Quentin Tarantino makes less bloody cut of Django Unchained for Chinese release

Posted on 10 April 2013
By Pierce King
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Pulp Fiction mastermind Quentin Tarantino has been forced to make cuts to Django Unchained, in order to make the Southern slave epic less blood thirsty and to secure a release in China.

Zhang Miao, director of Sony Pictures’ Chinese operations said director Quentin Tarantino has ‘agreed on making slight adjustments to the film for different markets – and this adjustment for him is progress rather than a compromise.’

He said: “What we call bloodshed and violence is just a means of serving the purpose of the film, and these slight adjustments will not affect the basic quality of the film – such as tuning the blood to a darker color, or lowering the height of the splatter of blood.

“Quentin knew how to adjust that, and it’s necessary that he is the one to do it. You can give him suggestions, but it must be him who does the fine tuning.”

The Chinese cut of Django, opening on Apr. 11 – will be 165 minutes long, the same length as the version released in the U.S.

The original version of the film has already been released in Hong Kong, which runs a film classification and censorship system independent from and more tolerant than mainland China.

Django Unchained will be the first time a Tarantino film is released commercially in mainland Chinese cinemas.

The closest he came was with Kill Bill, the martial arts action homage which was actually shot in the country.

Tarantino is beginning to get a little traction in China. The state-backed Chinese Film Archive will host a one-off screening of Jackie Brown on Apr. 11, and then Robert Rodriguez’s Tarantino-produced Sin City the following day.

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