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Pirates Of The Caribbean - At World-s End -2007...

– a humorous mockumentary-style featurette showing how the crew created the multiple hallucinated Jack Sparrows (from Davy Jones's Locker). It includes interviews with Johnny Depp playing several versions of himself, plus visual effects breakdowns.

The final hour unleashes the franchise’s most ambitious sequence: the Battle of Calypso’s Maelstrom. As the Black Pearl and the Flying Dutchman circle a giant whirlpool, Beckett watches from his massive man-of-war, certain of order’s victory.

To survive, the nine Pirate Lords must unite at Shipwreck Island to release the sea goddess and make a final stand for freedom. Production and Technical Achievement The scale of At World’s End was unprecedented for its time: Pirates of the Caribbean - At World-s End -2007...

"The world is still the same. There's just less in it." — Captain Jack Sparrow

Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End (2007) is the epic third installment in the original Disney trilogy. Released on , the film concludes the storyline established in Dead Man's Chest , following a sprawling quest to save Captain Jack Sparrow and stop the East India Trading Company. The Plot: A War for the Seas – a humorous mockumentary-style featurette showing how the

The final shot of the Black Pearl trilogy is not a laugh. It is a sunrise over a beach where Elizabeth and their ten-year-old son watch a green flash—the signal that Will, on his Dutchman, has returned for his one day of shore leave.

Then there is the heart. In Dead Man’s Chest , stabbing it would kill Jones. In At World’s End , we learn the deeper truth: The one who stabs the heart must replace Jones as captain of the Flying Dutchman, ferrying souls to the afterlife for eternity. It is a cursed duty. This moral lockbox forces Will Turner to choose between love and immortality, and his father, Bootstrap Bill (Stellan Skarsgård), to choose between his son’s freedom and his own damnation. As the Black Pearl and the Flying Dutchman

Picking up where the second film left off, the pirate world is on the brink of extinction. Lord Cutler Beckett of the East India Trading Company now controls the terrifying Davy Jones and his ghost ship, the Flying Dutchman , using them to hunt down every pirate ship on the ocean.

The script, penned by Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio, requires close attention. Character motivations shift like the tides: Will Turner seeks to free his father; Elizabeth Swann grapples with her identity as a pirate and a leader; Jack Sparrow struggles with hallucinations and his own self-interest; and Barbossa acts as the unlikely mediator. Add to this the tragic love story of Davy Jones (Bill Nighy) and the sea goddess Calypso (Naomie Harris), and you have a narrative that is arguably overstuffed.

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