Saturday, December 29, 2012

Review: 'Django Unchained' is brilliantly acted across the board

Tarantino is possessed by two emotions—love and revenge—and the over-all subject of the movie is essentially a counterfactual historical warning: that the South got off easily with the Civil War when, in a proper balance of

the-hobbit-box-office.jpg Newcomers "Les Misérables" and "Django Unchained" couldn't unseat "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" from atop the Friday box office. After a record-setting debut, Peter Jackson's fantasy flick raked in another $10.7 million

EW critics Owen Gleiberman and Lisa Schwarzbaum tackle Quentin Tarantino's Django Unchained in the latest “Movie Talk with Owen & Lisa.” “There are moments when I think it is really juicy and fun,” Owen says, but overall he isn't pleased. “I think it

If you love Quentin Tarentino, you will be thoroughly entertained by "Django Unchained." It moves the audience from curiosity into a spaghetti western, from cheeziness into blaxploitation and outright fun, and then into the gut-wrenching reality of

Unlike "Lincoln," "Django Unchained" affords room at the heart of its narrative for compelling and assertive African-American characters, both heroic (Foxx in the title role) and otherwise (Samuel L Jackson, memorably repellent as a house servant who

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