DJANGO GETS HIS FREEDOM FROM THE SLAVE TRADERS FULL SCENE - DJANGO UNCHAINED HD - WALTZ FOXX
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- čas přidán 8. 10. 2022
- From the Academy-Award winning film, Django Unchained.
In early 1858 Texas, brothers Ace and Dicky Speck drive a group of shackled black slaves on foot. Among them is Django (Foxx), sold off and separated from his wife Broomhilda von Shaft, a house slave who speaks German and English. They are stopped by Dr. King Schultz (Waltz), a German dentist-turned-bounty hunter seeking to buy Django for his knowledge of the three outlawed Brittle brothers, overseers at the plantation of Django's previous owner and for whom Schultz has a warrant. When Ace levels his gun at Schultz, Schultz kills him and shoots Dicky's horse. As a result, the horse falls on top of Dicky, pinning him to the ground. Schultz insists on paying a fair price for Django before leaving Dicky to the newly freed slaves, who kill him and follow the North Star to freedom. Schultz offers Django his freedom and $75 in exchange for help tracking down the Brittles. - Zábava
"I wish to parlay with you!"
"Speak English."
Dude is German and speaks better English than the both of them.
That's the point. Tarantino did a pretty good job implying things he chose not to straight up say.
@Rob it’s crazy how accurate his accent is actually. I had the opportunity to visit a village outside Frankfurt where I stayed with a friend. All the locals who spoke english had the same accent as the Dentist had. Very British influenced and it was amazing how it wasn’t the traditional rough German accent we’re so used to hearing from other actors in other movies.
Parlay wasn't part of the English language in the 1800's. It became an English word in the early 1900's.
@@rob8617 I meant the character Dr. Schultz is German. Waltz is Austrian-born.
The word you're looking for is parley
"DAMN LEGS BUSTED!"
"Yeah, no doubt" Gets me every time
It's the tooth for me. The scene is brilliant, and Waltz' performance is fantastic, but the stupid dangling tooth is somehow the funniest thing in all of this.
🤣😅
Me too, I actually laugh out loud a little bit every time I watch this opening scene.
Same..
@@RimshotKiller you can be sure that tooth is all Quentin, haha!
"Now wait a minute fellas, let's talk about this" part always makes me laugh.
lol yes I got a kick out of that too
He gave one of the guys his last apple, some gratitude
I was just doing my job. Where have we heard that one before? And we'll be hearing it a lot very soon.
Blueberry!!! 🤣🤣🤣
Now they are fellows..before nobodies
“In case any among you are astronomy aficionados, The North Star is that one!”
I love how Schultz doesn’t actually commit any crimes in this scene.
Animal abuse?
@@danlubezillagoleez7867While no one really likes to see a horse get shot, killing an animal by shooting them in the head constitutes a standard method of slaughter, and is therefore not animal abuse anymore than killing a cow for beef is.
@@danlubezillagoleez7867i mean, in a way it was self defence? idk kinda doesn’t count for me
Killing the horse is definitely a crime. Maybe not in 1858? But it's definitely a crime now
@@jaffa3717Destruction of property would be my guess
"Did you simply get carried away with your dramatic gesture, or are you pointing your weapon at me with lethal intention?" God damn i love the writing in Tarantino's movies.
As an officer of the court he is above board, especially in self defense.
Please don't use God in vain. Thank you, may God bless you all and everyone. ❤
Such an elegant and gentlemanly way of saying: "Dude, are you for real?!"
@@anonymousgara8415 God's name means nothing to me.
@@Mad_racc00noooo edgy!!!!
I'm still thinking about how well-trained fritz the horse is.
The way it said hi, bowing his head in a respectful way, when his owner (the doctor), introduced him. 😆
Very nice detail there.
@@nachgt123 Yeah he does it again when they arrive at the first slavers ranch hunting those 3 guys, and the slave chicks laugh 😄 It's cute as hell
Haha I've watched this many times and that's my thought also. Reminiscent of 'Young Frankenstein'.
Don't tell anyone but Fritz is the brains of the whole operation.
