MovieChat Forums > Django Unchained (2012) Discussion > This movie goes downhill after Waltz/Leo...

This movie goes downhill after Waltz/Leo die


This movie was brilliant for the first 2/3 or so, but after the handshake scene where Schultz & Calvin die, the films brilliance ends. From the absurd massive shootout, to the inane Australian scene, to the cringeworthy death of Lara Lee, it just becomes a farce. It also doesn't help when you kill off the two most interesting characters within seconds of each other. I don't even doubt it was QT's intention to be completely over the top like that, I get it's a spoof on blaxploitation films, but after how great this movie was for so long, I was pretty disappointed with the final 45 minutes

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"cringeworthy death of Lara Lee"

Speak for yourself, as for the rest of what you said.

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Completely agree. The best of the movie was Waltz and DiCaprio.

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Have you ever heard the phrase ''all good thing come to an end''?
It's not because a character is great that he has to survive the whole movie.
Yes the best part of the movie is with them, but that doesn't mean the movie would have been better with them until the end.
Quality is better than quantity.

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I agree with this. It actually raised the stakes after Waltz and Cap’s deaths. I wouldn’t say it went downhill, it just switched gears into more of a hostage situation (the wife had technically already been paid for and was free).

I did find the Australian scene bizarre though. As an Australian I like hearing my accent on screen, and can appreciate Tarantino wanting some quirkiness to his cameo, lol. But I can’t imagine there would be any Australians whatsoever in the American Wild West of the 1850s! Zero. Plus Australia was less than 100 years old in the 1850s, and most Aus movies set in this period accurately only have Irish and English accents. This would’ve been too early for an Aussie accent.

Plus Tarantino‘s accent was so bad I actually thought he was playing a South African (eg, the white bearded villain in Black Panther). Oh well whatever, it was funny.

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Just saw the movie and totally agree. I was concerned at the insane running time (almost three hours for a non-novel adaptation seems pretty self-indulgent) but I never once found the movie dragged and thoroughly enjoyed it... up until the big shootout scene.

Not only was it sparked by something more comedic than dramatic (there was no reason to shoot Candie and then commit suicide by just standing there) but it was the logical end to the movie, yet it staggered on for another twenty minutes of baffling padding.

Why were the mining guys (including Tarantino, with a dreadful accent) Aussies? Why kill the innocent sister and make Django into a villain himself? Heck, why would they let him live and risk any chance of revenge after he killed about thirty people in that shootout?! What were they going to do with his wife? Why was Zoe Bell in this film with a mask on when it had no payoff at all?

IMO, the film should either a) have ended with that gunfight, letting Django kill Steven and escape with his wife (since a tragic end wasn't in the cards, clearly) or b) have Candie kill Schultz in cold blood at the dinner table and have Django sent to the mine... so he escapes, returns to rescue Hilde and kills Candie and Steven in a similar epic gunfight and explosion as the finale.

What we got was an ending... then a bit of faffing around, then another ending.

Oh, and IMO the ending was quite tonally off from the rest of the film too, playing like a blaxploitation ending (fine by itself, as its a fun genre) when Django had previously been set up as a much more introspective, just man with a conscience rather than a "kill whitey like a badass" hero.

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I kinda think that there was a "rhyme" to what QT did with the script structure here, and a certain service to Django as his lead character.

Simply put, when Schultz shoots Candie, and is in turn killed by Butch...the two main white characters are out of the film(with Schultz being dispatched by yet another white character.)

Now, Django is set on course for a final confrontation with Stephen...the black hero will kill the black villain(and, unlike as with Waltz, will not die in the process.) Indeed, before their final fatal confrontation, we get the scene where Django is hanging upside down and Stephen is revealing to him the full evil depravity of his sell-out "house slave" to the white slave masters.

Schulz was Django's mentor for the first 2/3 of the film, teaching him how to shoot, how to be a bounty hunter, how to assert his authority AS a bounty hunter(Django uses Schultz's verbal techniques and wanted posters to convince the Aussie mining men to give him a GUN, for God's sake!), and even how to dress better. With Waltz now dead, Django has to take over the movie and assert himself as the hero -- starting with that big ol' gunbattle that we just KNOW Django has been aching for against all these white bigots. And look how great Django dresses at the end, after that initial silly blue outfit he wears at Big Daddy's ranch.

By the way, in an interview, Will Smith said one reason he turned down Django Unchained is that HE wanted to be the one who killed Calvin Candie, not Schultz. That's movie superstar thinking -- "its all about me." QT protected his structure(the two white men die and set up the confrontation between the two black men) and let Smith walk.

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I agree as well, the movie ground to a half when the two main white characters died. IMHO that showed a central weakness in the script and the direction - the white characters were better developed and got more screen time than the black!

