Django Unchained: Blaxploitation Films

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In the twenty-first century, black audiences have the opportunity to enjoy movies where leading roles are black figures, and witness the diverse stories within the black community. Several film directors feel the need to comment on African-American history in order to contribute to the progression of the century. With the increase of films engaging in the trials and triumphs of African-Americans, comes a new problem—blaxploitation films. Blaxploitation films essentially use African-American stories as a basis for their plots, but instead of being profound, are a detriment to representation of the black community. Tarantino’s film, Django Unchained, serves as the perfect example of a blaxploitation film, because: the film is primary based on a historical …show more content…

The film fits into the blaxploitation genre, because it trivializes the black community’s oppression for box office sales. Tarantino rather upkeep his aesthetic for cartoonish violence, easy to follow plot structures, and bleak characters, than create a film that offers insightful commentary on slavery. In the film, Tarantino centers the climax on Mandingo fighting which has no definite evidence to support its existence. Mandingo fighting could be defined as two slaves helplessly wrestling for their lives for their slaver-owner’s entertainment. Essentially, Mandingo fighting is vital to advancing the plot, because this is the only gateway for Dr. Schultz, a bounty hunter, and Django, a freed slave who’s a partner to Schultz, to retrieve Hildi, Django’s wife. Several sources note, Mandingo fighting did not happen on the same scale as Tarantino portrays. Edna Greene Medford, a professor and the chair of Howard

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