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Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pirates of the Caribbean:
Dead Man's Chest
Directed by Gore Verbinski
Produced by Jerry Bruckheimer
Written by Characters:
Ted Elliott
Terry Rossio
Stuart Beattie
Jay Wolpert
Screenplay:
Ted Elliott
Terry Rossio
Starring Johnny Depp
Orlando Bloom
Keira Knightley
Bill Nighy
Stellan Skarsgård
Jack Davenport
Kevin McNally
Jonathan Pryce
Tom Hollander
Naomie Harris
Music by Hans Zimmer
Cinematography Dariusz Wolski
Editing by Stephen E. Rivkin
Craig Wood
Distributed by Walt Disney Company
Buena Vista Pictures
Release date(s) July 7, 2006
Running time 151 min.
Language English
Preceded by Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl
Followed by Pirates of the Caribbean: At Worlds End
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest is a 2006 pirate adventure film that follows the 2003 summer blockbuster Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl. The sequel is again directed by Gore Verbinski and produced by Jerry Bruckheimer.

Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley reprise their roles as Captain Jack Sparrow, Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann, respectively. Also returning are Jack Davenport as Commodore James Norrington and Jonathan Pryce as Governor Weatherby Swann. Joining the cast are Bill Nighy, who portrays the villainous Davy Jones and Stellan Skarsgård playing Will Turner's father, "Bootstrap Bill" Turner.

The film was released in Australia and the United Kingdom on July 6, 2006, and in the USA and Canada on July 7, 2006. The movie set several records in its first three days, with an opening weekend of $135,000,000. As of November 2006, the film has made about $423,000,000 in the U.S. and became the third film to reach the $1,000,000,000 worldwide mark. Pirates of the Caribbean: At Worlds End is set to follow on May 25, 2007.

Contents

[edit] Production

Information about the two sequels to Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl was presented at a Disney Investor Conference Studio Presentation in 2005. The title for the first sequel was revealed to be Dead Man's Chest, and a second sequel was promised for a May 2007 theatrical release.

Locations were in the Costa Alegre, in Jalisco (Mexico) and Barrouallie, St. Vincent. The sequel also includes location shooting in Dominica as well as The Bahamas. The filmmakers are largely shooting the two sequels back-to-back, à la The Matrix Trilogy, although throughout 2005 primary filming was for Dead Man's Chest, with only a handful of scenes for the third movie being shot. Because of the back-to-back setup, filming for Dead Man's Chest was not finished until February 7, 2006.[1]

Dead Man's Chest premiered at Disneyland in Anaheim, California on June 24, 2006, two days prior to the reopening day of the refurbished Pirates of the Caribbean attraction on which the movie series is based. The refurbished attraction includes an adjusted storyline and Audio Animatronics based on the movies and opened June 26, 2006. The same attraction at Walt Disney World in Florida also underwent refurbishment and reopened on July 6, 2006 in conjunction with the film's theatrical release.

[edit] Plot

Elizabeth Swann's (Keira Knightley) and Will Turner's (Orlando Bloom) wedding day is disrupted by Lord Cutler Beckett (Tom Hollander) of the East India Trading Company. Beckett threatens to execute them and former commodore James Norrington (Jack Davenport) for aiding Jack Sparrow's escape. Beckett wants Jack Sparrow and his compass, and Will agrees to search for both in exchange for clemency. Will finds the Black Pearl run aground on Pelegosto, a cannibal-inhabited island where Jack and his crew are captive. Jack hid there after being visited by "Bootstrap Bill" Turner, who is now enslaved on the Flying Dutchman. Bootstrap delivered the Black Spot, a mark that Jack’s debt to Davy Jones is due. Thirteen years before, Jones raised the sunken Black Pearl and made Jack captain. In exchange, Jack must now serve aboard the Dutchman for 100 years or face the Kraken.

