Nalina Moses

ARCHITECT, WRITER, CURATOR

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Django Unchained stirs up memories of dozens of other movies (Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Bonnie and Clyde, Lawrence of Arabia, Taxi Driver, Gladiator), but what it reminds me of most is Huckleberry Finn.  In his consideration (it’s ce…

Django Unchained stirs up memories of dozens of other movies (Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Bonnie and Clyde, Lawrence of Arabia, Taxi Driver, Gladiator), but what it reminds me of most is Huckleberry Finn.  In his consideration (it’s certainly not a review) of Django in the New York Press, critic Armond White makes the same comparison, although derogatively, saying that, like the book, the movie “gratifies some people’s entrenched racial prejudices."  The first half of the movie, which is lyrical, tender and hilarious, follows the slave Django and his owner, the German-born dentist Dr. King Schultz, as they meet in the ante-bellum West and travel to the South on horseback.  Along the way they learn how to talk to one another, how to work together, and something about who the other is.  And while there is, as in Huckleberry Finn, an obscene imbalance between the men in their status, security, and means of expression (Django remains uncomfortably silent most of the time, while King never shuts up), the men become like best friends, like teammates, like father and son.  This, the first part of the movie, is a love story.

It is also an ecstatic vision of the American landscape.  Interspersed with the comedy and action set pieces there are wide, distant views of Django and King riding their horses, across prairies dotted with wildflowers, beneath ranges of stony, snow-capped mountain, and down allees of knarled, centuries-old, kudzu-draped trees.  These views are cliched (probably deliberately so), over-familiar from landscape paintings, westerns and car commercials, but it's stunning to see these different American landscapes depicted so simply and expansively.  The images aren’t prettified; they’re raw and shadowed, alive with motion.  They give a feeling for the horizon, and for the vastness and wildness of the terrain.  In one passage the two men, after a snowfall, on their horses, approach a herd of grazing bison.  It’s part of a lighthearted montage, with an old, worn pop song playing on the soundtrack, that’s meant to express that time is passing but nothing important is going on.  But as I watched I felt that image, which is very loosely composed, as if looking on from a ladder’s height about twenty feet away, fall straight into my subconscious.  The men move slowly, like the animals, comfortable on the land and in the presence of one another, without speech and without purpose.  They might each never belong anywhere in American but they both, at this moment, belong right here.  At the end the movie turns into exactly what one expects, a profane and comic bloodbath.  But when Django and King are traveling alone together across forest and field the story is splendid.  Just as it was following Huck and Jim drift down the Mississippi, I wanted these men to keep going.

May 03, 2013 by Nalina Moses
May 03, 2013 /Nalina Moses /Source
Mark Twain, Quentin Tarantino, Django Unchained, Huckleberry Finn, LANDSCAPE PAINTING, MOVIES
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An official poster for Quentin Tarantino’s forthcoming slave saga Django Unchained was just released.  It’s a bold graphic, in red and black, reminiscent of constructivist, primitivist, and mid-century modern aesthetics, and particularly…

An official poster for Quentin Tarantino’s forthcoming slave saga Django Unchained was just released.  It’s a bold graphic, in red and black, reminiscent of constructivist, primitivist, and mid-century modern aesthetics, and particularly, as others have observed, Saul Bass’ work.  But the text on the new poster is isolated and terribly buttoned-up; it looks more like a caption than a title.  The imagery doesn’t soft-pedal the theme, but it lacks the kooky emotionalism of some of the unofficial fanboy posters that have been circulating online.  I want so much to see a hand at the top shaking the chain, like the hand in posters for The Godfather.

It’s a shame the designers didn’t try to incorporate Tarantino’s handwriting, which resembles that of an obsessive, over-stimulated, ten-year-old boy.  I’ve been smitten since seeing the title page he crafted for the final draft of Inglourious Basterds, where he draws S’s like those in the Kiss logo.  His hand, with its sloping, bloated block letters, looks like a serial killer’s, and yet there’s real tenderness in it.  Look at the tenuous closing of the capital G in the Django poster and the tiny, trembling quotation marks.  It’s a rich graphic.

April 17, 2012 by Nalina Moses
April 17, 2012 /Nalina Moses /Source
GRAPHIC DESIGN, Saul Bass, Quentin Tarantino, MOVIES, Django Unchained, handwriting
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