Django : django cornered scene?

django cornered scene?

hi all. recently when django unchained was being discussed on a tv show (i think it was the review show on the bbc) they showed a scene which i thought they said was from django. the guy who i thought was django was in a gunfight but found himself in a difficult position, when he realised someone had a gun pointed at him. the guy told him to hand him the gun. django then managed to fire the gun at the guy despite holding it from the wrong end / holding it in a very weird fashion. i've probably described the scene poorly but i only saw it once.

anyway i just watched this film and the scene i described isn't in the film. if anyone knows what i am talking about do they know it? is it in a sequel or another spaghetti western perhaps? it definitely has something to do with django which was the reason they showed it.

Re: django cornered scene?

I have seen a scene or many scenes where someone pulls off a similar move as you describe. I'm currently obsessed with Spag Westerns and am about to watch as many Django movies as I can find so if I see it I'll post it here.

Re: django cornered scene?

If it was in reference to the original Django (1966) movie starring Franco Nero, then the scene in question must be the penultimate one in which Django is in the cemetery trying to get his pistol in position to shoot at the bad guys - Major Jackson and his minions - despite his mangled hands (broken earlier by Mexican bandits). He manages to bite the trigger-guard off his pistol and kill Jackson and his five surviving men by pressing the trigger against a cross on the grave he is standing behind and repeatedly dropping the hammer. This may or may not be the answer you seek but it's the first one that comes to my mind.

Re: django cornered scene?


then the scene in question must be the penultimate one in which Django is in the cemetery trying to get his pistol in position to shoot at the bad guys - Major Jackson and his minions

Actually it would be the ultimate scene. penultimate means next to last but the scene you are describing is indeed the last scene of the film.






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