“I’m sorry. I couldn’t resist”

Miller 2022-04-21 09:01:09

As a person who grew up in the Celestial Empire and was fed by various forms of resistance against Japan, the United States, the Eight-Power Allied Forces, etc., I just saw the subtitle of 'Before the Civil War' at the beginning, in my mind A tall image emerges indelibly.
Guessing that this Django maybe will lead many black slaves to liberation, to the light, and even a bit obsessed. At the end of the end, the great Comrade Lincoln slapped Django on the shoulder and said, "Well done, boy! "...
With this thought, I started a long wait of almost three hours.
I'm a Quentin fan, I've admired the aesthetics of violence, and I'm amused by the sheer Quentinian humor in this movie.
The big tooth swaying on the roof of the car, after gentleman Schultz politely killed a person and a horse, for the first time, he picked Django out of several black slaves and pushed it to the big screen.
Watching the black slave played by Jimmy Foxx, I wondered how, if not for the emancipation of all blacks, how could this black slave with lashes say a few touching and inflammatory words for his equally oppressed compatriots .
Just like Hitler was bombed in Inglourious Basterds, although the bombing was absurd and comical, the causal relationship of the main line of Jewish bullying and then Hitler being bombed still exists.
Being oppressed and then resisting, even Quentin has followed this routine.
But after I waited and waited, I only waited for the scene of the dogs tearing up the corpse...
It was only a matter of a few hundred dollars, but the hero I was looking forward to, Django, held his head high, and he The B-player emphasized the ruthlessness of the bounty hunter to his mentor Schultz. Looking at Schultz's pale face, and thinking about his disproportionate collapse in the harp after the film, the phrase " I
'm sorry. I couldn't resist" after shooting Cady
He's not worth...
He couldn't help but be angry at Django's fellow man, but what about Django...how is he different from Stephen in disregarding his fellow man's life?
The torn corpse scene that was cut to pieces because it was too bloody kept lingering in my head, so that the climax like the return of the hero at the end didn't make me happy at all. To be honest, I didn't even see it.
Having seen so many movies, I don't think a hero saves beauty at the end deserves too much praise, even if it was made by Quentin!
Perhaps some of Quentin's 'big fans' would say that the Acura-like liberation is out of the way. Yes, I also admit that if the ending is really as I think it is to join hands to free the slaves, unless the drama reaches a certain level, I will also feel a little disappointed.
But after all, movies are a way of telling stories. After watching the whole movie, I felt like pouring water and mixing noodles. There was too little water, and only a few strands of flour in the whole pot of flour were sticking together thinly, and the rest were scattered. of.
The music is great, some of the passages will become classics, and the movie is very entertaining, so I think it's worth recommending.
But what about cinematic?
I read a lot of comments, saying that Quentin is unpredictable and unpredictable, but this film only makes me think that all the plots are deliberately unpredictable .
The entertainment is vigorous, but some 'entertainment' is done.
That slave scream is still circling in my head, no way, I just want to say I'm sorry. I couldn't resist,
save Django?
Still not rescued. . . .


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Extended Reading
  • Kristy 2022-03-22 09:01:07

    The first half is very healing, full of wit, and you can watch it endlessly; the second half is procrastinated, and the soundtrack is so messy that there is no sense of discipline. And the doctor I admired so much, just died like this?

  • Braxton 2021-10-20 18:58:23

    Waltz is so charming but so soy. . .

Django Unchained quotes

  • Django: It's me, baby...

  • Dr. King Schultz: I wish to parley with you.

    Dicky Speck: Speak English.

    Dr. King Schultz: Oh, I'm sorry, please forgive me. it *is* a second language.