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* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler: Django wins the fight, but most of his allies are dead.]]

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* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler: Django wins the fight, but most of his allies are dead.dead and Django himself is severely injured.]]


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* ContrivedCoincidence: Considering how the BigBad has a literal army at his command at the beginning of the film, it’s somewhat of an unusual (if not symbolic) coincidence that by the final scene [[spoiler:there’s only six of them left, and Django can’t reload his six-shooter due to his injuries, meaning he has exactly one bullet left for each of his remaining foes.]]
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* HookerWithAHeartOfGold: Maria and a couple of the other prostitutes.

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* HookerWithAHeartOfGold: Maria and a couple of the other prostitutes.prostitutes are quite loyal and compassionate.
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* CoffinContraband: Django drags a coffin with a machine gun hidden inside behind him wherever he goes.

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* CoffinContraband: Django drags a coffin with a machine gun hidden inside behind him wherever he goes. Halfway through the movie he switches it up to use the coffin to smuggle out the BigBad's stash of gold.
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Dewicked trope


* NiceHat: Django's.
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* BlackAndGrayMorality: Django is willing to kill innocent soldiers to destroy the gangs he's after, but said gangs hunt people for sport and make them eat their own ears.
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* SuperStrength: The weight of machine guns from the 1880s was in the 60-lbs range. There was a serious reason they were fired from tripods. In the scene where he shoots the bottles at the bar, Django cradles it in his arms, without even flinching.
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* {{Fingore}}: Part of the ColdBloodedTorture inflicted on [[spoiler: Django]] by Hugo and his mooks, as punishment for betrayal, where his fingers (all of them) ends up being crushed by the butt of a rifle. It ends up becoming a plot point in the final duel where [[spoiler: Django needs to figure out a way to gun down Jackson and his remaining mooks without using his fingers]].
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It inspired a number of other {{Spaghetti Western}}s that also used the word "Django" in their titles, Italian copyright law being pretty lax on stuff like that. It had one proper sequel, ''Django Strikes Again'', starring Nero and directed by Nello Rossati. Another, ''Django Lives!'' directed by John Sayles, is [[DevelopmentHell perpetually rumoured to be in production]]. And much later, it inspired both ''Film/SukiyakiWesternDjango'' and Creator/QuentinTarantino's ''Film/DjangoUnchained'', which featured [[RemakeCameo a cameo by Franco Nero]].

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It inspired a number of other {{Spaghetti Western}}s that also used the word "Django" in their titles, Italian copyright law being pretty lax on stuff like that. It had one proper sequel, ''Django Strikes Again'', starring Nero and directed by Nello Rossati. Another, ''Django Lives!'' directed by John Sayles, is [[DevelopmentHell perpetually rumoured to be in production]]. And much later, it inspired both ''Film/SukiyakiWesternDjango'' and Creator/QuentinTarantino's ''Film/DjangoUnchained'', which featured [[RemakeCameo a cameo by Franco Nero]]. Django even had a {{Crossover}} with Film/{{Sartana}} in 1970's ''Django Defies Sartana''.
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[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mv5bmta4m2nmztgtogjlos00ndexlwe4mzitnwqxntrmyzizymm0l2ltywdll2ltywdlxkeyxkfqcgdeqxvynjc1ntyymjg_v1.jpg]]

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[[quoteright:300:https://static.[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mv5bmta4m2nmztgtogjlos00ndexlwe4mzitnwqxntrmyzizymm0l2ltywdll2ltywdlxkeyxkfqcgdeqxvynjc1ntyymjg_v1.jpg]]
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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/django_coffin_6961.png]]

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[[quoteright:350:https://static.[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/django_coffin_6961.png]]
org/pmwiki/pub/images/mv5bmta4m2nmztgtogjlos00ndexlwe4mzitnwqxntrmyzizymm0l2ltywdll2ltywdlxkeyxkfqcgdeqxvynjc1ntyymjg_v1.jpg]]
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corbucci didn't direct django strikes again


It inspired a number of other {{Spaghetti Western}}s that also used the word "Django" in their titles, Italian copyright law being pretty lax on stuff like that. It had one proper sequel, ''Django Strikes Again'', starring Nero and directed by Corbucci. Another, ''Django Lives!'' directed by John Sayles, is [[DevelopmentHell perpetually rumoured to be in production]]. And much later, it inspired both ''Film/SukiyakiWesternDjango'' and Creator/QuentinTarantino's ''Film/DjangoUnchained'', which featured [[RemakeCameo a cameo by Franco Nero]].

to:

It inspired a number of other {{Spaghetti Western}}s that also used the word "Django" in their titles, Italian copyright law being pretty lax on stuff like that. It had one proper sequel, ''Django Strikes Again'', starring Nero and directed by Corbucci.Nello Rossati. Another, ''Django Lives!'' directed by John Sayles, is [[DevelopmentHell perpetually rumoured to be in production]]. And much later, it inspired both ''Film/SukiyakiWesternDjango'' and Creator/QuentinTarantino's ''Film/DjangoUnchained'', which featured [[RemakeCameo a cameo by Franco Nero]].
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* EvilPlan: Major Jackson and General Ramirez have separate plans to take over the same small Western town. The ensuing MobWar drives the conflict.
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It inspired a number of other {{Spaghetti Western}}s that also used the word "Django" in their titles, Italian copyright law being pretty lax on stuff like that. It had one proper sequel, ''Django Strikes Again'', starring Nero and directed by Corbucci. Another, ''Django Lives!'' directed by John Sayles, is rumoured to be in production. And much later, it inspired both ''Film/SukiyakiWesternDjango'' and Creator/QuentinTarantino's ''Film/DjangoUnchained'', which featured [[RemakeCameo a cameo by Franco Nero]].

to:

It inspired a number of other {{Spaghetti Western}}s that also used the word "Django" in their titles, Italian copyright law being pretty lax on stuff like that. It had one proper sequel, ''Django Strikes Again'', starring Nero and directed by Corbucci. Another, ''Django Lives!'' directed by John Sayles, is [[DevelopmentHell perpetually rumoured to be in production.production]]. And much later, it inspired both ''Film/SukiyakiWesternDjango'' and Creator/QuentinTarantino's ''Film/DjangoUnchained'', which featured [[RemakeCameo a cameo by Franco Nero]].

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