Film character
Fictional character
Django |
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Franco Nero as Django in Django (1966) |
First appearance | Django (1966) |
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Created by | Sergio Corbucci |
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Portrayed by | |
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Occupation | Dismissed Union Army soldier |
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Spouse | Mercedes Zaro |
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Django is a fictional character who appears in a number of Spaghetti Western films.[1][2] Originally played by Franco Nero in the Italian film of the same name by Sergio Corbucci, he has appeared in 31 films since then.[3] Especially outside of the genre's home country Italy, mainly Germany, countless releases have been retitled in the wake of the original film's enormous success.[4]
Character biography
Franco Nero films
Django
Django is a 1966 Spaghetti Western directed by Sergio Corbucci starring Franco Nero as Django; a dismissed Union soldier who fought in the American Civil War. The film is set in 1869, four years after the end of the Civil War. After arriving in a bleak, mud-drenched town in the American Southwest and dragging a coffin behind him, Django gets caught up in a violent race war between exiled Mexican revolutionaries, led by General Hugo, and a gang of militant neo confederates led by Major Jackson. Armed with a deadly Mitrailleuse volley gun, Django proceeds to play both sides against each other in the pursuit of money and, ultimately, revenge against Jackson; the Major having murdered his wife years before.
Django Strikes Again
Twenty years after the events in the first Django, the title character has left the violent life of a gunslinger to become a monk. Living in seclusion in a monastery, he wants no more of the violent actions he perpetrated. Suddenly, he learns from a dying former lover that some time ago he had a young daughter, who has been kidnapped along with other children who are now working for a ruthless Belgian criminal known as El Diablo (The Devil) Orlowsky, who is an arms dealer and slave trader. The children and other prisoners work in Orlowsky's mine, from which he hopes to get rich from the spoils. Determined to find his daughter and nail the bad guys, Django gets some arms and goes on the warpath against Orlowsky's private army.
Appearances
Official films
Franco Nero films
Unofficial films
The enormous success of the original Django movie in 1966 inspired unofficial sequels to be created by a multitude of studios, due to loose copyright laws in Italy at the time. Some actually feature the character of Django, and some titles just capitalize on the name, even though the character is not in the film.[6]
- A Few Dollars for Django (1966) starring Anthony Steffen
- Django Shoots First (1966) starring Glenn Saxson
- Two Thousand Dollars for Coyote a.k.a. Django, A Bullet for You (1966) starring James Philbrook. Original title: "Django cacciatore di taglie".
- Two Sons of Ringo (1966) starring Franco Franchi
- Django Does Not Forgive (1966)
- Massacre Time a.k.a. Django the Runner (1966) starring Franco Franchi
- God Forgives... I Don't! (1967)
- Django, The Last Killer (1967) starring George Eastman
- Django Kill... If You Live, Shoot! (1967) starring Tomas Milian
- Don't Wait, Django… Shoot! (1967) starring Ivan Rassimov (as Sean Todd)
- Son of Django a.k.a. Return of Django (1967)
- 10,000 Dollars for a Massacre (1967) starring Gianni Garko
- Any Gun Can Play (1967)
- Two Faces of the Dollar (1967)
- Man, Pride and Vengeance (1967) starring Franco Nero. Original title: "L'uomo, l'orgoglio, la vendetta".
- Django Kills Softly (1967). Original title: "Bill il taciturno".
- Vengeance is Mine (1967) a.k.a. 100,000 Dollars for a Killing. Original title: "Per 100.000 dollari ti ammazzo".
- Rita of the West (1967) (Italian: Little Rita nel West). The character is parodied by Lucio Rosato.
- Django, Prepare a Coffin (1968) starring Terence Hill[7]
- If You Want to Live... Shoot! (1968)
- No Room To Die a.k.a. Hanging for Django a.k.a. A Noose for Django (1969) starring Anthony Steffen. Original title: "Una lunga fila di croci".
- False Django (1969)
- Django the Bastard (1969) starring Anthony Steffen
- One Damned Day at Dawn... Django Meets Sartana! (1970) starring Jack Betts
- Django Defies Sartana a.k.a. Django Against Sartana (1970)
- Django and Sartana Are Coming... It's the End (1970) starring Jack Betts
- Django Is Always No. 2 (1971)
- W Django! a.k.a. Viva! Django a.k.a. A Man Called Django (1971)
- Django's Cut Price Corpses a.k.a. A Pistol for Django (1971)
- Ballad of Django (1971)
- Gunman of One Hundred Crosses (1971)
- Shoot, Django! Shoot First! (1971)
- Kill Django... Kill First (1971)
- Down with Your Hands... You Scum! (1971)
- Django... Adios! a.k.a. Death Is Sweet from the Soldier of God (1972) starring Brad Harris. Original title: Seminò la morte... lo chiamavano Castigo di Dio.
- Long Live Django! (1972)
- Sukiyaki Western Django (2007)
- Django Unchained (2012). A Quentin Tarantino film starring Jamie Foxx and featuring the original actor of Django, Franco Nero, as a minor character. Tarantino's re-envisioned Django character is a former slave turned bounty hunter on a quest to liberate his wife.
TV series
Django is portrayed by Matthias Schoenaerts in the 2023 TV series of the same name.