Post by Radrook Admin on May 28, 2021 13:24:50 GMT -5
Django Unchained Absolute Best Scenes HD
Jamie Foxx as Django Freeman
Christoph Waltz as Dr. King Schultz
Leonardo DiCaprio as "Monsieur" Calvin J. Candie
Kerry Washington as Broomhilda "Hildi" von Shaft[1]
Samuel L. Jackson as Stephen Warren
Walton Goggins as Billy Crash
Dennis Christopher as Leonide "Leo" Moguy
James Remar as Butch Pooch / Ace Speck
David Steen as Mr. Stonecipher
Dana Gourrier as Cora
Jamie Foxx as Django Freeman
Christoph Waltz as Dr. King Schultz
Leonardo DiCaprio as "Monsieur" Calvin J. Candie
Kerry Washington as Broomhilda "Hildi" von Shaft[1]
Samuel L. Jackson as Stephen Warren
Walton Goggins as Billy Crash
Dennis Christopher as Leonide "Leo" Moguy
James Remar as Butch Pooch / Ace Speck
David Steen as Mr. Stonecipher
Dana Gourrier as Cora
This is a film that can be viewed repeatedly and always seems to entertain because of the subject matter acting on everyone's part, and the graphic way that the inhumanity of man towards man can so easefully be justified for the sake of profit. It revolves around five principle characters,
Dr. King Schultz, a dentist turned bounty hunter.
Django, a slave that he sets free in order to track down certain criminals.
Broom Hilda, who is Django's wife who is herself still a slave.
Mr. Calvin Candie, the owner of the plantation
Stephen, the Uncle Tom slave who persecutes his own people.
Django is supposed to play a freed slave offering advice to Stephen who is buying slaves for fighting. Is told to keep a low profile but doesn't. Steen warns him but he justifies it by claiming to it itrigues Mr. Candie. Yet, when Steven breaks character by attempting to save a slave from being thrown to dogs, Django Steven stops him and forces him to play his part as a callous slave buyer in order to avoid arousing Candie's suspicions. Django stopped Steven from saving the slave who was about to be thrown to the dogs to avoid that. Ironically, it was the memory of that hideous death that kept making Stephen emotionally upset and which contributed to his losing it and shooting Calvin Candie, and almost cost Django not just losing his beloved Broom Hilda, but to almost losing his gonads as well.
One thing that becomes very clea rat the end is that Stephen was willing to go just so far in the taking of human life. Then men that he killed were men who were wanted for murder. So he felt morally justified in taking an life for a life. But taking of the life if a slave in order to satisfy Django's need to have his wife back was not what he had intended and if he had known, he would have probably not undertaken to help. This was clearly bothering him deeply as the last scene is presented where he tells Candie''s sister to stop playing the harp, refuses to eat the white cake, and refuses to shake hands. Then, as Calvin Candie states the ultimatum, notice how he stares at Django just before killing Calvin Candie. The look isn't a friendly one. It's as if he is seeing Django for the first time, as a cold-blooded murderer willing to sacrifice an innocent man in the most brutal manner in order to get his wife back.
Irony
Ironic how Steven offers to help Django to free Hilda which involves buying her back cheap and winds up paying $12,000 further endangering her life, losing his own. and almost getting Django castrated in cold blood. Also ironic how the Uncle Tom slave Stephen tries to help his master get a good deal with excellent profit for his master and only manages to get him killed, loses his own life and the entire Candyland estate goes up in flames. Brings to mind the saying that the road to perdition is very often paved with good intentions.