“Find Jack Sparrow for me and relay a message, from Captain
Salazar. Tell him, death will come straight for him.” ~ Salazar
“We are to be allies.” ~ Henry Turner
“Considering where
your left hand is, I’d say we’re more than that!” ~ Carina Smyth
“I have heard stories of a mighty Spanish captain who sunk
and killed thousands of men.” ~ Hector Barbossa
“Guillotine? Sounds French. I love the French!” ~ Jack
Sparrow
Disney’s now long running Pirates Of The Caribbean series returns to theatres with a fifth
film, Dead Men Tell No Tales, which
treads some familiar ground (well, familiar waters) with the drunken pirate,
the young lovers, and the cranky villain who just can’t let go of a grudge. If
you think you’ve seen this film before, you have, because that’s pretty much
been the status quo of the previous four movies in the series. Johnny Depp and
Geoffrey Rush return once more to reprise their roles, while the villain’s role
is given over to an actor who’s in danger of becoming typecast for playing villains,
Javier Bardem.
We meet the ten year old Henry Turner (Lewis McGowan) early
in the film. The son of Will and Elizabeth Turner (Orlando Bloom and Keira
Knightley, returning to reprise their roles in cameo appearances), Henry seeks
to free his sea faring father from the curse that binds him to the Flying
Dutchman ship, and meets him for the first time. Will is touched, but doesn’t
believe it’s possible to lift the curse, telling his son to leave and never
return. Nine years later, Henry is in the Royal Navy, now played by Brenton
Thwaites, and his ship comes under attack by a ghostly ship in a place called
the Devil’s Triangle. The ship is captained by the seriously grouchy Captain
Salazar (Bardem), who leaves Henry alive to send a message to someone he has a
particular dislike for.
That person, of course, is Captain Jack Sparrow (Depp),
who’s been busy robbing and plundering with his crew. Sparrow’s luck seems to
run out, and he finds himself about to be executed in the company of a young
woman sentenced to die for witchcraft, Carina Smyth (Kaya Scodelario), who’s
not a witch but more of a scientist. It doesn’t take long for Sparrow, Henry,
and Carina to all get caught up in the same over the top quest for a relic
(another holdover from the previous film, these movies always have some
treasure or object of desire), the Trident of Poseidon, which will supposedly
grant its possessor control over the seas.
The screenplay comes from Jeff Nathanson, who had a hand in
film scripts like Catch Me If You Can,
The Terminal, and Indiana Jones &
The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull. The film was in development hell for
years on end- it’s been six years since the last instalment. This time out
feels all too familiar- as mentioned earlier, there are common motifs in this
franchise, from the drunken pirate bumbling his way through a supernaturally
tinged adventure, the young star crossed lovers, the cranky antagonist, the
oddball supporting characters and sheer preposterousness of the plotline.
Original series director Gore Verbinski, who helmed the
first three films and then went on to that disaster known as The Lone Ranger, is absent again, as is
Rob Marshall, who directed On Stranger
Tides. In their place are a pair of directors, Joachim Ronning and Espen
Sandberg. Most of their filming was done on location and sound stages in
Australia, while series producer (and perennial expert in bombast) Jerry
Bruckheimer stayed on in that role. The film moves along through plot holes and
preposterousness with breathless abandon, and the directors pace it that way.
There are times, though, when the visual style can be a bit murky, such as
night scenes- I suggest avoiding this in 3D, unlike the only screening that I
could get to; I expect 3D winds up making things all the more murky. There’s
some spectacular CGI along the way- the ghostly look of Salazar, his ship and
crew, for instance, or the look of the previously established Flying Dutchman.
The CGI goes into overtime, however, for the climactic sequences, and a parting
of the seas that puts The Ten
Commandments to shame.
What’s previously established in this series generally
works, from the point of view of the crew. Set design certainly does render a
look that’s vivid for pirate or Navy ships, or a Caribbean town of the era.
This comes down to costume design and makeup, where pirates each in turn have a
distinctive look, for instance, or civilians are dressed in a way accustomed to
the era. The score, which has previously had the touch of Hans Zimmer all over
it in earlier films (Zimmer produced the first score by Klaus Badelt, and
composed some of the themes before taking the helm for the following films), is
now taken on by Geoff Zanelli, one of Zimmer’s associates. Zanelli had a hand
in some of the orchestrations of the previous films, and those films provide a
springboard for his score.
The cast is a sprawling one, a good number of them British,
but generally international. Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley sat out the
fourth instalment as their characters Will and Elizabeth Turner, the star
crossed lovers who took three movies to finally get married (and then got
separated by a wee bit of a curse that keeps Will permanently at sea most of
the time). Both the actors and the characters seem a bit too young to be the
parents of a nineteen year old son, one of those plot holes I mentioned, and
their appearances here tend to lean more towards the cameo, but it’s pleasing
to see them both, even as it reinforces how their characters shine more than
the younger set.
