SKYFALL: So Much For My Promising Career in Espionage

Skyfall (2012) – The 23rd James Bond Film; the 3rd Daniel Craig Film – Directed by Sam Mendes – Starring Daniel Craig, Judi Dench, Javier Bardem, Ralph Fiennes, Naomie Harris, Bérénice Lim Marlohe, Ben Whishaw, Rory Kinnear, and Albert Finney.

If you’re new here, be aware that SPOILERS are coming. Lots of them. I am not bound by your inability to have seen the movie before me. I’ve seen it and I want to talk about it, so if you don’t want anything ruined, go away, see the movie, and then come back and tell me why I’m an idiot. If you’re looking for the answer to the question, “Should I see it?”, the answer is Yes. If you really want to read about Bond, though, I’ve reviewed the other Bond movies, which you can find right here at the James Bond Review Index.

Whenever a new story in a long-running series comes out, there’s this immediate, infantile urge to locate the story’s place in the greater scheme: Best Bond film ever! Worse than Quantum of Snoozefest! Not as good as Octopussy but better than Die Another Day/!

These kinds of comments and lists are ridiculously tiresome. It’s like people are out there waiting for an opportunity to update a list rather than watch a movie. I think they are generally created by people who can’t prove their better than you by buying a Ferrari so they try to shame you with knowledge, or who have perhaps mistaken their fandom for identity and fear new fans enjoying what they’ve been enjoying and thus, the argument goes, somehow ruining it. (I thought this way, too, once. Of course, I was fifteen.) If people have fun with them, that’s fine, but if they’re using it to make you feel dumb, then I hope they sit next to the loudest, dumbest fourteen year old the next time they go to the theater. Why? Because it will be like they’re sitting next to themselves, that’s why.

What irks me the most about them, however, is that the idea of accurately comparing the immediate experience of watching a film in the theater with films that have been around for decades.

No, I take that back. What irks me the most is the person who doesn’t have fun with their lists, who uses the creation of a list or the comparison of one film to another in the series simply as an opportunity to toss some predictable, tired snark around.

I bring all of this up, in part, as a way to call myself out. (What? You thought that I thought I was perfect? You really are new here.) While watching SKYFALL this afternoon in a very crowded theater on the 23rd Bond film’s third day of release, I found myself occasionally thinking of where I’d place SKYFALL in the Bond pantheon. Instead of, you know, simply enjoying and analyzing the movie on its own merits. If you’ve kicked around the Anxiety, at all, you know I hate lists. I think once you get past a few movies, trying to argue that, say, the 14th best Bond movie is better than the 15th best Bond movie is a little specious. I prefer to do my rankings using the tier system; it’s more general, but for me, at least, it’s more accurate. I can make a very convincing argument that CASINO ROYALE (2006) is the best Bond movie ever, but I can also make a convincing argument that GOLDFINGER is the best Bond movie ever, too.

The truth is that sometimes I think ROYALE is the best and at other times I think GOLDFINGER is the best, so I’m content to call them “Tier One” movies and leave it at that.

Is SKYFALL a Tier One Bond movie?

Yes. Probably. Talk to me after the Blu-ray comes out and I’ve seen it a few more times. That snarky comment that kept rattling around my brain during the film was, “This is good, but it’s not CASINO ROYALE good.” For now, I’m confident in saying that it’s not nearly as good as CASINO ROYALE, but then, I consider CASINO ROYALE the single best action movie since Die Hard. I am happy to say that it was worth every penny of the $9 I would have paid if I had paid for my ticket this afternoon. It’s a mature, serious espionage film, dotted with brief moments of wry humor. It’s well-written, well-acted, and well-directed, although on this last point it must be noted that Sam Mendes’ action scenes succeed because of their narrative strength and not because of their visual flair.

There’s nothing wrong with that, of course, and it shows how smart a director Mendes is to play to his strengths and minimize his weaknesses. It also gives SKYFALL a uniqueness to it; there’s a very real sense throughout the movie that SKYFALL is raising the bar and making a real attempt to push action movies in a different direction.

Which is to say, it’s not a Jason Bourne movie. In fact, SKYFALL owes more (visually and narratively) to Steven Soderbergh’s Haywire than any of the Bourne movies, or even many of the Bond movies.

