up Spielberg's "tendentious" productions.

    • @missbelled6700
      @missbelled6700 7 місяців тому +4

      @@ianl.4470 this must have been such a disappointing reply for him, absolutely zero for the troll to work with 😄

  • @VeryRareMatt
    @VeryRareMatt 9 місяців тому +83

    Crazy how he’s having flashbacks about his wife, he didn’t just relieve what he was feeling for so long. He handled it with a straight face and killed ‘em all in just about 10 minutes

  • @ltcrescent4011
    @ltcrescent4011 11 місяців тому +4560

    There something I just realised that makes Django's outfit design pure genius. I believe there are two purposes, the first being to make him stand out among all the other dull coloured outfits and in this moment while surrounded by other slaves, provide a sense of hope that they can break free and become 'unchained' if you will. The second is that it is the ultimate 'fuck you' to the brittle brothers who tortured him and his wife, that being that not only is he free, he is also wearing a high-class attire, which outclasses their ragged and low-class looking clothes showing that he has not only overcome their torture but also risen above them. anyway that's just my interpretation.

    • @TheCreepyLantern
      @TheCreepyLantern 10 місяців тому +91

      i love everything about that 'because i hadn't really thought about it until now. bravo.

    • @JoseChavez-fz2ty
      @JoseChavez-fz2ty 10 місяців тому +166

      to add just one more layer. You are 100 percent right on but another nod to the high class attire is that in that scene Django's clothes is a replica of the clothing in a famous painting called Blue Boy. So not only is it fancy clothes, its famous fancy clothes

    • @juliane3683
      @juliane3683 10 місяців тому +8

      Did you work that out all by yourself?

    • @ltcrescent4011
      @ltcrescent4011 10 місяців тому +26

      @@juliane3683 yeah, why do you ask. If you gotta know it was kinda just a sudden thought

    • @stanleystove
      @stanleystove 10 місяців тому +9

      Should've wore a suit or something, that would be real class and a non verbal "I am powerful"

  • @zarakikenpachi7359
    @zarakikenpachi7359 Рік тому +459

    "You mean you want to dress like that?" Gets me every time

    • @harimauindia5775
      @harimauindia5775 10 місяців тому +3

      Timestamp?

    • @Luka2000_
      @Luka2000_ 10 місяців тому +26

      ​​@@harimauindia5775o watch the scene. Damn people with the tik tok attention span

    • @Nexgenss
      @Nexgenss 9 місяців тому +7

      @@harimauindia57750:30

    • @thomasvarley380
      @thomasvarley380 4 місяці тому +2

      😂

    • @christansdad
      @christansdad 3 місяці тому

      Black women have been putting down the black man for 200+ years. There he is free, and earning a good living...she's a slave...and she is putting him down.

  • @EowynGeorgia
    @EowynGeorgia 10 місяців тому +106

    5:08 The face alone deserves an Oscar, it's priceless 😂😂😂

  • @ytpremium7649
    @ytpremium7649 8 місяців тому +73

    We owe a lot of gratitude to Tarantino for making films no one else would dare make

  • @chadbinette3201
    @chadbinette3201 Рік тому +1557

    "you mean you wanna dress like that?" Still makes me laugh no matter how many times I've seen the movie haha

  • @brians7901
    @brians7901 Рік тому +413

    The woman who shows him around the Plantation is one of the most adorable human beings I've ever seen.

    • @purpleness64
      @purpleness64 10 місяців тому +28

      Poor squirrel

    • @lovefortush
      @lovefortush 10 місяців тому +7

      It's a movie, you realized that?

    • @iponce2
      @iponce2 10 місяців тому +87

      ​@lovefortush Oh, it is? I thought Jamie Foxx for real time traveled to get enslaved for the role with a tiny drone in tow to record everything. Of course it's a movie, dingus.

    • @vanillabatcave5677
      @vanillabatcave5677 8 місяців тому +20

      She's such a sweatie

    • @jnelghsoghn
      @jnelghsoghn 2 місяці тому +14

      “You mean you wanna dress like that?” One of my favorite lines

  • @lmmmlful
    @lmmmlful 2 місяці тому +13

    That split second when the blood hits the cotton shows how brilliant Tarantino can be.

  • @DanMartin67
    @DanMartin67 9 місяців тому +120

    4:14 I remember i was 15 in the theatre at the grove watching this. I cant express how incredible it was seeing him stand there. You would think there would be an applaud from the audience but you could hear a pin drop. It was incredible.

  • @AVA-vt5tl
    @AVA-vt5tl Рік тому +2844

    After Quentin Tarantino completed his 10th film. People will definitely miss his movies. Mahn is a legend

    • @felphero
      @felphero Рік тому +172

      I dunno man, I honestly think Quentin loves movies too much, I have my doubts if he will actually for real 100% stop

    • @kazario1269
      @kazario1269 Рік тому

      F*** Tarantino and who/wherever he came from.

    • @AVA-vt5tl
      @AVA-vt5tl Рік тому +20

      Let's hope so

    • @ChrisZukowski88
      @ChrisZukowski88 Рік тому +37

      Fave director, his creativity is through the roof. Miss his greatness already!

    • @ironfist458
      @ironfist458 Рік тому +10

      He’s really Albino and that means his family is from West Africa.

