I've always loved Dr. Schultz for his politeness, his calmness, and his humor. He's got to be one of my fav movie characters and Christoph Waltz nailed this role masterfully.
I read supposedly the role was written specifically for Waltz by Tarantino. He still almost refused to take it, but he accepted on the condition that his character be "totally pure".
@@johntumahab323 Yeah he said that he didn't want to play a character that's so close to reality. But eventually he accepted saying that he wanted to be too pure and good like his real persona.
The Marshall thought he was going to arrest and hang some kind of raving madman who murdered his sheriff in cold blood but now he realises not only that the madman had the authority to do just that but that his sheriff was a wanted man and that he now must pay $200 dollars to a man that just made him look like a fool in front of the entire town. And cost him a sheriff.
That was the whole idea. And it was acting a script and screenplay. The movie was intentionally redemptive, full of the apposite phrases and actions we always think of after the actual event has taken us by surprise.
I don't know what pissed them off more. That an outlaw tricked them all and hid right under their noses, or that they were forced to pay a total stranger $200 for killing the local sheriff.
I think that's the reason why he told the guy to call the sheriff first. The marshall wouldn't have gotten the whole town armed if he was the first to arrive, and the sheriff would have had gotten the whole town armed anyway if the marshall had been shot, thus their difference in autorithy being irrelevant - but in this case, the sheriff probably would have shot first and asked questions later after Schultz shot the marshall (small town sheriff vs federal agent; it seems obvious...). Also, obviously a sheriff in a small town is more likely to be a wanted outlaw than a marshal.
I love how Dr. Schultz has just mastered the art of conversing at whatever situation it might be 😂. His articulation, tone of sound and gestures just assert subtle dominance.
+Joseph Halliday who the fuck shoots dogs in the street? it must happen often when they use it as a popular reference. ive shot a few cats in my days, but why would anyone want to hurt a poor puppy....out in the cold street!
RadioactiveSand i could think of several reasons! cats are parasites and antisocial beasts. my dog doesnt like em and thats for a good reason imo. dont get me wrong im not saying torture them, but get rid of em fast like the pest they are.
sooo... 336,000 dollars for Broomhilda + 2 new horses, 2 convertible wagooons, house with built in stables, schlager vinyl collection and fuckloads of other expenses till death do us part...
Burhan the Somali The character is indeed German, but the actor is Austrian, and the way they speak is considerably different from Standard High German as spoken in Germany. What I mean though, is that when speaking English, Schultz doesn't betray what you would call a typical German accent. Want to hear a German accent, listen to Gunther Hermann from Deus Ex, now that's a fucking German accent, haha :D
2:00 When the Marshall asks Schultz if he is unarmed, he answers, “Yes, we are.” Maybe it’s a pedantic detail, but gis character is so well developed. The entire town doesn’t see the black man next to Schultz as an equal human being, yet he finds it necessary to address the both of them with a “we”.
Exactly! The Marshall's question was obviously meant for the doctor, asking if he was unarmed. In his reply he subtly reaffirmed that the black man next to him was also to be treated as a free-willed human being.
@@Michael-nr9nx Meh, not likely. When he was first telling them to come out of the saloon, he said "you in the saloon" "you and your ni**er". He didn't say "both of you". At no point did he address Django directly. Listen to Tatum's words again.
Based on Waltz’s performance both here and in _Inglourious Basterds,_ it’s abundantly clear that he and Tarantino understood each other very well. I hope that Tarantino uses him again in his next (and likely last) film!
I'd love to watch just that!!! the two of them discussing duels, gunfights, nights on the road, the intricate problems of frontier society and just how unfairly Poker is played these days...
