2D - Tuesday, September 3, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.cam 2D - Tuesday, September 3, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom \i ct~i Film students develop their craft "We're here for the Bear Jew ... and the Little Man." 'Unchained'thil Tarantino brings blood, style to spaghetti western By AKSHAY SETH Daily B-Side Editor JAN. 9, 2013 - A tableful of professional criminals discussing Madonna's "Like a Virgin." Two jaded hitmen enthusiastically debating the sexual insinua- Django tions associated ag with a casual Unchained foot massage. A At Quality16 ruthlessly cun- and Rave ning SS offi- cer comparing Weinstein the survival instincts of the Jewish people to those of a rat - all the while puffing away on an oversized tobacco pipe. It really is the little things that make a Quen- tin Tarantino movie special. Little things and violence - pulpy, whimsical, hilarious vio- lence. And if you've seen Taranti- no's latest masterpiece "Django Unchained," you'll know there's just something inexpressibly spe- cial about watching a woman fly 10 feet in the wrong direction after taking a single bullet from an old- fashioned six-shooter. Over the last two decades, it's this quirky take on violence, almost comic book-like in its exaggeration, that has allowed the world's most knowledgeable director to use buckets ofpastyfauxbloodtomold a genre of his own. A genre in which the extrava- gant displays of ferocity are skillfully framed by beautiful, self- referential lines of dialogue and light-hearted contexts to pay hom- age to the most forgotten corners of B-movie history. "Django" is an undeniable product of this genre. In so many words, it is Tarantino's love letter to the classic Sergio Cor- bucci spaghetti western, featuring the same recognizable Southern setting and the same stereotypi- cal N-word-spewing, gun-slinging Southernfolk. But there's a catch. The two main characters, as can be expected of any Tarantino production, are written specifi- cally to stick out of this ostensibly well-trodden background. The first is Dr. King Schultz (Christoph Waltz, "Inglourious Basterds"), a bounty hunter hired by the nation- al government to dispatch known criminals and sell their corpses for sizable rewards. Naturally, he's also a German ex-dentist with per- fectly manicured fingernails and a soft spot for slaves. On a routine mission to locate and execute three ex-cons, our smooth-talking European friend needs the help of a recently sold slave to identify his three targets. Enter "D-J-A-N-G-O ... the D is silent" (Jamie Foxx, "Collateral"), Tarantino's take on those 19th- century cowboys found in early Clint Eastwood westerns. Except, of course, this cowboy is black, and represents the hand of bloody African-American revenge, much in the same waythe Basterds sym- bolized a collective Jewish ven- geance in "Inglourious Basterds." Django is later freed by Schultz, who helps transform him into the "fastest gun in the south," finally agreeing to assist in locating and freeing his enslaved wife, Broom- hilda (Kerry Washington, "The Last King of Scotland"). Unlike -most other Tarantino films, "Django" does not feature many strong female characters. Disappointingly, Broomhilda is really nothing more than a dam- sel in distress, visions of her pretty face and simple demeanor frequently appearing on screen to beckon our hero forward, towards old Mississippi's version of hell on earth. In this hell, the devil's throne is occupied by Calvin Candie, played by Leonardo DiCaprio ("Incep- tion") as a perfect representation of vicious white bigotry, served with a side of loquacious southern hospitality. The right-hand man is the head house slave, brought to life in scene-stealing fashion by By JOHN LYNCH resembles a more charming, less Senior Arts Editor obscene, college-inspired version of the HBO series "Girls." The film FEB.21,2013- It'sfinallyOscar takes place here on campus and week - that amusing time of the centers on the sexual escapades of year where we prepare to be disap- four senior girls, two of whom - pointed by the Best Picture winner, including the protagonist, Laura, reflect on the true winners that the played by Music, Theatre & Dance Academy opted to snub (moment senior Allison Brown - make a of silence for Leo DiCaprio) and, pact to lose their virginity in one of course, deliberate over the art of week after learning that they're film and the institution of cinema. the remaining virgins of their Here in Ann Arbor, cinema is friend group. the bastion of entertainment (seri- "Laura, my character, is super ously, which other city has two type-A. She's a planner," Brown movie theaters within 300 feet of said. "And it's funny because I each other?), and the University's think she's super similar to the Screen Arts and Cultures program average girl, even at Michigan, if I burgeons with talent and innova- may be so bold to make thatgener- tive vision. alization." The University's SAC 423, The script, penned by Pesquei- "Practicum for the Screenwriter," ra, is genuine and witty (at one class, taught by Robert Rayher and point equating the friend group's Jim Burnstein, is the culminat- remaining two virgins to "shoot- ing course for the program's most ing an Olsen twin"), and it's loosely driven and gifted students. Each based on the writer's real-life semester, the class produces two experiences. professional-quality short films. "I guess I had a lot of virgin Last year's most notable short, friends one year, and then in like "The V Card," written by 2012 six months, they all were not vir- University graduate Rebekka gins," Pesqueira said. "As soon as Pesqueira, received several awards someone lost their virginity, it was at the University's Lightworks like a snowball effect and they all Film Festival in the spring (includ- lost it, so I thought it made for a ing Best Director for its duo of 2012 funny story." graduate Brandon Verdi and LSA "The V Card" is an ode to Ann senior Jake Burnstein, son of Jim Arbor and to college life at the Uni- Burnstein) and also secured a spot versity, and was filmed at many at the Traverse City Film Festival notable locations on campus, last August. including - as co-director Verdi Available for viewing on You- recounted - the Big House. Tube, "The V Card" is a 30-min- "We had one hour to get that ute-long comedy/drama that entire sequence (at the Big House) filmed before they kicked us out," Verdi said. "And it was one of the weirdest, most intense, most amazingexperiences ofmycollege career, and I imagine everybody else's too." Verdi and Burnstein conducted a cast and crew of more than 30 University students to create the film and were afforded a number of resources by the University for the filming process, including the use of the Red One MX camera - the same model, according to Verdi, that "The Social Network" was shot on. As Burnstein recalled, the potential trials of co-directing a film were greatly alleviated by the fact that he and Verdi are close friends. "We were completely and utterly on the same page the entire time," Burnstein said. "It was almost like osmosis. We always knew what each other was think- ing, and we did everything togeth- er and didn't divide any jobs up." Upon graduating, Burnstein plans to join Verdi, who is now working as a production coor- dinator in Los Angeles, and the two aspire to work together and develop film projects in the future. Brown, who has a background in theater, hopes to move to New York after graduating to pursue an entertainment career. Pesqueira is currently working with Jim Burnstein, her former professor, to refine and expand "The V Card" script into a marketable, feature- length work. a ,. Samuel L. Jackson ("Pulp Fiction"), who quickly comes to represent the mental manacles of slavery that Django has to overcome on his path to liberation. Like in any good western, when the good meets the bad, things go boom. But it's clear Tarantino is going for something a lot more ambitious with this film. Yes, he's still that kid working at the video store, waxing lyrical about the movies he finds genuinely enter- taining, but he's no longer just concerned about making obscure pop references and getting that occasional knowing chuckle out of audience members. Tarantino, now having made eight feature-length films, has grown as a writer and director. In "Django," the scenes of vehe- ment retribution are aplenty and all wholly satisfying. But the truly memorable ones feature a form of writing that puts on full, ugly display the saddening excuses ignorant men hid behind to justify slavery. The scenes of Django riding desperately towards his wife, his last chance at something normal dwindling in front of him as flecks of dust ripple off the tattered rags around his shoulders, make you want to stand up and applaud. And when the credits roll, the applause comes. Finally, for once, it's not just for the little things. .4 F I r:,