What it does have is Samuel L. Jackson in a pinpoint performance as an unctuous
old house slave who's more layered than he appears, and when Django, Schultz, and Candie are sitting around the parlor trying to outwit each other, the film achieves that QT hypnotic mood.
But the true revelation of Candyland is Stephen (Samuel L. Jackson), a 76 - year -
old house slave who has served generations of Candies, and who has become institutionalized by time, his codependent relationship with his master, and the small margin of power he wields with perverse pleasure over the other slaves.
Not exact matches
Trouble comes when he uncovers a scheme to fake
old people's death and actually send them away to be
slaves at a small farm
house, owned by the mother of Neil King (Owen Wilson), the head nurse and a supreme sleaze bag.
This small museum is located in the
oldest house on the cobblestoned streets of the area that became home to Muslims and freed
slaves after slavery was abolished in the Cape, known as Bo - Kaap (above the Cape).
Other
old buildings include Government
House (1814), the Supreme Court Building and former
slave quarters along Regent Street.
The Valley of the Sugar Mills is home to the Torre de Manaca Iznaga, which was a former
slave watchtower by an
old plantation
house.
«It is about drawing with my camera and documenting
old, former,
slave cabins, turned tenement
houses instead of drawing with oil pastels.»