Much as we'd all enjoy see something like that, ain't nobody gonna cheat the hangman in my town! I don't know why, but this line makes me chuckle every time
"You mean like you did our Sheriff? Shot him down like a dog in the street." "YES, that's [EXACTLY] what I mean! Do I have your word as a Lawman, [NOT] to-shoot-me-down like-a-dog in-the-street?" "Well...much as we'd all enjoy seeing something that, ain't nobody gonna cheat the Hangman in my town." "Fair enough Marshall, here we come!" This movie is just absolutley loaded with unbelievably, fantastic scriptwriting and character development! 🔫🤠
Well.. this is Quentin Tarantino Writing for you! Southern American English is for a non native speaker quite difficult to understand.. at least in the very beginning, but as time passed I got the grasp of it. It was the same thing with Brad Pitt's Character Aldo Rayne in Inglorious Basterds: I had to listen twice and sometimes thrice, when I watched the movie in english. Greetings from Germany by the way :)
Gotta love the fact that the good doctor not only brought an African American into a bar with no regards for the owner’s view but he also killed the town’s sheriff, proved he was legally allowed to, and made the Marshall pay him for the bounty. Absolute badass
I remember when I first saw this scene I was completely blown away. It's dialogue like this that make movies interestingly great. Out of the box thinking. This cleverness also reminds of the greatness I saw in the dark knight when joker pulled the "I'm going to make this pencil disappear" gag.
One of the greatest scenes I've ever had the privilege of witnessing. Thank you, Quentin Tarantino, for everything you've given us. You are a genuine genius and your talent does not go without recognition.
Arguable, but not by much. The scene where they ride off to the music of Jim Croce is nice, as is the bandying between Dr. Schultz and Don Johnson's character. But definitely top 3.
When I started watching Django I had a terrible fever and had mainly put it on as background noise, after that scene I forgot about my fever and was hooked to watch the rest of the movie, such an awesome scene!
This scene was epic in it's awesomeness. Loved it. This is one of my favorite movies of all time and certainly my favorite Tarantino movie. Dr Schultz character was awesome.
"Well, much as we'd all enjoy see somn'like that, ain't nobody gonna cheat the hangman in my town!" For some reason, to me this is the most memorable phrase in the movie. Love the way he delivers it.
I prefer him in Inglorious, but nonetheless this is a very... very... close second. I was on the fence about but I took Inglorious on the fact that it was his big breakout role.
"I want 6 men 6 rifles there, want 2 men 2 rifles up on this roof, 2 men 2 rifles up on that roof there, all barrels pointin' to that front door" *10 seconds later 100 people appear pointing at the front door*
Fun fact: both the writer (Quentin Tarantino) and the actor (Christoph Waltz) won a host of awards for this performance, including Academy Awards and Golden Globes. They don't give out Emmys for movies though, those are for TV shows.
I don't consider myself a Tarantino fan, but I do admire aspects of his work. I think his movies get a little over the top with the violence and blood shed but there are very few film makers who can match or exceed his ability to write dialogue.
The cherry on top of this scene is Schultz’s shit eating grin at the end, and Django’s reaction to what the man standing next to him just said to the Marshall. I remember watching this for the first time. My jaw was on the goddamn floor and my dad was watching my reaction smiling from ear to ear and he thought ‘ yep... my boy is a Quentin Tarantino fan now ‘ he was absolutely right. I had the pleasure and fortune of this being my first QT film, I was 12 at the time. I loved every last fucking second of it. Pure creation, genius, humor, historical accuracy, amazing affects and casting/acting performances. Just WOW
I've always loved Dr. Schultz for his politeness, his calmness, and his humor. He's got to be one of my fav movie characters and Christoph Waltz nailed this role masterfully.
I read supposedly the role was written specifically for Waltz by Tarantino. He still almost refused to take it, but he accepted on the condition that his character be "totally pure".
He was equally as good in Inglourious Basterds
@@johntumahab323 Yeah he said that he didn't want to play a character that's so close to reality. But eventually he accepted saying that he wanted to be too pure and good like his real persona.
@@johntumahab323 well that's acceptable given how evil Hans Landa was
Good writing. Is so much better than star wars reboot.
If only Red Dead Redemption had negotiation abilities to lose 'wanted' status
That could be a mod, once it comes to pc in November.
bukon90 yeah but the ppl that make the mod would have to record new dialogue it wouldnt work
Skyrim does, just sayin'
@@lt.lasereyez8891 So? Skyrim is a completely different type of game other than the open worldness.
@@caydenl.4878 It is !? OMG!
That last smug line completed this masterpiece of a scene.
TraustiGeir and the music. it's like cherry on the top
TraustiGeir I don't get it can some one explain what happened??