I'm still thinking of Oberst SS Hans Landa the greatest acting performance I've ever seen in my life
5:15 - Absolute boss, casually handing a gun to a slave without worrying about it.
And when he does, and the guy hesitates to take it, he nods to say ‘yes, I said that, it’s alright.’
Then the guy just keeps looking back and forth with that wtf expression lmao
Well of course Schultz wouldn't have anything to worry about. Everything this slave has seen about him demonstrates he's not a threat to him.
That slave (soon to be exslave) was wondering if Schultz was crazy or not..... perfect acting with the look on that actor's face!
Django's expressions after he is freed from the iron get me every time. He first views Schultz with suspicion, thinking that he is going from one owner to another. Then Schultz willingly hands the shotgun to the man behind him, making himself vulnerable. When Schultz tells him to get on the horse and take the winter coat, he knows that something has changed, you can see the surprise and amazement on his face. Such great acting while saying absolutely nothing. Then there's the mens' faces when he tosses them the key. The there's the fact that he lifts the lamp intead of ordering the first man to do it, then says 'thank you'.
I always thought Django was worried that Schultz was under orders to _kill_ Django for something he did at the old plantation.
@@JoshSweetvale Yeah, one could understand why he would be worried about that. Good eye.
One of the many reasons I think Jamie was better for this role than Will would have ever been. I don't think Will would have been able to depict such fear and insecurity
Watching slave traders get what they deserve is gratifying...seeing the guy responsible do it with politeness, calmness and intelligence makes it even more so.
Most slave owners were Jewish but the history books don't mention that for some reason
@@JohnDoe-yq9rt *citation needed
@@theoceansandbox2712 Look it up? There are plenty of resources, it's just not mentioned in school history books.
@@JohnDoe-yq9rt I could, but if this is apparently so well known, I’m sure you can procure a link
Jewish people were also slaves in history
Native americans owned slaves
Spanish colonists attempted genocide to native americans
White Colonists owned slaves
African Leaders traded their own people
So on and so on.
If we are going to make this a race war why not include everyone? Since apparently, majority is the worst, so you must also know most slave owners were white too yeah?
I love that the only thing that unsettles him in the whole scene is Django's scars
Sometimes am surprised they didn't have him turn to the other slaves and go *I've seen many horrific things in my day but this... this is worse than all of them* when he saw his back.
@@GuardianGrarl Actions speak louder than words
@@GuardianGrarl Show, don't tell.
@@GuardianGrarl That would make this scene infinitely worse.
Because even for slave owners, treating a slave thay badly was rare.
Dr. King Schultz is the most original and noteworthy character in recent cinematic history. He is polite, honest, well groomed, well spoken, thoughtful, even tempered, honorable, and conscientious but he still does not hesitate to resort to extreme violence, if warranted, in order to bring justice to both those who wronged others and those who have been wronged.
Sadly he couldn't resist in the end.
ok calm down a little, buddy. he is a great character but not that great lol
He is polite, honest, well groomed blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah. Get paid by the word?
Yea even tempered until he had a chance to walk out of a situation where he could live and decided not to
@@2donovan8 where he dies, its a reflection of real life. that sometimes standing up for what is right and confronting evil WILL cost you your life.
ITs a good scene considering he was dishing out Justice throughout the movie in a somewhat cartoonish way without any real threat to his life.
ITs a really good scene. Dont overlook its simplistic realism
I think my favorite part of this scene is Schultz casually throwing money at Dicky’s head. The little noise it makes when it hits his head always gets me 😂
That little _pap_ is perfect
The coin too, for his horse 😂
And ofc those money meant for the slaves, cuz you know Speck gonna die anyway
@@cb-9938 His brother's horse...
I love how Dr. Schulz insults the Speck brothers when he speaks perfect English, they don't understand him and demand he speak English, only for him to apologize and say that it's a second language for him.
Oh, damn, i missed that.
Thats a double burn.
Kind of like Waltz's other Tarantino character, Colonel Hans Landa, in the Italian speaking scene in Inglorious Basterds.
Cause he said "parler" which is mean "speaks" in French. Unless you guys also use "Parler" in America. I just never heard any Americans using that word.
