'Django Unchained' at 10: Jamie Foxx says he 'understood the text' of Quentin Tarantino's N-word-laden script

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DJANGO UNCHAINED, Jamie Foxx, 2012. ph: Andrew Cooper/©Weinstein Company/Courtesy Everett Collection
Jamie Foxx in 'Django Unchained' (Photo: Andrew Cooper/Weinstein Company/courtesy Everett Collection) (©Weinstein Company/Courtesy Everett Collection)

If there’s one takeaway from talking to Jamie Foxx about making Django Unchained — the Oscar-winning revisionist Western that opened 10 years ago, on Dec. 25, 2012 — it’s that the actor really, really, really loved working with writer-director Quentin Tarantino.

“Working with Quentin Tarantino is the best,” Foxx told Yahoo Entertainment in a 2018 Role Recall interview. “Because he’s like a jazz musician. He just plays. And he has incredible disciplines. He says, I only shoot with one camera. I’m a director, not a video selector — so everything he shoots is one camera, it’s lean.

“He loves cinema. He loves everything about it. And if you’re lucky enough to become part of that family, it’s a wonderful time. Because with the way movies are going now, with the reboots and the superheroes and what we do now, it’s rare when you get to work with someone that original.”

DJANGO UNCHAINED, from left: Jamie Foxx, Leonardo DiCaprio, 2012. ph: Andrew Cooper/©Weinstein Company/courtesy Everett Collection
Jamie Foxx and Leonardo DiCaprio in 'Django Unchained (Photo: Andrew Cooper/Weinstein Company/courtesy Everett Collection) (©Weinstein Company/Courtesy Everett Collection)

Foxx, who won an Oscar for 2004’s Ray, played Django Freeman, a formerly enslaved man who sets out to rescue his wife (Kerry Washington) from a merciless Mississippi plantation owner (Leonardo DiCaprio).

The actor had heard about the project while it was in development, and lobbied for the part — but thought it might go to another bold-faced Hollywood name.

“What’s interesting is, [Tarantino] goes on vibes,” Foxx says. “I would see [him] at clubs, dinners, things like that, and just be like, “You the baddest motherf***ker on the planet. If I ever get the chance, I’m really ready.

“Of course, there were other people who I thought would have been incredible [in the role]. Will Smith would have been fantastic. I know at one point, Idris Elba — I said, ‘Idris, are you Django?” And he said [impersonating Elba], ‘Quentin Tarantino is talking about this movie called Django Unchained,’ and I was like, ‘Boy, your pretty black ass playing Django — it’ll be crazy!’ But luckily, I got a chance to meet with Quentin, and we hit it off.”

PALM SPRINGS, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 02: (L-R) Quentin Tarantino and Jamie Foxx attend the After Party for the 31st Annual Palm Springs International Film Festival Film Awards Gala at Palm Springs Convention Center on January 02, 2020 in Palm Springs, California. (Photo by Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for Palm Springs International Film Festival)
Quentin Tarantino and Jamie Foxx attend at the 31st Annual Palm Springs International Film Festival Film Awards Gala on Jan. 2, 2020. (Photo: Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for Palm Springs International Film Festival) (Emma McIntyre via Getty Images)

Foxx defends the Pulp Fiction filmmaker when it comes criticism over the use of racial slurs, particularly the N-word. The word is uttered 110 times in Django, according to the Dallas Observer. (Other Tarantino movies not set at the time of slavery also had an excessive amount of the epithet: Jackie Brown and The Hateful Eight both used the word over 35 times.)

“When Django came around, I understood the text,” Foxx says. “The N-word was said 100 times, but I understood the text — that’s the way it was back in that time.”

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