Sure, there’s the tired, seen-too-many-times “Bond is getting old” trope trotted out one more time, and when SKYFALL is at its worst it’s indulging in this nonsense. (Which is really silly considering that ROYALE and QUANTUM OF SOLACE were the start of Bond’s career and they happened one immediately after the other.) James Bond is such the epitome of cool that giving him physical frailty is the easiest way to put a dent in his armor, but I feel about this plot the way I feel about superheroes who don’t want to be superheroes: this isn’t why you’re getting my money. It’s harder, but much more satisfying, when Bond films find other ways to give our supercool British spy a hurdle to overcome. Give them a love interest. Give them a personal vendetta. Give them Christopher Lee.

Thankfully, SKYFALL offers a bit of this, too. While it opens with Bond getting accidentally shot off a moving train by another British agent (Naomie Harris’ Eve Moneypenny, though the film doesn’t tell us her name until the end), only to come back a few months later looking haunted and beaten down, SKYFALL eventually moves us to Bond’s family home (named Skyfall) in Scotland. SKYFALL starts in the present with the damaged Bond, but then once he returns to active field duty, the rest of the film is a balance between who he (and the franchise) used to be and who he (and the franchise) is going to be.

That’s not unintentional, of course. This is the 50th year anniversary of the James Bond cinematic franchise, which makes it a fitting time to reflect and redefine.

On that note, it’s both satisfying and a bit disappointing that the answer to where Bond is going is back to tradition. By the end of the film, M (Judi Dench) is dead, Gareth Mallory (Ralph Fiennes) is the new M, and we’ve been introduced to a new Q (Ben Whishaw) and Miss Moneypenny (Naomie Harris). The film tries to hold off on the new M and Moneypenny until the end, but given that we don’t hear Moneypenny’s name at the start and all of her dialogue with Bond centers around her maybe not being best suited for field duty, it’s pretty obvious where that plot is going. Similarly, the film introduces the idea that M is going to be forced to step aside and it’s pretty obvious that if she is going to be replaced, Ralph Fiennes is going to be her replacement.

It’s not just the reinstatement of Q and Moneypenny to the franchise, but the whole office set-up that played such a huge role in the pre-Craig era. As SKYFALL is closing, there’s Bond coming through a door, Miss Moneypenny taking her seat at a desk, and Bond entering a small but rich office where he takes a mission from M. Mendes makes these moments work, and it’s a confident shot at other movie franchises. Any franchise that survives for 50 years is going to have a certain amount of malleability to it, and that’s clearly in evidence over the course of Bond’s run. Sean Connery exchanged confidence for parody. Roger Moore went to space. Timothy Dalton made a Schwarzenegger film. Pierce Brosnan oversaw the rise of female equality. And Daniel Craig wasn’t allowed to smile.

None of that is, in and of itself, automatically a bad thing. Malleability is a good thing, in the long run, because it gets the franchise through the years where it has fallen a bit out of favor, and then every so often we’re rewarded with a SPY WHO LOVED ME or GOLDENEYE or SKYFALL that reasserts the franchise’s preeminence.

And that’s really SKYFALL’s biggest strength – this is a movie that does what it does without concern for the latest cinematic trends. SKYFALL is a movie that charts its own course, that’s respective of the past and cognizant of the future. When Bond exchanges M’s Jaguar for his original Aston Martin DB5, it’s not just symbolically cool to see Connery’s car back, but an assertion of the confident style that Bond represents. Far too often over the years the Bond franchise has been the Ford Mustang; no, not the pre-1970s Mustang which was as cool as any car ever, but all of those post-First Generation Mustangs where Ford ripped the guts out of their Pony Car and continually morphed it into whatever the populace was buying at the moment. The Mustang should always be THE MUSTANG. Other car manufacturers should change to rip it off but instead we’ve gotten nearly forty years of the Mustang trying to be the Toyota Celica or Mazda Rx-Whatever or Dodge Charger.

I like QUANTUM OF SOLACE more than just about anyone, but it’s not a traditional Bond movie. It’s a great action movie, but it’s far more Bourne than Bond. It took the grim Craig Bond one step too far into the darkness, and while that isn’t ideal, the reaction has been to bring Bond back into the light with SKYFALL. The care and attention here to not only make a great movie, but to make the reset to a Bond tied to an M, a Q, and a Moneypenny happen organically. In the long history of the Bond franchise, SKYFALL represents a high point in terms of seeing a long-term plan. That’s what I thought was going to happen with ROYALE, but then QUANTUM took a awkward step and financial troubles befell MGM, and so SKYFALL feels like another new beginning. Because of what ROYALE didn’t do (no Q, no Moneypenny, very little sense of humor), SKYFALL took the opportunity to re-establish some old friends and it does it beautifully.

