Difference between revisions of "Django Unchained Movie References guide"

From The Quentin Tarantino Archives

m
m
Line 17: Line 17:
* [http://www.spaghetti-western.net/index.php/Shango,_la_pistola_infallibile Article page at the SWDB]
* [http://www.spaghetti-western.net/index.php/Shango,_la_pistola_infallibile Article page at the SWDB]
Jamie Foxx' character is pronounce with a silent D, so it sounds a bit more like this spaghetti western
Jamie Foxx' character is pronounce with a silent D, so it sounds a bit more like this spaghetti western
'''Minnesota Clay'''
* [http://www.spaghetti-western.net/index.php/Minnesota_Clay Article page at the SWDB]
* This is a spaghetti western, one of Corbucci's early works, and also the title of a saloon in Django Unchained.


[[Category:Django Unchained]][[Category:Resources]][[Category:Movie references]]
[[Category:Django Unchained]][[Category:Resources]][[Category:Movie references]]

Revision as of 11:11, 28 May 2012

We are working on a list of movie references. Stay tuned.

Disclaimer: Movies listed here are a mix of movies that might possibly have influenced Tarantino in making this movie (so those are guesses) and movies that are directly or indirectly referenced to or more or less openly paid hommage to by Tarantino (such as "Django" oviously).


Mandingo

Django

This is of course the seminal movie by Corbucci which in parts inspired Tarantino.

Shango

Jamie Foxx' character is pronounce with a silent D, so it sounds a bit more like this spaghetti western

Minnesota Clay

  • Article page at the SWDB
  • This is a spaghetti western, one of Corbucci's early works, and also the title of a saloon in Django Unchained.
Tarantino XX BluRay
Bad Mother Fucker Pulp Fiction Wallet