firecat: damiel from wings of desire tasting blood on his fingers. text "i has a flavor!" (Default)
firecat (attention machine in need of calibration) ([personal profile] firecat) wrote2013-01-05 01:53 am

Django

http://whiteseducatingwhites.tumblr.com/post/39365279657/whiteness-unchained-when-a-national-shame-becomes-camp

This article makes Django look like The Help with extra torture scenes. (I haven't seen it, but I'm OK with spoilers in the comments.)
lilacsigil: 12 Apostles rocks, text "Rock On" (12 Apostles)

[personal profile] lilacsigil 2013-01-05 11:36 am (UTC)(link)
I haven't seen it either (not a big fan of heavy violence) and I was finding that article really interesting until the writer decided that because an actor played an evil, sadistic slave-owner very well, it was *too* believable and it makes the actor seem "less of a convincing actor and more of a convincing racist."

That's the same line of reasoning that keeps gay actors out of work, and straight actors from acting in gay roles, and it's totally out of nowhere, adding nothing to the argument.
wild_irises: (Default)

[personal profile] wild_irises 2013-01-05 04:14 pm (UTC)(link)
I haven't seen it (and won't, because violence) but two people I respect (one African-American, one Caucasian) saw it together and really liked it. Basically, they take the position that it is deeply cathartic (which is a good thing) and that Tarantino was consciously intending the catharsis.
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[personal profile] elainegrey 2013-01-05 10:23 pm (UTC)(link)
Tarintino is not my thing. I did happen upon Terri Gross interviewing him on Fresh Air. His comments about the "real"violence (what really happened to people in slavery) and the "movie" violence (apparently revenge is served) were intriguing. But i had to shut of the interview because Terri Gross was nigh inarticulate in her discomfort discussing the violence and portrayal of slavery: i was cringing on her behalf.
elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)

[personal profile] elainegrey 2013-01-06 04:42 am (UTC)(link)
She wasn't talking about her feelings: i assumed her stammering out questions and saying she wasn't sure of the right word was indicative of her discomfort.

[identity profile] nancylebov.livejournal.com 2013-01-05 04:41 pm (UTC)(link)
I'd say it isn't a particularly fair review.

Contemporary black Americans don't have the experience of chattel slavery any more than I've experienced the holocaust. "It would have been me" adds an emotional connection, but it's not the same thing.

I regret that the first major movie about slavery in the south was a fantasy rather than a more realistic handling, but it wasn't that bad. Django and Schulz are both using each other for their own agendas-- Schulz helps Django first because Django has information and later because he thinks Django will be a good partner as a bounty hunter.

I'm not sure why Schulz shot Candie-- there's a weird interaction before that where Candie absolutely insists on Schulz shaking his hand and Schulz won't do it. Then Schulz shoots Candie. Candie is a bully, but it seems as though there's something else going on like some sort of trick that would get Schulz killed (Schulz and Django tried to trick Candie into selling Broomhilda). I'm writing that stuff off as a reference to westerns I haven't seen.

Broomhilda? This is annoying-- her name was originally Brunhilde. I'm not sure if it's supposed to be an example of white southerners getting things humorously wrong or what.

I give Tarantino credit for a description of industrial slavery, the kind that killed in a few years. I don't think it's part of most people's vision of slavery.

I would say that Django is absolutely the central character of the movie, even though Schulz and Candie have major parts. He's not as talkative as the white characters, but what he says is focused and intelligent.

Part of the problem with that sort of review is that it's guessing about how black people will take the movie. Steve Barnes (a black sf author) liked it a lot. I saw a review (will track it down if you want) by someone black who talked about black audiences being uncomfortable at laughing at the many funny bits, something I wouldn't have guessed.

I didn't realize that Mandingo fighting was invented. So far as I know, the Klan was started after the Civil War.

I do think there are some problematic aspects to the movie-- it's got relatively little from slave viewpoints. For practical purposes, Django is semi-free through most of the movie. It's bad about women. I'm not sure that the sub-plot about Steve (the house slave who reveals Django's scheme to Candie and is torturously killed by Django) makes sense.

Another problematic aspect is that Django is so extraordinary that he makes (male?) slaves who made practical compromises to stay alive (I don't think he'd have survived the happy ending of the movie for very long, either) just look weak.
Edited 2013-01-05 17:11 (UTC)
sabotabby: raccoon anarchy symbol (racist!)

[personal profile] sabotabby 2013-01-05 05:13 pm (UTC)(link)
Having seen it (and standard disclaimer that I'm white and obviously can't speak for the viewing experience of black people, and also that I completely love everything that Tarantino does), I feel like the reviewer completely missed the point.

I'm not black, but I'm Jewish, and my experience watching Inglorious Basterds was not that Tarantino was disrespectful to history or the millions who died in the Holocaust, but was a) presenting an incredibly satisfying revenge fantasy, b) making a statement about the relationship between film and audience, and c) making the only kind of fictional movie about the Holocaust that I can stand to watch. I don't want to see my people's history represented by Tragedy! And Sad Music! And Serious Acting! That's manipulative. The opening sequence in that movie is worth a bazillion Schindler's Lists (and why does no one ever criticize that movie for being about a white saviour...but I digress).

I had a similar feeling about Django Unchained. You simply can't represent the horrors of slavery in a way that is dignified or respectful, and Tarantino doesn't try. He makes it brutal. I flinched. I covered my eyes in the infamous dog scene, and then hated myself a little for not being able to watch, because this kind of shit happened to real people. A more serious, subtle filmmaker would have cut away there, but Tarantino forces you to watch. And then he gives you the catharsis of watching one of slavery's victims take incredibly satisfying revenge (yes, the white saviour character kills DiCaprio's character, but the black character kills pretty much everyone else, including Tarantino).

I haven't seen The Help because it did sound completely racist, but it's my impression that it's a story about how some white people really helped out during the Civil Rights era. This is much more about playing with cinematic conventions—how do we depict slaves, Klansmen, Uncle Tom characters, etc., in film.

/shameless Tarantino fangirl