DJANGO COLLECTS HIS BOUNTY ON THE WILSON-LAU GANG - DJANGO UNCHAINED
Vložit
- čas přidán 24. 09. 2022
- From the Academy-Award winning film, Django Unchained.
In 1858 Texas, brothers Ace and Dicky Speck drive a group of shackled black slaves on foot. Among them is Django, 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, a German dentist-turned-bounty hunter seeking to buy Django for his knowledge of the three outlaw Brittle brothers, overseers at the plantation of Django's previous owner and for whom Schultz has a warrant. When Ace refuses to sell Django to Schultz and levels his gun at him, Schultz kills him and shoots Dicky's horse in order to pin him to the ground. Schultz insists on paying a fair price for Django before leaving the other slaves to kill Dicky. Schultz offers Django his freedom and $75 in exchange for help tracking down the Brittles.
After collecting the bounty on the Brittles brothers, Django decides that he will become a bounty hunter with Doc. After some training they ambush the Wilson-Lau gang. - Zábava
Everybody praises Dr. Schultz but nobody says anything about this unnamed marshal who treats Django just like any other person and invites him to come on in and enjoy some coffee and cake with him.
we all noticed
Yes
Like how he said ”got some cake… pretty good” 😂
Because slavery was only legal in southern states during this time
@@joesouthey9590 that still dosn't change the racial bias against black people at the time
I would watch a TV show of just Doc and Django collecting bounties and turning them in.
I wish he hadn´t died. Think of the sequel with the Doc, Django and Hildi hunting bounties.
@@SirMarshalHaig yeah too bad he couldn't resist lmao
@@pinkdaddyhoehoe this comment deserves more likes
@@SirMarshalHaig sequel? They don’t need to make sequel. Just make a TV series out of the winter Doc and Django spent hunting bounties before they went after Hildy!
Could call it Bounty Law.
I love that King and Django both take their hats off upon entering, shows how polite King is and how Django emulates him
Manners Maketh Man
@@WJKF 🙏
Even he knows you don’t wear a hat in the house white man
Well King taught him that when they had beers at the bar
@@YokaiX that's not true.
Scenes like this show Django has a network of allies thanks to Schultz. He gained the skills and the resources at Schultz disposal so even when he passes on, Django has a career path ahead of him.
My head canon is that Major Marquis from Hateful Eight is an old and disgruntled Django seeing how his gun is the same gun used by Doc Schultz and the movie took place 19 years after Django
@@tannhauserr your head cannon is half true. Hateful original screenplay was a direct sequel to Django, but while writing it Tarantino wanted to mix it up more and not used an established character
@chevy cox considering he is a nasty gunslinger and, from clothing alone, clearly not a slave he could. There were free slaves at that time whom had careers of their own. Though mainly chefs and there was always a high risk of being captured and resold into slavery (see 12 years of slave as a good movie reference) Django has a high chance of making a career from bounty hunting thx to his skills and allies that he made from his time with the Doctor.
So yes as long as he doesnt get recaptured and stays around the allies King introduced him to he has a good chance of a career.
@@chevycox6089 Bass Reeves? The real Lone Ranger
After blowing up Candyland, i don't think he would have any allies left and more importantly he wouldn't use his name anymore and would disguise himself.
Because despite what a shitty person Calvin Candy was ; what Django did to Candyland is a crime.
0:40 and schultz comes outta nowhere! 😂 cracks me all the time!
Crouching down just out of frame haha
Haha, yes! That's fucking genius visual humour. Hilarious cartoonish gag in such a serious movie, god bless Tarantino and his crew
Thats accurate
420th!
I love the implication that schultz and django were just out there building a snowman for fun, scarf, hat, pipe and all, before django started using it as targeting practice.
I like to think Schultz suggested using a snowman for target practice, and Django having been living in southern states was like "What's a snowman?" and Schultz was then excited to show Django the joy of building a snowman.
@@brain5853 you could make a whole feel good movie out of Django and King's winter in the mountains with them just horsing around, hunting bandits, King teaching him to read and telling fucked up german folktales...