  • @jamescalderon289
    @jamescalderon289 Рік тому +618

    I wish Waltz and Fox did more movies together. They had really great chemistry.

    • @misterbreezeoftharedpillma1710
      @misterbreezeoftharedpillma1710 Рік тому +1

      DIDN'T WALTZ PASS AWAY?

    • @cantinadudes
      @cantinadudes 10 місяців тому

      ​@@misterbreezeoftharedpillma1710 no, what the fuck? Where did you hear this?

    • @cram1816
      @cram1816 10 місяців тому +35

      ​@@misterbreezeoftharedpillma1710 nope

    • @selenaphillips6971
      @selenaphillips6971 9 місяців тому +5

      ​@@misterbreezeoftharedpillma1710He had a TV show either on Apple+ or Amazon Prime.

  • @almostmadeit96
    @almostmadeit96 6 місяців тому +55

    ive seen this 100s of times but its my first time picking up on the facial expression of the little kid at 5:05. it's like he is watching a real life superhero origin story before his very eyes. it's hard not to get a little choked up about that - imagine the stories he told for years to come and the little bit of hope that was instilled upon him that afternoon. this movie is special.

    • @almostmadeit96
      @almostmadeit96 6 місяців тому +2

      i also just realized this is my pfp - go django go

    • @almightywhitey6955
      @almightywhitey6955 6 місяців тому +2

      love that perspective. fresh & positive & very insightful

    • @misselle1430
      @misselle1430 4 місяці тому +2

      I just watched and got the same feeling when he successfully lies to his transporters otw to the other slave owners. The way the 3 men in the cage looked at him in admiration was incredible

    • @TruckingWithMike
      @TruckingWithMike 2 місяці тому +1

      @@misselle1430If they were to make a Django 2. They could make a connection of the young boy and the older slave watching Django over the years. Eventually looking up to him like a Hero. I can see that.

  • @Lamontraymontbundy
    @Lamontraymontbundy 10 місяців тому +47

    6:33 "I'm positive he dead" 😂😂

  • @The0KUltra
    @The0KUltra Рік тому +3932

    4:55 I'll never forget seeing this scene at the movies opening night. Me and and friend went to see this. The theater was packed, not an empty seat in the whole room. Everyone laughed seeing Django in his blue attire, but when he picked up that whip all of the laughter turned into cheering. The entire theater was clapping, cheering Django as he whipped the skinny Brittle brother. We all felt the energy behind that moment and it was amazing. Such a great crowd and such a satisfying revenge scene.

    • @ginger_breadman
      @ginger_breadman Рік тому +164

      I personally liked Django‘s blue attire

    • @518goeshard420
      @518goeshard420 Рік тому +106

      @@ginger_breadman I also appreciated the drip

    • @hurleymacmaster8262
      @hurleymacmaster8262 Рік тому +11

      Assumptions are bad. Especially when you laugh at someone who can do damage to you.

    • @michaelstraubinger6687
      @michaelstraubinger6687 Рік тому +95

      I went to see this with a bunch of my aboriginal friends and family to see this on opening night in Australia, we stood up jumped around and cheered in all the revenge scenes. But I saw some of the elders in tears and very emotional. In Australia we still have segregation and really bad racism, we are basically a bad Texas with no way to protect ourselves. That movie really hit some sensitive spots. We were publicly eradicating aboriginals as recent as the 2000's.

    • @chrisleehey8079
      @chrisleehey8079 Рік тому +17

      I love watchin' them get capped

  • @mitchellbowman22
    @mitchellbowman22 Рік тому +287

    The delivery of “I like the way you die boy” is absolutely perfect. Amazing acting

    • @lagoonz1961
      @lagoonz1961 10 місяців тому +6

      John brittle previously said "i like the way you beg boy", django returns his own line back to him

    • @mitchellbowman22
      @mitchellbowman22 10 місяців тому +2

      @@lagoonz1961 oh yeah that’s what makes it so fucking awesome

    • @Sgtturtle22
      @Sgtturtle22 10 місяців тому +2

      I would have said “I like the way you bleed boy”

    • @dxcSOUL
      @dxcSOUL 8 місяців тому +2

      @@Sgtturtle22 sounds a bit less effective...

  • @fatdad64able
    @fatdad64able 9 місяців тому +43

    "You mean you wanna dress like that??" 😂😂😂 cracks me up everytime. Greetings from Germany.

  • @gabs_salem
    @gabs_salem 5 місяців тому +20

    I like how Schultz comes in like "who are they?", as if Django randomly decided to kill two guys for no reason

  • @boxheadboiii
    @boxheadboiii Рік тому +1291

    6:09 I love this little banter between em, it sums up their character dynamic really well and how they both know exactly what is about to go down

    • @luyandamngadi3351
      @luyandamngadi3351 Рік тому +51

      I don't know what positive mean.
      I died

    • @darkphoenix0808
      @darkphoenix0808 Рік тому +18

      @@luyandamngadi3351 so did Ellis

    • @luyandamngadi3351
      @luyandamngadi3351 Рік тому

      @@darkphoenix0808 I'm positive he dead

    • @ConanObrien22
      @ConanObrien22 5 місяців тому

      It's so cool how QT played it. Waltz panning the rifle in front of the camera while having that banter. This scene is just iconic. One of a kind

  • @UnderTheTableGremlin
    @UnderTheTableGremlin Рік тому +1590

    I remember just shrieking “YES” when I heard Django say “I like the way you die, boy.” This, Inglorious Basterds, and Kill Bill Volumes I and II are four of the best revenge movies ever made.