The Marshall thought he was going to arrest and hang some kind of raving madman who murdered his sheriff in cold blood but now he realises not only that the madman had the authority to do just that but that his sheriff was a wanted man and that he now must pay $200 dollars to a man that just made him look like a fool in front of the entire town. And cost him a sheriff.
Ludovic Gelli also 200 dollars back then is like 4 or 5 grand now
That was the whole idea. And it was acting a script and screenplay. The movie was intentionally redemptive, full of the apposite phrases and actions we always think of after the actual event has taken us by surprise.
"2 men with 2 rifles on that roof and 2 men 2 rifles on this roof."
10 seconds later, 20 guys on the roof.
Did anyone get poor Bill out of the goddamn street?!
@@wilji1090 Asking the real question here.
Then proceeds to say that he has 100 men.
I think they should have taken one rifle and shared it between them.None if them shot art them anyway.
Lol no one actually listened they wanted that shot
I don't know what pissed them off more. That an outlaw tricked them all and hid right under their noses, or that they were forced to pay a total stranger $200 for killing the local sheriff.
+Olaf Peuss aye aye to that
He wasn't an outlaw.
Angus Gillies
He was an outlaw pretending to be someone else with a job as the sheriff
They were probably more upset over a Black Man being in their town and being treated as an equal by a European more than anything else.
@@Wasserkaktus I think it's all three combined.
I like how the marshall kept his cool and stayed reasonable the whole time.
And: Somebody get poor Bill outta the Goddamn street. Har, har, har.
In his place I'd've done the same - though probably only because I wanted to hear what Doc Schultz had to say for himself.
I think that's the reason why he told the guy to call the sheriff first. The marshall wouldn't have gotten the whole town armed if he was the first to arrive, and the sheriff would have had gotten the whole town armed anyway if the marshall had been shot, thus their difference in autorithy being irrelevant - but in this case, the sheriff probably would have shot first and asked questions later after Schultz shot the marshall (small town sheriff vs federal agent; it seems obvious...). Also, obviously a sheriff in a small town is more likely to be a wanted outlaw than a marshal.
"In other words, Marshall: you owe me 200 dollars."
Now that's how to end the conversation. :D
+Beginstheman Almost as good as the "you owe me 200 dollars" scene in Warrior.
+coryboy345 Im pretty sure that was bucks,"you owe me 20 bucks".
+Beginstheman The fucking balls on him! Oh I remember the theater erupted in laughter.
+Beginstheman with the music after that, it's just a perfect cinematic moment!!!
+Beginstheman Funny every time when I watch it...
I love how Dr. Schultz has just mastered the art of conversing at whatever situation it might be 😂. His articulation, tone of sound and gestures just assert subtle dominance.
He's the courier with 10 charisma
"YES, THAT'S EXACTLY WHAT I MEAN!... Like a dog in the street!" Lmao, I love that line!
Joseph Halliday He didn't say 'like a dog in the street.'
I know it wasn't exact, put the point was the same.
+Joseph Halliday who the fuck shoots dogs in the street? it must happen often when they use it as a popular reference.
ive shot a few cats in my days, but why would anyone want to hurt a poor puppy....out in the cold street!
+TheWimmse Well why would anyone want to hurt a poor cat, either?
RadioactiveSand i could think of several reasons! cats are parasites and antisocial beasts. my dog doesnt like em and thats for a good reason imo. dont get me wrong im not saying torture them, but get rid of em fast like the pest they are.
$200 in 1858 is about $5,600 in 2017 dollars.
Pickman Good pay to kill someone legally lol.
Seems a bit on the low side to me, the modern amount.
John Randall That’s why you bring them back alive more money
@@johnrandall125 naaa only in movies a kill is worth a small fortune
sooo... 336,000 dollars for Broomhilda + 2 new horses, 2 convertible wagooons, house with built in stables, schlager vinyl collection and fuckloads of other expenses till death do us part...
3:34 the way he turns his head is just so perfect
damn finally found u :D
Hey sup
mooo :D sup
DeeDoctor all’s good wbu
mooo :D good man!! I'm heading to school rn
does anybody else get a weird satisfaction out of the way he says "WillaRD PeCK" aha
Yes. I find myself mimicking his accent from time to time. Real fun thing to do to annoy the shit outta the special people in your life.