Will, Jack and the crew escape Pelegosto, unexpectedly recruiting Pintel and Ragetti along the way, and head to sea. Jack has obtained a drawing of a key leading to untold riches, but his magical compass fails. Jack agrees to give Will the compass if he helps find the key. Seeking assistance from Tia Dalma (Naomie Harris), a voodoo priestess, Jack learns the compass will not work because he does not know what he truly wants. The key, Tia tells him, unlocks the Dead Man's Chest containing Davy Jones' heart. Whoever possesses the heart controls the oceans. Back at sea, Davy Jones finds Sparrow, who deviously attempts to barter Will in exchange for himself. But Jones demands 100 souls for Jack’s freedom and keeps Will as a "good faith payment."

Meanwhile, Governor Weatherby Swann frees Elizabeth. Confronting Beckett at gunpoint, she forces him to validate a Letter of Marque—a document intended to recruit Sparrow as a privateer, but which she wants for Will. Going to Tortuga to search for Will, she finds Jack and Gibbs in a pub enlisting sailors. A fallen James Norrington also joins the crew, although he first tries to shoot Sparrow whom he blames for ruining his life. Jack convinces Elizabeth she can find Will by finding the chest. Using Jack's compass, she gets a bearing. They set sail for Isla Cruces, unaware Davy Jones is also headed there. Once underway, tension arises between Jack and Elizabeth when each discovers the compass now points to the other. It is unclear if they desire one another or if each is seeking the other as a means to obtain what they truly want.

Jack Sparrow opens the Dead Man's Chest containing the heart of Davy Jones.
Enlarge
Jack Sparrow opens the Dead Man's Chest containing the heart of Davy Jones.

On Isla Cruces, Jack, Norrington and Elizabeth find the Dead Man's Chest. Will, who escaped the Dutchman with help from his father, Bootstrap Bill, arrives with the key. Will wants to stab the heart to kill Davy Jones so he can free his father, but a duel erupts between him, Jack, and Norrington, each claiming it for their own purpose. When they are interrupted by Dutchman sailors, Norrington escapes with the heart and the Letter of Marque. Jones’ crewmen retrieve the chest, unaware it is empty.

The Flying Dutchman pursues the Black Pearl, but with the wind behind them, they outrun her. Instead, Jones summons the Kraken. In a moment of cowardice, Jack abandons the ship in a long boat, but he returns in time to save the crew. He gives the order to abandon ship before the Kraken returns for a third attack. ‎Realizing the Kraken only wants Sparrow, a deceptive Elizabeth traps him on board. She then tells the others he chose to remain behind. Jack frees himself and charges the Kraken. But the colossal beast drags the "Pearl" and Jack to a watery grave. Davy Jones declares their debt settled, but he soon discovers the Dead Man's Chest is empty. Arriving in Port Royal, Norrington presents the heart and the Letter to Beckett in a bid to regain his career. Cutler Beckett now controls the seas.

The grieving crew seeks refuge with Tia Dalma. Consoling them, she asks if they would sail to World's End to bring Jack and the Black Pearl back. All agree, and she says they will need a captain who knows those waters. Incredibly, the formerly dead Captain Barbossa (Geoffrey Rush) descends the stairs, inquiring about the Black Pearl. After the credits, there is a brief sequence showing what happened to the dog that the cannibals chased away during the film, in which they appoint the dog as their new chief.

[edit] Cast

Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest teaser poster.
Enlarge
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest teaser poster.
Actor Role
Johnny Depp Captain Jack Sparrow
Orlando Bloom Will Turner
Keira Knightley Elizabeth Swann
Stellan Skarsgård "Bootstrap Bill" Turner
Bill Nighy Davy Jones
Jack Davenport James Norrington
Kevin McNally Joshamee Gibbs
Jonathan Pryce Governor Weatherby Swann
Tom Hollander Lord Cutler Beckett
Mackenzie Crook Ragetti
Lee Arenberg Pintel
Martin Klebba Marty
Naomie Harris Tia Dalma
David Bailie Cotton
Dermot Keaney Maccus
David Schofield Mercer
Alex Norton Captain Bellamy
Geoffrey Rush Captain Barbossa