There’s no doubting I left the theater with a smile on my face, but it’s not simply because SKYFALL takes what is old and makes it new, again. No, what makes all of this work is that the mission in SKYFALL brings Bond, old M, new M, Q, and Moneypenny together through the test of battle. Because of the personal attack on M and MI6 by Raoul Silva (Javier Bardem) and British politicians, we see our new unit coming together organically. Yes, we get the r-establishment of the lovably contentious Bond/Q relationship, but it’s in the process of Q having to prove himself to Bond when 007 steals M away in order to hide her that his inclusion wins me over.

People have been raving about Javier Bardem’s Silva, and it’s a good performance, but it’s yet another former ally turned enemy plot, and there’s really not a lot here that’s better than Sean Bean’s role as 006. The opening confrontation between Silva and Bond is very strong, but Silva quickly becomes just another thug with a gun and an axe to grind.

Daniel Craig is once again very good as James Bond and SKYFALL is a very good movie. Mendes manages to make an excellent spy film that brings back some of the old James Bond elements that had grown stale and rightly been abandoned. He infuses a grown-up espionage film with plenty of nods to Bond’s past and as the curtain falls on Bond’s 23rd movie and 50th year, Mendes puts all the toys back on the board, setting up the movie franchise for it’s next stage. When M is sitting in front of the government inquisition and a politician is telling her how MI6 is outdated and she’s outdated and blah blah blah, it’s not just a story point but a subtle shot at the changing trends. M’s response, Bond’s response, even Mallory, Q, and Moneypenny’s response is a come back to Jesus moment, welcoming old fans back to a more traditional Bond at the same time it lets us know what the new ground rules are going to be.

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Check out my latest work of fiction, with a time-traveling British secret agent: GUNFIGHTER GOTHIC VOLUME 0: BLOOD OF THE UNIVERSE. Here’s the blurb: It’s 1866 and Jill (a white, merchant’s daughter) and Hanna (a Korean-American servant in the merchant’s house) have fled to the American West to start a new life on their own terms.
They boarded a train in Kansas City, and before the morning was over, they had fought werewolves and vampires, partnered with Bellingham, a time-traveling British secret agent, and made an enemy of Mrs. Lincoln.

And then the train jumped its tracks, crashing violently, and killing Jill.

Hanna is despondent until Bellingham reveals his real reason for being in 1866: the Universe Cutter, a knife with the power to resurrect the dead. All they have to do is find it.

To bring Jill back, Hanna will partner with two time travelers and President Grant’s right-hand man, and battle Confederates, werewolves, lizard men, sun worshipping cultists, and a man from the end of time. All for a chance to bring back the woman she loves … a woman who will never love her back.

GUNFIGHTER GOTHIC VOL. 0: BLOOD OF THE UNIVERSE also features the back-up tale, “Appetite for Appeasement,” starring Bellingham.

PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: AT WORLD’S END: All Men Are Drawn to the Sea, Perilous Though it May Be

Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End (2007) – Directed by Gore Verbinski – Starring Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom, Keira Knightley, Stellan Skarsgård, Bill Nighy, Tom Hollander, Chow Yun-fat, Geoffrey Rush, Jack Davenport, Naomie Harris, Kevin McNally, David Schofield, Jonathan Pryce, Mackenzie Crook,
Lee Arenberg, and Keith Richards.

If you want to argue that PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: AT WORLD’S END is too bloated and too dark, you won’t get a huge fight from me; I will, however, counter that despite these problems, I still enjoy the movie a good deal. I find it works much better as a home view than it did in the theaters, as 11 minutes short of 3 hours is just too darn long for a fun movie-going experience.

And that length exemplifies what is both ill-conceived and admirable about AT WORLD’S END: they forgot they were making a popcorn movie.

When I saw this movie in the theaters I left bitterly disappointed at the various endings. For a series that had delivered so much fun, so many thrills, and such nice character growth, AT WORLD’S END is a downer of a movie: Will Turner (Orlando Bloom) is killed and becomes the new captain of the Flying Dutchman, meaning he and Elizabeth Swann (Keira Knightley) can see each other only once every ten years; Barbosa (Geoffrey Rush) has stolen the Black Pearl away from Jack Sparrow (Johnny Depp); and Norrington (Jack Davenport) and Governor Swann (Jonathan Pryce) are dead.

Why? If there was ever a series in which giving us a Happy Hollywood ending would have been totally justified, it’s PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN. Yet the only character who really ends on a high note is Will’s dad, “Bootstrap” Bill Turner (Stellan Skarsgård), and the crew of the Dutchman, who stop being fish men and go back to being regular men.