Burhan the Somali The way he's talking isn't the German accent at all. It's just vestiges of his Austrian accent.
Burhan the Somali The character is indeed German, but the actor is Austrian, and the way they speak is considerably different from Standard High German as spoken in Germany.
What I mean though, is that when speaking English, Schultz doesn't betray what you would call a typical German accent. Want to hear a German accent, listen to Gunther Hermann from Deus Ex, now that's a fucking German accent, haha :D
Simon Edmonds I also like the "Lubbock Texas..."
+Simon Edmonds I really like: "The man lying dead IN THE DIRT-UH..."
2:00 When the Marshall asks Schultz if he is unarmed, he answers, “Yes, we are.”
Maybe it’s a pedantic detail, but gis character is so well developed. The entire town doesn’t see the black man next to Schultz as an equal human being, yet he finds it necessary to address the both of them with a “we”.
Exactly! The Marshall's question was obviously meant for the doctor, asking if he was unarmed. In his reply he subtly reaffirmed that the black man next to him was also to be treated as a free-willed human being.
The marshall is asking „you unarmed“
That means he could be adressing Schultz as well as django
Yeah this comment is incredibly reaching
@@Michael-nr9nx Meh, not likely. When he was first telling them to come out of the saloon, he said "you in the saloon" "you and your ni**er". He didn't say "both of you". At no point did he address Django directly. Listen to Tatum's words again.
Tarantino movies, characters, actors. Fucking awesome.
Didn't know that was tarantino- thanks
Marshall says "Go on" with hands on his hips like he's a dad waiting to hear his teenage son explain how he wrecked the family car.
It's a power move: He wasn't gonna buy it at first 😅
Haha, Django at the end:
"....damn".
Georgio16100 the exact words are “I’ll be damned” lol even better
Damn this man is good
lol he actually said that.. never heard it before
Right..
Now that's actually the whole scene oh, the look on Django's face and the thoughts running behind his stare at the dentist
Reason most of us only heard Damn, rather than I'll be dammed is because of the fact African Americans love saying DAYYUMMMM.
Based on Waltz’s performance both here and in _Inglourious Basterds,_ it’s abundantly clear that he and Tarantino understood each other very well. I hope that Tarantino uses him again in his next (and likely last) film!
When "Movie Critics" comes out?
Somebody get the poor Bill out the god damn street
+Pinto Nicolas That's Willard Peck
+Gokul Rama , the hell you say..!!
It was very disconcerting....to Sheriff Sharp. LOL
slow clap
lol shot him down like a dog in the street!!!!
One of the coolest characters in film history. So much that even his horse ' Fritz ' had superb panache.
Pan ass
Damn that Marshall is like THE definition of american
Its Luke Duke, yee haa!!
just a good ol' boy, never meaning no harm.
Beats all you never saw, been in trouble with the law, since the day he was born.
guys, we have GOT to get the band back together, seriously.
Sorry, but that's just a little bit more than the law will allow.
The Doctor and Buster Scruggs could probably talk to each other for hours without getting bored.
I'd love to watch just that!!! the two of them discussing duels, gunfights, nights on the road, the intricate problems of frontier society and just how unfairly Poker is played these days...
That's a Shitload of Spit the Marshal spat.
Probably spit and tobacco
propably some jizz
Did you not see bill(i mean budd) spitting in kill bill...... TARANTINO likes characters with extra saliva..
Naman Popat Budd i think eh
it was actually a spit load of spit
Dr King was honestly my favorite part of this whole movie. Such a graceful badass
Much as we'd all enjoy see something like that, ain't nobody gonna cheat the hangman in my town!
I don't know why, but this line makes me chuckle every time
Giulia Guarienti Kind of interesting in hindsight, as that same sentiment is shared by a character in The Hateful Eight.
lmaooo that shit was funny as fuck 😂
It's a sad state of affairs when one of the duke boys stop s running from the law and become the law, just a good old boy my ass.
Funny as shit
They loved hanging shows back then👆😇 as there was no TV.
Why is everything Christoph Waltz say in this movie so fucking satisfying
are the unpleasant profanity and the question mark mutually exclusive ?
"In other words, Marshall, you owe me 200 dollars."
