Maybe it’s just me, but the Django movie
did come across as a bit of a ‘favouritismo’ towards Cristoph Waltz. Yes, a
director has his favourites, but to weave a whole movie around him – needs
something really special. It is true that Bergman might not have made the Wild
Strawberries, if not for Victor Sjöström; drawing a comparison here – could
Inglorious Basterds pack the punch it did without the Nazi charlatan Clolonel Hans
Landa? And would Django really be possible without the straight talking,
manipulator Schultz? Even the Academy (which I’m not a big fan of) awarded him
an Oscar for his role in Django, maybe as an aftermath of Inglourious Basterds,
but if anyone deserved it, it was him. Django was supposedly the main character
in the movie (which was also named after him, maybe to argue for the fact that
it was not Christoph who was lead), but it was Dr. Schultz who was the
mainstay, he almost made Django look like a sidekick, which he was in the first
half of the movie, before coming of his own. Moving on to the movie, what can I
say about the stupid, ignorant, white man bashing – only and only Tarantino is
capable of such comical bloodshed, pleasing to the eyes, yet gory. There’s
something quite biblical in the way his action shots pan out, they stay with
you, years after you’ve watched the movie. Certainly, Quentin Tarantino has
been a virtuoso in the genre of the much neglected and snubbed B-grade
Hollywood movies which rely on catchy and hard hitting dialogues and revolve
around movie making styles taken from all around the world, from Asian martial
arts to western hotdog wars and bi polar gang wars. A true postmodern director,
he is.
Django Unchained doesn’t need a re-screening (it runs for a whooping 165 minutes) to get the fact straight. It is totally and unabashedly digressive to the American white race who had been for years on end patronizing the slave trade. It will hit them hard who still garner affection for the age of slavery and have a persisting racial mentality. Tarantino’s flamboyance in handling the story makes it pleasant in spite of the abundant bloodshed and gore and free flow of crude language. It is comical and ferociously brutal along with other movies under Tarantino’s belt like Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction and Inglourious Bastards, but has a hint of ethical seriousness, unlike the rest, it questions outright – the morality of the racist white man. Coming back to Cristoph Waltz, his Oscar winning role consists of a charming, big hearted bounty hunter, who obviously hates the slave trade and when he meets Django, becomes his ally and mentor. Django is played ably by Jamie Foxx, who becomes the bounty hunter’s sidekick and partner. The hero’s first appearance ironically is one where he’s bound in chains being flocked through a night forest by two white men, this is where Schultz, that is Cristoph Waltz’s character rescues him on the pretext that he has important information about three fugitives he is looking for. Over time as the movie progresses the role of a white gunslinger and a black sidekick of the 50s is reversed as the storyline shifts from the bounty work to search for Broomhilda, Django’s object of love who was whipped and sold when she and Django tried to run away from their plantation. Django and Schultz’s search for her and the other fugitives leads them to Candyland, a Mississippi estate whose owner is Calvin Candie played brilliantly by Leonardo Di Caprio, whose almost indecent flair gives a whole new perception to the arrogant white American. He is assisted in the daily affairs of the estate by an uncle Tom named Stephen, played by Samuel L. Jackson – whose servility has gradually mutated into monsterity.
The plot is by Tarantino’s standards weaker and linear. It lacks the fast pace
of a Pulp Fiction but yet manages to hold on to the imagination of the audience.
There are two things that aid this fact – one, the fascinating evolution in the personality
of the slave called Django, and two, whenever Schultz gets ready to pitch
another of his straight talks, you just sit tight and listen. In the end, the
whole mockery, bloodshed and (anti) fundamentalism boils down to the story of
good pitted against a stronger evil and his ultimate victory. Although the
movie cannot surpass the quality of say, a Reservoir Dogs, when put in the same
frame, but it is arguably more radical and loud in its approach.
Waltz and Tarantino is one of those dream
pairings critics fifty years down the line will be talking about!