Watching AT WORLD’S END now, however, I can better appreciate what Gore Verbinski and the rest of the creative team were attempting. Clearly, they want AT WORLD’S END to have a real sense of inevitable decline. At one point in the film Jack mentions he wouldn’t mind being the last pirate alive and Barbosa reminds him that one of the downside of being that last is that inevitably there will be no one left.

The idea that the “old ways” are becoming extinct has been at the heart of the PIRATES trilogy, and here we see that idea taken as far as it can go: Lord Beckett (Tom Hollander) has control of the Flying Dutchman because he controls Davy Jones’ heart, and he’s on a quest to rid the world of pirates. In response, the pirate convene a meeting of the Brethren of Pirates, bringing together the nine Pirate Lords to try and figure out what to do.

There’s just one problem – Jack Sparrow is one of the pirate lords and he didn’t name a successor before getting sucked down into Davy Jones’ locker. As seen at the end of DEAD MAN’S CHEST, Tia Dalma (Naomie Harris) has brought Hector Barbosa back to life to captain the Pearl‘s crew, Will, and Elizabeth on a quest into Davy Jones’ locker to bring Jack back.

AT WORLD’S END suffers from taking it’s sweet ass time getting anywhere. The opening sequence is an elongated negotiation/fight/team-up with Sao Feng (Chow Yun Fat), as Barbosa takes the crew to Singapore to ask this Pirate Lord. It’s a half hour before we even get to see Jack on screen, and then we get ten minutes of him acting bonkers.

The film needlessly has Jack, Will, Elizabeth … heck, nearly everyone switching sides to cut the best deal for themselves. I know this loyalty hopping has been a trademark of the series, but it feels a bit tired and unnecessary here because there’s just so much of it. Becket is the enemy yet Sao Feng, Jack, and Will all cut deals with him on the sly for their own benefit. It shouldn’t be this much work keeping track of who’s betraying who.

The movie suffers, too, from a bit of Keira Knightley worship. All the major male players but Barbosa have a thing for her (or Elizabeth Swann, I should say) and it gets a bit tedious to watch every single male try to get in her pants. I mean, I get it, she’s hot and all, but enough’s enough. By the time Sao Feng makes a play on her, I’d had it.

AT WORLD’S END continues the trend of having Elizabeth step into the main spotlight, and while can handle the smaller bits, she’s not very convincing as a Pirate Lord, let alone Pirate King.

Problems aside, the bloatedness of AT WORLD’S END is nearly completely forgotten by me when we get to the final battle between the Black Pearl and the Flying Dutchman. If there is a greater ship vs. ship battle in cinematic history, I have not seen it. The two ships battle in the wind and rain as they circle an oceanic whirlpool. It’s phenomenally great work from the CGI folk and a rousing battle. I could watch just this final battle on a loop and be satisfied.

In the end, however, I keep coming back to the fact that Verbinski and Company coated everything here in darkness. It’s a blast to see Keith Richards show up to play Jack’s dad, but there’s not enough of these moments. AT WORLD’S END is still an enjoyable movie because I like hanging out with Barbosa, Jack, Will, and Elizabeth and because the action sequences are amazing. It is admirable to see a trilogy go out with all guns blazing (as it were).

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PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN Review Index

POTC: THE BLACK PEARL: You Best Start Believing in Ghost Stories, Miss Turner, You’re in One
POTC: DEAD MAN’S CHEST: I’m Afraid Currency is the Currency of the Real,
POTC: AT WORLD’S END: All Men are Drawn to the Sea, Perilous Though it May Be
POTC: ON STRANGER TIDES: Does This Face Look Like It’s Been to the Fountain of Youth?

PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S CHEST: I’m Afraid Currency is the Currency of the Realm

Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (2006) – Directed by Gore Verbinski – Starring Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom, Keira Knightley, Bill Nighy, Stellan Skarsgård, Naomie Harris, Jack Davenport, Kevin McNally, Tom Hollander, Lee Arenberg, Mackenzie Cook, Jonathan Pryce, and Geoffrey Rush.

I find that PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S CHEST ages very well. This is perhaps an odd thing to say about a film that hit the theaters only six years ago, but when it was initially released I found the film to be a bit disappointing. Perhaps in the wake of CURSE OF THE BLACK PEARL, nearly any sequel was bound to be disappointing, but now, without the immediate pressure of being a follow-up, I’ve come to really enjoy the film for what it offers instead of how it fails to match its predecessor.

