Over the holidays, I managed to make it to the movies three
times. Two of those three times were to see the new Quentin Tarantino spaghetti
western flick “Django Unchained”. Django was an absolutely brilliant film,
combining all the qualities you expect from a Tarantino flick and then some.
You were given the proverbial Tarantino gore, witty banter, and slew of absolute
brilliantly written characters, but also saw the intertwining of an unforeseen
amount of humor (the KKK scene? BRILLIANT) with a compelling love story that
drove the film’s protagonist throughout this entire elaborate and entertaining
plot. All while taking place in the cruel and slavery infested era that is the
1850’s south.
What made “Django Unchained” even more incredible, and what
I personally loved about it, was the absolute exceptional casting and performance
by the actors. While they were all brilliant, Christoph Waltz (Dr. King Shultz) was
on another level as far as I’m concerned. What astounded me about Waltz’s
performance was that he was not only able to portray this very intellectual character
so fluidly with his unconditional charm and enunciated vocabulary, but also
capture the roughness and danger that is the bounty hunter. As you know, he won
the Golden Globe for best supporting actor for this performance and still
awaiting to see if he can go for two for two with his Oscar nomination in the
same category. Waltz won the Oscar two years ago for his role as “Hans Landa”
in Inglorious Basterds. I think it’s safe to say that if Waltz should work
exclusively on Tarantino films for the rest of his career, well he’d be just
fine.
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