(dir. Rob Marshall, 2011)
Full disclosure: this franchise is something which, despite poor quality and confusing narratives, I cannot hate. No matter whether or not a Pirates film is good, I manage it thoroughly enjoy it. It's the hold the franchise has over me. Color me a biased film critic, matey. (Also, Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl in all it's by-the-book and Disneyfied glory, is my favorite film of all time. Right around The Silence of the Lambs, Pulp Fiction, White Christmas, and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind).
But this film, the fourth in an admittedly bloated series, was attempting to recapture the start-up magic of the original. It was without the second and third films' penchant for elaborate, complicated plots and subplots. But it never fully recaptured the feeling of the original. What was so grand about the first three was their undeniable epic scope; you felt like you were watching something that was a true adventure flick. But On Stranger Tides doesn't have that feeling. It's deflated.

McShane, as I said, is doing what he can to save the part. Blackbeard is easily the worst villain of the franchise, and simply because he's written so poorly. A bad guy going out to seek the Fountain of Youth so he doesn't die? Is that it? Is that suppose to make him a bad guy? He doesn't try to kill Jack, Barbossa, or anyone we like. His majestically powers of battleship embottlement, zombification, and rope manipulation are never explained nor do we ever get a good glimpse of what make Blackbeard so vile. At least with Davy Jones and Barbossa we understood their means to an end, even if their means were vicious. The Pirates series never had a villain you could really hate; Barbossa just wanted to taste an apple and Jones was just a sad, heartbroken man. But with Blackbeard, you're just told he's a bad man and you're left at that.
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Reporting to duty, I was told I have to save this film? |
The true highlight of the film wasn't a battle, or a scene full of visual effects wonderment, but rather the brief scenes between Jack and Barbossa. Johnny Depp and Rush have always such a marvelous chemistry, and I always felt their lack of togetherness in the second film stopped it from being great (granted, Barbossa was dead in that film...mostly). It doesn't hurt that the writers gave Barbossa the only intriguing motive to do anything in the whole film, what with trying to enact revenge on the man who cost him his leg (and when Rush tells his tale vengeance, it's a scene of splendid acting). When they're together, how they play off one another is just a type of magic you can't create with CGI. If the fifth film wants to do better with everyone (audiences and critics), I think re-pairing that dynamic duo would be a wise decision.
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A poor man's Will and Elizabeth |
But still, just being able to see Rush and Depp on screen again in these parts was a large portion of my enjoyment. And I cannot argue with the genuine joy I get from seeing Capt. Jack. That enough is enough to see the film. I just wish there were more reasons. GRADE: B-
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