Django Unchained «FREE — 2027»
As Django rides away from the exploding Candyland, with Broomhilda on his horse, he looks back at the destruction—not with tears, but with a smirk. The D is silent. But the message is loud and clear.
Django Unchained is a recklessly entertaining mess—and in Tarantino’s world, that’s usually a compliment. Django Unchained
is a messy, bombastic, offensive masterpiece. It is a film where a former slave says goodbye by pistol-whipping a white woman to death and then blowing up a mansion. It refuses to be polite. It refuses to be sad. It chooses to be angry, and then it chooses to be free. As Django rides away from the exploding Candyland,
When Quentin Tarantino announced he was making a film set in the Deep South of 1858, combining the brutal history of American slavery with the stylized violence of Italian Spaghetti Westerns, the world held its breath. The result, released in 2012, was —a film that defies easy categorization. It is a revenge fantasy, a historical drama, a buddy comedy, and a blood-soaked opera all rolled into one. Django Unchained is a recklessly entertaining mess—and in
Before Django , Leo was largely the hero or the tragic lead. Enter , the monstrous, francophile plantation owner of "Candieland".