Clocking in at 2 1/2 hours, DEAD MAN’S CHEST is a huge movie, and while I wouldn’t mind seeing much of the “Jack Sparrow as King of the Islanders” sequence cut way back, I’m not going to complain too vociferously about having an extra 15 or 20 minutes with a fantastic set of characters. If anything, I’d have cut those minutes in the theatrical cut and then inserted them for a director’s cut; I don’t mind if a Blu ray/DVD version of a film is a bit too long because, unlike in the theater, I can hit pause when I need to use the bathroom or get refills on my Coke Zero and popcorn.

DEAD MAN’S CHEST isn’t quite as good as BLACK PEARL but it’s still a really strong movie that increases the darkness and CGI-content, but also de-emphasizes Jack in order to allow the Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann (Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley) characters more room to grow. Johnny Depp takes Jack Sparrow a big step down Self Parody Lane, relying more on weird looks, exaggerated gestures, and mumbled dialogue than in bringing anything new to the table, but Keira Knightley’s deepening of Elizabeth comfortably steps into that void.

Where BLACK PEARL rarely felt like anything more than Jack’s movie, DEAD MAN’S CHEST feels like Will’s movie during the first half and then morphs into Elizabeth’s film for the latter portions of the film. Where BLACK PEARL felt like the two young lovers had been shoehorned into Jack’s story, DEAD MAN’S CHEST feels much more like Jack has been brought into their adventure.

The movie opens with Will and Elizabeth’s wedding day being ruined by the arrival of Lord Cutler Beckett (Tom Hollander), who has warrants for their arrest for associating with known pirate Jack Sparrow. Unlike the villains in the previous film, Beckett has no redeeming qualities, nor is he given any sense of being anything more than a cardboard villain. Hollander plays it well, but Beckett working as an operative for the East India Trading Company in order to get Will to steal Jack’s compass for him is without motivation beyond greed. It’s a simple part and maybe it’s just what the film needs to highlight the freedom of a pirate’s life versus the hypocrisy of government work, but after the last film’s willingness to complicate its characters, Beckett is a bit of a letdown. He’s devious, sure, but it’s a deviousness without complication.

Will agrees to go get Jack’s compass, but when he arrives at the Black Pearl, he finds it beached on an island and he has to save them from the islanders I mentioned above. There’s some fun scenes here with Will and the crew, but the whole Jack-as-God angle is pretty tired. Once reunited aboard the Pearl, they head to the Louisiana swamps where they visit Tia Dalma (Naomie Harris), a voodoo priestess who tells them about Davy Jones’ locker, the titular “dead man’s chest” that contains Jones’ heart.

Jones, it turns out, was desperately in love with a woman, so he cut his heart out, put it in a chest, and then buried in the sand on some island. For safety, he keeps the key to the chest on his person at all times.

Of course. Who hasn’t been there?

Jack tricks Will into venturing onto a shipwreck, which Jack knows will end with Will being taken aboard the Flying Dutchman. The Dutchman is the ghost ship captained by Davy Jones (Bill Nighy). Jones travels the oceans and signs dead or dying crewmen to 100 year contracts to serve aboard the Cutchman and over that 100 years the sailors slowly lose their humanity and become … well, walking fish. Jones looks like he’s got a green octopus for a face, but then has lobster or crab claws for hands. On board the Dutchman, Will is reunited with his father Bootstrap Bill Turner (Stellan Skarsgård), who’s got a starfish growing on his face.

Bill was part of the Black Pearl crew under Jack’s leadership, and when he refused to join in the mutiny, he was tied to a cannon and tossed overboard, where he would have died except for the whole curse thing. Unable to free himself, Bill spent years trapped on the bottom of the ocean, only escaping when Davy Jones came along and offered to free him in exchange for 100 years of servitude on board the Dutchman.

Will is pretty much a dick to his dad, who sacrifices himself during a game of liar’s dice (a game you can play on the Blu ray against Pintel) to save his son. Will is like, “You’re an idiot, dad, because I just wanted to know where Jones keeps his secret key.” Will steals the key with his dad’s help and escapes. Which is a great plan, until Jones sends the Kraken after the merchant ship that rescued him. So, yeah, Will, good going. You just got people killed. Nice one.

While all of this is going on, Elizabeth escapes from the prison cell Beckett placed her in with help from her dad. She travels to Tortuga and ends up running into Jack and the Will-less Pearl. Jack has made a deal with Jones that will release him of his debt in exchange for Jack delivering 100 souls to Jones, so Jack and Gibbs (Kevin McNally) are tricking drunken degenerates into signing up to crew the Pearl without telling them they’re all going to be sacrificed to Davy Jones and spend the next century crewing a ghost ship and turning into fish men.

