DJANGO DESTROYS CANDYLAND PLANTATION - DJANGO UNCHAINED

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Published 2022-11-13
Django and Schultz kill the Brittle brothers at Spencer "Big Daddy" Bennett's Tennessee plantation. Bennett lets Django and Schultz leave due to the warrant, but later tries to attack them with a posse. Schultz ambushes the posse with explosives and Django kills Bennett. Feeling responsible for Django, Schultz agrees to help him find and rescue Broomhilda. They return to Texas where Django collects his first bounty, keeping the handbill as a memento. He and Schultz rack up several bounties before spring, when they travel to Mississippi and learn that Broomhilda's new owner is Calvin J. Candie, the charming but cruel owner of the Candyland plantation, where slaves are forced to wrestle to the death in brutal "Mandingo" fights. Schultz and Django hatch a plan: deciding that Candie will price Broomhilda beyond their reach if they try to buy her upfront, they will instead offer $12,000 (equivalent to $376,000 in 2021) for one of his best fighters as a pretext to acquiring Broomhilda for a nominal sum. They meet Candie at his gentlemen's club and make the offer. Intrigued, Candie invites them to Candyland. En route, the group encounters Candie's slave trackers who have cornered D'Artagnan, an escapee Mandingo fighter. Schultz attempts to save him, but Django intervenes to prevent him from blowing their cover. Candie has the trackers' dogs maul D'Artagnan to death, visibly upsetting Schultz.

Having told Broomhilda of their plan, Schultz offers to buy her as his escort while negotiating the initial deal during dinner. Candie's staunchly loyal and suspicious head house slave Stephen realizes that Broomhilda knows Django, deduces their plan and alerts Candie. Candie alters the deal at gunpoint to sell Broomhilda for $12,000 instead of the fighter; Schultz reluctantly agrees. During the sale's finalization, Candie threatens to kill Broomhilda if Schultz does not shake his hand to seal the deal. Having had enough of Candie's arrogance, Schultz shoots and kills Candie. Butch Pooch, Candie's bodyguard, kills Schultz, and Django goes on a rampage, killing Pooch, Candie's lawyer Leonide Moguy, and several of Candie's henchmen, but is forced to surrender when Broomhilda is taken hostage.

The next morning, the chained Django is tortured and about to be castrated by Candie's henchman Billy Crash when Stephen arrives, informing him that Candie's sister Lara, who has taken charge of the plantation, has ordered him to be sold to a mining company and worked to death. En route there, Django devises an escape plan and uses his first handbill to prove to his escorts that he is a bounty hunter. He falsely claims the men on the handbill are at Candyland and promises the escorts a share of the reward money. Once released, Django kills his escorts and returns to Candyland with dynamite. Recovering Broomhilda's freedom papers from Schultz's corpse, Django bids him goodbye and avenges him and D'Artagnan by killing the trackers, and frees Broomhilda just as Candie's mourners return from his burial. At the mansion, Django kills Lara, Crash and the remaining henchmen, releases the two remaining house slaves, and kneecaps Stephen, who had revealed to be faking his limp, before igniting the dynamite he had planted throughout the mansion. Django and Broomhilda watch from a distance as the mansion explodes before riding off together.

All Comments (21)
  • @Mrmilmil
    I’m glad Will Smith turned this down
  • The way he said “I’m sorry, I couldn’t resist” shows you just how much he hated Calvin Candie
  • @Tiran654LP
    I like how he says "Im sorry, i couldnt resist", with this face full of emotions, knowing that he is going to die now and fully accepts that, but is also a little bit sad at the same time.
  • @dylanbomba9559
    "bye miss luara" flies away pretty close to a 90 degree angle from the bullet gets me everytime
  • @Fizzlefuse
    The way miss laura flies backward while being shot from basically the side still cracks me up.
  • @cebuninja8008
    I love how they went from actually showing what a bullet does to a human with Calvin, and then goes full Hollywood with Schultz being launched 10 feet by a shotgun
  • @sergiomendoza4850
    Love how Steven gives up his whole act as soon as he realizes he’s fucked. Throws his cane, stands up straight and tries to die with dignity. Shows how evil of a person he was, pretending to be crippled and doing everything he could to keep his position.
  • @jangotack
    "I count six shots, n*gga." "I count two guns, n*gga." Stephen had the appropriate reaction, ain't shit to say to that
  • @TheRama2299
    I love the way this movie strikes the perfect balance between pure action, seriousness and comedic moments
  • @anactualalpaca7016
    God, in most movies the bad guy gets shot and they just flop and are dead, but in this movie they roll around, groaning and screaming in agony. Not every shot is a kill shot, and getting shot fucking hurts. This film captures that perfectly.
  • @BartHowell-kg3jj
    Will Smith is a phenomenal actor, but there are extremely vital aspects of Django’s character where only Jamie’s god given swagger could’ve given us this finished product💯
  • I like how when Django shoots them the bullets go through multiple people, but when he's using someone as a human shield they don't over penetrate.
  • @mrgoody69
    Steven fake his broke legs for years so he can escape the heavy work. And he gets what he deserve in the end. Masterpiece!
  • @codykodak
    Physics be damned, I always laugh when he shoots ms Laura 😂
  • @jacobadam6804
    I love how Steven refers to Django killing several people as "carryin on" 😂
  • the way jamie fox flies out the room backwards always gets me. 😅
  • 8:33 I always loved this part in particular. Steven dropping the cane is like him dropping his “act”. Steven was putting on an act to earn preferential treatment from Candie, but now the jig is up.
  • @DeathbyDawn141
    The way she flys back always makes me laugh... like you knew that when they filmed that Quintin basically said yank her as hard as you can
  • @wolvves4293
    In my personal opinion, this is Tarentino's magnum opus. This movie was perfect, from start to credits. The casting, the story, the action, the romance, everything. Perfect.