@@LeSchackal he said parley
@@LeSchackal Not normally used in American English, except as an informal slang.
He remains calm and polite the entire time
Yes, the southern rancher is a gentleman.
The Schultz works in calm & polite ways for that is the way of the King.
@@wildchild1823 he obviously is talking about Fritz
If you call shooting someone's head off POLITE.
Calm and REASONABLE, you mean.
I love how Schultz couldn’t resist the revolver spin after he dealt with the brothers. He knows full well that he’s a badass
"Now if you can keep your caterwauling down to a minimum id like to finish my line of inquiry with young Django" Love that line
And Speck immediately starts screaming again. I don’t know whether he did it to be defiant or he really didn’t understand what Schultz was saying. Either way, hilarious.
Shultz apologized for killing his horse but not his brother 😂
(Edit: the slaves face of bewilderment when he's given the shotgun is amazing)
His brother pointed a rifle at him, poor horse though 😭
"your horse was sadly innocent, but your brother he had shit coming" 😂
Only one of them tried to kill him.
No remorse for slavers
He values animals more than he values slavers. A good man, Shultz.
What I love about the scene of course is how fast you like our cool savage dentist but what I also enjoy is that he paid the slave trader fully knowing that they will kill him and take that money to give them a headstart for a new life.
Never thought of it this way
1850 fugitive slave act tho 😭
I think it's two-fold, while its a head start I also believe Schultz is not a thief. He is a reputable bounty hunter, gentleman, and businessman.
@@halfxbreed23 IF you could be "reputable" as a bounty hunter!!
@@halfxbreed23 Exactly, the money was worthless to them, Black, in America, with money, was worse then than it is now!
Guy: blueberry, didn’t I give you my last apple
😂😂😂😂😂
It's crazy to learn that Leo cried soo much during this movie, and Jamie Fox had to literally take him aside and tell him, "No, do it, Leo." As his lines were soo incredibly vile. That's why Leo's eyes sparkle in this movie. They are watery from tears of anguish.
That was samuel L. Jackson telling him its just another tuesday for them saying the n-word. Reassuring him that he isn’t racist, his character is and must put 100 perfect into it so the audience believes so.
I’m sure the glass didn’t help
Didn't Leo say this was one of the most evil characters he's ever had to play
I thought because misery and filth.
@@BingQilin Has he ever played the antagonist in any other movie?
I love how Christoph Waltz' character Dr. King Schultz is the exact opposite of Hans Landa in "Inglourious Basterds". Both are soft spoken and doing "odd jobs", but Schultz lives by the ideals of humanism and Landa by racism. One is disguised as a monster, the other is a monster in disguise. It´s like seeing Sebastian Haffner´s book title "Germany - Jekyll & Hyde" in the movies.
I think you're underselling some of the subtext behind Hans Landa. His character is not a racist, he even makes this quite clear with his rat speech in the french farmhouse. Hans Landa relished in having an adversary, the brutality was his muse. Part of the diabolical nature of his character is that it wasn't animosity or a sense of superiority that drove him to commit those acts, he did it because he enjoyed hunting people, he wanted that desperation in his victims and toyed with them to a certain extent because he was just profoundly evil in nature.
Well, Landa is a Nazi.
Hans wasn't racist. An absolute psychopath and sadistic fuckhead? Yes, but not racist.
In the opening scene he says he has a lot of respect for the Jews he hunts because they prove to be crafty adversaries. He does not underestimate them because he knows how creative those who are put in desperate situations can be.
His drives in that movie were not "Pure German" superiority, but merely his interests and achievements, hence why instead of turning in The Bastards, he cuts a deal with them to be handsomely rewarded by the Allies for "assisting" them with the assassination of Hitler and his circle. As this would bode better for him than to continue as "The Jew Hunter"
Almost all Nazis are racists. A few maybe not, but almost all of them are.
Ironic that both Landa and Schultz were both Germans.
@@Maxisamo1 so by your logic, Hans is merely a hired gun or bounty hunter that’s hunting Jews not out of racism.