    • @gwpeatz6263
      @gwpeatz6263 Рік тому +21

      Quentin Tarantino all day!

    • @CompletelyNormalHuman
      @CompletelyNormalHuman 11 місяців тому +5

      Tarantino really likes revenge movies

    • @Nantosuelta
      @Nantosuelta 11 місяців тому +3

      No they aren't, but whatever

    • @ats8377
      @ats8377 11 місяців тому +22

      @@Nantosuelta called and opinion but whatever 😂

    • @tommy_noble
      @tommy_noble 11 місяців тому +5

      ​@@Nantosueltachode

  • @christansdad
    @christansdad 3 місяці тому +13

    The blood on the cotton is not just good cinematography, it is good symbolism. "There is blood on cotton in America."

  • @LeeRenthlei
    @LeeRenthlei 3 місяці тому +7

    "I like the way you die boy"
    One of my all time favourite lines.

  • @danieldevito6380
    @danieldevito6380 Рік тому +5940

    The most satisfying revenge movie EVER made. Tarantino is TRULY the greatest director of all time

    • @jorged06
      @jorged06 Рік тому +141

      He is wonderful, I love him, but he is not the greatest ever

    • @uio890138
      @uio890138 Рік тому +142

      Now he should do one about the slaves going back to Africa and getting revenge against the African kings that sold them into slavery.

    • @omegaramos6130
      @omegaramos6130 Рік тому

      @@uio890138 This is a subliminal comment black slave masters were bred and made And then used against us as an example whenever y’all feel to evil shut up and soak it up

    • @Thai_nerd69
      @Thai_nerd69 Рік тому +307

      @@uio890138 lol triggered aren’t ya

    • @uio890138
      @uio890138 Рік тому

      @@Thai_nerd69 No, I just like seeing evil people have revenge placed on them.
      BTW, liking your own comments?...CheeseFUCKINGball.

  • @Darth1Marik
    @Darth1Marik Рік тому +2940

    I like how as he advanced with the whip he eventually made his way to where the revolver was and kicked it away. The faces of all the slaves as he arrived and their gaping expressions when he shot John Brittle was like people witnessing a hero come to save them. Especially those little kids at 4:36. This is probably the first time slaves ever saw a black man actually fight and kill slavers.
    I'm speaking in the context of their acting as this is obviously a movie and not real life nor is it based off real life events. I'm saying they did a fantastic job portraying their amazement and surprise to what just occurred to them in the movie. Nothing more, nothing less theres no deeper meaning or thought to it.

    • @cook101191
      @cook101191 Рік тому +21

      You know this is fantasy right?

    • @TheGreatSalsaMan
      @TheGreatSalsaMan Рік тому +1

      Truly disgusting, a thug killing a white guy just trying to do his job.

    • @Darth1Marik
      @Darth1Marik Рік тому +210

      @@cook101191 You know I CAN comment on the acting ability of the actors right?

    • @cook101191
      @cook101191 Рік тому +24

      Yes of course but your commentary seems to transcend the genre of the movie..."this is probably the first time slaves ever saw a black man actually fight and kill slaves" vs. "The chatacters really looked like it was the first time that they had seen a black man fight and kill slavers" its the "actually" that made me think maybe you thought the movie was based on a true story or something....

    • @Thefrenchiie
      @Thefrenchiie Рік тому +5

      I agree with what you Say !

  • @samuelstacey2309
    @samuelstacey2309 5 місяців тому +37

    This scene always gives me goosebumps, him trying to reason with them and to that song. So horrifying yet beautifully made.

  • @dimitries
    @dimitries 9 місяців тому +121

    Kerry Washington is just plain brilliant. As they make a run for freedom, with the hounds howling in the background, the look of fear and determination on her face is so visceral. That part almost brought me to tears cuz i felt what my ancestors probably went thru

    • @refulgent_fanta
      @refulgent_fanta 9 місяців тому

      Fun fact: the whipping part wasn't fake. Kerry wanted to take the lashings for real. The bullwhip wasn't real, just a prop, but they say it still hurt.

    • @dean3438
      @dean3438 9 місяців тому +6

      No you didn’t and you never known slavery in your life

    • @nezahualcoyotlarrieta-rey3341
      @nezahualcoyotlarrieta-rey3341 7 місяців тому +1

      She did a spectacular job...however, I wish she would have put more "spice" to the kiss. That kiss blew the scene for me.

    • @dimitries
      @dimitries 7 місяців тому

      @@dean3438of course I never been a slave dumbass. But her acting made me feel like I was there. Made me imagine what it was like at that time. That’s what movies do for most people. They invoke feelings

    • @C.k.101
      @C.k.101 7 місяців тому +9

      @@dean3438she said that’s what her ancestors went through not them themselves. There’s a little thing called context, learn how to read it.

