Monday, 21 December 2015

Django Unchained Review




This movie really got the grips of my attention right from the very opening and rattled it to the finish. With scenes of pure brutality and racism causes the viewer to really put themselves on the shoes of slaves. You begin to get to grips with the violence and the treatment of the slaves in that time period in which the film is set in (1800's). Django is a blossoming character. He starts off the movie with such little confidence and wit. But with the help of Dr King Shultz , Django turns into a sharp tounged with a presence that could easily wake anything in his path. He begins to develop verbal and shooting skills in a battle to save his wife Broomhilda. It seems throughout the entire movie that Dr King Shultz ( the bounty hunter that bought Django his freedom from chains) is the only white character to treat him respect and give him his human rights, portraying his character to be loving and faithful and Shultz really plucks the strings of your heart when you think about it as he should be cold-hearted as can be as he is a bounty hunter but he is really a nice heart warming character.

In conclusion the film is a brutal train ride with emotional drops and highs to portray the struggle of slavery and the sheer brutality of the contextual time the movie was set in. The blood bath of an ending is sheer chaos and the final scenes are something you have to experience to be over whelmed.




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