@@kakroom3407id honestly watch that going off this video i just watched, it would be a amazingly beautiful movie of them just hunting bounties and bandits in the mountains and having all sorts of fun, id watch it if it was a movie
I adore the subtle implication of the passing of time; that Django and Schultz worked with each other long enough for even a White US Marshal to recognize Django, an ex-Slave, now a black bounty hunting badass that he treats like a friend and coworker.
Unspoken goat.
I love how a running joke in the movie is nobody knows who the outlaws are who end up on Wanted posters who get hunted by the bounty hunters like Schultz. Like the scene when Django escapes from the Australian mine company guys. "Who the fuck is Smitty Bacall?"
Or this guy, "Who the hell is the Wilson Lau gang?"
To be fair most of the criminals Schultz goes after seem to have gone into hiding, like the Brittles or the sherif. So they're unlikely to hole up or try to disappear where they commited their crimes, and Schultz isn't going to bother to bring their bodies back across an entire state -or the damned nation- when the nearest marshal can pay him, and get him back on the road to eliminate the scum of the Earth sooner.
I love it because it's accurate for the times. There was no television or Internet or really anything to quickly transfer information. Sure there was telegrams but those required infrastructure and a line between two points. So unless you were especially nefarious and public enemy number one, traveling even a hundred miles away could let you feasibly lay low. Every mile further than just increasing the odds that no one heard of what you did or even who you are.
@@sweatysunder4681 yeah, and just how easy it would have been in those days to take new identity just by saying some random name in some new place. It would have been impossible to identity every outlaw, and good information to get to every sheriff or something. So i can see some bounty hunter showing up, and gunning down some guy you thought to be law abiding citizen of your town. Just like in this movie the one guy ended up been the law enforcement because people didnt just simply know.
As long as theyre slaves. A bum? A bum in the big house?
I was looking for this comment! I thought it was funny because it implied that these two just be killing random outlaws nobody cares about for the bounty, getting their work in 😂
I like the interaction between Django and the non racist white folks through this movie
I hope US go to hell that racist country
he's german
@@BRUH-et8ex he meant the Sheriff at the end of the clip
@@vuxluongw ah, my bad
@@BRUH-et8ex most Germans are white 😭
2:16 i like this sheriff. such a respectful and polite guy to him and Django.
I always love the “pretty good” at the end
Lmao that got me too
Cake is great. " pretty good " cake is, well, pretty good.
That and the Snowy-snow keep me coming back hahaha
Like how that sheriff wasn't racist and addressed django as equal to a white man
from his perspective both are doing valuable work that makes his life and job easier
contrary to popular belief, not everyone in the wild west was racist. Just because it was the popular standard, doesnt mean that there were people that didnt abide by said standard.
The Wild West needed more people like snowy snow guy tbh
Me too, I was relieved to see at least two white characters in the movie NOT being racist and treating Django horribly
@@cslpchr you really didn't say anything we didn't already know and also you wasn't around so how can you use "contrary to popular beliefs" ?? We can't deny or confirm what you said yet you're presenting it as a fact.
2:12 “huh.
Well they ain’t goin nowhere so leave em out there.”
Gold line right there
This clip should be called "DJANGO DOES NOT COLLECT BOUNTY ON THE WILSON-LAU GANG BUT HAS BIRTHDAY CAKE AND COFFEE"
Technically it should be called, "Django does not collect bounty on the wilson-lau gang but instead goes inside and maybe has birthday cake and coffee, but we'll never show it"
0:44 “That’s accurate”
I thought the thumbnail was a screenshot of Read Dead Redemption 2
Haha, me too. I thought to myself, did we had Django in RDR2? And the it hit me 😂
@@kotakuk6533 lol xD
Ofcourse you did
thats why we clicked
every time i rewatch django i remember RDR 2
I really liked this scene because to me it made it feel like there was a whole nother story during that short montage
Yeah they could have made an entire movie about the winter that Dr King and Django spent bounty hunting together.
I just love the contrast between the characters of Schulz and Django, one is the classy approach and the other is rough and tough, yet both are equally badass
I love how the sherif doesn't even give a shit! He just says "what you got there". Lmao!!
Can we all appreciate that Django is wearing beautifully tailored jackets, in particular the green beauty he is wearing at 0:19.