This is such an awesome scene. I could watch it a million times and appreciate a new detail each time. From the way he pays for Django knowing full well that the dude was gonna die, to the slave holding the lantern for him while he writes, to the surprised look the slave gets when he hands him the shotgun, to the multiple removals of the slave blankets. There is SOOOOOO much to appreciate in this scene.
Musket* not shotgun
@@jordanbrabham389 that was definitely a double-barreled shotgun
Lets not forget the way Shultz slowly dragged aside his coat behind him to reveal his gun so that he has an easier time trying to reach for it
Got to love the slave expression when the doctor hands the shotgun to the slave . His face is so funny
Holy Crap! --Besides its other benefits, Freedom makes you WARM!
They didn't even bother to free themselves first. They all moved as together specifically to kill him, that's such good writing
Having a calm dignified conversation when someone scummy is writhing in pain in the background is a Tarantino staple. Love it
I just love the little things Tarantino does that you don’t notice the first time like the little interaction with the enslaved man holding the lantern at 6:40. He tells him “thank you” and the black man responds with a little head nod and a “mmhmm”. He also moves the lantern closer so Schultz can see better at 6:45. This movie is top tier.
You can't hide class or decent manner.
"A person responded "in-universe" as a real person would"
100/100 PERFECTION, ERECT A FUCKING STATUE IN TIMES SQUARE OF QUENTIN TARANTINO ALREADY WHYYY HAVEN'T YOU DONE THAT ALREADY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I love how despite this being in 1858, I love how the dentist still gives them a choice, knowing they already have a choice to do whatever, making it clear that you don’t have to be bought to be free. Even though they still had shackles on them, they circled around the fallen man with his broken leg, AND JUST SENT HIM TO GOD! ((Sorry as I was typing this, seeing red mist like that I can bet that burial was difficult, and still made me flinch, since it was point blank 😮💨))
"the little things you don't notice?" dude. It's right in the center of the screen. What is this pseudointellectual horsesh*t you're talking about, lmao.
@@burningchrome70 and helps the fact he isn't being rude to them and treats them like a person, although quite formal way, but still...
He's a top bounty hunter, yet still has class and excellent manners.
Professionals have standards
@@DMlTRElbe polite
@@isaacyeon6334be efficient.
be the best at what you do
5:20 I love how the guy in the background is contemplating wtf is happening right now, glancing at Schultz and the shotgun back and forth, not fully ready to believe what is unfolding right in front of him.
6:10 i love the way he throws the money on the guy's forehead 🤣
I just realised that Dr. King paid for Django and the horse even though he knows the Speck brother is going to die so that the freed slaves would have some money to travel north and start their new lives.
He paid for him because he is an honest man, and his job is a bounty hunter. Going after people who have broken the law. Makes no sense for him to be breaking laws too.
@@dslims1 he just bought Djano illegally. I don’t think he cares.
@@dslims1 Also the second guy wasn't pointing a gun at him with lethal intent, so he had no cause to shoot the horse.
@@Rattenhoofd Of course it did, it allowed him to disable the other guy without being a murderer.
@@Rattenhoofd There's no way the second guy wouldn't try to kill him after he shot his brother, no matter how good his reasons for doing so were. The law of the Wild West operates a little differently.
Beautifully shot, acted and scripted. One of the best opening scenes of any film.
Glad to hear you’re passionate about it. I love the acting and shot compositions. They’re really unique. But
do you ever feel like the writing in this movie was really jank and cliche?
There are some great conversational moments.
I completely agree - Christoph Waltz for me really helped make the film - but this opening scene is probably one of the top openers in history.
@@greyvii511 I have always thought that about Django but it kind of makes me appreciate it even more in a way.
@@greyvii511 nope
Watch “inglorious bastards” that opening scene blows this one out of the ball park.
I do love how when they get threatening schultz points the lantern at his face to look as though its easier for them to see him, but in fact conceals what he is doing with his body such as using his left hand to pull back his coat from his revolver as well as reaching for it.
Love this film
This movie is such a masterpiece. Waltz played his role perfectly. And so did foxx. Jackson and Leo definitely closed it out. Definitely one of my favorite movies.
