This film revolves around the unlikely team of Dr. King Shultz and slave named Django. Dr. Shultz is formerly a dentist, but has picked up bounty hunting since. After purchasing Django, he plans to have him assist with his killing of the Brittle Brothers. Django wants to rescue his wife, Broomhilda, from Calvin Candie, a cruel plantation owner who bought Django's wife some time ago. Dr. Shultz agrees to rescuing Broomhilda from Calvin Candie under the condition that Django helps him kill the Brittle Brothers. After they make a successful kill, the two adventure to Candyland, Candie's plantation, and find Broomhilda. After planning to purchase Broomhilda, the head slave of Candyland reveals them to Candie. All hell breaks lose at this point and Django must fight alongside Shultz to escape Candyland and save Broomhilda.
Although this movie was only released a year ago, Tarantino does a fantastic job of bringing an old feel to the film. With country-western music, flawless costume design, and on-location shooting, this movie shines. Tarantino has a way of shooting in an independent way, straying away from special effects and over-the-top camera angles. The special effects help the grittiness of the film by using physical gunfire and real explosions instead of computer generated explosions and blood spatters. Although exaggerated, fake blood bursting from a corpse is more believable when as a physical liquid, rather than digitally inserting it later. I feel that Tarantino's effects makes it easier to watch the film, keeping consistency throughout shots and never distracting the viewer.
I believe Quentin Tarantino successfully uses all possible elements to bring together a movie the viewer can truly connect to. Shooting on location stuck out to me especially. Continuing my thoughts from the last paragraph, Tarantino manages to keep a continuous look throughout the film without the help of digital locations and effects. Set design is incorporated beautifully, transporting the viewer to the years before the civil war. Tarantino perfects the sound design, allowing us to hear every bullet, hit, gallop, and explosion with clear detail as well as incorporating background sound of the surroundings. With physical special effects and an incredible soundscape, Django Unchained is another gem in Quentin Tarantino's collection of films.