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Pirates of the Caribbean:
The Curse of the Black Pearl is the second theme-park ride
turned big-screen feature, following the ridiculously
unnecessary The Country Bears
and preceding the probably unnecessary Haunted Mansion
with Eddie Murphy (the trailer for that is attached to Pearl).
I was excited to see it, mostly because I really like
Johnny Depp, enjoyed director Gore Verbinski's previous three
features (even The Mexican),
and have had many a naughty dream about Keira Knightley.
Got to the screening,
and yo ho ho and a bottle of...hey, wait a minute.
I hate pirate movies.
What the hell am I doing here?
Maybe it's just me, but being born after the whole Errol
Flynn thing was over and having to deal with stuff like Cutthroat
Island, Hook and Muppet Treasure Island (The
Goonies doesn't count, okay?) doth not a pirate fan make.
Pearl
is set in the 18th century and opens with a prologue that shows
the Swann family making the transatlantic journey from England
to the New World. They encounter a ship destroyed by pirates and
manage to rescue an unconscious pirate boy, whose special pirate
medallion is swiped right off his little pirate body by young
Elizabeth Swann.
Flash forward a dozen or
so years and former pirate boy Will Turner (Orlando Bloom, The
Two Towers) is now an expert blacksmith and part-time
Justin Timberlake impersonator, while Elizabeth (Knightley, Bend
It Like Beckham) – the daughter of Governor Weatherby
Swann (Jonathan Pryce) – is the unenthusiastic recipient of a
marriage proposal from a snooty commodore (Jack Davenport).
When Elizabeth faints and takes a spill into the drink
thanks to a tight corset, she's rescued by the swishy Jack
Sparrow (Depp, From Hell), a
renowned marauder of the seas.
Sparrow is rewarded with
a trip to the brig, but not before catching a glimpse of
Elizabeth's desirable booty (the medallion, stupid!), which sets
off a whole chain of zany pirate-related activity, specifically
pertaining to Will's medallion and its importance to the Black
Pearl, a legendary ship whose crew were cursed to exist in that
strange state in which you're not quite dead but not entirely
alive, either. They look normal, except when the moonlight hits them and
then they resemble Imhotep from The Mummy,
which is funny because that film was also too long and totally
unsatisfying. Speaking
of totally unsatisfying, Pearl screenwriters Ted Elliott
and Terry Rossio penned brain dead summer fare like The Mask
of Zorro and Godzilla as well.
Disney's first-ever
PG-13 film would have been a complete nightmare if it weren't
for Depp, whose character is an unholy melange of Captain
Morgan, Dudley Moore, Keith Richards and Andy Dick.
In addition to facing down the Black Pearl's captain
(Geoffrey Rush, Frida) in a
battle to see who could chew up the most scenery, Sparrow spends
most of the picture playing both sides (ahem!) in the many, many
double-crosses. And
speaking of playing both sides, that's just what Disney and
Verbinski (The Ring) do.
In an attempt to make Pearl a family adventure,
they tone down the violence and up the goofiness but keep the
adult running time, making the whole thing too long for kids and
not sophisticated enough for able-minded grownups.
How many times can a fake eye popping out of a guy's head
be funny?
| 2:20
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action/adventure violence |
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