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Django Freeman Django is a slave up until Dr. King Schultz Dr. Calvin Candie Calvin Candie is the Francophile owner of "Candyland," the most notorious plantation in all of Mississippi, who has acquired Django's wife Broomhilda through questionable means. Samuel L. Jackson Stephen as Stephen. David Steen Mr. Stonesipher as Mr. Dana Gourrier Cora as Cora.
Nichole Galicia Sheba as Sheba. Sammi Rotibi Rodney as Rodney. Miriam F. Glover Betina as Betina. More like this. Watch options. Storyline Edit. In , a bounty-hunter named King Schultz seeks out a slave named Django and buys him because he needs him to find some men he is looking for.
After finding them, Django wants to find his wife, Broomhilda, who along with him were sold separately by his former owner for trying to escape. Schultz offers to help him if he chooses to stay with him and be his partner. Eventually they learn that she was sold to a plantation in Mississippi. Knowing they can't just go in and say they want her, they come up with a plan so that the owner will welcome them into his home and they can find a way.
Life, liberty and the pursuit of vengeance. Rated R for strong graphic violence throughout, a vicious fight, language and some nudity. Did you know Edit. Trivia When Calvin Candie Leonardo DiCaprio smashes his hand on the dinner-table, DiCaprio did accidentally crush a small stemmed glass with his palm and did really begin to bleed.
He ignored it, stayed in character, and continued with the scene. Quentin Tarantino was so impressed that he used this take in the final print, and when he called cut, the room erupted in a standing ovation. DiCaprio's hand was bandaged, and he suggested the idea of smearing blood onto the face of Kerry Washington. Tarantino and Washington both liked this, so Tarantino got some fake blood together. Tarantino has made the n-word a significant part of his canon partly because it's a major part of American history.
The view that he or no one should ever use it is simplistic and reductive, and attempts to correct a difficult part of history by stuffing it in the ground. I'm uncomfortable with lazy, colloquial usage. But within the world of art the word cannot be simply erased. It's part of the American linguistic songbook.
Tarantino has surely taken far more liberties with it than any other filmmaker, but his usage can be broken down into three buckets. Mostly he has used it to further the characterization of a morally bankrupt white person. From the thugs of Reservoir Dogs to the slavemasters of Django, when white people in his movies use the n-word he is generally signaling that they're racist and thus despicable.
Tarantino has also put the n-word in Black people's mouths to signify that they're "supercool. The third way Tarantino has used the n-word is a single-serving group: Jimmy from Pulp Fiction, played by the director, who has a Black wife and at least one Black professional gangster friend.
He uses the n-word but not to seem morally bankrupt or cool. He is far from either. Is it just for a shocking, subversive laugh? Seems so. In Django he never does that. He gives us masters dying at the hands of a freed slave on a mission to liberate his wife. I wonder if our ancestors would find that disrespectful. IE 11 is not supported. She was supposed to stay for 10 days and presumably die , but Django and Schultz show up, and Schultz requests to see her.
He tells Candie it's because Schultz is German and he would like to speak with someone in his native language. So Broomhilda is removed from the hot box in front of Django and Schultz in a humiliating way. When Broomhilda is brought to Schultz's room, Django joins them and surprises her. Broomhilda faints. They assumingly revive her and brief of their plans to rescue her. Later, Broomhilda serves as a houseslave during the dinner attended by Candie, Django, and Schultz, among others. The head slave Stephen notices how Broomhilda and Django look at each other and surmises that they know each other.
When Broomhilda returns to the kitchen, Stephen corners her and confronts her about knowing Django, which she fearfully denies. After the money is exchanged and the papers are signed, Schultz declares Broomhilda to be a free woman. However, Candie refuses to let Schultz and his party depart without a handshake. In disgust, Schultz shoots Candie with a hidden derringer, killing him instantly.
Schultz is quickly killed by Candie's bodyguard, who in turn is killed by Django with his own gun.
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