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Post Posted: July 24th 2010 3:27 pm
 
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DIRECTOR:
• Rob Marshall

CAST:
• Johnny Depp - Captain Jack Sparrow
• Penelope Cruz - Angelica
• Ian McShane - Blackbeard
• Geoffrey Rush - Barbossa
• Gemma Ward - Mermaid Queen

OPENS: MAY 20, 2011

PLOT:
First in a new planned trilogy, this takes Captain Jack on a trip in search of the famed "fountain of youth." In this action-packed tale of truth, betrayal, youth and demise, Captain Jack Sparrow crosses paths with a woman from his past (Cruz), and he’s not sure if it’s love–or if she’s a ruthless con artist who’s using him to find the fabled Fountain of Youth.

When she forces him aboard the Queen Anne’s Revenge, the ship of the formidable pirate Blackbeard (Ian McShane), Jack finds himself on an unexpected adventure in which he doesn’t know who to fear more: Blackbeard or the woman from his past…

Behind The Scenes Filming Images: Black Pearl re-outfitted? keeptothecode.com
Cast & Crew Filming: keeptothecode.com


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Post Posted: July 24th 2010 5:22 pm
 
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Only the first movie was good. A perfect blend of humor, fun, swashbuckling and the supernatural element. The sequels were absolutely bloated, over-the-top and misguided.

The entire pirate universe was no longer about pillaging and plundering, swigging rum and regaling the town with catchy songs. It was all about fish people, Johnny Depp and crabs, previously like-able characters now devoid of human qualities and plotting against each other and all this other shit I don't even care to remember.


Post Posted: July 25th 2010 6:59 am
 
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I think the real reason the 2nd two seemed to suck (the 2nd one was bore-ring, 3rd was just a'ight) was because the whole story got bogged down in the viewer supposed to be giving a fuck about Elizabeth Swan and Orlando Bloom's romantic blahblah whogivesafuck.

And Davy Jones. Maybe a decent villian, but descended along with the rest of what could have been interesting into his own locker. If Knightly would have gotten Knudely then it may have been worth it, but that was never going to happen.

Hopefully, it will focus more on Captain Jack being Captain Jack and more Piratey things happening then some special effects laden romance story.


Post Posted: December 13th 2010 5:52 pm
 
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The trailer is out. Yahoo Movies

[align=LEFT][flash width=640 height=385]http://www.youtube.com/v/KR_9A-cUEJc?fs=1&hl=en_US&rel=0&hd=1[/flash][/align]

I love the series as much as I loathe the third film. The director of Chicago is making this so I'll give it a chance.


Post Posted: December 13th 2010 6:48 pm
 
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Big fan of the first, the other two not at all.

I'll see this one, but I'm hoping they return to the spirit of the original - an Indiana Jones-like sense of adventure with a splash of supernatural fantasy.

The trailer didn't tell me anything and it was horribly cut.


Post Posted: December 13th 2010 8:41 pm
 
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the trailer makes it look like a mess. it's the Johnny Depp show with quirky one liners and no special effects. not a good first impression


Post Posted: December 14th 2010 7:21 am
 

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Whoever edited that trailer should be ashamed. What a mess. Still can't wait for the movie, though!


Post Posted: March 22nd 2011 4:27 pm
 
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[align=left]TRAILER

[flash width=640 height=385]http://www.youtube.com/v/2XeeqYh3Cyg?fs=1&hl=en_US&rel=0&hd=1[/flash][/align]


Post Posted: March 23rd 2011 2:29 am
 
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The movie looks rather fun, just like the previous three.


Post Posted: March 23rd 2011 9:37 pm
 
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The first Pirates came out 10 years ago and it's very well, strange that there is a new Sparrow-centric trilogy beginning.


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Post Posted: March 24th 2011 1:36 am
 
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So how come Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley are not in this one? They opt not to star in it, or what?


Post Posted: March 26th 2011 4:47 pm
 
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Thier boring PG romance was played out, so they didn't make it into the script this time. At least that's what I'm putting together outta' what we've seen.