  • @boscopappas234
    @boscopappas234 Рік тому +1068

    00:34…such a small part but the actress conveys this line perfectly and it adds to the subtext. The way she says “What you want?” when Django pulls her away to ask her something in hushed tones implies that she’s been in this situation countless times. Men asking her privately for “favors”. This was among the ugliest accepted practices in human chattel. Female slaves had one bargaining chip but if they played it right it could get them amenities they wouldn’t otherwise have (extra food, clothing, etc). Amazing scene.

    • @RocKnight11
      @RocKnight11 Рік тому +98

      I find the part of a slave "breaking eggs" interesting. I think it refers to a slave revolting quietly by damaging products (such as eggs).

    • @burnerbaby26
      @burnerbaby26 Рік тому +89

      I’ve always loved that part, too. She didn’t even bat an eye, shows just how prevalent and normalized SA was back in those times.

    • @jontraz5993
      @jontraz5993 Рік тому +38

      ​@@RocKnight11 i like that too. It could also be that she just dropped em and the Brittles are evil enough to punish that with whipping.

    • @kgpspyguy
      @kgpspyguy Рік тому +48

      @@RocKnight11
      That was a common situation. American slaves had to be supervised almost constantly, because they would frequently break their tools on purpose as a small act of rebellion.

    • @filmgeekstudios4393
      @filmgeekstudios4393 Рік тому +27

      I think you're reaching a little with that one. Sexual assault was common, and she has probably experienced it, but there's not much about this interaction implying she expected anything like that from him. Plus, white slave owners probably didn't ask for favors in a hushed tone, it was probably very overt.

  • @Joe-ns4ek
    @Joe-ns4ek Рік тому +2672

    There’s pretty much nothing bad about this movie. The story, music, action, characters,cinematics, and just the way the movie progresses makes you want to tag along for the journey the whole time. Top tier

    • @Brett-du5nh
      @Brett-du5nh Рік тому +242

      The fact that Will Smith turned this down makes it even better.

    • @wilvictor
      @wilvictor Рік тому +11

      @@Brett-du5nh 😂😂😂😂

    • @artofvale_1122
      @artofvale_1122 Рік тому +20

      The only bad thing for me is when there's this mass shooting in DiCaprio's house and a song starts playing and it seems quite modern to be in the movie, but okay

    • @Dystopie173
      @Dystopie173 Рік тому +16

      The movie had to end earlier. It got pretty boring in the end.

    • @KoiYakultGreenTea
      @KoiYakultGreenTea Рік тому +45

      @@artofvale_1122 there’s too many scenes with ‘modern’ music and that’s tarantino’s style. It doesn’t take you away from the scene tho. Cos he specifically selects it with the mood and energy of the scene in mind. It works for his movies and as much as people criticised Sophia Coppola’s Marie Antoinette for the modern themes in a historical movie, it’s the same concept as here

  • @Jos-dd1hs
    @Jos-dd1hs 10 місяців тому +19

    Everybody talking about Jamie fox and Christoph Waltz acting , but that Betina girl killed it , the way she speaks and acts .

  • @BC1878
    @BC1878 10 місяців тому +14

    “I positive he dead!” 😭
    Absolutely iconic line

  • @Argumemnon
    @Argumemnon Рік тому +839

    That bit when there's a mirror conveniently there so she can see him too makes me chuckle every time. I also love her reaction to the whipping.

    • @jcorbett9620
      @jcorbett9620 Рік тому +69

      Django is dressed up like "The Blue Boy", a famous portrait painting by Gainsborough (I think you even see the painting when Django chooses that outfit). The mirror has a fancy, decorative frame so that when the slave girl sees Djangos' reflection in it, she is seeing him as a "framed portrait". A clever "blink and you will miss it" nod to the original painting.

    • @rahulpathak1992
      @rahulpathak1992 Рік тому +6

      @@jcorbett9620 The reflection has no head, or rather face. I wonder what that means?

    • @lavenderhuman
      @lavenderhuman Рік тому +17

      @@rahulpathak1992maybe that she doesn’t know anything about Django and yet he’s still her hero? My best guess

    • @ozymandiasramesses1773
      @ozymandiasramesses1773 Рік тому +20

      ​@@rahulpathak1992 Maybe it obscures his race? The original painting "The Blue Boy was of a white man so perhaps it's a way of cementing the inversion of the western hero architype as racial justice. A theme that is played out many times in the course of the film. It's the little touches like that which really shine through a true artistic vision.

    • @webkid4567
      @webkid4567 Рік тому +8

      The fact she can't see his face is also an important detail, like some other moments in the film it foreshadows the legend that Django will become, a man slaves will tell stories about to remind themselves that a black man can become free of his chains and take back what was stolen from him.
      She never sees the face of the man who saved her, she just sees a black man in an eccentric outfit, who guns down her oppressors and rides off into the sunset. (Not literally what happens in the scene but ya know)
      Another big one is in the last act, when he kills the three transporters for the mining company, then takes dynamite, guns, and mounts a horse bareback to take his revenge and save his wife.
      The slave who at first hated Django, who he believed was a black slaver, now knows that was a ruse, that they killed his former master, and now as Django rides off to finish the job, the final shot of this man and his expression again implies that hope has been inspired in him and he will tell the story of what he's witnessed to other slaves he encounters

  • @ayokay123
    @ayokay123 Рік тому +547

    The juxtaposition of Django walking to get Big John against the background of the slave women on swings is nothing short of brilliant.

