Django Unchained
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- robotron3k0
Tarantino is Great storyteller but is weak in the actual area of directing. compare the cinematography of Django to Skyfall and Django looks more like a parody. I did enjoy Django enough to watch all the originals and other spagetti westerns, the Trinity series is incredible too. They all on YouTube under full movies.
- CALLES0
fucking samuel l jacskon was hilarious
- CALLES0
anyone else watched it?
- chossy0
Yes it was weird she was looking at a picture with a fancy set of goggles.
I enjoyed the film, but I grew tired very quickly listening to people say nigger. It was constant throughout and it was incredibly annoying after a while.
- JG_LB0
i dug it
- CALLES0
i do have a question. did anyone notice the girl?
- JG_LB0
what gurl
- teh0
seeded
- son0
I loved it!
- rylamar0
I went with my girlfriend and her family to watch it at a movie tavern. Felt uncomfortable throughout because all wait staff was black. I think I over thanked them for everything.
- qoob0
- webazoot0
Like that last four or so Tarantino films I found this annoying as for me I can see there is a good or even a great film in there, but this isn't quite it.
Agree I enjoyed his first three or four films a lot more, his films since then have been directionless, over long and ultimately a bit boring.
I get hes making the kind of films he likes to make but can't help thinking if he was having to work to a brief/someone elses script/producers then the resulting films would be a bit more interesting.
- DaveO0
I liked it! Watched Inglorious Basterds the next day as I'd not seen that, which is also fucking ace. I think I prefer Inglorious actually, watching them side by side.
Of his films I think Pulp Fiction is the most successful for me, just because it skates the line between the genre-vernacular he's referencing and the usual construct of what a film usually is for a mass audience. Not saying that it's my favourite, but it does a lot of things his way and just enough 'by the book to not feel completely indulgent.
I'd love to see him do another crime caper again, something really American. Watching Pulp Fiction & Jackie Brown again, you see how he really nails down a specific type of Americana. A bit like Paul Thomas Anderson really.
I watched Moonrise Kingdom and I'll have to say that even though I've loved Wes Anderson I felt that I'd seen the film before in one guise or another. Tarantino surprises every time i think.
- DaveO0
I liked it! Watched Inglorious Basterds the next day as I'd not seen that, which is also fucking ace. I think I prefer Inglorious actually, watching them side by side.
Of his films I think Pulp Fiction is the most successful for me, just because it skates the line between the genre-vernacular he's referencing and the usual construct of what a film usually is for a mass audience. Not saying that it's my favourite, but it does a lot of things his way and just enough 'by the book to not feel completely indulgent.
I'd love to see him do another crime caper again, something really American. Watching Pulp Fiction & Jackie Brown again, you see how he really nails down a specific type of Americana. A bit like Paul Thomas Anderson really.
I watched Moonrise Kingdom and I'll have to say that even though I've loved Wes Anderson I felt that I'd seen the film before in one guise or another. Tarantino surprises every time i think.