Tarantino's most recent film, Django Unchained (remember the D is silent), follows a somewhat similar path to Inglourious Basterds - it is influenced by some kind of historical truth, deciding to depict slavery in Colonial-Era America in a highly stylised and brutally violent manner. It's a Western that draws heavily from the Spaghetti Westerns that launched Clint Eastwood's career and before Django, we had never seen a foray into the genre from Tarantino. However, that doesn't tarnish Django in the slightest; bold, violent and highly stylised, it's everything that could be expected from a Tarantino Western.
The film could be seen as another story about revenge in a sense, whereas Inglourious Basterds depicted Shosanna's revenge against the Nazi regime, Django could be seen as a tale a revenge against slavery, as most of the plot revolves around Django finding his wife and making the slave owners who held both him and his wife pay. Tarantino ventures into another genre he had no experience in and gives another of history's victim a bold and bloody pay-back story.
The trademark violence is here in spades, from shoot-outs to the cilmatic ending where Django single-handedly rescues his wife and clears out Candie's plantation, it is brutal, it is plentiful and it is bloody and it's very essence is Tarantino. Even the language is brutal and historically accurate, I am not going to say that particular word here, but it's presence is persistent throughout the film. The film is relentless in it's style and because of this, it won't be for everyone which is understandable.
But if you're a fan of Tarantino and if you're a fan of Westerns, Django Unchained stands up there with the best of them.