    • @cbenford
      @cbenford Рік тому +64

      Its the double entendra for me: “swinging from a tree”

    • @ayokay123
      @ayokay123 Рік тому +9

      @@cbenford Didn't even catch that. Absolutely!

    • @FMDedits
      @FMDedits Рік тому +3

      Yh that shot hit me, man
      I’ve never the seen film and the surreal feeling of their lack of reaction says so much
      Great filmmaking

    • @haterade3.029
      @haterade3.029 Рік тому

      Not really, thats half the crap Hollywood spews now

  • @Wownerd1265
    @Wownerd1265 8 місяців тому +5

    I know it's like, the least important part of the scene, but I love when Schultz rolls up, not even mad, just confused- "Who're they?"

  • @TheTrueEmrys
    @TheTrueEmrys 2 місяці тому +3

    "I don't know what positive mean" "I'm positive that he dead" love that whole exchange

  • @bantehayes9973
    @bantehayes9973 Рік тому +1534

    I love this scene, but a part of me wished the one with the whip suffered more.

    • @ADAPTATION7
      @ADAPTATION7 Рік тому +34

      Now that's gotta hurt big time.

    • @kyle18934
      @kyle18934 Рік тому +25

      if he just shot him in the chest once instead of emptying the revolver into him?

    • @jmrichards5910
      @jmrichards5910 Рік тому +7

      I'm positive that's not how bull-whips work.

    • @Guido-Fawkes
      @Guido-Fawkes Рік тому +3

      aquilo nao significou nada para mim, aqui no sul de verdade matar e que da prazer

    • @AverageAmerican_
      @AverageAmerican_ Рік тому

      *YO* 🇺🇸👨🏿‍🌾
      ua-cam.com/video/ifidIi7su8c/v-deo.html

  • @bigmike-
    @bigmike- Рік тому +318

    Fun fact! Brittle's Revolver only has 5 shots in it because revolvers during that time period didn't have a safety sear on their hammer -- so the 6th chamber was often left unloaded (with the hammer resting down on the empty chamber), so that there wouldn't be an accidental discharge if the weapon was bumped, dropped, etc.

    • @EmanAugust
      @EmanAugust 10 місяців тому +4

      very cool!

    • @saulgoodmanKAZAKH
      @saulgoodmanKAZAKH 10 місяців тому +7

      Sooo Tarantino got that right too

    • @gdept88
      @gdept88 10 місяців тому +3

      The ol' cowboy load.

    • @jetthelooter
      @jetthelooter 9 місяців тому +9

      Fun fact! Old revolvers were actually carried with all six chambers loaded and then the hammer pulled partially back to the safety notch to prevent accidental discharge. The 5 loaded 1 empty chamber is a urban myth purported by modern cowboy action shooting for mythical "range safety" gameplay reasons

    • @lambsauce5312
      @lambsauce5312 9 місяців тому +2

      I feel the vast majority of cartridge guns even from that time had a halfcock
      And most cap&ball guns had notches in between the caps for the hammer to rest on

  • @nickd987
    @nickd987 6 місяців тому +7

    This scene is Aristotle’s catharsis in its purest and loudest form. Can’t explain how that made me feel as a 15 year old boy watching this for the first time. Tarantino is a genius man. I love art.

  • @janiellemamby5763
    @janiellemamby5763 9 місяців тому +10

    "You mean you want to dress like that?"😅 0:29

  • @Symphorch
    @Symphorch Рік тому +391

    The perfect timing of the conversation between King and Django before Ellis Brittle is shot always makes me smile. Tarantino is so fantastic!

    • @Swoosh_TV
      @Swoosh_TV Рік тому +1

      ua-cam.com/video/SUA_p15Wm_k/v-deo.html 😭😭

  • @villep7907
    @villep7907 Рік тому +1792

    4:15 I always laugh my ass off to how over the top Tarantino went with this scene 😂

    • @Darth1Marik
      @Darth1Marik Рік тому +202

      it was like the introduction of a hero

    • @nafnaf0
      @nafnaf0 Рік тому +181

      I think this is when he truly became 'unchained'

    • @danieldevito6380
      @danieldevito6380 Рік тому +92

      With this scene? Tarantino goes over the top with almost every scene that involves violent. Just go watch the Katana fights in Kill Bill. Watch what happens when someone has an arm cut off. This scene is pretty toned down for Tarantino lol

    • @sightfield1132
      @sightfield1132 Рік тому +23

      I think it's good tho
      It's from full shot slowly to cowboy shot

    • @webkid4567
      @webkid4567 Рік тому +18

      It's how you would see the hero being introduced or arriving to save the day in a spaghetti western, which he loves making homages to especially in Django

  • @rileyconnor7749
    @rileyconnor7749 10 місяців тому +63

    The reason I find this scene so brilliant is the subtle symbols Tarantino made. If you look at the reflection in the mirror at around 4:06, you see that Django’s head is missing from the rest of his body signifying that Django was not real but more so a man of legends and something that African American individuals would have believed in and passed down to help them push through their traumatizing years of treatment. AMAZING storytelling.

    • @ohger1
      @ohger1 6 місяців тому +3

      Oh please, it was just a broken mirror - that's why it was in the junk pile.

