Django Unchained

Titolo originale: Django Unchained
Regia: Quentin Tarantino |
Anno: 2012
Origine: United States of America |
Generi: Dramma Western
Tag: rescue | friendship | bounty hunter | texas | slavery | plantation | rivalry | revenge | shootout | racism | kindness | dentist | django | slave trade | aftercreditsstinger | black slave | agreement | 19th century | chattanooga | german | cotton plantation | plantation owner | old west | western | 1850s | mississippi |
Cast: Jamie Foxx | Christoph Waltz | Leonardo DiCaprio | Kerry Washington | Samuel L. Jackson | Walton Goggins | Dennis Christopher | James Remar | David Steen | Dana Gourrier | Nichole Galicia | Laura Cayouette | Ato Essandoh | Sammi Rotibi | Clay Donahue Fontenot | Escalante Lundy | Miriam F. Glover | Don Johnson | Franco Nero | James Russo | Tom Wopat | Don Stroud | Russ Tamblyn | Amber Tamblyn | Bruce Dern | M.C. Gainey | Cooper Huckabee | Doc Duhame | Jonah Hill | Lee Horsley | Zoë Bell | Michael Bowen | Robert Carradine | Jake Garber | Ted Neeley | James Parks | Tom Savini | Michael Parks | John Jarratt | Quentin Tarantino | Amari Cheatom | Keith Jefferson | Marcus Henderson | Chuuch | Kinetic | Louise Stratten | Kim Robillard | Shana Stein | Shannon Hazlett | Jack Lucarelli | Victoria Thomas | Grace Collins | Sharon Pierre-Louis | Christopher Berry | Kim Collins | Dane Rhodes | J.D. Evermore | Rex Linn | Michael Bacall | Ronan Hice | Ned Bellamy | Dave Coennen | Danièle Watts | Jon Eyez | Omar J. Dorsey | Evan Parke | Craig Stark | Brian Brown | Ritchie Montgomery | Nicholas Dashnaw | Jarrod Bunch | Edrick Browne | Kerry Sims | Jamal Duff | Todd Allen | Lewis Smith | Keniaryn Mitchell | Jakel Marshall | Carl Singleton | Ashley Toman | John McConnell | Mark Amos | Marsha Stephanie Blake | Catherine Lambert | Deborah Ayorinde | Takara Clark | Kimberley Drummond | Tenaj L. Jackson | Carl Bailey | Ross P. Cook | Gregory Allen Gabroy | Seth Bailey | David G. Baker | Glen Warner | Kesha Bullard Lewis | Edward J. Clare | Mike DeMille | Gary Grubbs | Justin Dwayne Hall | Kasey James | Cindy Mah | Johnny Otto | Belinda Owino | Mark Ulano | Misty Upham | Fatimah Taliah | Dudley Fuqua | Augustine Alvarez | John R. Bennett II | Valencia Christina | Gene Kevin Hames, Jr. | Ryan Happy | Bill Heintz | Jacky Ido | Jacquelyn Twodat Jackson | Marvin Jones III | Ashlee Nicole Jordan | Spencer Kayden | Elton LeBlanc | Chuck Murphy | Brianna Oppenheimer | Kel Owens | Matthew Parrott | Erin Pickett | Tom Proctor | Aleeah Rogers | Alfred Smith III | Kay Smith | Samantha Smith | Nathan Alan Thomas | Tristan Tierce | LaTeace Towns-Cuellar | Rashia Whitlock | Travis Wilkerson | Tadasay Young | Ronnie Zappa |

Stati Uniti del Sud, alla vigilia della guerra civile. Il cacciatore di taglie di origine tedesca dottor King Schultz, su un carretto da dentista, è alla ricerca dei fratelli Brittle, per consegnarli alle autorità piuttosto morti che vivi e incassare la ricompensa. Per scovarli, libera dalle catene lo schiavo Django, promettendogli la libertà a missione completata. Tra i due uomini nasce così un sodalizio umano e professionale che li conduce attraverso l'America delle piantagioni e degli orrori razzisti alla ricerca dei criminali in fuga e della moglie di Django, Broomhilda, venduta come schiava a qualche possidente negriero.