Love how there are actually results of a horse falling on this guy, most people in movies just slide out from under them but in a real situation that would shatter your leg.
No, a horse is heavy, but it won’t leave you unable to move. Struggling to move around for the next two days for sure. But with any amount of adrenaline, a horse falling on you in that manner would be extremely uncomfortable. And having a dude kill your brother in the process, I would assume… mentally paralyzing.
@@Glassie3731 I’d gather from working with horses for most of my life, that the ones I spent my time with, couldn’t level you completely unless they jumped onto your leg from a standing position.
Falling from horse is dangerous, talk to superman...
Had my horse slipping on ice during a gallop and falling on the side with my leg underneath it. Nothing happened. We both got up, I got back in the saddle and we kept riding. Just slightly more carefully.
@@alexszpilman2803 Your horse wasn't literal dead weight. That might be a factor.
Why is this scene so incomprehensibly awesome ?!
Christoph Waltz
@@thatboyYERP Oh ... makes sense .
Courtesy of great Christoph Waltz
Because Christoph's performance is EXACTLY what we want to happen in our heads. Good guy who recognizes injustice as well as how important it is for some to take their freedom.
Because it has a little bit of truth. Probably like this do business in far west..
"On the off chance there are any astronomy aficionados amongst you, the north star is that one".
I love the way that line is delivered. He knows he has told them exactly how to proceed and is helping them the best way he can. He gave them directions and $125.
One other thing I like is how the first killing in the movie mirrors the last killings. Dr. Shultz is holding his lantern, drops it, draws, and shoots. At the end... Django is holding a candle, drops it, draws, and shoots.
$125.25
The horse cost a quarter.
@@JB-yb4wnjeesus now you can't even get a good burger for under 15$ 😂
@@andrew-rn9uiWell 15 cents back then was worth $1.50 cents including tax though most of the time paying for something that was 15 cents was worth $2.50. Remember, back then doesn’t mean things were cheaper, it means there was just less inflation in the American dollar.
@@JB-yb4wn Actually it was a $20 gold coin, so that the now freed slaves had enough to have a good chance of getting to Canada (the US had passed a (sad & idiotic) law that if a former slave was caught above the Mason-Dixon Line he (or she) could be arrested and sent back to their former owner.....
The slaver's brains got all over the money though. If they didn't unshackle themselves before filling his cranium with lead the money wouldn't have been an after thought.
Most well deserved Oscar in history.. And I have seen Heath Ledger's portrayal of The Joker and Robin Williams as the therapist in Good Will Hunting but my statement still stands. Nothing will ever beat Christoph Waltz performance in this movie.
inglourious basterds was his best performance! This one was amazing but not his best.
@@Bellaciaaonope its this movie with his best performance hans Landa doesn't come close
1:18 I love how he says "Dentist" in a tone with the subtext, "Clearly the giant bouncing tooth on the roof of my wagon should've told you that fact."
One little thought that finally hit me is how patient and methodical Dr. King Schultz is as a gunslinger. The moment he senses the conversation with the Specks going south, he crosses one hand behind his back. Anyone would immediately assume he's fingering his weapon with that hand, but he proceeds to drop his lantern and draw with the same, other hand, buying a second of hesitation that's everything in a gunfight.
The hand behind is back is actually to pull his coat, so his weapon is in the open (you can see him let go of his coat after he bends down). But because the light is right in his face, no one pays attention to that.
I loved that he freed them gave them directions and even left them money
First time I saw that opening scene I was blown away like the Speck brothers heads. It's when you see an opening scene like this one that you know you're in for a treat. The film didn't disappoint.
Hateful Eight, same intro ...instant elbow to the nose, like alrighty, the tone is set. XD
Tarantino isn't exactly known for subtlety unless it's a fine detail that 95% of people will miss. Point being, Dr. Schulz, from behind his back, slowly pulls his coat aside to make his draw easier before he shoots the first brother. You're keyed into the fact that he's more than just a dentist without even realizing it. It's both ends of the spectrum simultaneously but for the entire length of the movie. Genius storytelling.