    • @rileyconnor7749
      @rileyconnor7749 6 місяців тому

      @@ohger1 there’s definitely deeper meaning to this, but sure take a movie that’s rich in subtle Easter eggs with face value 😂

    • @bloodhoundo9320
      @bloodhoundo9320 3 місяці тому

      ​@@ohger1it's placed really specifically though, there was definitely intent

  • @yellowstalk6653
    @yellowstalk6653 7 місяців тому +5

    I really love the moment to moment symbolism. What struck me the most is the way some whip cracks sound like gunshots, and of course that briefest shot of the third Brittle's blood staining a patch of cotton plants, very striking.

  • @anthonybalista7421
    @anthonybalista7421 Рік тому +374

    “You sure that’s him?”
    “Yeah”
    “Positive?”
    “I don’t know”
    “You don’t if you’re positive?”
    “I don’t know what positive means”
    “It means you’re sure.”
    “Yes”
    “Yes what?”
    “Yes I’m sure that’s El’s Brother”
    *BANG*
    “Positive he dead”.
    Love that exchange lol.

    • @raineivy5091
      @raineivy5091 Рік тому +3

      🤣🤣👌👌👌

    • @trouble7242
      @trouble7242 Рік тому +2

      Hilarious 🤣🤣

    • @SaberRexZealot
      @SaberRexZealot Рік тому +11

      “Ellis Brittle” not El’s Brother lol

    • @rasheenportee2544
      @rasheenportee2544 Рік тому

      You may need to re-watch the movie or retype everything you wrote because you have alot of incorrect words and grammar.

    • @anthonybalista7421
      @anthonybalista7421 Рік тому +1

      @@rasheenportee2544 pretty cool how i didn't ask though huh?

  • @Carlos-xz3vi
    @Carlos-xz3vi Рік тому +1156

    This whole movie is one great scene after another after another. A delight to the senses.

    • @fahadahmed4113
      @fahadahmed4113 Рік тому +1

      What's the name of the movie please

    • @girekerelo2452
      @girekerelo2452 Рік тому +7

      @@fahadahmed4113 Django Unchained mabrouk

    • @Footballornothing978
      @Footballornothing978 Рік тому +4

      Even better when you watch it during a continental breakfast.😂

    • @AverageAmerican_
      @AverageAmerican_ Рік тому

      *YO* 🇺🇸👨🏿‍🌾
      ua-cam.com/video/ifidIi7su8c/v-deo.html

    • @fahadahmed4113
      @fahadahmed4113 Рік тому

      @@girekerelo2452 thanks bro👍🏼

  • @premiumheadpats4150
    @premiumheadpats4150 7 місяців тому +1

    I think "I'm positive he dead" is the most memorable line in this movie for me. 🤣

  • @MariaHeredia-dw4id
    @MariaHeredia-dw4id 8 місяців тому +2

    The love Django and Hilde had for each other is hella amazing for the time some real ride or die!

  • @robjones2408
    @robjones2408 Рік тому +216

    "I'm positive he dead !"
    Classic one-liner. QT at his mordant best.

    • @AverageAmerican_
      @AverageAmerican_ Рік тому

      *YO* 🇺🇸👨🏿‍🌾
      ua-cam.com/video/ifidIi7su8c/v-deo.html

  • @francois_bahia
    @francois_bahia Рік тому +594

    Tarantino is pure GENIUS! The music, the scene, the triumph ... a bonafide legendary director!

    • @manjuroca3747
      @manjuroca3747 Рік тому

      Taradino is a piece of shit,cheap copy from 60s with a nigga😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @billlyons7024
      @billlyons7024 Рік тому +5

      The only real director left on the planet.

    • @supastar25
      @supastar25 11 місяців тому +3

      He's truly amazing tbh...I rewatched this and Inglourious Basterds recently...both are easily perfect films...he keeps saying he's retiring as a director after his next film...cinema needs him

    • @lebayhsok9557
      @lebayhsok9557 10 місяців тому

      ​@@billlyons7024 Christopher Nolan

    • @christianvazquez3219
      @christianvazquez3219 10 місяців тому

      ​@@billlyons7024Martin Scorsese

  • @fazbell
    @fazbell 7 місяців тому +4

    One of the finest revenge scenes in cinema.

  • @GoodnightMoon4
    @GoodnightMoon4 9 місяців тому +10

    When Django walked up part of me expected the cliche arm/whip grab interruption, and I'm so glad that wasn't the case. That standoff and callout to his past tormentor was FANTASTIC

  • @fungoidal
    @fungoidal Рік тому +1223

    The scene of him walking over and turning practically a perfect 90 to face John with the music cues and the cinematography of the black woman strung up on the tree with John between her and Django make this probably one of the best scenes in any movie to date. The scene of Django behind John Brittle as he prepares to whip her shows just how far he’s come, John Brittle preparing to whip the woman who is very clearly powerless against him, thus he is infront of her during the scene (and ofc because he’s whipping her), and that is juxtaposed by Django, a black man, standing in-front of John Brittle, showing how very clearly powerless he has become in the presence of him.

    • @JoshSweetvale
      @JoshSweetvale Рік тому +22

      I recognized that fucking verse too.
      It's where God gives Adam the right to tame animals. To use animals as tools, by force if necessary.

    • @chuchada
      @chuchada Рік тому

      Juxtawhat!!!

