Django Unchained

22 January 2013 | 11:36 am | Guy Davis

"To borrow a line from his Kill Bill movies, it’s a “roaring rampage of revenge,” albeit one that’s also surprisingly moving and hilariously funny.

Quentin Tarantino displays his own brand of social consciousness with Django Unchained, his violent and passionate tale of a slave looking to liberate his wife and take revenge on his tormentors in the American South of the 19th century.

When Django (Jamie Foxx) is freed from a pair of slave traders by the cultured German bounty hunter Dr King Schultz (Christoph Waltz), it's the beginning of an unlikely partnership – one that goes from business arrangement (Django knows the faces of three outlaws Schultz is tracking), to a mentor-protege relationship as Schultz teaches Django the finer points of bounty hunting (Django proves a quick study when it comes to quick-draw gunfighting), to genuine friendship.

It culminates in a quest to find and free Django's beloved wife Broomhilda (Kerry Washington) from the clutches of the loathsome Calvin Candie (Leonardo DiCaprio), a plantation owner with a penchant for 'mandingo' bouts where slaves fight to the death.

The filmmaker's tangible outrage at the degradation and inhumanity of slavery is depicted in a no-holds-barred manner. But while Django Unchained is a fiery, fierce rebel yell of a movie, it's also a sparkling piece of entertainment – to borrow a line from his Kill Bill movies, it's a “roaring rampage of revenge,” albeit one that's also surprisingly moving and hilariously funny.

In cinemas Thursday 24 January

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