Post Posted: May 15th 2011 3:59 am
 
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The soundtrack is 'out' and is a Zimmer rehash interspersed with some enjoyable guitar work by Rodrigo y Gabriela. Action figure collectors will note that the toys are also out and are horrid compared to other brands in the boys' action isle.

I'm getting a cool vibe coming from the latest trailers. Also it seems to loosely adapt Tim Powers' book of the same name, which inspired the Pirates series and classic LucasArts game Secret of Monkey Island. I think this one will kick off my summer movie season, followed by Super 8, The Trip (which was hilarious during its run on BBC), Transformers, Potter and Cowboys & Aliens. Not so much excited about The Smurfs. Seriously, who greenlighted The Smurfs?


Post Posted: May 17th 2011 6:26 pm
 
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it just got shat upon in it's first review from AICN:

[spoil][align=left]Fun fact: it's been nearly four years since Jerry Bruckheimer produced a bona-fide blockbuster for his corporate overlords at Disney. Keep this in mind should you succumb to the big-summer-movie seduction of PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES. As you're paying premium prices to view this mega-budgeted monstrosity in the heightened format of your choosing, know that the primary service you're providing is one of getting a struggling hit-maker off the schneid. Bruckheimer is counting on your loyalty. He's hoping that the goodwill built up almost exclusively from THE CURSE OF THE BLACK PEARL - as the last two movies have been routinely bad-mouthed by critics and fans alike (despite outgrossing the first installment) - will be all he needs to get in your pockets. As for making good on his part of the transaction and leaving you with a reasonably entertaining movie? Go fuck yourself.

PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES is the awe-deadening nadir of studio tentpole filmmaking, a soulless reconstitution of marketable elements in search of box office plunder. As a perversely unsatisfying moviegoing experience, it calls to mind BATMAN AND ROBIN - though to be fair to Joel Schumacher's franchise-killing debacle, PIRATES 4 lacks the conviction to be that memorably tacky. There is a stunning paucity of effort on display in this film; neither director Rob Marshall nor screenwriters Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio - who've saved themselves the trouble of mapping out a completely original narrative by cannibalizing Tim Powers's well-regarded adventure novel, ON STRANGER TIDES - seem at all interested in captivating their paying customers. What could've been a divertingly madcap dash for the Fountain of Youth is instead a lethargic, backstory-laden tour through familiar (now in 3D!) tropical scenery. Perhaps the filmmakers were relying on their murderer's row of a cast to enliven the plodding narrative. If so... oops!

When Johnny Depp sauntered into the role of Captain Jack Sparrow eight years ago, it was well-earned playtime for an actor who'd admirably eschewed easy stardom for the opportunity to collaborate with visionary (i.e. non-mainstream) directors like Terry Gilliam, Jim Jarmusch and Sally Potter - and the unmitigated glee with which he threw himself into the swashbuckling role went a long way toward erasing the based-on-an-amusement-park stigma that had dogged the project since its inception. That rapscallion charm, which was still present in the exhausting DEAD MAN'S CHEST and the muddled AT WORLD'S END, has completely vanished in ON STRANGER TIDES. This is a classic cut-the-check gig, akin to the phoned-in horseshit Eddie Murphy's been foisting on us for the last decade (DREAMGIRLS excepted). Depp is so disengaged he can barely be bothered to maintain the boozy cadence of Sparrow's speech. Worse, as he's forced to engage in endless expository conversations, artlessly furthering the plot Elliott and Rossio couldn't be bothered to dramatize, his accent comes and goes - at which point the whole endeavor drops from listless to downright contemptuous.

In Depp's meager defense, it's unlikely a full-blooded Jack Sparrow performance would've masked the amateur-hour quality of Elliott & Rossio's screenplay. This is seriously rancid stuff. When they're not lazily filling up script pages with backstory detailing the quest for the Fountain of Youth like they're writing a radio play, they're dropping in thudding bon mots like, "I, for one, support the missionary's position." Which brings us to the missionary, a desperate Will Turner replacement named Philip (Sam Claflin), whose sole function within the narrative is to fall contrivedly in love with a comely mermaid (Astrid Berges-Frisbey) - thus giving easily-enamored young girls something to swoon over. Every minute spent with these star-crossed dullards is excruciating - save for the moment a badly-wounded Philip wanders away from the climactic, soundstage-bound battle into which far too many combatants have been crammed. True, it's a laughably ineffective attempt to get some parallel action going, but at least there's a competently-composed shot or two to be found.