    • @ayokay123
      @ayokay123 Рік тому +3

      @@chuchada Just supposed. As in, "just supposed I don't know what juxtaposed means".

    • @TheIcekake
      @TheIcekake Рік тому +1

      You’re an English/literature aren’t you damn it!

    • @billwilliams9362
      @billwilliams9362 Рік тому

      You don't like black women ?

  • @raulbetancourt5795
    @raulbetancourt5795 Рік тому +312

    And they say that revenge isnt worth It.

    • @Theomite
      @Theomite Рік тому +10

      Well, BLUE RUIN kinda does make that point pretty well.

    • @raulbetancourt5795
      @raulbetancourt5795 Рік тому +3

      @@Theomite
      Yeah, i've seen many that do It too.

    • @SStupendous
      @SStupendous Рік тому +6

      Arthur Morgan, Jesus, Buddha and Yoda disliked that comment

    • @CommissarChaotic
      @CommissarChaotic Рік тому

      it depends..

    • @-bielle2985
      @-bielle2985 Рік тому +4

      It might not be worth it, but damn, it feels good

  • @disappointedfather5114
    @disappointedfather5114 10 місяців тому +10

    This movie was Quentin's best. A masterpiece.

  • @OrchardFilm
    @OrchardFilm 10 місяців тому +4

    The swelling of the horns in the soundtrack when Django starts whipping the other brother is just amazing. I get goosebumps everytime.

  • @hugonavakopp
    @hugonavakopp Рік тому +445

    Let’s not pretend the whole country wasn’t feeling djangos walk when he’s walking toward them . Beautiful

    • @WillyEckaslike
      @WillyEckaslike Рік тому

      the movie is nothing more than a promotion of bad whyt people and blk heroes....very little of that sort of thing went on otherwise b1ks wouldnt be 15% of the population

  • @MaZaKeRaL
    @MaZaKeRaL Рік тому +34

    4:08 How I confronted my boss on my last day at work.

  • @marklockettsr.8175
    @marklockettsr.8175 8 місяців тому +2

    One of the best scenes in cinema history.

  • @withgoddess1119
    @withgoddess1119 8 місяців тому +1

    This is THE most moving, colorful, exciting movie I have ever seen. Time to rewatch it. ❤

  • @DelightLovesMovies
    @DelightLovesMovies Рік тому +448

    I love how Django is like Superman in that blue suit, and the music is so perfect.

  • @tristy9134
    @tristy9134 Рік тому +368

    Tarantino knows what true satisfaction is.

    • @AverageAmerican_
      @AverageAmerican_ Рік тому

      *YO* 🇺🇸👨🏿‍🌾
      ua-cam.com/video/ifidIi7su8c/v-deo.html

  • @kathleendubois7128
    @kathleendubois7128 7 місяців тому +3

    Soundtrack is superb. Jamie is superb. This movie is epic. Gotta love and honor Quentin!

    • @omgorangelollipop8184
      @omgorangelollipop8184 7 місяців тому

      I love whipping scenes. They should have at least let the task master have a few minutes with her first before he got shot. Smh

    • @kathleendubois7128
      @kathleendubois7128 Місяць тому

      Legendary!

  • @CHARRNAGE
    @CHARRNAGE 7 місяців тому +1

    One of the greatest movies, it really speaks to history and how we should all work for a better future.

  • @coolguyponus
    @coolguyponus Рік тому +408

    Waltz is the greatest actor of this generation. The villain in Basterds is terrifying, and his character in this movie is the ultimate guy we all root for! Brilliant.

    • @TheBlackSheep314
      @TheBlackSheep314 Рік тому +4

      Lol the only actor anyone is rooting for is Django. Best actor of this generation hands down.

    • @yomamaso100
      @yomamaso100 Рік тому +12

      ​@@TheBlackSheep314 There would be no Django without Shultz

    • @supastar25
      @supastar25 11 місяців тому +10

      His character in Basterds is the best villain perfomance I've seen tbh

    • @ku8son892
      @ku8son892 10 місяців тому +4

      @@TheBlackSheep314 no lmao i was rooting for Shultz all the time

    • @wedontagelikemilktho.7839
      @wedontagelikemilktho.7839 10 місяців тому +3

      Ku8son So you were basically rooting for Django too cuz Schultz supported Django through out the whole movie.😂

  • @ringleader18
    @ringleader18 Рік тому +25

    @5:03 When yo mama said you ain't gettin' her car over the weekend lmao

  • @G82Jesse
    @G82Jesse 8 місяців тому +2

    Tarantino's use of music in this movie is superb... This scene, the Ancora Qui scene, and the dynamite scene near the end. 100/100.

  • @Solqueen86
    @Solqueen86 7 місяців тому +5

    Everytime Will Smith rejects a movie role you know the movie going to be a masterpiece without him😂

    • @RaiderRSupastar
      @RaiderRSupastar 27 днів тому

      I didn't know that. 😂 Thanks for the gift Will

  • @oldindependent3040
    @oldindependent3040 Рік тому +1815

    Sadly, the cruelty was real. And unimaginable

    • @TheGreatSalsaMan
      @TheGreatSalsaMan Рік тому +2

      Based on how their kind is ruining the country today they weren’t nearly cruel enough to them…

    • @victorhardin2186
      @victorhardin2186 Рік тому +241

      Real life is always worse. I can't even imagine. But this scene gives some sort of satisfaction.

