Quentin Tarantino Defends Violence in 'Django Unchained'

121217)QTFilmmaker Quentin Tarantino defended the heavy dosage of violence in Django Unchained, his latest film starring Jamie Foxx, Christoph Waltz, Leonardo DiCaprio, Kerry Washington and Samuel L. Jackson. As with many of his past offerings, Tarantino's Oscar hopeful includes a graphic depictions of blood and gunshot victims. Tarantino was asked about the violence over the weekend in New York in the wake of the tragedy in a Connecticut elementary school that left 26 dead, most of them children.

At a Saturday press event, Tarantino said that real-life violence is the fault of perpetrators and didn't appear to accept a correlation between incidents like the weekend's massacre in Newtown, CT and violence on the big screen.

"I think you know there's violence in the world, tragedies happen, blame the playmakers," he said according to BBC, adding, "It's a Western. Give me a break."

Django Unchained received five Golden Globe nominations last week and is a strong contender for Oscar nominations next month.

Still, Django star Jamie Foxx did say he believes the big screen can influence people's actions. "We cannot turn our back and say that violence in films or anything that we do doesn't have a sort of influence. It does," he said.

In the spaghetti-western style feature, Foxx pays a freed slave who sets out to rescue his wife from a ruthless plantation owner, played by Leonardo DiCaprio.

Representing more divide among the Django crew that is perhaps a microcosm of society generally, Christoph Waltz said he didn't believe films provoke violence, adding that the film contained violence because it was in fact part of American history.

"The media's responsibility is greater than the story teller is because... Django is violent, but it's not inspiring violence," said Waltz.

Kerry Washington offered up that violence in film can serve as an important learning vehicle, educating audiences about historical atrocities such as slavery. "I do think that it's important when we have the opportunity to talk about violence and not just kind of have it as entertainment, but connect it to the wrongs, the injustices, the social ills," said Washington.

Meanwhile, Paramount decided to move premiere events in Los Angeles and Pittsburgh for Tom Cruise's new action pic Jack Reacher "out of honor and respect for the families of the victims whose lives were senselessly taken." The feature opens with sniper shooting several people.

And Sunday night, new episodes of Family Guy and American Dad were dropped, with Fox network opting for repeats of the shows in order to avoid showing any potentially sensitive content. A scheduled repeat of The Cleveland Show was also swapped out.

Twenty six children and six adults died at Sandy Hook school in Newton, CT. The gunman is identified as Adam Lanza, 20. He killed his mother before heading to the school Friday.

[Source: BBC]



Comments

  • Ross Lincoln says:

    It saddens me the way we always rush to blame fiction for violence in the real world, but especially here, when the violence in question is meted out to the perpetrators of one of the greatest injustices in recorded history. You know what a better question is? 'Do you think America's history of enslaving millions of people, with the corresponding rape of many millions of those enslaved wretches, followed by a total unwillingness to ever hold the people who perpetrated such horrors accountable at all, to the point that today the ancestors of those who started the bloodiest war in US history so they wouldn't have to give up perpetrating that injustice hold those war criminals up as moral exemplars, might be a contributing factor to America's violence culture?'

    • Tim Smith says:

      Hmmm.......no.

    • Jenny says:

      No one is rushing to blame violence on the screen, on the contrary we have given the media and filmakers too many concessions. Telling a story about American history is one thing, but producing the bloodiest most violent images in order to sell movie tickets to a culture that is fascinated by violence is quite another. Images affect our brains no matter what context they are in.The human brain has to process these visuals. We all have to be accountable.

  • HIP OP says:

    ---DO NOT be taken in by the capstone 'authorized' antics
    of the capstone agenda 'on board' Tarrentino ---it's a PHONEY.

    And 'MANDINGO' meets 'BLAZING SADDLES' will ---NEVER----
    make the grade, in Globalist---RED China handover op 2013.

    Decades STALE, PC 'outrageousness' without a cause
    and POP cultural incest more conventional than a Tupperware party.

    AGAIN -----STEER CLEAR!

  • Lucy says:

    @Ross I agree. Check out this interview with Quentin where he talks about the violence http://bit.ly/Yxu2w3

  • olimila says:

    Love Jackie Brown. Check out this interview with Robert Forster on what was his favorite Quentin on set direction he was given: http://www.indiefilmhustle.com/ifh-002-oscar-nominee-legendary-actor-robert-forster/

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