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Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World's End (Limited Edition) (2DVD)
 
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Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World's End (Limited Edition) (2DVD)

Starring: Lee Arenberg, Johnny Depp Director: Gore Verbinski MPAA Rating: PG-13
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)

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Review

The producers of Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End clearly wanted to end the threequel with plenty of room left for a fourth installment. But whether the prospect of expanding the franchise well beyond the borders of a trilogy inspires irritated groans or delighted applause will prove to be the most divisive issue ever to pervade a movie produced by Jerry Bruckheimer. On the one hand, Pirates 3 goes running with the tangled web of plot developments from the second movie that so many viewers found convoluted and boring. On the other hand, this film streamlines the story and brings it to fruition, providing a payoff for all that head-scratching setup we had to endure last time. It'll be clear to you within the first 20 minutes whether you're too turned off by the narrative style of Pirates 3 to dig it. However, it'll also be clear to you if the third movie's slightly retooled approach is just what you need to float your big old pirate boat. At World's End is full of the delightful, adrenaline-fueled action sequences that an adventure movie requires, but while the second film (despite being a rollicking good time) lost sight of its own pacing because its sword fights, chase scenes, and naval battles were a tad too long, too many, and too near-between for some tastes, this movie nails the momentum a lot better. It spaces its over-the-top excitement sparingly, giving you just a taste here and there of the high-flying action to come, until it finally lets the swords, cannons, and supernaturally conjured sea storms fly in the enthralling, well-tuned climax. There's also a fantastic sense of pirate lore in the film. The piratical world is brimming with rules and councils and procedures, with arbitrary authority and magical objects to be exploited, stolen, or misused by the brethren, whose double-crossing nature is the source of most pirate adventures in the first place. The confusing ins and outs of pirate bylaws provide a lot of humor, but those looking for a movie with a robust comedic side will be disappointed. The script for Pirates 3 isn't constructed around jokes for the most part, though there's still a healthy dose of character-driven humor. Johnny Depp, in particular, is as hilarious as he was in the first movie, but that doesn't mean that Jack Sparrow's existential crisis is over. That's one great thing about this film: the surprisingly sophisticated character development. Sparrow losing his cool because he no longer knows what he wants (as illustrated by the aimless spinning of his magic "knows-what's-in-your-heart" compass) passes as he realizes that he does know what he wants, he just doesn't know how to get it and still respect himself in the morning. Now, Captain Jack hallucinates a room full of Jacks talking his ear off and offering him an unflinching reflection of himself, which both forces him to think about who he is and provides Depp with the great chance to flex his bulging comic muscles. Other characters get fleshed out, too, including Keira Knightley's Elizabeth Swann, who gives up hoop skirts altogether in favor of trousers and an impressive arsenal. And Knightley plays the part with intelligence and dignity; she doesn't shriek her way through it or play her hard-fighting duties like some cute, spunky girl from a romance novel. That's actually another surprisingly exceptional element of Pirates 3: the underlying themes about women are pretty progressive. Intentional or no, it's a relief that despite all the male blustering and masculine badassery, it remains in the movie that women wield the most potent power, and that the men who seek to contain it aren't rewarded. Something to really watch out for in Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End is that it's a lot less kid friendly than its predecessors. Not only is there a ton of complex plot and wordy, old-fashioned dialogue that little ones just won't follow, this movie's violent themes are much more gruesome. The opening sequence, for instance, is meant to illustrate just how evil the bad guy, East India Trading Company boss-man Lord Cutler Beckett, really is, so it shows a crowd of peasants being led to the gallows, where we see nooses tightened around their necks, and their twitching feet dangling from below the planks following the drop. It's creepy and moving, and it does exactly what it's meant to for adults, but for young kids, it probably just means nightmares. Scenes like this, while not graphic, would be very conceptually disturbing for younger kids, so unfortunately for them, it might be a few years until they can watch what could, for all its faults, quite possibly become an adventure classic for all time. ~ Cammila Albertson, All Movie Guide


On the DVD

Keith & the captain: on set with Johnny Depp and the rock legend
Bloopers of the Caribbean
Deleted scenes with optional commentary by director Gore Verbinski
The tale of many Jacks
Anatomy of a scene: the malestrom
Masters of design - creating the pirates' world
The world of Chow Yun-Fat
Inside the Brethren Court
The pirate mastero: the music of Hans Zimmer
Hoist the colours - the story behind the song

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Customer Reviews

12 Reviews
5 star:
 (4)
4 star:
 (5)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (12 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars At World's End, Aug 28 2007
By WriterGrl "Melodie" (Ontario, Canada) - See all my reviews
I can't honestly rate the DVD and bonus features and such as it isn't out until December 4th (a date I wait for with bated breath) but I can say that this is one of most spectacular movies I've ever seen. Exciting, funny, romantic, it's got it all. As a trilogy, the entire thing works perfectly. However, the plot may be slightly confusing for someone who is not obsessed like I am. :) Anyway, there are really only two complaints: one-the multiple Jack scene is not nearly as funny as it's supposed to be, and two-this film is much more entertainig if viewed as a trilogy, because all the character arcs and the romance and such are complete. If it is viewed by itself, it loses some of that. Ideally, if you were to watch this for the first time, I would recommend renting them all and watching them close together, over a weekend for example.
Note: After this film came out, I bought the special limited edition. Don't buy it, it's not worth it. There's only one good documentary, about the Maelstrom, the "hours" bonus features are actually around 1 hour and 5 minutes, and there aren't even any commentaries...none at all! It feels very rushed. The film's great, but the extended edition isn't worth your money...perhaps one day they'll bring out a good special edition to this movie, but this one isn't it.
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10 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Thanks for Everything Captain Jack!,, Nov 8 2007
By Jenny J.J.I. "A New Yorker" (That Lives in Northern Nevada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)   
Now that I have seen I'm better fond of Captain Jack. The first part of the Trilogy pulled me in completely into its spell. Expectations were accordingly high, when one announced the Sequel- perhaps to much which made it a bit stale. In my eyes those was not somewhat too strongly interlaced story and humor reached the level of the first part. The third film in the federation hands the water to the first film in each regard: A large portion of well humor, tension on lake and country, as well as a clenched charge action. In the third part it pulls from the first parts admitted to characters among other things into the Far East, concretely to Singapore.