The Speck brothers were going about their legal business and were murdered by a thief stealing slaves
I know it isn't something Mr. Tarantino is ever likely to do...but I would pay good money to watch a movie all about Dr. King Schultz's exploits up until this moment of his appearance.
I would pay for that prequel in a second!
In the Tarantino timeline The character that Christopher Walken's character in Pulp Fiction is Schultz great grandfather.
Djanos descendent is Jackie Brown.
Tarantino was just having fun giving references to his previous movies but I still laugh my ass off at it that Jackie Brown is Djano's great great grandaughter or something.
@@charlesacker9174 really??
@@charlesacker9174 That sounds 100% like fan theory
@@Teauma Tarantino himself said he throws jokes on his movies that sometimes he doesn't even know what he'll later do with them. So one joke be made early on is world War II ended in 1944. John Travolta says this obviously wrong in real world History to Samuel L. Jackson in Pulp Fiction.
Decades later we get inglorious Bastards and yeah World War II did end in 1944 when the Bear Jew machine guns down Hitler's face in a movie premier in Paris.
I have no idea if there's a Japanese parallel to what He was thinking but if he makes a Samurai film you guarantee he's gonna have some geek reference like the sensei from kill Bill volume 2 as a kid surviving Nagasaki.
"You go to hell, Dentist" and that is the line that got me hooked. I love this movie
Love how he treats them as equal men; handing them the shotgun to hold (LOL the bewildered look on the dudes face), saying "thanks" for holding the light while he writes out the 'bill of sale', and at 7:00 he doesnt tell them what to do (as a slaver would), he informs them of the choices they can do, and lets them decide (as free men).
Scene is fucking epic.
The way they threw off the sheet like Django did 😂
THREW off the sheet, not THROWED. You did get an education unlike the slaves of old, didn't you? Don't write like an illiterate.
The word is 'threw', my man, threw off the sheet.
@@MrM-mb5ll english probably isn’t his first language
@@FANOFWAR34 If that's the case, then they just got a free English lesson. :)
THREW, not THROWED!!!
The grateful look the dude holding the lantern gives Schultz is a sight to behold.
6:04 the non-chalant way schultz counts the money, then the way he slaps it on his forehead, as if to really hammer it home on how simple it could have been then followed by the speck's expression as he gets the message is priceless
“You shot Rosco…and you killed Ace”😂😂😂😂😂😂
"Damn legs busted!!"
Doc, "No Doubt" 🤣🤣🤣🤣
I love that when Dr. Schulz introduces his horse Fritz nods in greeting, when the Dr. addresses the slaves, they all step back a little bit in shock-no white man that walked or talked like him ever spoke to them that way, with patience and respect. How the Dr. talks calmly and gently to Django as to not startle him, how the Dr. hands the slave the rifle, and him and Django look at each other like "what in the fu-?" and how the Dr doesn't understand what the problem is when the Speck tells him not to talk to Django the way he was, how the Dr. knowingly pays for the horse and Django to help the other slaves get a headstart, and how he doesn't assume what knowledge they might have by saying "On the off chance there are any astronomy aficionados amongst you, the North star is that way. Ta ta!" and how Django stays just long enough to watch as the others shoot the other Speck. Truly incredible storytelling, the details in this movie is unbelievable
Though being in Texas it probably would have been better to direct them to Mexico.
@@Neneset depending on how far north they were they could have escaped to Indian territory and make it to Kansas.
A small detail that I like to imagine is that their last names are Speck. Specks of dirt to be stepped over on the very beginning of our Siegfried’s story, Django’s beginning to track down his beloved Brunhilda.
Love how Schulz slowly and carefully pulls his coat behind his back, just in case he needs to draw, which he does.
Great attention to detail and really gives you early context to Schulz's character and personality.
“You go to hell, dentist!” gets me every time 😂
4:33
"Damn legs busted!"
"No doubt. Now, if you could keep your caterwauling down to a minimum, I'd like to finish my line of inquiry with young Django."
My dad and I died at that scene 😂😂
3:19 That delivery right there was executed perfectly. He says it with so much disgust, like the concept of the slave trade is abominable to him.
