• Privacy policy
  • T&C’s
  • About Us
    • FAQ
  • Contact us
  • Guest Content
  • TLE
  • News
  • Politics
  • Opinion
    • Elevenses
  • Business
  • Food
  • Travel
  • Property
  • JOBS
  • All
    • All Entertainment
    • Film
    • Sport
    • Tech/Auto
    • Lifestyle
    • Lottery Results
      • Lotto
      • Set For Life
      • Thunderball
      • EuroMillions
No Result
View All Result
The London Economic
SUPPORT THE LONDON ECONOMIC
NEWSLETTER
The London Economic
No Result
View All Result
Home Film

Forgotten Film Friday: Django

By Michael McNulty The steady plucking of an electric guitar explodes into the title theme, “Django, have you always been alone,” croons Luis Bacalov as a man in a heavy coat and black Stetson walks away from the screen dragging a heavy, muddied coffin along the ground and so opens Sergio Corbucci’s 1966 Spaghetti Western […]

Guest Contributor by Guest Contributor
2017-09-22 13:03
in Film
FacebookTwitterLinkedinEmailWhatsapp

By Michael McNulty

The steady plucking of an electric guitar explodes into the title theme, “Django, have you always been alone,” croons Luis Bacalov as a man in a heavy coat and black Stetson walks away from the screen dragging a heavy, muddied coffin along the ground and so opens Sergio Corbucci’s 1966 Spaghetti Western classic, Django.

It goes without saying that if there was no Django there would be no Django Unchained. Quentin Tarantino spoke openly about the influence of Corbucci’s film on his. So let’s go back and look at where it all began. Corbucci, like many Italian directors, cut his teeth in the filmmaking world working on standard studio fare of the likes of epics and comedies. He didn’t direct his first Western until 1963, Red Pastures, followed later by Minnesota Clay and Johnny Oro (both made before Django, but released after).

Upon release Django was a massive success in Italy and transformed then unknown 23 year old, Franco Nero (who played the title role), into a big box office attraction. However, the film was also controversial in, what was deemed, its exploitative and excessive use of violence and banned from release in the UK and never finding a distributor in the US.

Although the story was conceived by Sergio and his brother Bruno (writing credits also include Franco Rossetti and Piero Vivarelli), the plot throws back to Sergio Leone’s A Fist Full of Dollars (which throws back to Kurosawa’s Yojimbo – it’s a bit like Russian nesting dolls). Django (Franco Nero) pits two feuding gangs against each other, Major Jackson (Eduardo Fajardo) and his band of quasi Ku Klux Klan racists and the boisterous, sadistic General Hugo (José Bódalo) and his army of Mexican bandits, in a rundown town, he has plans of his own and a score to settle. It standard stuff, but really that’s not the point here, because Corbucci’s film reimagines and subverts the genre, turning it into a gloriously blood soaked, mud caked beast of its own.

Corbucci’s west is a veritable wasteland, a torn up, muddy world that feels narrow and tight. The rundown town, populated solely by Nathaniel (Ángel Álvarez) and his small stable of prostitutes, seems to exist as if suspended in its own nightmarish reality, serving more as a representation of Django’s warped psychological state.

Unlike the heroes commonly associated with the west, Django is void of morality. He is no hero, but a tortured remnant of the civil war, dressed in a battered Union uniform. He does not ride into town bringing with him the promise of order and instead walks in (he is never on a horse throughout the film), dragging a heavy coffin which when first considered could hint at the symbolic weight he carries as a result of the murder of his wife, but later proves to simply to be a functional case in which to carry a heavy machine gun.

The film plays out almost episodically and its surreal nature is heightened by the explosive violence. Here Corbucci knows no bounds and the bloody excess is frighteningly shocking. In one scene Major Jackson and his cronies, who sport red Klan masks that stick out against the bleak landscape, use captured Mexicans as clay pigeons, releasing them from a holding pen before gunning them down.

RelatedPosts

Netflix has added one of the best blockbusters of recent years

Best films of the 21st century have been revealed

Netflix is about to remove one of the best thriller movies of recent years

Netflix has added one of the best thriller movies of the decade

In another, the sweaty, corpulent General Hugo cuts off a priest’s, who is a Jackson sympathizer, ear and makes him eat it, before unloading a round of bullets into his back. There is no God in this country, a truth that is revisited in the final showdown.

To top it all off there is Franco Nero, who for many may appear to be a reimagining of Clint Eastwood’s a Man with No Name, but don’t let those piercing blue eyes and rugged good looks sell you short on a character and performance that is entirely its own. Django is firecracker of a film, 90 minutes of blood, mud and good ol’ fashioned gun slinging.

RELATED 

https://www.thelondoneconomic.com/film/film-review-mother/13/09/

https://www.thelondoneconomic.com/film/forgotten-film-friday-branded-kill/08/09/

Subscribe to our Newsletter

View our  Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions

About Us

TheLondonEconomic.com – Open, accessible and accountable news, sport, culture and lifestyle.

Read more

SUPPORT

We do not charge or put articles behind a paywall. If you can, please show your appreciation for our free content by donating whatever you think is fair to help keep TLE growing and support real, independent, investigative journalism.

DONATE & SUPPORT

Contact

Editorial enquiries, please contact: [email protected]

Commercial enquiries, please contact: [email protected]

Address

The London Economic Newspaper Limited t/a TLE
Company number 09221879
International House,
24 Holborn Viaduct,
London EC1A 2BN,
United Kingdom

© The London Economic Newspaper Limited t/a TLE thelondoneconomic.com - All Rights Reserved. Privacy

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Lottery Results
    • Lotto
    • Set For Life
    • Thunderball
    • EuroMillions
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Food
  • Travel
  • JOBS
  • More…
    • Elevenses
    • Opinion
    • Property
    • Tech & Auto
  • About Us
    • Privacy policy
  • Contact us

© The London Economic Newspaper Limited t/a TLE thelondoneconomic.com - All Rights Reserved. Privacy

← The Weekly Cocktail Recipe: Tia Maria Iced Popcorn Frappe ← Why there has never been a more exciting time for English wine
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Lottery Results
    • Lotto
    • Set For Life
    • Thunderball
    • EuroMillions
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Food
  • Travel
  • JOBS
  • More…
    • Elevenses
    • Opinion
    • Property
    • Tech & Auto
  • About Us
    • Privacy policy
  • Contact us

© The London Economic Newspaper Limited t/a TLE thelondoneconomic.com - All Rights Reserved. Privacy

-->