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Django Unchained Analysis Essay

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Django Unchained: Communication and Culture

The film set in the deep South in 1858, about a slave who gains his freedom with the help of Dr. King Schultz (Christoph Waltz), a German bounty hunter, and sets out to rescue his wife from a brutal Mississippi plantation owner is an intriguing story with very graphic action scenes. The plot of the story begins as Dr. Shultz buys Django (Jamie Foxx), a black slave, from some traveling slave owners. He buys Django because he is chasing a pair of outlaws known as the Brittle Brothers and Django is the only person who knows what they look like. As the plot develops, Dr. Schultz and Django become allies and work together to achieve each other’s personal goals; Dr. Schultz wants to track down and …show more content…

Time after time, he is tempted by senseless violence and he doesn't succumb to its immediate satisfaction. He reminds himself that he has to do what he must to liberate Broomhilda, but any premature action will jeopardize that.” This show that Django knew, even if unconsciously, that he must do what he needed to in order to achieve his purpose.

Freud also saw the importance of “compromise” between people in order to survive. This characteristic of the survival of the fittest theory is also very obvious in Django Unchained as you consider the compromise between Django and Dr. Schultz. They work with one another in order to reach their goals with less difficulty than they would alone: as mentioned at the beginning, Schultz wants the financial reward of killing outlaws and Django wants to rescue his wife from slavery. They need each other’s qualities in order to increase their possibility of reaching their objectives. Thus evidently illustrating Darwin and Freud’s theory of human nature, there is often the necessity of compromise in order to survive or achieve each other’s personal desires.

This film was based on the time period, as Calvert describes it in The Myth Of The Old South, downloaded May 8, of the Antebellum South, filled with large, prosperous plantations and big white, columned houses. In the Old South, before any equal protection laws were ratified, slavery was a central and important part of

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