Django Unchained -

Watch it for: Waltz and DiCaprio’s verbal duels, the cinematography, and a final act that will make you pump your fist. Skip it if: You’re sensitive to racial slurs, extreme gore, or movies that take a sledgehammer to historical trauma.

And yes, the violence is absurd. Blood sprays in cartoonish geysers. Gunfights are choreographed like ballet. The climactic shootout at Candyland sees Django turn a mansion into Swiss cheese, freeing the slaves and painting the walls red. It’s cathartic, juvenile, and exhilarating all at once. Django Unchained

Additionally, Django Unchained is too long. The middle section, while fun, drags under the weight of Tarantino’s self-indulgence. The Australian cameo by Tarantino himself (complete with an inexplicably terrible accent) is a low point—a distracting, unnecessary speed bump in the revenge engine. Watch it for: Waltz and DiCaprio’s verbal duels,

Here’s a review of Quentin Tarantino’s Django Unchained (2012), written in a critical but enthusiastic style. Quentin Tarantino has never been known for subtlety. But with Django Unchained , he loads his signature blend of grindhouse violence, pop-culture pastiche, and rapid-fire dialogue into a musket aimed directly at the heart of American slavery. The result is thrilling, uncomfortable, wildly entertaining, and occasionally tone-deaf. Blood sprays in cartoonish geysers