view all comments (3) - add your comments
Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End Movie Review
Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End Review

"Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Gore VerbinskiProducer : Jerry Bruckheimer
Screenwiter : Tedd Elliott,Terry Rosio
Starring : Johnny Depp,Keira Knightley,Orlando Bloom,Chow Yun-Fat,Geoffrey Rush,Bill Nighy,Jack Davenport,Tom Hollander,Jonathan Pryce,Stellan Skarsgård
An honest-to-God, brawling, hooting, big ball of popcorn spectacle of a movie,
Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End fully embraces its ludicrous sense of
summer season overkill without succumbing to the bloated tedium that afflicted
its disappointing predecessor Dead Man's Chest. Clocking in at just under three
hours, it's definitely longer than necessary, but given the number of
unresolved plot strands that the last film left strewn about like so much
tangled rigging, it's actually amazing the filmmakers are able to tie
everything up quite as nicely as they do.
Starting with its unlikely origin as an amusement park ride, the Pirates series
quickly mushroomed into a sort of meta-pirate film, a vast and whirligig
universe unto itself that drew in every possible nautical cliché and legend
possible. Thus the first film concentrated on yo-ho-ho-ing, rum-drinking, and
general pirate-y scalawaggery. The second roped in Davy Jones and The Flying
Dutchman -- not to mention an excess of secondary characters and familial
drama. For the third (but not necessarily last, given the teaser it ends with)
entry, the bursting-at-the-seams script tosses in a raging maelstrom, an actual
trip to Davy Jones' Locker, and even the sea goddess Calypso. Dead Man's Chest
showed that more is not always better, with excess just leading to more excess
and a general sense of lethargy -- they were just setting us up for the
conclusion and marking time until then. At World's End, however, shows that
Hollywood excess, when combined with the right combination of actors and an
occasionally smart script, can work out quite nicely, thank you very much.
As for what actually happens in the film, the plot synopsis would keep us here
until the next film (maybe) comes out. Suffice it to say that the young lovely
lovers Will Turner (Orlando Bloom) and Elizabeth Swann (Keira Knightley) are
still semi-estranged, though grudgingly working together, this time with
Captain Barbossa (Geoffrey Rush). They're trying arrange a high summit of
pirate lords to fight as one against the dread Lord Beckett (Tom Hollander),
who's enlisted the near unbeatable Flying Dutchman and its undead captain Jones
(Bill Nighy) to his anti-pirate crusade. Meanwhile, Jack Sparrow (Johnny Depp,
aka the reason everybody's buying a ticket) is marooned in Davy Jones' Locker
and needs rescuing. Things don't go smoothly.
Director Gore Verbinski has an obvious talent for staging the frequent and
massive action scenes. They're more fleet-footed this time out, particularly a
full-on broadside duel between two ships swirling around a roaring maelstrom,
sword duels raging on both decks. Surprisingly, in this film he also manages to
let a little honest emotion sneak into the equation, and it works; note
particularly one surprisingly moving scene where a major character sees their
father floating by in a small boat ferrying him to the afterlife.
But it's really Verbinski's deft touch with superstar actors (how else can you
imagine The Mexican got made?) and providing smart jabs of humor amid the furor
of clanging swords, roaring cannons, and howling winds, that make At World's
End as enjoyable as it is. With a lesser crew hanging around, the improbably
dense storyline would have suffocated the film. But with Depp, Rush, Hollander,
and Nighy (not to mention a new pirate lord, played by Chow Yun-Fat with
claw-like fingernails) all in gloriously high-camp mode, it's near impossible
not to crack a smile. And how exactly does Stellan Skarsgård -- playing
Turner's Flying Dutchman-trapped father -- manage to wring so much honest
pathos out of a role that requires him to have a starfish stuck to his face? Of
course, there's also Depp's sun-stroked, prolix looniness ("I'm not in a
divulgitating mood"), which is heavily relied on here, as it should be; the
film would collapse like a house of cards without his deft, mad Bugs Bunny
appeal.
The summer season has definitely seen better. At World's End is too long for
what it is, and the blithely bloodless way in which the body count piles up
makes that PG-13 rating a little troubling. But for a sequel to a sequel, based
on a Disneyworld attraction no less, it's really not half bad in the reckoning.
Now with even more Verbinski.
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti
i dont understand how you could not have enjoyed pirates of the caribbean at
worlds end it was a fantastic movie w/sev'l fine actors.especially johnny
depp...he is a young and brillant star....he made all the pirate movies really
enjoyable.either you slept thru the movie or maybe you just didn't follow the
the story line....
For real, it's not that hard to follow, you just got to pay attention which
isn't hard given the cast. it was awesome i hope they make another one.
view all comments (3) - add your comments