The outfit is inspired by Little Joe's outfit from Bonanza
That sheriff has the same speech and mannerisms is my grandpa. The "pretty good" made me do a double take lol
A thought that just occurred to me is before the quick draw training, tehy wouldvt had to spend about 10 minutes creating a snowman, and the thought of these badasses doing that fills me with glee
I wish it was legal to shoot a snowman you made in your backyard.
@@dark7element it is in many places in the US
Snow is like the old times' version of ballistics gel.
10 mins? lol try like an hour
@@gtxx6699 I would expect professionals to be of higher snowman making quality
Fun Fact: Django was the last person ever to be trained by Don Deigo De La Vega aka Zorro. There's a comic series named Django/Zorro, a 7 issue mini series..where Django serves as the bodyguard of the aging Zorro.
Tarantino was supposed to make a Django/Zorro movie, but got scraped by WB.
I’m saying “snowy snow” from now on
The dialogue in tarantino films always comes across as so genuine. The characters say all manner of goofy but normal things even down to small details: "come on in out of the snowy snow"
1:12 Shell casings getting everywhere? THAT's accurate!
God these scenes are just pure dopamine. Makes me want a full show of these two collecting bounties so badly. Their chemistry, the music, the humor, it’s all exactly what I want out of westerns.
The symbolism of the gunslinger taking off his black leather glove and having the hand beneath it be Black - and then watching that Black hand commit to this skill and coming full circle to almost become the black glove - is so wonderfully done. People talking about the racial politics and symbolism of this movie should be talking about this sequence as much as any of the others - it's such a brilliant little discourse on the history of Westerns, delivered with no dialogue in a training montage.
English teachers be like
I really like Dr. King Schulz, he’s a great character.
My Favorite Part of this scene is when the music suddenly slows down and seems kind of ominous as they show the hanging rabbit, foreshadowing Django hanging similarly later. Quentin Tarantino is cool
I like the friendly sheriff who lives in the middle of the snowy snow.
The line about the cake is honestly one of my favorite lines in the movie. The way he says “pretty good” always makes me wonder how good that cake actually is.
I love the detail of the empty shells on the hat because they come out of the top
The crotch shot on the snowman is really funny, but even better is when Django actually uses the technique at the end of the movie. Chekov’s crotch shot if you will.
The dialog at the end with the marshal is like something out of a Red Dead Redemption cutscene 😂
„They ain‘t goin nowhere. 😑👍🏼“ 😂
Doc and django deserve their own spin off series
I love how the sheriff doesnt care about Djangos skin.
Love how exaggerated the blood in this movie was lol🤣
Splatter Western 🩸
You have seen other Quentin Tarantino movies, right? Its his thing. Tarantino is to exaggerating blood as Michael Bay is to explosions or J.J. Abrams is to lens flares.
Kill Bill: Volume 1. Beatrix vs the Crazy 88 is always amusing.
@@ShimrraJamaane nope, I gotta watch more of his movies
Something about coffee and cake on a cold, snowy day, spending an evening in a warm cabin after being out on the range, making your own hours and living off the wealth you create by doing so- a bounty hunter's life was not a pleasant or easy one, but I see the appeal.
The music makes this whole movie
1:01 this is cool and all but the cooler thing would have been if one of them was in a position to provide enfilading fire, considering their quarry was in a perfect enfilade position.
But I can imagine Tarantino hearing that and saying, "no that's dumb a crossfire is cooler"
For the life of me, I can’t figure out why “it’s pretty good“ absolutely send my sides into orbit
This is why I still play red dead. Also hunting. Just the noises and such, i drift off and wake up next to a pile of bodies.
Doc was such a good character I wish he didn’t die
I'm curious if there were people with this type of consistent accuracy in real life
There were a few. Wild bill Hickok was notorious with a pistol
The handguns of that era were not famous about their accuracy. Most parts were made from iron which made them heavy, they were using black powder and had so much recoil that in order to aim you needed both hands to hold them. Shooting from the hip with one hand and with such accuracy was unreal.
Jerry miculek modern example shows what would’ve been possible.