Bad movies happen to great actors all the time, so it's not exactly shocking the extent to which Marshall has ill-utilized the likes of Geoffrey Rush, Ian McShane, Richard Griffiths and Penelope Cruz. As the feuding Barbossa and Blackbeard, Rush and McShane at least recite their forgettable lines with professional gusto; Griffiths, on the other hand, goes regrettably over the top in his one awful scene as King George, which concludes with the most ineptly executed action sequence I've seen in some time (scored with unnecessary bombast by Hans Zimmer, who appears to be recycling cues from the previous PIRATES movies). And Ms. Cruz... one could take issue with her pronunciation struggles, but this dialogue deserves to be mangled, and she looks sensational mangling it.

PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES is an embarrassment on every level for Disney and Jerry Bruckheimer, but it's unlikely they'll be cowed when the opening weekend grosses come in next Saturday. And that's what's most frustrating about this film: it was a success the minute it was greenlit; all the key creatives had to do was show up, and that's precisely all they did! Ten minutes into ON STRANGER TIDES, anyone with an ounce of self-respect will remember why they should've abandoned this series four years ago, and bolt for the ticket window to demand their money back. That this movie is shorter than the mostly-maligned AT WORLD'S END only means it's a return to duration, not form; if brevity is that important to you, stay home and watch Richard Fleischer's masterfully economical THE NARROW MARGIN twice. Or stay home and watch nothing. I've got recordings of a beaten-down Redd Foxx working off his IRS debt in Vegas that evince more joy and vigor than this.

Or be lured by the siren song of Disney and Bruckheimer, and bear witness to the cinematic equivalent of Kenny G playing with his back to the audience. They'll be relieved to know that this is all it takes.

Faithfully submitted,

Mr. Beaks[/align][/spoil]


Post Posted: May 17th 2011 6:48 pm
 
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shat upon is putting it nicely


Post Posted: May 17th 2011 7:11 pm
 
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I really wanted this film to be good but after all of the horrible reviews I can't justify spending hard earned money on it. I'll go see Thor instead.


Post Posted: May 20th 2011 1:58 am
 
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My friend is a huge Pirates fan and so she convinced me to see it tonight. They were only playing it in 3D, but if you have the choice don't bother.

It's a paint by numbers movie. Nothing more, nothing less. It's not bad enough to hate, like so many of these AICN reviews are making it out to be, but it's also not a good movie. It's typical summer blockbuster fare - built solely to rake in serious cash. I don't know why people are being personally offended by it; it's not like the last two were spectacular.

The press loved Fast Five - which was written by a 2 year old, directed by a smack head and starred Paul Walker - yet they're blasting Pirates 4? Why does this film demand you take it more seriously than the FATF series?

If you're selective about movies to see this summer, don't see Pirates 4. If you're looking to shut off your brain for 2 hours, well you don't have much choice beyond this effort for a couple weeks anyway.

There was actually one really, really cool idea in the movie that wasn't explored AT ALL: the concept of Blackbeard keeping the ships he's captured as ships in a bottle. First off, it's a great effect. Second, the mysticism behind that could have been a plot device for an entire movie. Wasted opportunity. That's really the sense you got from watching this movie. It's the same sense I felt watching Pirates 2 and 3.


Post Posted: May 21st 2011 6:45 pm
 
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The sequels really are such bad sequels. They become more and more ridiculous and over-the-top when it isn't even necessary. I'm confused why they felt the need to turn the Caribbean into a Mummy-ish supernatural wonderland. Everything is cursed and foretold by mystics, monsters and undead dudes are everywhere, nobody is phased by any of this.

Worse, they took perfectly good characters and turned them into a bunch of dicks plotting against each other. They also exploited a really great thing they had going with Depp as Captain Jack. The first movie DID have its supernatural edge, but it was cool.


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