In Tortuga, not only does Elizabeth find Jack, but also her ex-fiance, Commodore Norrington (Jack Davenport), who’s resigned his commission when he lost his ship and crew in a storm while pursing the Pearl. Norrington has become a washed-out drunk, living among the people he hates and generally wallowing in self-pity and filth. Davenport is once again completely fantastic in his role and his arc is one of the highlights of the film. Norrington signs on to crew for Jack, seeing it as some kind of ultimate self-punishment, which is made even worse when he finds himself once again in the company of an Elizabeth who’s trying to save the man she actually loves instead of the man with whom she was engaged.

Everything comes crashing together as the Pearl, the Dutchman, and Will run to recover Jones’ buried treasure chest. There’s a three-way sword fight between Will, Norrington, and Jack on the white sand of that island that has Elizabeth looking on in frustration and Pintel and Ragetti stealing the chest, then the crew of the Dutchman getting it and, well, lots of wacky action hijinks. Could this sequence be trimmed? Sure could. Am I disappointed it’s a bit bloated? Not at all. This is what I paid my money to see, so if we get a bit too much of a good thing, it’s not a big complaint.

I must say that I don’t think Keira Knightley has ever looked hotter on film than she does in DEAD MAN’S CHEST; not only is she stunningly gorgeous, but her character also drives the action in the latter stages of the film. She plays a huge role in the battle against the Kraken and it’s her seductive teasing of Jack that causes the pirate to forego his own escape in order to come back and help his crew. Critically, when she realizes that the Kraken isn’t after the crew of the Pearl but Jack, she kisses Jack in order to both fulfill her conflicted yearning for the pirate as well as distracting him so she can chain him to the mast and leave him as easy bait for the undersea monster.

“The Kraken’s after you, not us,” she tells him, then tells the escaping crew that Jack has volunteered to stay behind and sacrifice himself so they can get away.

It’s a horrible thing for Elizabeth to do, but it’s also a wonderful bit of characterization as DEAD MAN’S CHEST continues THE BLACK PEARL’s theme of people being a whole lot more complicated than they appear. Will sees her kiss Jack, but doesn’t realize what she’s done, so he ends the film feeling all down and rejected, while Elizabeth ends it all down and dejected for what’s she done. The crew ends up back at Dalma’s, where she tells them there’s a way to save Jack, thereby setting up AT WORLD’S END. The crew agrees, but as they’re without a captain, she introduces them to the man who will lead their quest – Captain Barbosa (Geoffrey Rush), now back from the dead and able to eat apples.

There’s a whole lot to love about DEAD MAN’S CHEST; Nighy’s Davy Jones is a fantastic villain, there’s plenty of character development with Will and Elizabeth, and plenty of fun with Jack and the Pearl crew. The Kraken sequences look amazing and the individual battle scenes are thrilling, as well.

I love, too, how Norrington achieves the biggest victory, as he’s the one who ends up with Davy Jones’ heart, which he brings to Beckett in the hopes of getting a new commission in the Royal Navy.

There’s also this: few directors shoot the natural world with more effectiveness than Gore Verbinski. DEAD MAN’S CHEST looks every bit as beautiful as Ms. Knightley as Verbinski’s camera drinks both of them in and revels in their beauty. Any director can set up a camera and shoot wide angle shots of deserts and mountains and valleys, but Verbinski has an incredible ability to put his camera and characters into perfect symmetry with their environment and show off the best of both. I don’t think Verbinski gets nearly enough credit, either, for being a fantastic director. DEAD MAN’S CHEST is 2 1/2 hours but it’s a brisk, fun 2 1/2 hours, impeccably and inventively shot and cut together.

PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S CHEST is a film that I appreciate more with each new viewing. It’s not as fun as CURSE OF THE BLACK PEARL but it’s a very good movie on its own and an incredibly fun watch.

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PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN Review Index

POTC: THE BLACK PEARL: You Best Start Believing in Ghost Stories, Miss Turner, You’re in One
POTC: DEAD MAN’S CHEST: I’m Afraid Currency is the Currency of the Real,
POTC: AT WORLD’S END: All Men are Drawn to the Sea, Perilous Though it May Be
POTC: ON STRANGER TIDES: Does This Face Look Like It’s Been to the Fountain of Youth?