Approfondimenti

Leonardo DiCaprio has stated that the characters of Drexl Spivey from Una vita al massimo (1993) and [...] D
When Quentin Tarantino first met Franco Nero in Rome, he told Nero that he first saw Django (1966) w [...] D
Leonardo DiCaprio (Calvin Candie) and Jonah Hill (Bag Head #2) appeared in The Wolf of Wall Street ( [...] D
After the initial explosion of the Candyland plantation, the song "Trinity: Titoli" by Franco Micali [...] D
Cuba Gooding, Jr., lobbied for the role of Django, but Quentin Tarantino would not consider him. Acc [...] D
Dennis Christopher's character, Léonide Moguy, is a reference to French director Léonide Moguy [...] D
For the montage-sequence of Dr. King Schultz and Django beginning their partnership as bounty-hunter [...] D
Takes place in 1858. Calvin Candie's speech about phrenology concerning the skulls of slaves is a ps [...] D
The film did not receive a rating from the MPAA until over a week before its wide domestic release. [...] D
This is technically not the first western Django movie on which Quentin Tarantino has worked. He pla [...] D
Calvin J. Candie's given names are a reference to Italian director Giorgio Ferroni, who directed sev [...] D
As appreciation for being cast, James Remar gave Quentin Tarantino a 35mm IB Technicolor print of Ma [...] D
In one of the scenes at the beginning, Tarantino used an arrangement of the main music theme from Gl [...] D
While Kevin Costner turned down the role of Ace Woody (a character that doesn't appear in the final [...] D
This is the first of two movies which Samuel L. Jackson's character dies laying next to a dead or dy [...] D
During this shoot, Walton Goggins was contacted by Sons of Anarchy (2008) creator Kurt Sutter about [...] D
The scene with the Australian slave traders was originally written a little differently. Instead of [...] D
The bounty on Willard Peck (Sheriff Bill Sharp) was $200 in 1858. Adjusted for inflation in 2021, th [...] D
The infamous hand injury scene with DiCaprio has been featured in many video lists across several ch [...] D
The rifle used by Dr. King Schultz is a 1874 Sharps Buffalo, which appeared twenty years later than [...] D
In the original draft of the script, there was supposed to be a young stable/slave boy named Timmy. D
Dr. King Schultz partly mirrors the real-life Doc Holliday, also a dentist turned gunfighter. D
Spoiler: While Dr. King Shultz was always intended to be a good man (per both Quentin Tarantino's id [...] D
Sid Haig was a strong contender for the role of "Mr. Stonesipher", so much so that casting director [...] D
Firearms used in the film: James Remar (who plays two characters) wields the same weapon as both, a [...] D
In the beginning of the film where Dr. King Schultz frees Django, one of the slave owners calls one [...] D
Despite Quentin Tarantino writing the role of Django specifically for Will Smith, he ultimately deci [...] D
Quentin Tarantino included scenes in the snow as an homage to Il grande silenzio (1968). "Silenzio t [...] D
The screenplay for this film was featured in the 2011 Blacklist; a list of the "most liked" unmade s [...] D
Quentin Tarantino: [Men getting shot in the genitals] Django trains by shooting a snowman's crotch, [...] D
During the filming of one of the dinner-scenes, Leonardo DiCaprio had to stop the scene because he w [...] D
This is the second time Jamie Foxx and Kerry Washington have portrayed a married couple. The two pre [...] D
Django's blue costume is based on the famous painting "The Blue Boy". This painting inspired F.W. Mu [...] D
In Star Wars: Episodio II - L'attacco dei cloni (2002), Mace Windu (Samuel L. Jackson) killed a boun [...] D
Leonardo DiCaprio and Russ Tamblyn appeared in modern-day adaptions of Romeo and Juliet. DiCaprio pl [...] D
Franco Nero was considered for the role of Calvin Candie, but instead was given a cameo appearance a [...] D
Quentin Tarantino: [Banal conversation] When the villagers are getting ready for the raid and they t [...] D
Tom Savini: A noted special effects and make-up artist in the industry, that has worked with Quentin [...] D
The final draft of the script is dated April 26, 2011. D
While filming on-location in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, Quentin Tarantino rented out a local movie theat [...] D
Dr. King Schulz insists on saying good-bye in English to M. Candy because in English, the word has a [...] D
The title alludes to the titles of Django (1966), Hercules Unchained (1959), and Angel Unchained (19 [...] D
Christoph Waltz turned down the role when first given the script. He felt that it was too tailored t [...] D
