Django the bastard combines two unlikely genres. The spaghetti western and a ghostly slasher. Do they mix together? Absolutely they do. It also has one of the coolest western protagonists out there.
I'm not to farmailiar with the other spaghetti Western protagonists other than the man with no name. My only experience with Django before was Jaimie Foxx in the awesome Django unchained. So I thought Django was very cool. I love that he has this ghostly feel the entire movie too. His entire thing with the crosses was just great.
The story was a good mix of western and an almost revenge slasher. What I liked about it the most was how it made Django feel like this ghost and showing the fear in the villians. Their backstory and reason for revenge was interesting too. There was a movie i watched a while ago called emmanuele queen of the desert that tried to pull of the same thing but it's flashback sequence completely put the pacing to a stop. Django the bastard one was quick, short and just what you need. The entire revenge method was great too.
The characters outside of Django were all fine and interesting too. The highlights being the crazy brother who steals the show with his insanity and his wife. The lead villian was good too and I quite liked how he was handled. I can say I felt like all of the side characters had personality and were fun. From the little moments between henchman to the bigger moments with the bad guys.
It's a spaghetti western, so does it look good. Yes it does and the action and shootouts were well done. The town as the hunting ground was used well. It's desert locations looked pretty. It's very entertaining and both the set locations and the action sequences were very fun.
Django the bastard Is a great time all around. Django caught my attention, now I want to see more. The story was a good mix of genres too. So Django is not a complete bastard or devil out of hell because he got me watching his other adventures.
Django the bastard combines two unlikely genres. The spaghetti western and a ghostly slasher. Do they mix together? Absolutely they do. It also has one of the coolest western protagonists out there.
I'm not to farmailiar with the other spaghetti Western protagonists other than the man with no name. My only experience with Django before was Jaimie Foxx in the awesome Django unchained. So I thought Django was very cool. I love that he has this ghostly feel the entire movie too. His entire thing with the crosses was just great.
The story was a good mix of western and an almost revenge slasher. What I liked about it the most was how it made Django feel like this ghost and showing the fear in the villians. Their backstory and reason for revenge was interesting too. There was a movie i watched a while ago called emmanuele queen of the desert that tried to pull of the same thing but it's flashback sequence completely put the pacing to a stop. Django the bastard one was quick, short and just what you need. The entire revenge method was great too.
The characters outside of Django were all fine and interesting too. The highlights being the crazy brother who steals the show with his insanity and his wife. The lead villian was good too and I quite liked how he was handled. I can say I felt like all of the side characters had personality and were fun. From the little moments between henchman to the bigger moments with the bad guys.
It's a spaghetti western, so does it look good. Yes it does and the action and shootouts were well done. The town as the hunting ground was used well. It's desert locations looked pretty. It's very entertaining and both the set locations and the action sequences were very fun.
Django the bastard Is a great time all around. Django caught my attention, now I want to see more. The story was a good mix of genres too. So Django is not a complete bastard or devil out of hell because he got me watching his other adventures.