"blueberry, didn't I give you my last apple?" kills me everytime lol
Thank you Quentin, for sharing your feelings with us.
One of my all time favorite scenes in any genre.
the camera angle and the lighting when the other four prisoners took out the bad guy in the end is just perfect.
bad guy? Course not, he gave blueberry his last apple.
play it back at half speed to catch the beauty of the head exploding
Christoff Waltz is amazing in this movie. Brilliant.🙏
Let me fix that for you. "Christoff Waltz is amazing" there u go.
I like that the most serious Schultz is in this scene is not when he has a gun raised on him but when he sees Django's scars and signs of mistreatement. Says a lot about his character without needing anymore exposition.
"Sorry, english is a second language to me" while speaking a more cultured english than them xD epic, simply epic!
This NEVER gets old. I love this scene more than any other in the history of film making.
This is good... But 'The D is silent Hillbilly' scene gets me semi hard
5:15 "Could you hold this for a moment", the look on the guy's face 😂
It's really cool to see that nothing in the scene felt rushed. It makes each subtle gesture/tone of voice mean and be more impactful.
I never get tired of this scene.
"I'm not a bad guy. I'm just doing my job."
You chose to do that job. That makes you one of the worst bad guys.
No matter your situation, you are always responsible for what you choose to do to other people.
He can’t be a bad guy, he gave blueberry his last apple!
What he was doing was evil. But dont judge historical people by today’s standards. One day people will look at how we treated immigrant families at the border and say “They stood by.” It’s easy to think you wouldve been different in 1858. But chances are very good you would’ve been a slave owner, or tolerant of it if you were white. Because if you voiced issue, you wouldve been shunned or killed.
That depends on what the situation is. There are people in this day and age who would deny rights to trans, gay and other such minorities... even women. And they genuinely do not believe they're bad people. And in those times, lots of people probably didn't even know better.
@@nagavamsip It doesn't matter if they think that they are good or bad people. Their actions speak for themself.
If you willingly choose to hurt other people, then you are as bad as can be.
If you try to excuse yourself that it is just your job, then you are the worst. Because you chose it, you have no excuse.
Simple as that.
Sounds a lot like, "I don't make the laws. I just enthusiastixally enforce the laws," doesn't it?
5:03 This is the moment when Django became unchained
roll the credits!
I love Christopher waltz's character, his acting, & how he talks... & especially his dialogue! Gee, what an actor!
Waltz is so damn good I expected him to turn traitor the entire time, thanks to his role in the previous film.
Really?! After a couple minutes i already knew hes a going to be a really good guy
you realize hes acting a role haha. Just cause you play a nazi doesn't mean your a actual nazi
@@marcoskolioulis3522 I know, he was just such a good bad guy. It’s like watching Gary Oldman play a good guy. For a while it just felt strange because he played such a good bad guy.
@@Minotaur-ey2lg I feel ya but hes a fantastic actor especially in tarantinos movies. He was awesome in hateful eight too
Dr. Schulz is a man of honour and integrity. Pays for what he takes even when he knows the vendor is going to croak in a few minutes.
At least the other slaves got some change to get going north
@@eh1600 Considering $20/month was good pay and the 4 of them had $145 to split among them, their chances were dramatically better than a normal "runaway"!!! (Gold coin for the horse was a $20 "double eagle")
I love how Dr. Schultz at 1:26 says " I'm sorry, please forgive me. It is a second language." And then proceeds to completely school them on the use of the English Language. Bravo.
This was the first movie I’ve seen Christoph Waltz in and as soon as he started talking I was hooked. Phenomenal actor
8:33 Legend has it that shot is still echoing to this day!
the sound has now reached Norway, witnesses claim.
I love the slave behinds djangos disbelief that Schultz handed him a shotgun like that.
I love the look of pure confusion the slave has when he is handed the shotgun and lantern.
That small move Dr Shultz does where he drops the lantern and draws his gun in the same motion is one of the cleanest uses of misdirection I've ever seen someone use in a gunfight
One thing that always stuck with me about this scene is how the freed men went straight for the kill, they didn't even take the chains off first. Still unbelievable how literal human lives are traded for scraps of paper.
edit: changed to present tense as slavery still exists, I didn't word it as I intended, apologies guys.