Will Smith, Idris Elba, Chris Tucker, Terrence Howard, Michael Kenneth Williams, and Tyrese Gibson w [...] D
In the film, Leonardo DiCaprio says the n-word 34 times. D
Christoph Waltz dislocated his pelvic bone while training for his part. He alluded to the injury bac [...] D
The men in hoods organized by Big Daddy (Don Johnson) represent a group known as "The Regulators", s [...] D
Production designer J. Michael Riva died on June 7, 2012, long before the Christmas Day release. Thi [...] D
Franco Nero, making his cameo in the film, is seen wearing white gloves. This may be a reference to [...] D
Samuel L. Jackson and Lewis Smith grew up in Chattanooga, Tennessee. D
The title alludes to the titles of Django (1966), Hercules Unchained (1959), and L'angelo scatenato [...] D
U.S. Marshall Gill Tatum has a curious name. Marshall, Gill, and Tatum are three North-East Texas to [...] D
The Italian song playing right before Django and Broomhilda reunite translates as "Still here/ still [...] D
Jamie Foxx and Samuel L. Jackson appeared in The Great White Hype (1996). D
Denzel Washington was considered for the role of Django, but was deemed too old. D
Although the film is often considered a part of the Western genre, writer and director Quentin Taran [...] D
Leonardo DiCaprio, whose role marked the first time he played a villain since La maschera di ferro ( [...] D
Franco Nero: The lead actor from Django (1966), the movie which inspired this one, has a cameo as th [...] D
Jamie Foxx used his own horse, Cheetah, in the movie. He got it four years prior as a birthday prese [...] D
After an accident in training, where Christoph Waltz was thrown off his horse and broke his pelvis, [...] D
Jamie Foxx's first western. D
The name "Django" is a Romani name, meaning "I awake". It was very popular amongst musicians and jaz [...] D
Dr. King Schultz mentions that Alexandre Dumas was Black. Dumas was of mixed ancestry. On his father [...] D
Quentin Tarantino wrote a role for Michael Kenneth Williams, but Williams had to turn it down due to [...] D
First western to win the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay since Butch Cassidy (1969), and [...] D
Russ Tamblyn, whose character in this movie is named "Son of a Gunfighter", starred in Mezzo dollaro [...] D
Quentin Tarantino has said that Calvin J. Candie is the only character he has ever created whom he t [...] D
Calvin Candie refers to Samson as "Black Hercules." This was the real life nickname of Ken Norton, a [...] D
It's been theorized that Paula Schultz, the deceased woman in whose grave Beatrix Kiddo (Uma Thurman [...] D
Zoë Bell and Lady Gaga were considered for the role of Lara Lee Candie-Fitzwilly. D
When Dr. King Schultz (Christoph Waltz) puts the dynamite in the tooth atop the wagon, he is whistli [...] D
Many of the actors and actresses were playing characters written with them in mind, including, among [...] D
Django (Jamie Foxx) takes on a mythical form while on Big Daddy's (Don Johnson's) plantation confron [...] D
It has been suggested that Michael Parks' character in this film is Earl McGraw's (a role played num [...] D
The final showdown with Django and the hillbilly trackers was written to be entirely different. Mr. [...] D
I segreti di Twin Peaks (1990) cast members Russ Tamblyn and Michael Parks appeared in this movie, a [...] D
The film cast includes four Oscar winners: Christoph Waltz, Leonardo DiCaprio, Jamie Foxx, and Quent [...] D
The music where Django confronts Big John Brittle (M.C. Gainey) and Lil Raj Brittle (Cooper Huckabee [...] D
Was described by Samuel L. Jackson in an interview as "Shaft il detective (1971) on a horse." D
After the actors left the project, the minor roles that were going to be played by Michael Kenneth W [...] D
In Kill Bill - Volume 2 (2004), Bill (David Carradine) described how painful a shot to the kneecap i [...] D
Leonardo DiCaprio was injured twice, once during rehearsal, and once during filming. Once with a ham [...] D
Leonardo DiCaprio (Calvin Candie) was originally the first choice for the role of antagonist Colonel [...] D
The opening title sequence featuring Django and the other slaves being lead through rocky terrain is [...] D
When Django (Jamie Foxx) and Dr. King Schultz (Christoph Waltz) are in Daughtrey, Texas, the saloon [...] D
Quentin Tarantino's first movie not edited by Sally Menke, who died in 2010. Fred Raskin (who assist [...] D
During D'artganan being ripped apart by dogs, one of the trackers has a large knife strapped to his [...] D
Dr. King Schultz's hat was made especially for the movie. It's a combination of a derby and a tradit [...] D
This is the first stand-alone film (not counting Grindhouse (2007) or Grindhouse - A prova di morte [...] D