The moxy on this man...
Best scene of the movie ?? I think yes...
priceless reaction hahahha
MARSHAL BE LIKE GOD DAMN I SHOULD SHOT THE SHERIFF
THE HELL YOU SAY
"You mean like you did our Sheriff? Shot him down like a dog in the street."
"YES, that's [EXACTLY] what I mean! Do I have your word as a Lawman, [NOT] to-shoot-me-down like-a-dog in-the-street?"
"Well...much as we'd all enjoy seeing something that, ain't nobody gonna cheat the Hangman in my town."
"Fair enough Marshall, here we come!"
This movie is just absolutley loaded with unbelievably, fantastic scriptwriting and character development!
🔫🤠
But for non native english speakers it is really hard to understand 😅
Greetings from a German. 😄
Well.. this is Quentin Tarantino Writing for you! Southern American English is for a non native speaker quite difficult to understand.. at least in the very beginning, but as time passed I got the grasp of it. It was the same thing with Brad Pitt's Character Aldo Rayne in Inglorious Basterds: I had to listen twice and sometimes thrice, when I watched the movie in english. Greetings from Germany by the way :)
I'd make that deal. Would you make that deal? I don't blame you. DAMN GOOD DEAL!
I MADE A DEAL WITH THE HE GENERAL FOR THIS SHERIFFS LIIIEFEEFE!
AU REVOIR, SHOSHANA
That deal was made but they didn't give a about that sheriff.
Hell, I would definitely make that deal.
A glass of milk
Gotta love the fact that the good doctor not only brought an African American into a bar with no regards for the owner’s view but he also killed the town’s sheriff, proved he was legally allowed to, and made the Marshall pay him for the bounty. Absolute badass
"In other words Marshall, you owe me $200" best damn line in the movie
Dylan Chew the music kicking in makes me smile
There are so many best lines in the movie, I can't count them.
This whole scene has like 8 best lines. Lol
iSwayzak me too :D
I like the way you die boy!Is my favorite!
Django.... “Damn”.
He KNEW he just watched an acting of masterpiece theater that only 0.1% could pull off.
I remember when I first saw this scene I was completely blown away. It's dialogue like this that make movies interestingly great. Out of the box thinking. This cleverness also reminds of the greatness I saw in the dark knight when joker pulled the "I'm going to make this pencil disappear" gag.
Incessant Wake It scenes like those ones that have helped make audiences love the films & have proven Ledger & Waltz to be damn fine actors!
top dialogue
Well, tables turned, right?
yes!
Two of my top 5 movies right. Dark Knight and Django
When he says "Willard Peck" and "Lubbock", gives me an odd satisfaction.
i love it how he points at the warrant @3:00
Reminds me of Deadpool.
@@schuylervaillancourt5499 he wore the brown pants
Chris Cosmic me too 😂
Schuyler Vaillancourt I was gonna say Ace Ventura with the shadow puppet.
One of the greatest scenes I've ever had the privilege of witnessing. Thank you, Quentin Tarantino, for everything you've given us. You are a genuine genius and your talent does not go without recognition.
"This (proceeds to point) is a warrant" STILL GETS ME EVERY TIME LOL
This guy can carry a scene with just pure acting.
As an actor, that's actually his job
This was the best scene in the whole movie in my opinion, fucking brilliant.
LiPOTO no the MMM scene was
The scene when he shut Candie was great as well.
Arguable, but not by much. The scene where they ride off to the music of Jim Croce is nice, as is the bandying between Dr. Schultz and Don Johnson's character. But definitely top 3.
“And if there’s any astronomy aficionados amongst you, the North Star is that one “ you can quote this movie all night long!
IoriaDieffenbach while this scene is my favorite in the movie, that line is probably my favorite!!!
IS THIS THE MARSHALL I HAVE THE PLEASURE OF ADRESSING?!?!
TheNytdj with dat face :3
TheNytdj yes it is!
@@jeffryalgo This is the U.S. marshall Gil Tatum
He is so polite to be a killer??
"He'll back up who I am,and who your dear departed sheriff.. was". the Marshal's face......
Plot twist: Marshall is also a wanted man.
$200
But then there would be no marshal near the village to pay them off.