That’s probably more because the younger actors in the film
have roles that are somewhat underwritten and fill in the blank sorts. Brenton
Thwaites is an Australian actor, playing the part of the Turner son Henry, who
spends the film on a desperate quest to save his father from the curse he’s
under. He plays the part with an earnest, befuddled manner (not unlike Will,
who frequently seemed befuddled by the pirate captain he’d thrown his lot in
with). The actor’s capable enough in the role, it just seems like the writer’s
trying to essentially fit him right into the same slot as his character’s
father was in the first film. The same applies with Kaya Scodolario, playing
Carina. She’s essentially the Elizabeth Turner substitute of the film- the
intelligent, wilful, strong minded woman who’s easily exasperated with Jack and
becomes smitten with the young Henry. The story gives the character some
different angles- instead of a governor’s daughter, she’s a person of science,
particularly astronomy, in an era where a woman learning in higher education is
unthinkable.
Kevin McNally returns once again, having had appeared in all
four of the previous films as Jack’s loyal first mate Joshamee Gibbs. The
character is good for comic relief and the occasional touch of wisdom; while
drink seems to hit him harder than it does Jack, it doesn’t appear to have done
the amount of brain damage to him that it has to Jack (has Jack Sparrow ever
wondered if he might have a drinking problem?). Gibbs is a welcome continuing
presence in the series, and the actor makes the most of it.
Javier Bardem is in danger at this point of typecasting
himself in the role of villains. The Spanish actor is known to North American
audiences for two ruthless villains in No
Country For Old Men and Skyfall,
and the pattern returns with his role as Captain Salazar, the antagonist of the
film. His back story shows him to be a Spanish pirate hunter when he was alive,
cursed with his crew into an undead state when he was tricked into sailing into
the Devil’s Triangle by a young Jack Sparrow. It’s left the man rather
irritable, and the actor’s take is to mix together rage and pride in his
performance, a man driven by hatred and revenge. Bardem gives Salazar a
ruthless and grouchy edge, leaving us wondering just how many people Jack Sparrow
has earned a grudge from.
Geoffrey Rush returns once again as Hector Barbossa. The
antagonist of the first film, Barbossa ended up becoming a reluctant ally to
Sparrow in subsequent films. When we find him now, he’s alive and sun
weathered, captain of the Queen Anne’s Revenge. He may look like he’s been out
in the sun too long, but he’s been successfully building wealth since we last
saw him, commanding a fleet of privateers and enjoying his riches. Barbossa has
to weave between the right path and the wrong path this time out, with a hidden
element in the mix for his character, and Rush gives the character the same mix
of charm and unpleasant crankiness that we’ve seen before, while rising to the
occasion at the most opportune of moments.
One gets the impression that Johnny Depp has a lot of fun
playing Jack Sparrow. This is his fifth time playing the rogue pirate, and he’s
invested in Sparrow. The character experiences no personal growth through this
movie (does he ever?). Instead, Jack continues to be the eccentric drunk,
stumbling his way through scenarios that might give others permanent nightmares,
but from which he might only wake up with a hangover. Jack gets himself in and
out of chaos and trouble haphazardly, and we’re left to wonder just how much
damage all that rum’s done to his head. As always, his allegiances and
motivations are constantly shifting, and his ethics are at best questionable, and
Depp plays the eccentricity to the hilt. It’s a fun character to watch on
screen, but would you want to know such a person in reality?
Dead Men Tell No Tales
is entertaining enough, if you
ignore the plot holes here and there, and the under-developed characters (Henry
and Carina, I’m looking at you). It’s loud, brash, over the top, and murky at
times in its tale of a seething undead naval officer with a serious grudge
seeking out a drunken pirate who might have problems remembering the other
fellow existed. The film claims to be the final one in the franchise, but we’ll
see. After the problems of the fourth film of the franchise, it would be wise
to end here. It would have been wiser to have finished with the first three. It
would have been impossible for studio marketing chimps to have just
left it at one incredibly memorable film with the first one and do no sequels.
Sounds pretty murky all the way around and I'm not a fan of "undead" characters unless they are angels. And, too bad Captain Sparrow can't be sober during the rewrites. :)
ReplyDeleteWell, in these movies, there's always a supernatural curse.
DeleteThis is the fifth one? Wow, I've only seen the first!
ReplyDeleteIf they make another one, they'll end up resurrecting Captain Kidd.
DeleteI've found that the most fun characters to watch are usually the ones I'd want to see least in real life.
ReplyDeleteTrue!
DeleteI've only ever caught the first film in this series. I did enjoy it, but pirates have never quite been my thing. Though I do like Bardem quite a lot (though more for his Spanish roles than anything in English).
ReplyDeleteI've only seen him in English language material. He is a compelling actor.
DeleteThanks for another great review, William. I think I'll wait until it turns up on Netflix.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome!
DeleteThanks for this review, William, as we just saw the 5th film this evening after I posted about our weekend marathon viewing of the first 4 films. I would agree that the first 3 were the best with #3 being our favorite in the series. The 4th film directed by Rob Marshall was lackluster at best. Thankfully the Norwegian directors of this current (and final?) outing brought back some spectacular special efx.
ReplyDeleteIf it's the final, it was a good way to wrap things up.
DeleteI saw the first one and that was enough. Pirates were the scum of the earth and I see no reason to watch any of these movies. Boring in spite of all the action and effects.
ReplyDeleteIt's not for everyone, admittedly.
Delete