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  1. The 1975 blaxploitation film Mandingo, which Tarantino has cited as “ one of [his] favorite movies ,” is about a slave named Mede who is trained by his owner to fight to the death in bare ...

  2. According to an interview with David Blight, the director of Yale s Center for the Study of Slavery, Mandingo fighting never happened. The reason slave owners wouldn t have pitted their slaves against each other in such a way is strictly economic. Slavery was built upon money, and the fortune to be made for owners was in buying, selling, and ...

  3. Slate notes that a number of films have used Mandingo fighting as a plot device, including the 1975 film "Mandingo" -- one of Tarantino's "favorite" movies. Of course, Tarantino is free to embellish history as he sees fit. Adding color to a piece of historical fiction is more complicated, however, when one suggests the film was not even as ...

  4. Mandingo is a 1975 American historical melodrama film that focuses on the Atlantic slave trade in the Antebellum South. The film's title refers to the Mandinka people, who are referred to as "Mandingos", and described as being good slaves for fighting matches. Produced by Dino De Laurentiis for Paramount Pictures, the film was directed by ...

  5. Not at all. Reynolds Nelson writes: There's no such thing as the Mandingo fighting depicted in which black men died fighting each other for sport. Dynamite wasn't invented until after the Civil ...

  6. Mandingo: Directed by Richard Fleischer. With James Mason, Susan George, Perry King, Richard Ward. An 1840s slaveowner trains one of his slaves to be a bare-knuckle fighter.

  7. I answered this question on Quora: https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-history-behind-Mandingo-fighting-as-portrayed-in-Django-Unchained-2012/answer/Scott-Krag...

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