ZnNlove Efil I read this as the music kicked in. Now THAT was quality.
@@Radimunto the village would have to chip in to the $500.
plot twist: The Marshall is going to cheat the hangman. lol
When i first saw this, i said damn at the same time django did in the scene lol
Christoph Waltz rules man!!!
And he deserved that Oscar as well.
yes true
I love him
Ever notice how this guy always has long smart ass speeches in all the films he does ?
I love it
I just realized another connection.
"The lonely grave of Paula Schultz."
True Tarantino fans will know.
kill bill 2
lol
Mind blown 😮
Beatrix Kiddo
Kill Bill 2..
Christoph is a genius in this and every other scene he's in
Dr. Shultz is such an awesome character in the movie, and Christoph Waltz played the character so naturality. He deserved that award.
When I started watching Django I had a terrible fever and had mainly put it on as background noise, after that scene I forgot about my fever and was hooked to watch the rest of the movie, such an awesome scene!
Fun fact: That guy who played the marshal was also Luke from The Dukes of Hazzard in the 70's and 80s
+RobotYoshimis good role for that guy !
+RobotYoshimis Sir Tom Wopat
Now that I look at it again, it sure looks like him.
annoyed707 It is him ..and the first guy they shot was a famous 70's star tv and movies
Fun fact: The music at the end is the main theme from an old Rockstar game called Red Dead Revolver.
I wish I could watch this again for the first time. you are a madman Mr. Tarantino and I love it.
in other words Marshal...you owe me 200 dollars
Travis Walsh Hahaha !
Travis Walsh damn
i love how schultz is honest and dishonest both at the same time
and that the only people he lies to his enemies
"In other words, marshal... you owe me two hundred dollars!"
Burn
"Shot him down like a dawg in the street!" I love how Gil Tatum says that line lol
This scene was epic in it's awesomeness. Loved it. This is one of my favorite movies of all time and certainly my favorite Tarantino movie. Dr Schultz character was awesome.
"Well, much as we'd all enjoy see somn'like that, ain't nobody gonna cheat the hangman in my town!"
For some reason, to me this is the most memorable phrase in the movie. Love the way he delivers it.
This is Christopher Waltz best performance in this movie. 2nd is Inglorious Basterds
I think in Basterds he was much better, but both are still very good
That's why every time Waltz does a Tarantino film he earns an Oscar.
I think hes amazing in this movie, but the opening scene from inglorious bastards is just amazing, he really built tension there
CHRISTOPH not CHRISTOPHER
I prefer him in Inglorious, but nonetheless this is a very... very... close second. I was on the fence about but I took Inglorious on the fact that it was his big breakout role.
"I want 6 men 6 rifles there, want 2 men 2 rifles up on this roof, 2 men 2 rifles up on that roof there, all barrels pointin' to that front door" *10 seconds later 100 people appear pointing at the front door*
YES THAT'S EXACTLY WHAT I MEAN!!! best scene lol
+Jim Knopf Yep! I laughed my ass off when i've seen this movie the first time :D
I love how he makes some words last longer and how his accent boosts it.
Null-drama christoph waltz is a Hella of a actor
Null-drama he should play Vladimir Putin in a Trump movie
He has an accent?
Robert Pattinson! lol Who? and that's the joke.
John Creasy01 noname trying to insult a world-class leader? Truly remarkable.
Dr Schultz: "In other words, Marshall: you owe me 200 dollars."
Marshal: "FIRE!!!" ^^
*Every townsfolk staring at each other like "what the fuck??"*
Such a phenomenal actor is Christoph Waltz. Soo talented, smart and simple.
Christoph is like... so good. Goddam it. Like Day-Lewis good.
Christopher Waltz is the man!
have you seen him in There Will be Blood? There's nothing that can top DDL.
Borkborkwoof so much effort that it feels weighed. That day lewis guy is overrated. The Austrian is effortless
@@HighLordBlazeReborn There is, Daniel Day Lewis in The Last of the Mohicans.
Quentin one of the greatest directors.. ever.. especially in terms of consistency over numerous decades and different genres..
“$200 dead or alive.”
“The hell you say?”
That KILLS ME EVERY TIME 😂😂😂💀💀💀
I love the camera shot at the word "this" when he points with one raised hand at the warrant in the other.
