Sukiyaki Western Django: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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** "QUUUUUEEEEAM GWWWWAAAAVVYYYYYY!!"
** "QUUUUUEEEEAM GWWWWAAAAVVYYYYYY!!"
* [[Flat What]]:
* [[Flat What]]:
{{quote| '''Quentin Tarantino/Ringo''':"[[Akira]]! Oh, how that lonesome sound brings me back. At the end, I am an {{spoiler|anime otaku}} at heart."<br />
{{quote|'''Quentin Tarantino/Ringo''':"[[Akira]]! Oh, how that lonesome sound brings me back. At the end, I am an {{spoiler|anime otaku}} at heart."
'''Other Guy:''' "... What?" }}
'''Other Guy:''' "... What?" }}
* [[Gatling Good]]: See the 5 o'clock position on the page image.
* [[Gatling Good]]: See the 5 o'clock position on the page image.

Revision as of 15:24, 7 August 2014

Sukiyaki Western Django is a Spaghetti Western by Takashi Miike starring almost entirely Japanese people, with almost exclusively English dialogue. There are two exceptions to both: one of each of them is Quentin Tarantino, who opens the film in a flashback where he tells the age-old tale about a war, a recurrence of which he takes part in much later in his life. He then throws an egg in the air, shoots 3 people whose blood splatters the backdrop, and then extends one hand to catch the egg to an accompanying slide whistle. It's that kind of movie.

The film takes its plot from the Spaghetti Western film genre - Django, among others, hence the name, although significant plot elements come from Yojimbo and its de facto remake A Fistful of Dollars: sukiyaki is a hot pot or "steamboat" dish often used as a generic label of "Japaneseness".


This film contains examples of:

Quentin Tarantino/Ringo:"Akira! Oh, how that lonesome sound brings me back. At the end, I am an anime otaku at heart."
Other Guy: "... What?"