All the actors put together high achievements here. Johnny Depp excels, having by now refined his slightly fey Jack Sparrow, and equipped him with a dozen variations of his persona, each set to amuse us. He's the real pirate, stealing the whole film all around. He plays its character with such devotion that one receives the impression; it would give nothing else as the Captain in its life - again an absolute master achievement. Keira Knightley and Orlando Bloom were up to par with their roles and will continue to attract the remaining male and female audiences. The remaining actors achieved impressing achievements and to lend to the film a high degree at reliability. Younger fans will nevertheless enjoy the visual stimulation of a fantasy world where anything is possible, where fish people and barnacle people collide with uniformed soldiers, world pirates (as in world music) and mysterious forces from the deep. Ferocious battles, scheming baddies and valiant heroes populate this world - for the third time.

Pirates OF the Caribbean: At World's End is one of the better films I've seen this year and that my family enjoyed. It consists of an ideal mixture of action to inspire tension and humor, besides with much love for the detail. Gore Verbinski's orchestration is never flabby, and his editors have wrangled this huge beast of a movie into less than three hours of action (plus 12 minutes of credits). Also remarkable is the fortitude of the cast, who, in the face of blue screens and water hoses, make it all seem real. The frictions, the romance, the enmity and the betrayals are all grounded in strong characters and genuine dramatic values.
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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The third time is not quite the charm for the Pirates of the Caribbean, Dec 12 2007
By Lawrance M. Bernabo (The Zenith City, Duluth, Minnesota) - See all my reviews
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)   
Watching rewatching "Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End" after watching the first two movies again, I kept thinking about another movie trilogy, made a long time ago in a galaxy not that far away, because the two seem eerily similar. Instead of Han Solo frozen in carbonite we have Captain Jack Sparrow in the belly of the Kraken. The other two figures of the story's central love triangle, Elizabeth Swann and Will Turner (versus Luke and Leia) need to rescue him, getting mystical advice from Tia Dalma (instead of the ghosts of Obi-Wan Kenobi and Yoda), and help from a former enemy (Captain Barbossa instead of Lando Calrissian). The end game will set up an epic battle between two giant fleets of ships, but instead of the Emperor on a new Death Star we have Lord Cutler Beckett on a quadruple-decked battleship. Along the way we have multiple Captain Jack Sparrows to replace the droids and an undead monkey to replace the Ewoks, so that would mean Davy Jones is in the Darth Vader role. But then that would make "The Flying Dutchman" the Death Star and obviously "The Black Pearl" is the "Millennium Falcon."

Now, you might think that I am going to condemn last summer's blockbuster for a lack of originality, but that is not really my complaint (I just like to extend comparisons as far as possible--and beyond). Ultimately, the flaw in "At World's End" is that we go into the movie thinking that it is all going to come down to someone stabbing the heart of Davy Jones, but then the movie keeps coming up with other possibilities, none of which pan out. In other words, you are thinking "A" has to happen, but then they come up with "B" and "C" and "D" and "E" until we get to the end and it really is "A" after all. However, the net effect is that the emotional impact of the ending, which should have been pretty good, ends up being thrown away because of how it is set up. We were actually laughing in the theater because given what had happened at the end of the second film and earlier in this one, we decided that being kissed by Elizabeth was not a good thing. Finding out we were right only made us shake our heads, because we took no pleasure in the film making our joke come true.

There is a sense in which this movie might have worked out better without Captain Jack, because as welcomed as he is every time he is on the screen you keep having the feeling that Johnny Depp is in a different movie. While the plot gets progressively darker and more serious, Jack Sparrow shows up and starts doing his shtick, which usually seems to have more to do with given Depp an opportunity to be entertaining than it is an effort to advance the story. His presence usually constitutes blatant attempts at misdirection, because in the grand scheme of this film all sorts of pieces are put on the board but never into play, which gets me back to my central complaint. All of the pirates in the world come together to take on the Armada raised by Beckett in a giant sea battle, and we do not get it. The whole plot line regarding Calypso ends up being a big wind. Keith Richards shows up, looks great and talks great, and except for a so-so sight gag with Depp is wasted as a character.

But if you work backwards from the end of the movie (to wit, the scenes before and after the end credits), then the problem is that screenwriters Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio might have come up with an ending to this trilogy that has emotional resonance, but they fail to set it up properly so that it has the impact it should have after three movies. "Pirates of the Caribbean: At the World's End" is the least entertaining of the three, but if it fails to provide a big finish it is still pretty entertaining (there is so much in it there have to be several things you like). Good is not great, but it ain't bad either.
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