Pirates
of the Caribbean:
Dead Man's Chest
Starting next week, children across America
will be saying "bugger," imitating Jack Sparrow's most uttered
line. This may not be the most socially responsible development,
but it will only speak to the other Fanboy Planet prediction
of the month: Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest
will completely rule the Summer.
And well it should.
This movie provides all the excitement
of a thrill ride while still moving its characters forward.
Amidst giddy battles, real character development, some of
it even subtle, keeps cropping up. Director Gore Verbinski
balances pace and plot so well, even the cliffhanger ending
(setting up next Summer's At World's End) feels like,
"yeah, we can stop here for a little while because we need
to take a breath or two. Thanks."
Everybody gets their due, with the script
finding a place for just about everybody from the first
film. At the same time, Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio expand
the mythos in some clever and touching ways.
Though we see Jack Sparrow (Johnny Depp)
firmly in command of the Black Pearl, except for that pesky
undead monkey, all is not well at the beginning of Dead
Man's Chest. On the eve of their wedding, the franchise's
young lovers Will Turner (Orlando Bloom) and Elizabeth Swann
(Keira Knightley) get taken into custody. Their crime? Aiding
and abetting the escape of a pirate, punishable by death.
Of course Jack has problems of his own.
In order to captain the Black Pearl in the first place,
he sold his soul to Davey Jones (Bill Nighy). The patron
demon of the sea doesn't care that Jack's thirteen years
of captaining were interrupted by a mutiny. To add insult
to injury, Davey Jones' messenger is a previously unseen
but crucial character - Bootstraps Bill Turner (Stellan
Skarsgard).
It's a great addition, allowing for Will
to have a decent arc as he comes to grips with his father's
ghost - literally. While the callow youth wrestles his father
issues, Jack and Elizabeth spar over morality, and suddenly
this frivolous film franchise actually has something like
depth to it.
Impressively, it doesn't get lost in the
spectacle, but Verbinski delivers plenty of that, too. The
stuntwork in this movie is amazing, but it never seems arbitrary.
A giddy three-person swordfight just keeps upping the ante,
involving a runaway water wheel and the requisite lush scenery.
Yet it all follows from the plot.
Dead Man's Chest also has some tremendously
impressive production design. We've seen the grime of Tortuga,
and the efforts at duplicating the theme park ride before.
But with this, we get a fierce cannibal tribe with some
subtly disgusting set pieces, and then a Caribbean bayou
so dank and moist it's like being licked.
The real achievement, though, is with Davey
Jones and his crew of the Flying Dutchman. What sets this
movie apart from everything else we've gotten so far this
Summer is its willingness to really take us someplace new.
Cursed to serve the heartless (literally) Jones, the crew
and the ship have taken on the life of the sea, slowly merging
with the ocean. Bill Turner has it comparatively light;
only a starfish and a few barnacles seem to be growing on
him.
Jones himself has magnificently merged
with lobsters and squid, which allows for a few grotesque
visual gags. At one point, Verbinski uses him to pay homage
to Disney's 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. Yet underneath
the make-up and the CG lies a talented actor commanding
the screen, holding his own against Depp.
Both Bloom and Knightley, too, have greater
strength in this film, though it's really Elizabeth Swann
that plays foil to Jack Sparrow. She teases and taunts the
pirate captain in ways the first film only hinted, and both
characters don't exactly like what it reveals about them.
With the father-son dynamic of the Turners, Bloom gets a
chance to be a little more than earnest, and Skarsgard brings
a note of sadness that makes a nice counterpoint to all
the action.
Perhaps trying to prove his craftsmanship,
Verbinski does linger a bit over certain shots. While the
extra arty shots seem showy, they also allow for a little
bit of breathing before the audience tumbles over the next
set piece. A subplot involving the East India Trading Company
slows things down, too, and though it sets up another villain
in Lord Cutler Beckett (Tom Hollander) , Dead Man's Chest
really flies its flag highest when dealing with the supernatural
and the swashbuckling.
Even
with the cliffhanger, the story moves so swiftly and surely
that the ending really seems a logical next step. No, it
doesn't involve Keith Richards; he's waiting for the third
film.
And
after seeing Dead Man's Chest, we'll be waiting,
too.
Rating:
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