Django & Django
- 2021
- 1 Std. 20 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,9/10
1806
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Eine Hommage an Sergio Corbucci aus den 1960er Jahren und Quentin Tarantino, die eine denkwürdige Periode des italienischen Kinos mit der Sensibilität von heute erzählt.Eine Hommage an Sergio Corbucci aus den 1960er Jahren und Quentin Tarantino, die eine denkwürdige Periode des italienischen Kinos mit der Sensibilität von heute erzählt.Eine Hommage an Sergio Corbucci aus den 1960er Jahren und Quentin Tarantino, die eine denkwürdige Periode des italienischen Kinos mit der Sensibilität von heute erzählt.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 Nominierung insgesamt
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I really loved it, Very informative and entertaining at the same time, a must watch for all cinephiles and especially Spaghetti western fans. Don't miss it.
I really enjoyed this, and think Tarantino is a very interesting director to listen to, and I find him talking about movies very engaging (almost as much as I enjoy hearing Scorsese talk about film). You can tell he's truly passionate about Corbucci and the genre of Spaghetti Westerns as a whole because there's a couple of times his words can't keep up with his thoughts 😅
I wish it had been a little longer by going into a few more movies (Corbucci appears to have directed heaps, and I've only seen two, so will need to check out some others), especially because I feel like there were a couple of extended montages near the end that only served to pad this out to over 70 minutes. But if "I just wanted a bit more" is the biggest complaint I have about a documentary, then it's honestly a pretty damn good documentary.
I wish it had been a little longer by going into a few more movies (Corbucci appears to have directed heaps, and I've only seen two, so will need to check out some others), especially because I feel like there were a couple of extended montages near the end that only served to pad this out to over 70 minutes. But if "I just wanted a bit more" is the biggest complaint I have about a documentary, then it's honestly a pretty damn good documentary.
I've long maintained that no one in Hollywood has more fun with his craft than Quentin Tarantino. Here's further support for my thesis. Who else opens a documentary with a mockumentary? And gets a pair of major stars to appear in it?
Though nominally an homage to director Sergio Corbucci, it's really more of a focused interview with Tarantino, allowing him to explain his love for Spaghetti Westerns, including their historic role in context with all that preceded them, and transpired here during those years, giving due credit to those on both sides of the cameras. Corbucci is the primary object of his praise, but many others, including some lesser-known contributors, get their moments in the sun, as well.
I've seen over 300 of these films (including all that are featured here), and continue seeking others on my checklist. I'm obviously a genre fan. Even so, I found new appreciation for many I've already savored, and plan to re-watch a few, based on his insights. (In fact, since posting the rest of this review a couple of weeks ago, I re-watched Navajo Joe and upped my prior IMDb rating for it by a point; more appreciation for all Burt did there, thanks to QT's perspective.)
Tarantino isn't credited as the writer or director of this doc, but his fingerprints are all over it, even beyond what he says on camera.
I wish they'd covered one question that's been bugging me for a while, though it would have been somewhat off-topic. I've noticed many more Appaloosas in Spaghetti Westerns than in U. S. oaters of the same era. Were horses of that distinctive breed so much more prevalent in Spain than here, or did they just have better agents?
The preceding digression notwithstanding, thanks for making this project, dude. It was fun and informative to see a bit of what's going on between your ears.
Though nominally an homage to director Sergio Corbucci, it's really more of a focused interview with Tarantino, allowing him to explain his love for Spaghetti Westerns, including their historic role in context with all that preceded them, and transpired here during those years, giving due credit to those on both sides of the cameras. Corbucci is the primary object of his praise, but many others, including some lesser-known contributors, get their moments in the sun, as well.
I've seen over 300 of these films (including all that are featured here), and continue seeking others on my checklist. I'm obviously a genre fan. Even so, I found new appreciation for many I've already savored, and plan to re-watch a few, based on his insights. (In fact, since posting the rest of this review a couple of weeks ago, I re-watched Navajo Joe and upped my prior IMDb rating for it by a point; more appreciation for all Burt did there, thanks to QT's perspective.)
Tarantino isn't credited as the writer or director of this doc, but his fingerprints are all over it, even beyond what he says on camera.
I wish they'd covered one question that's been bugging me for a while, though it would have been somewhat off-topic. I've noticed many more Appaloosas in Spaghetti Westerns than in U. S. oaters of the same era. Were horses of that distinctive breed so much more prevalent in Spain than here, or did they just have better agents?
The preceding digression notwithstanding, thanks for making this project, dude. It was fun and informative to see a bit of what's going on between your ears.
Django & Django, if you recall in Once Upon A Time in Hollywood, Ray ( Leonardo diCaprio) went over to Italy to make some spaghetti westerns. The first part of this movie recalls the fictitious meeting in great detail of Ray meeting Italian director Sergio Corbucci. Quentin Tarantino then narrates a great documentary about Corbucci. Nice to see clips of westerns that are very rarely seen now, and even better to see The Specialist from 1969 starring Johnny Hallyday , the film that should have been Ray's. Tarantino is his usual infections self in this thoroughly entertaining film 8/10.
Or is t a mockumentary, not really sure with Tarentino's intro using his OUaTiH Rick Dalton backstory. Anyway, comes off as a good recap of Italian Spaghetti westerns, yes Corbucci is a real Director. Lots of clips, good for a laugh, and Tarentino does some kind of film school analysis of the deeper plotting and messaging. Makes one want to watch Minnesota Clay.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesQuentin Tarantino's story about his fictional actor Rick Dalton thinking he would work for Sergio Leone and winding-up with Sergio Corbucci instead is actually the true story of (and what happened to) a young Burt Reynolds, when he wanted to follow in his friend Clint Eastwood's footsteps to work for Leone, and wound up with Carbucci doing Navajo Joe, a movie that "Rick" and Quentin reference as Burt wearing a wig and looking like Natalie Wood in the movie, and the movie not being good. Reynolds himself detested it.
- Zitate
Quentin Tarantino: Of all the great Western directors, Corbucci created the most pitiless West that there was. The most pitiless, the most pessimistic, the most surrealistically grotesque, the most violent.
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde 20 Minuten
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- 16:9 HD
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By what name was Django & Django (2021) officially released in India in English?
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