daibakuha said:
I don't really see the point in objecting to Django killing people in cold blood a lot of action movies do the same for their heroes and don't get any slack for it. Not to mention the fact that he only really kills 2, maybe 3 people in cold blood, and that was only after they tried to kill him first.
How many action movies has the hero casually shooting the villain's sister when she does nothing on-screen to warrant it?
Not to mention the fact that if he didn't kill those people they would have hunted him down like an animal and probably have dogs tear him limb from limb.
You think that the slaves he let go were immune to bribery from other masters? They're all going to end up at other plantations. The movie was kind of big on emphasizing how important the freedom papers were to ensuring that other slavers wouldn't re-sell him. Matter of fact...
Yes, the movie is racist, and it's racist in the most correct way possible. When Calvin Candie makes his speech about "one ****** in 10,000" actually being independent-minded enough to take freedom's opportunity when it comes, Django merely proves that
he's the one. The rest of the slaves? Maybe Samuel L. Jackson is one in 10,000 that decided to seize power instead of freedom, but otherwise every other black character in the movie is passively acted on or heavily encouraged by outside action [http://thelastpsychiatrist.com/2012/04/whats_wrong_with_the_hunger_ga_1.html], rather than shown to be an independent actor taking their actions from reason and personal history. And you know what?
It precisely matches the psychological profiles of the vast majority of black people today. Collect welfare checks when shown how, commit random violence against each other when the feeling strikes you, take affirmative action/government quote and set-aside jobs to create an artificial middle class, vote en masse for the guy who's a half-member of your race despite the fact that his amnesty for illegal immigrants primarily destroys the low-skill high-labor jobs that kept your parents and ancestral communities employed after slavery...
Have you considered the fact that Samuel L. Jackson might not, in fact, have been acting all that hard? That he does, in fact, have some precedent for this role?
Phrenology "skull bumps" as an explanation for the phenomenon might have been pseudoscience, the observations of black passivity, stupidity, and indolence were as real and universal as rain.