The film was always intended to earn an R rating, and in fact it got the R designation from the MPA [...] D
The $12,000 paid for Broomhilda's (Kerry Washington's) freedom equates to just over $398,000 in 2022 [...] D
The opening song is the soundtrack that played during the opening credits of Django (1966) by Luis B [...] D
Samuel L. Jackson does not appear until one hour and twenty-six minutes into the film. D
Although some viewers feel that Calvin Candie (Leonardo DiCaprio) displays incestuous behavior towar [...] D
With a budget of $100 million, this is Quentin Tarantino's most expensive film. D
James Remar has two roles: one as "Butch Pooch" and other as "Ace Speck". A situation is created whe [...] D
The contraption that protrudes beneath from the Doctor's sleeve near the end of the film is a nod to [...] D
In the scene in which Stephen (Samuel L. Jackson) is describing what will happen to Django (Jamie Fo [...] D
The quilt that is on the bed, onto which Broomhilda is thrown, is an Underground Railroad style. Myt [...] D
Joseph Gordon-Levitt was cast in a minor role as Jano, but had to drop out due to scheduling conflic [...] D
The notoriously famous shoot-out between Django and Calvin Candie's henchmen was not written in the [...] D
Right before candyland explodes, Stephen begins, but doesn't finish saying "SOB". This is a referenc [...] D
The song of Django, Trinity is originally from Trinity stand tall, starring Terence Hill. D
While it is known that there is a link between Dr. King Schultz and the grave of the mysterious "Pau [...] D
When we first see Calvin Candie, he is seated on a couch with his back to the camera, blowing plumes [...] D
The contraption Schulze uses to brandish the gun with which he shoots Calvin is a reference to the f [...] D
During the first forty minutes of the movie, with the exception of a single scene at Big Daddy's (Do [...] D
The men playing poker towards the end of the film are using severed ears from slaves as their curren [...] D
Four characters use the "n" word at least ten times: Calvin Candie (twenty-nine times), Stephen (twe [...] D
Jonah Hill was supposed to play a bigger role in this film. He was originally cast to portray a char [...] D
The film was shot in one hundred thirty days. This was Quentin Tarantino's longest shooting schedule [...] D
In a January 2013 interview with Vanity Fair, costume designer Sharen Davis said much of the film's [...] D
When Calvin's people return from his funeral, they find Django upstairs in the house wearing a burgu [...] D
It comes as a coincidence that Samuel L. Jackson is in the movie. A decade earlier, in Star Wars: Ep [...] D
Quentin Tarantino: [Bare feet] Depictions of the slaves' bare feet. D
Calvin Candy's death, shot through a white carnation pinned to his jacket, is taken from the spaghet [...] D
In the first draft of the script, Dr. King Schultz was written to be more vulgar. D
Features seven actors who have been nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Ro [...] D
Calvin explains that via the study of phrenology, he is able to find the three dimples on Ben's skul [...] D
About halfway through the film, Dr. King Schultz says "I, for one, don't intend to die in Chickasaw [...] D
In the original script, Calvin Candie serves his guests rhubarb pie in the scene that leads to his d [...] D
Django saying to Stephen "You right where you belong" on the balcony in the ending scene mirrors a s [...] D
This is the second Quentin Tarantino movie where Samuel L. Jackson plays a role where he scolds his [...] D
Sacha Baron Cohen was cast as Scotty, and Kurt Russell was cast as Ace Woody, but both dropped out d [...] D
Dr. King Schultz's (Christoph Waltz's) and Django's (Jamie Foxx's) horses are named "Fritz" and "Ton [...] D
Kurt Russell replaced Kevin Costner for the role of Ace Woody, but then had to pull out. Russell and [...] D
Donald Trump posted a review of the film on Twitter where he said, "Django Unchained is the most rac [...] D
DIRECTOR TRADEMARK (Quentin Tarantino): (long shot): There is a long shot when Django is explaining [...] D
Don Johnson (Big Daddy) starred in the original Miami Vice series while Jamie Foxx (Django) starred [...] D
The scene at Candyland where Django is asked to spell out his name resembles the bar scene in Pulp F [...] D
Now Playing Podcast reviewed Django Unchained. This film received three "recommends". D
The line, "I'm countin six shots Django..." is a reference to Dirty Harry (1971). D
In November, 2012, in his monologue while hosting Saturday Night Live (1975), Jamie Foxx promoted th [...] D
Django and Kill Bill share similar scenes. Django stands on a balcony and tells the enslaved women t [...] D