    • @niladityadebnath3116
      @niladityadebnath3116 Рік тому +14

      We got the hero we deserve.

    • @herohonda4183
      @herohonda4183 Рік тому +20

      Apparently it wasn’t unimaginable

    • @YMS09D
      @YMS09D Рік тому +155

      And modern teaching wants us to forget this ever happened.

  • @UncleChopChop22
    @UncleChopChop22 Рік тому +507

    Crazy to think this movie is coming up to a decade old.

    • @Vorteksio3
      @Vorteksio3 Рік тому +46

      @@wt9767 Okay boomer.

    • @flipify_5044
      @flipify_5044 Рік тому +30

      @@wt9767 bro calm down jeez

    • @wt9767
      @wt9767 Рік тому +6

      @@Vorteksio3 Wow, what a genius response. The originality is mind blowing. You definitely will advance well past your current job of scooping up orange chicken at Panda Express.

    • @incogn3gr0
      @incogn3gr0 Рік тому +11

      @@wt9767 You must be fun at parties.

    • @mugiwara9507
      @mugiwara9507 Рік тому +12

      @@wt9767 this man is mad for some reason 😭

  • @ZoraVada-kn7tv
    @ZoraVada-kn7tv 4 місяці тому +2

    It is one of the most emotional roller-coaster scenes ever made in a movie. The satisfaction at the end made it worth it.

  • @kazitude1
    @kazitude1 Рік тому +631

    THIS movie is so fucking cathartic!
    I can watch it over and over and derive the same satisfaction
    Tarantino is a genius!

    • @Saif-zf9vb
      @Saif-zf9vb Рік тому +13

      Great word to describe the movie. I love it too, one of the greatest revenge movies ever.

    • @luvbig41
      @luvbig41 Рік тому +4

      I definitely bought this movie because of how much satisfaction it gives me.

    • @AverageAmerican_
      @AverageAmerican_ Рік тому

      *YO* 🇺🇸👨🏿‍🌾
      ua-cam.com/video/ifidIi7su8c/v-deo.html

  • @swappedoutZ71
    @swappedoutZ71 Рік тому +404

    This is legit one of the best movies ever made. Put it up there with roots and Amistad. This is just brilliant because Tarantino added the perfect amount of comedy without taking away any of the seriousness

    • @MrTuubster
      @MrTuubster Рік тому +9

      The absolute opposite of Thor: Love and Thunder then.

    • @BitchlessNigga
      @BitchlessNigga Рік тому

      @@MrTuubster Almost every Thor movie is shit

    • @MrTuubster
      @MrTuubster Рік тому +1

      @@BitchlessNigga true. Although I did enjoy Ragnarok.

    • @josephbassey1501
      @josephbassey1501 Рік тому +4

      @@MrTuubster you enjoying ragnarok too much is what gave the director the license to make Love n Thunder
      I know Thor the dark world was shit n a light hearted Film like Ragnarok was a relief but the comedy kind of blinded us from the character assassination of Thor which was finalized in Love n Thunder

    • @MrTuubster
      @MrTuubster Рік тому +2

      @@josephbassey1501 True. But I am not taking ALL the credit. Other people went and watched it too.

  • @bit1733
    @bit1733 26 днів тому +1

    Kerry's performance is superb here. Her pain and agony when she was being flogged feels so real.

  • @intellygent-alienking5651
    @intellygent-alienking5651 8 місяців тому +2

    I love how Tarantino told Foxx to calm down the coolness and reallly get into the character of a slave, which he does excellently, but still manages to be a bad ass

  • @senseo2848
    @senseo2848 Рік тому +155

    "i´m positive he dead" cracks me up all the time

  • @combatvolta
    @combatvolta Рік тому +321

    Credit to the lady ,her acting was perfect too , all was good in this movie

  • @javierbd09
    @javierbd09 2 місяці тому +2

    What a brutal flashback. It makes this movie my favorite love story.

  • @06SteveO
    @06SteveO 10 місяців тому +4

    “I like the way you die boy” best fucking line ever.

  • @johnodande6295
    @johnodande6295 Рік тому +379

    One minute he doesn't know what positive means. Next minute he's confident enough to use positive in a sentence. Such a fast learner. Impressive.

    • @error404m
      @error404m Рік тому +30

      If I said "flumunjun" means "sure", I'm pretty flumunjun that you could use it in a sentence immediately.

    • @SStupendous
      @SStupendous Рік тому +16

      @@error404m Keep in mind the possibility of the person you just replied to being a slow American, which would explain why so many seem to think Django using the word is the most amazing thing ever.

    • @SomeName_AlsoHandlesSucc
      @SomeName_AlsoHandlesSucc Рік тому

      @@SStupendous Slow american?

    • @enekaitzteixeira7010
      @enekaitzteixeira7010 Рік тому

      @@SStupendous It is the third comment I see prasing the use of a word just after they told him the definition. Makes me wonder how dumb can they be to be impressed by such a three years old task.

    • @SStupendous
      @SStupendous Рік тому +7

      @@enekaitzteixeira7010 I mean how incredible, being told what a basic word means in one context and definition, and instantly being able to use the word! As opposed to having to revise for a week and a half, and get classes on how to use it.