

Django

In the Wild West in the 1860s and 1870s, Sarah and John have founded New Babylon, a city of outcasts of all backgrounds. Haunted by the murder of his family eight years earlier, Django is still looking for his daughter, believing she may have survived the killing. When Django shockingly finds her in Babylon, about to marry John, Sarah - now a grown woman - wants Django to leave fearing he'll put Babylon in jeopardy. But Django, believing the city is in danger, is adamant that he will not lose his daughter twice.
[SkyShowtime] A tribute to Sergio Corbucci that is too languid and too long, trying to expand the characters' stories through endless flashbacks. It seems that the ideas ran out quickly, and that the confrontation between the ultra-Catholic lady (Noomi Rapace with an inexplicable accent) and the new settlement that provocatively calls itself New Babylon, begins to lose steam halfway through the season. Francesca Comencini is not gifted for the western, no matter how much it's constructed as a tribute with contemporary contributions. And despite the effort, it remains a failed attempt.