Django may have been the title character but it was clear that Tarantino w giving all his love and attention to Waltz and DiCaprio,

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Well, they could have been Turkish or from Kazakhstan.
It's just adding to the comedy aspect of the movie.
And Tarantino's accent was not even close. Thought he was a South African.

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Blaxploitation? From the big red fonts, to the soundtrack, isn't it more of a spoof of spaghetti westerns?

In any case, I thought it was interesting the circumstances in which Calvin Candie died. Almost made you feel Dr. Shultz was the bad guy. It was like Calvin was evil, but evil within the law of that time period. He took $12k from Shultz' billfold and not a dollar more. He even wrote up a bill of sale, and freedom papers. Granted, he made the ultimatum of $12k for Broomhilda or watch him bash her in. But that was because he was mad they almost made a fool of him. "Those time wastin' sons of bi***es," and as we all know, time is money! So you can't really fault him for wanting to sell something for $12k. He screams at them, that Broomhilda is his property, and he can do as he pleases with her, reminding the audience again, that he is evil but within the laws of those days. Dr. Shultz was definitely a sore loser. So much so, he risked the lives of Django and Broomhilda when he shot Calvin.

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It wasn't about winning or losing to Shultz. Maybe to a degree, but his impulse to kill Candie was more out of sheer moral frustration than ego. You can see it in his eyes when he shoots the Shariff at the brothel.

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Dr. Schultz's death was totally unnecessary. He's normally a quick shooter, yet he allowed himself to be shot to death. He didn't even defend himself.

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He only proved himself capable of getting in good sneak attacks at the right time when the stakes are high. He never proved himself capable of a shoot-out with multiple opponents. In fact, the movie made it clear that he would prefer to talk his way out of one when he's being surrounded.

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You're both correct.

I was surprised how easily Schultz was killed. I honestly thought he had another trick up his sleeve after he put the round in Candie's heart because he clearly left himself with no exit plan.

Everyone knows Schultz should have sucked it up, shook Candie's hand, and exact his revenge (if he indeed felt the need) when he could arrange for circumstances to favor his success, just as he did when bounty hunting.


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He only had a one-shooter hidden on him. He didn’t have any more rounds to shoot at anyone else. He was a sitting duck, and knew he would be the moment he decided to kill Candie.

Schultz was trying super hard to get out of there without being forced to shake Candie’s hand. Schultz practically said “I’d rather die than shake this asshole’s hand”. For him, it was a circumstance that was non-negotiable.

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Schultz was trying super hard to get out of there without being forced to shake Candie’s hand. Schultz practically said “I’d rather die than shake this asshole’s hand”. For him, it was a circumstance that was non-negotiable.


I want to start off by saying I completely agree with you - that was exactly what Schultz was thinking by shooting Calvin with no exit plan.

But it was also weak writing to have Dr. Schulz make such a rookie mistake. His mentoring of Django included several instances of lessons about not losing one's head and keeping everything strictly professional and to plan. Schultz was a cool customer when he summarily executed the sheriff on the street and calmly waited for the Marshall.

We can only say that Candie snapped Schulz as the answer.

My opinion is that based on what we saw throughout the movie, Schultz would have shaken his hand, kept to the "script", and gotten out with his prize.

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I agree. It's a betrayal of his character for him to do what he did. Not that I don't doubt he had a hard time with shaking Candie's hand, but in shooting him instead rather than going ahead with it, he must know he is condemning Django and Hilda to death or slavery again after all the trouble he took in freeing them. It'd be more believable for him to grit his teeth and shake the hand, then try to shoot Candie later on at a more opportune moment. I just don't buy that he would value his integrity by refusing to shake Candie's hand more than the lives of Django and his wife.

It was basically all an excuse so Tarantino could have one of his ultra OTT bloody violent fighting/shoot out scenes that he gets so giddy for. Unfortunately I lose interest by that point onwards.

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I'd love a film all about Dr. Shultz. Perhaps a prequel.

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It would have to be a prequel... :) but I agree. Great character. Kind of like English Bob in Unforgiven.

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I meant, "perhaps a prequel" in the sense that it could be completely unrelated to the Django story, but feature Schultz, or not. Either way, I would be stoked.

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Someone should pitch it to QT.. I'd love it as well.

If you're a fan of Unforgiven, the character English Bob was also great - one I thought could carry a feature film without the rest of the Unforgiven cast. Unfortunately, the great Richard Harris died some years ago. I don't know if anyone could do justice to Richard Harris' English Bob though. But a King Schultz movie would be fabulous.

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I use to agree with you, but after watching the film many times, I've since changed my mind. Django's development was all about understanding why machismo and gung-ho behavior will ultimately lead to death and failure. Django is a man of poor self image, who acts out of impulse. Ending the film at his first shoot-out in Candieland would have cut his development short, and betray the films themes by ending the film with that shoot-out. The last 45 minutes are critical to Django's development, because it shows that Django has dug deep into his self worth and is no longer ignorant to his talents. He fights with his wits and he wins.

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