WILHELM SCREAM: When the riders retreat from the exploding wagon in their night raid, and one falls [...] D
Don Johnson played Sonny Crockett on TV's Miami Vice. Jamie Foxx played Ricardo Tubbs in the big scr [...] D
Kerry Washington, who played Broomhilda, sought to bring authenticity to her performance in several [...] D
The fifteenth biggest grossing film of 2012. D
Dr. King Schultz says he wants to re-name Eskimo Joe, the Mandingo fighter he tries to purchase, "Bl [...] D
Joan of Arcadia (2003) star Amber Tamblyn made a cameo early on in this movie as Dr. King Schultz an [...] D
There was talk of splitting the film into two parts, like Kill Bill, but Quentin Tarantino eventuall [...] D
Body count: sixty-nine. D
Calvin Candie is constantly eating candy and sugary delectables, which causes his rotten teeth. That [...] D
Dr. King Shultz (Christoph Waltz) killed approximately twenty-three people, while Django (Jamie Foxx [...] D
According to critic Alex Ross, the alliance between Django (Jamie Foxx) and Dr. King Schultz (Christ [...] D
Nichole Galicia and Ato Essandoh appeared in Wish I Was Here (2014). D
Second of three films featuring Samuel L. Jackson and Bruce Dern. They later appeared together in Th [...] D
In the finished draft of the script, the character of Billy Crash was written to be much more brutal [...] D
In the final draft of the script, Stephen was written to be a more brutal character; in the barn sce [...] D
Christoph Waltz played a similar role in Alita - Angelo della battaglia (2019). In that film, Dr. Dy [...] D
After working on this film, composer Ennio Morricone said he would probably never again collaborate [...] D
Quentin Tarantino: One of the LeQuint Dickey Mining Company employees, using an Australian accent. H [...] D
Zoë Bell: A favorite stuntwoman of writer and director Quentin Tarantino appears as the tracker w [...] D
The Biblical verse Big John Brittle (M.C. Gainey) is saying before he is killed by Django (Jamie Fox [...] D
This is one of two films written and directed by Quentin Tarantino that featured Samuel L. Jackson a [...] D
Dr. King Schultz (Christoph Waltz) reminds Monsieur Candie (Leonardo DiCaprio) that his slave D'Arta [...] D
Don Johnson and Rex Linn appeared in this movie. Both were in television shows that took place in Mi [...] D
One of the members of the Smitty Bacall Gang was Gerald Nash. This name was also used as one of the [...] D
DIRECTOR TRADEMARK (Quentin Tarantino): (rotating shot): During the first dinner-scene with Calvin C [...] D
In an interview, Quentin Tarantino stated that originally, the mandingo fight scene, and the scene w [...] D
DIRECTOR TRADEMARK (Quentin Tarantino): (victim's viewpoint): Lil Raj Brittle's (Cooper Huckabee's) [...] D
The scene where Django and Dr Schulz ride out from the barn resembles one of the trademarks of John [...] D
Marks the fifth time writer and director Quentin Tarantino and Samuel L. Jackson collaborated in a d [...] D
The film's release was delayed in China by government censors in April 2013. Their requests included [...] D
Quentin Tarantino revealed at Comic-Con that Django (Jamie Foxx) and Broomhilda (Kerry Washington) a [...] D
Quentin Tarantino: [Red Apple Cigarettes] During the Mandingo fight scene, Django can be seen openin [...] D
Holds the all-time record for most uses of the "n" word (or some variation) in a movie, with 116 use [...] D
Tarantino wrote the roles of Dr. King Schultz and Stephen with Christoph Waltz and Samuel L. Jackson [...] D
Kim Robillard, M.C Gainey and Rex Linn previously starred together in Breakdown, which Kurt Russell [...] D
When Calvin Candie (Leonardo DiCaprio) smashes his hand on the dinner-table, DiCaprio did accidental [...] D
Early in the film, Christoph Waltz kills a town Sheriff, and is about to be arrested by the local U. [...] D
David Steen plays Mr. Stonesipher, Candie's dog handler. The last time Steen worked with Quentin Tar [...] D
Tadasay Young's debut. D
Excluding films in which the cast is billed alphabetically (Celebrity (1998) and Don's Plum (2001)) [...] D
A decade earlier, Samuel L. Jackson had starred as Mace Windu in Star Wars: Episodio II - L'attacco [...] D
Christoph Waltz concluded his Oscar acceptance speech for this film with, "sorry, couldn't resist", [...] D
At one hour, six minutes, and seventeen seconds, Christoph Waltz's performance in this movie was the [...] D
Leonardo DiCaprio does not appear until one hour and three minutes in. D
Kevin Costner was cast as Ace Woody, but dropped out due to scheduling conflicts. D
DIRECTOR TRADEMARK (Quentin Tarantino): (long shot): During the dinner-scene in Candyland, there is [...] D