Man slavery on all accounts across time and lands traded human lives for far less smfh
@@Swaggmire215 Rich people lose their humanity double quick, that never changes. If you can stay in a mansion while humans starve on the streets its a very quick hop to those "people" are not really "people"....
Still happens today. The government basically trades our lives for little pieces of papers ( we are slaves to taxes and control). The powers to be just found a better way of doing it while the rest of us dont realize it.
@@Swaggmire215 I think Roman slaverism was "more human"
They still are.
That "Djangle" of the chains at 8:03 is just... marvellous 🤣
"Aight bois"
Love how immediately this film gets you to like Schultz. Great way to kick off this movie
Waltz is one of the greatest actors in the history of cinema.
And yet the only good movies he's ever been in are this one and Inglorious Basterds. He's only a great actor when working with Quentin Tarantino.
@@furioussherman7265 he’s a good actor but he doesn’t write the scripts
Yep
No he's not Denzel Washington is
@@furioussherman7265You forgot Water For Elephants, Alita: Battle Angel, Epic and Spectre. Those two may be his masterpieces but he steals the show in almost every movie he's in that gives him reasonable screentime, I'd even watch flops like The Three Musketeers and Green Hornet again as his roles were really the only redeeming qualities besides Mad Mikkelsen.
From all the awesomeness of this scene, Idk why i laughed hardest at when Waltz threw the money at the downed Speck 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Waltz is phenomenal.
No matter what I'm watching or when I'm watching it youtube invariably brings this particular clip into the rotation.
“Who’s that stumbling around in the dark?”. That line just sounds so badass especially the way he delivers it and how the camera zooms in on his face. I’m going to start yelling that at my drunk neighbors.
Came here just for that hahah
Kristoff waltz is just hysterical dialogue just rolls off his mouth like butter even when he was the Jew hunter you couldn’t help but to smile when he talks
Christoph Waltz was so amazing in this movie. One of my all time favorite performances by any actor. 😀
I watch this opening scene probably 10-12 a year, it's fantastic and its brilliance can be found in the tiniest details and the coolest, most fun detail to me is whooshing sound the doctor's gun makes when e spills his pistol on his finger. There should be a new genre of movies created just for Tarantino films because his movies are so unique. You would have Drama, Action, Comedy, Romance, Sports, Classic and Tarantino.
Watched this 2 days ago, crazy but 2hr 45m just absolutely flew bye in a blitz of stellar casting, acting, action and comedy.
Truly masterful.
The scene that single-handedly made Christoph Waltz my favourite actor ever
“Didnt I gave you my last apple? “ such a nice guys
I love how he hands one of the slaves the shotgun and he looks so flabbergasted
"Sorry, it's a 2nd language"... proceeds to speak elite level English
So many great scenes in this movie but this is one of the best. King Schultz is a great character and Christoph Waltz plays the part so well.
3:42
NOOOOO NOT THE HORSE THE SLAVERS DESERVED TO DIE NOT THE HORSE
When Django turns to the trapped slaver and in slow motion casts his rag aside revealing his scared back, really shook me. The look Dr. Schulz face pushed me over the edge.
4:36 My favorite part of course is when Dr told him to keep the screaming loud down to a minimum and he screams louder on purpose lmao he used his stomach nd inhaled deep just so he can let out a big yell lol
"I can't do much anymore, but damn it I can annoy this guy by being loud!"
Someone give this horse an Oscar!
I love Django movement. Walking little arrogant after being freed, shows Speck who is boss and after stepping on that horse, he's back to his sense, of cold. And rush to the other Speck to loot.
I’ll never forget I saw this at LA live regal , my dad took me and my cousin will never forget this , taught me a lot
Christoph Waltz combined with Tarantino’s screenwriting/directing is always guaranteed to be compelling cinema.
I DON’T CARE WHAT NOBODY SAYS THIS IS TARANTINO’S BEST FILM..
Pulp Fiction every time