Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End
Johnny Depp Actor , Geoffrey Rush Actor , Orlando Bloom Actor , Keira Knightley Actor , Jack Davenport Actor
MPAA Rating:
PG13
Contains:Violence,Scary Moments
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Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End
Theatrical Release Date: 2007 05 24 (USA)
UPC: 786936292992
Studio: Walt Disney Video
MPAA Rating: PG13 Contains:[Violence, Scary Moments]
Summary: Director Gore Verbinski and the crew set sail once again for this, the third chapter in the swashbuckling Pirates of the Caribbean trilogy. Captain Jack Sparrow (Johnny Depp) is hopelessly trapped in Davy Jones' locker after a harrowing encounter with the dreaded Kracken, and now Will Turner (Orlando Bloom) and Elizabeth Swann (Keira Knightley) must align themselves with the nefarious Captain Barbossa (Geoffrey Rush) if they hold out any hope of saving their old friend from a fate worse than death. The East India Trading Company and its fearsome leader, Lord Cutler Beckett (Tom Hollander), have taken control of the ghostly Flying Dutchman and its captain, Davy Jones (Bill Nighy), and now the baleful Admiral Norrington (Jack Davenport) has taken the helm in a relentless bid to destroy every pirate ship in his path and bring the Age of Piracy to a violent close. Meanwhile, Will, Elizabeth, and Captain Barbossa navigate treacherous waters and face bitter betrayal as they set sail to gather the only army that can stand up to Beckett -- The Nine Lords of the Brethren Court. But Captain Jack Sparrow is one of the lords, and as long as he's stuck in Davy Jones' locker, Beckett and his nefarious armada are sure to emerge victorious. There's still hope, however, if the heroic team that includes Tia Dalma (Naomie Harris), Pintel (Lee Arenberg), and Ragetti (Mackenzie Crook) can reach exotic Singapore and convince vulpine pirate Sao Feng (Chow Yun-Fat) to provide them with charts and a ship. But even the powerful Brethren Court may need a bit of help from volatile sea goddess Calypso in order to weather the coming storm. With the entire future of the pirate way at stake, everyone will be forced to choose sides while drifting precariously to the edge of the earth for one final, spectacular battle. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
Category: Adventure
Awards: Best Art Direction in a Fantasy Film – Art Directors Guild Best Special Visual Effects – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Special Visual Effects – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Special Visual Effects – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Special Visual Effects – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Makeup – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Makeup – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Visual Effects – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Visual Effects – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Visual Effects – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Visual Effects – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
Features:
New Bloopers of the Caribbean feature
Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound
Spanish language track
Spanish subtitles
Widescreen (2.35:1) - enhanced for 16x9 televisions
Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End
Format: DVD
Release Date: 12/04/2007
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Cinemascope
Audio: DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1
Runtime: 169 Minutes
Sides: 1
Number of Discs: 1
Language(s) English,Spanish
Subtitles: Spanish
Region: USA & territories, Canada
Chapters:
Disc #1 -- Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End
1. Suspended
2. A Dangerous Song
3. Welcome to Singapore
4. Cold
5. Captain's Commands
6. A Jack of All Trades
7. Davy Jones' Locker
8. Souls at Sea
9. Rock and Roll
10. The Last Pirate
11. An Old Friend
12. A New Captain
13. Bootstrap
14. Choosing a Side
15. Shipwreck Island
16. Brethren Court
17. Reunion
18. The Pirate Code
19. The Exchange
20. Pieces of Eight
21. A Fool's Chance
22. Leverage
23. Time to Fly
24. Community Chest
25. Good Business
26. Turning Away
27. Egregious
28. Credits
Cammila Collar
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 Collar, Rovi
Cast and Crew:
Jerry Bruckheimer
Producer
Chad Oman
Executive Producer
Terry Rossio
Screenwriter
Hans Zimmer
Composer (Music Score)
Eric McLeod
Executive Producer
Ted Elliott
Screenwriter
Gore Verbinski
Director
Bruce Hendricks
Executive Producer
Mike Stenson
Executive Producer
Mike Wolski
Executive Producer
Johnny Depp
Actor
Geoffrey Rush
Actor
Orlando Bloom
Actor
Keira Knightley
Actor
Jack Davenport
Actor
Bill Nighy
Actor
Jonathan Pryce
Actor
Lee Arenberg
Actor
Mackenzie Crook
Actor
Kevin McNally
Actor
David Bailie
Actor
Stellan Skarsg�rd
Actor
Tom Hollander
Actor
Naomie Harris
Actor
Chow Yun-Fat
Actor
Martin Klebra
Actor
Keith Richards
Actor
Andy Beckwith
Actor
Reggie Lee
Actor
Vanessa Branch
Actor
David Schofield
Actor
Lauren Maher
Actor
Country: USA

