REVIEW

Movie Review: Pirates of the Caribbean - At World's End

Written by Brandon Valentine
Published January 07, 2008

Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End contains all the pieces that made The Curse of the Black Pearl and Dead Man’s Chest successful — a killer cast, snippets of comedy, and lots of adventurous action. Sadly, At World’s End is nothing more than a money-grubbing sequel that tries to outdo its predecessors with more ships, cannons, characters, and parlays. In addition, the film forgot one important rule: avoid mediocrity.

When we last left Captain Jack Sparrow (Johnny Depp), he was condemned to Davy Jones’ locker for eternity. Not for long.

As the Black Pearl descends off the edge of the map, Elizabeth (Keira Knightley), Will (Orlando Bloom), and the resurrected Captain Barbossa (Geoffrey Rush) attempt to rescue Captain Jack from the void of the locker. With assistance from the mysterious Tia Dalma (Naomie Harris) and a pack of other pirates, all involved must unite the nine pirate lords to help defeat Lord Cutler Beckett (Tom Hollander), Davy Jones (Bill Nighy), and the East India Company.

With At World’s End now part of the trilogy, it seems as though the Pirates vehicle was stuck in a ditch after Dead Man’s Chest. Even though the gas is applied in At World’s End, the wheels spin and the car goes nowhere. In the end, the characters converge and a few unexpected twists occur. Blah, blah, blah...

This is what happens when sequels attempt to one-up their predecessors; the result is clutter and chaos. Either everyone involved had too much rum in their system or too much greed in their hearts in making Pirates 3. Walt Disney Pictures’ eye was on the prize, not the production. To boot, throwing in Keith Richards, as Captain Jack’s father, only adds cameo cash-in value. 

Production miscues aside, At World’s End's most ill-advised inclusion is in gathering up nearly all the pirates in existence and putting them on display in a hardly “epic” sea battle. This results in previous villains either changing sides or not appearing as villainous. For instance, Captain Barbossa is now on Captain Jack’s side, Davy Jones looses his wicked intimidation factor by becoming a sap, and the film’s largest threat becomes Lord Cutler Beckett. Sheesh, talk about lacking a threatening antagonist.

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Brandon Valentine is a film critic from Hershey, PA. Aside from possessing the last name “Valentine” and living in “the Sweetest Place on Earth,” Brandon was also born on Valentine’s Day. That’s right, a Valentine born on Valentine’s Day. His “sweet” work can be viewed at Blogcritics, IMDb, and his own site, Valentine on Film.
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Movie Review: Pirates of the Caribbean - At World's End
Published: January 07, 2008
Type: Review
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: Action, Video: Adventure
Writer: Brandon Valentine
Brandon Valentine's BC Writer page
Brandon Valentine's personal site
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