Definitely if they practice with no tomorrow
The song playing is actually from a spaghetti western called day of anger with lee van cleef
This one unnamed lawman at the end of the clip is the fourth best character in the film after Django, Schultz, and Hildie lol
He seems like a friendly guy
To this day I wonder if he was downplaying or overselling the cake.
we got some cake, pretty good.... amazing acting :))
Fun fact, that 1860 Henry rifle that Dr. Shultz used wasn't developed yet in 1858, the time that movie is supposed to take place. Neither was the 1860 Spencer or the 1874 Sharps also seen in the movie.
Neither was dynamite, Alfred Nobel patented it in 1867 - in Germany.....
@@allanpetersen8871 ah, interesting. Wasn't aware of that
Neither were the sunglasses Django wears later
@@edschramm6757 right
Neither were Poptarts.
Is it just me or does QT have a thing about mutilating peoples bits via gunfire? Sam L Jackson in Hateful Eight, Walton Goggins and countless snowmen in Django Unchained, that SS Officer and Michael Fassbender in Inglorious Bastards.
He likes violence.
Don't forget Wallace shotgunning Zed in Pulp Fiction, though that was clearly deserved
Django collects his bounty on Lou Wilson of Dropout TV, formally College Humor!
"snowy snow"
We need tv series for this kind of movie
What a cool sheriff
I like how when they were gunning the guys down with the repeaters you can see django struggling to cycle the weapon a few times like he is still learning how to use it.
Is nobody going to comment on how uncomfortable it is to stick a cold glove into the waistband of your pants? 😂😂
Epic scene
I love that Tarantino uses good o’l fashioned squibs.
I could watch a whole film of just this chapter in their lives.
I wish we could see a part 2 on this movie.
I like the small detail of Django taking off his hat when se walks in the house, showing that he was telling the truth at Candieland, when he said "you don't wear a hat in the house white man even I know that."
Love how Tarantino worked in the Day of Anger theme here. I know he's about done directing movies but I'd sure like a Django sequel to be his finale.
That's Accurate is the best Western gunplay scene ever filmed the music is fantastic.
Django needs a video game on me
"....leave them out here; they ain't going nowhere..."😅😂
I'd love to join them to have coffee and that very birthday cake!!
Bloody sweet
I choose to believe this is the same way point cabin later seen in Hateful Eight.
Proper respect. 👍
That was a huge Heard of elk that they rode past in that clip from the movie I have never seen so many elk like that before
İ love when they kept the music acceleration with one note in 1:42
Got some cake yesterday… purrrrrty good.
Man I wanna experience that kind of snow😢
Anyone else besides me notice when Django Draws his Pistol- He Hops a little.
“Pretty good”🤣🤣🤣
Lol. Sherrif Chill making his presence felt
they actualy took the time to make that snowman...
He’s like yall got some dead bounties ok… well time for coffee and cake
Lmao
1:01 was specifically for Billy Crash 😂
That shot was high right by 12 feet
Poor frosty
Were gonna need a montage
Even Rocky had a montage!
Django vs the Van Der Linde gang. Now that would be a shoot out to see
No recoil, no hearing protection. That’s Hollywood.
It's a western. Did you ever saw John Wayne have recoil or protection. It's supposed to be a power fantasy.
hearing protection? bruh it's the 1850s nobody gaf about that
I mean the sounds off, sounds like different caliber, but winchester has very low recoil, also idk if anyone in that period was wearing hearing protection..
This is 1859, no ear protection
If you listen closely. You hear QT himself thru every character he’s ever written lol.
I love Tarantino’s gore lol
pretty good
If there are any skiers or Wyoming residents on here, is that the Grand Teton and Teton Mountain range in the background at 1:51 ? Beautiful mountains either way!
If only there is a crossover between Star Wars’ the Mandalorian and Django, Django would have been another great badass bounty hunter!
Awe yeah definitely Django would be a menace to bounties
I bet Roland would love this movie
Pretty good!
got some.cake.. it's prrety good
Purdy good.
That's accurate ❤️❤️❤️❤️
Have some snowy snow and coffee..what the hell is snowy snow..?
Pretty good...
Pretty good
Ngl I thought this had to do something with rdr 2 when I looked at the thumbnail. Had to do a double take and realized what it actually was lol
Who knew that Django build a snowman as his target.