Who ever wrote this scene should get an Emmy along with this actors dame they good. Now give me my 200 dollars hahs.
Tarantino wrote it. just like any scene in any Tarantino movie. he is a writer-director
Fun fact: both the writer (Quentin Tarantino) and the actor (Christoph Waltz) won a host of awards for this performance, including Academy Awards and Golden Globes. They don't give out Emmys for movies though, those are for TV shows.
Emmys are for shows dude lol
That “Damn” from Django at the end is beautiful
the marshall has a nice orange car :-)
+MrZillas Dukes of Hazard reference?
+Da CHickmOn No it's a Mean Girls reference
+Da CHickmOn - yes :-)
Old dude comes into your town, kills your cheriff, makes a panic across the whole town and in the end, you pay him $200 and let them go... :D
You mean like you did our sheriff, shot him down like a Dog in the street"
YES that's EXACTLY what I mean lmao
'As much as we all would like to see something like that...' That is hysterical.
“Is this the Marshal I am addressing” makes me laugh every time
Man flabbergasts entire town with one sentence, including his duo 😂
I don't consider myself a Tarantino fan, but I do admire aspects of his work. I think his movies get a little over the top with the violence and blood shed but there are very few film makers who can match or exceed his ability to write dialogue.
I love love LOVE Django Unchained. One of the best films ever made in my opinion.
Englisch: "Damn!" German : "Leck mich am Arsch!"
The marshal's sideways, double take after being asked for two hundred dollars is pure gold.
now wunderbar Marshal!
ich glaube er hat gesagt "na wunderbar Marshall"
This is probably one of my favorite scenes of the entire movie. He had it all figured out.
„Na wunderbar, Marshall!“
I love how he said that line.
That double take from the Marshall at the end always gets me, brilliant.
Gill Tatum must be Channing Tatum's gran gran grand father
I wаtсhеd Djаngооо Unсhаinеd full mоviе hеrее twitter.com/f841b5579e910acc3/status/795841819720368128 Djаngо Unchаinеd Dr Sссссhultz аnd thе Маааrshаl
omg he was born in Alabama!!!!
And funny thing, Channing Tatum became a STATESMAN.
Then Channing Tatum played an outlaw in Tarantino's next film The Hateful Eight with a price on his head.
Or Luke Duke's great great granddaddy!
One of my favorite movies of all time.
for those who think the marshal is familiar but cannot place him he was played my Tom Wopat (Luke Duke)
The writing, the delivery ....Tarantino is a legend! Will be remembered by
Well, at last, we have a serious western movie incident solved with no blood loss!
:)
+Diego Cobo you are aware of the dead sheriff, right...? :P
Scenes like this and others in this movie are the reasons why this is easily in my top 3 Tarantino movies.
Tarantino is only gonna make 2 more movies. If not at least one of them has Waltz in it, I will cry. Tarantino + Waltz = guaranteed Awesomeness.
I loved that ''damn'' at the end from Django, just at the break in the music, such good timing! :D
Dr. Schultz!
"Is this the Marshall I have the pleasure of addressing?" LOL
COLD BLOODED KILLER but so polite!!!
The cherry on top of this scene is Schultz’s shit eating grin at the end, and Django’s reaction to what the man standing next to him just said to the Marshall.
I remember watching this for the first time. My jaw was on the goddamn floor and my dad was watching my reaction smiling from ear to ear and he thought ‘ yep... my boy is a Quentin Tarantino fan now ‘ he was absolutely right. I had the pleasure and fortune of this being my first QT film, I was 12 at the time. I loved every last fucking second of it. Pure creation, genius, humor, historical accuracy, amazing affects and casting/acting performances. Just WOW
great actor brilliant screen play and dialogue
"IS THIS THE MARSHAL I HAVE THE PLEASURE OF ADDRESSING". lMFAO LOL!
"Yes it is, this is US Marshal Gill Tatum."
"In other words Marshall, you owe me 200 dollars... savage on a whole other level!!! Keep it 100 christopher ealts, you my favorite for a reason
the actor who played the marshell did a amazing job lol evee n tho its a small role its perfect acting
Mr. Waltz is such an awesome actor