[edit] Reaction

[edit] Critics

As of November 2006, the film has a 54% critic rating on Rotten Tomatoes,[2] the only consensus being that the film is overly long (2 hours, 31 minutes) and the plot difficult to follow. In contrast, as of September 2006 Dead Man's Chest currently holds a 7.3/10 user rating on the Internet Movie Database with 53,711 votes.[3] Early reviews for Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest were initially positive, but the days following the film's theatrical release revealed a virtual down-the-middle split between critics who thought it was a good piece of entertainment and those who believed otherwise. One critic, Michael Medved, gave the film two stars (out of four), calling the plot "sloppy, ...convoluted and insipid."[4] On the other hand, Michael Booth of the Denver Post awarded the movie three and a half stars, praising it as "two hours and 20 minutes of escapism that once again makes the movies safe for guilt-free fun."[5] While the action and CG sequences were said to be well done,[6][7] some critics felt that the plot was patchy, with the film relying on an overabundance of humor, special effects and action scenes.[8][7] Many critics have also felt that Bill Nighy (Davy Jones) stole the show. Entertainment Weekly infamously featured a cover story about the movie, only to have their reviewer give it a D+. When the film hit huge, the magazine was slammed with angry e-mails. Walt Disney Pictures has been questioned by the National Garifuna Council, a representative body of the Garifuna people, for what they feel is a racist portrayal of the Calinago, or Caribs, as cannibals in Dead Man's Chest. The Council called for what they considered to be a fair and accurate representation, and Disney responded that the script could not be altered. No known changes were made to the film.[9][10]

[edit] Box Office

Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest grossed $55.8 million on its opening day, setting records for the largest opening day, the largest single day gross, and the largest Friday gross of all time. The previous record was held by Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith with $50,013,859.[11]

The Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest opening weekend gross stands at $135,634,554 which beats the previous all time opening weekend set by Spider-Man with $114,844,116. Even taking into account the fact that ticket prices were higher for this movie than they were when Spider-Man debuted, Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest still sold about 200,000 more tickets than Spider-Man did. The film is also the fastest to gross $100,000,000, doing so in only two days, as well as the fastest to gross $200,000,000 and $300,000,000 achieving those milestones in eight and sixteen days, respectively. The film was the second fastest to reach $400 million (in 45 days); Shrek 2 (2004) did this 2 days earlier (in forty-three days). The film was the fastest to reach 1,000,000,000 dollars worldwide (63 days). Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest has set more than nineteen box office records.[12] Some of these records are below:

  • Highest Opening Weekend Gross: $135,634,554
  • Highest July Opening: $135,634,554
  • Highest Weekend Per Venue Average for a Wide Release: $32,818
  • Highest Opening Day Gross: $55,830,600
  • Highest Single Day Gross: $55,830,600
  • Highest Non-Holiday Monday Gross: $18,140,271
  • Highest Tuesday Gross: $15,731,919
  • Highest Friday Gross: $55,830,600
  • Highest Sunday Gross: $35,360,729
  • Highest 3-Day Gross: $135,634,554
  • Highest 6-Day Gross: $183,661,469
  • Highest Week Gross: $196,019,502
  • Highest 8-Day Gross: $214,975,000
  • Highest 9-Day Gross: $239,320,000
  • Highest 10-Day Gross: $258,205,000
  • Fastest to 100 Million: 2 days
  • Fastest to 200 Million: 8 days (beating Spider-Man 2 by a few million dollars)
  • Fastest to 300 Million: 16 days
  • Fastest to 1 Billion: 9 weeks
  • Most Weeks at #1 on the International Charts in the 00s (11 weeks)
  • Highest Grossing Film of 2006 (in the U.S.): $423,032,628
  • Highest Worldwide Grossing Film of 2006: $1,064,087,628

As of November 13, 2006, Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest has made an estimated $423,032,628 in the United States (far surpassing its predecessor) and about $1,064,087,628 worldwide, making it 2006's highest-grossing movie (in the United States and worldwide) and currently stands as being the 3rd highest grossing movie of all time worldwide and 6th highest grossing movie in the United States (or the 44th highest adjusted gross in the U.S.).[13]

[edit] Awards

2006 Teen Choice Awards

  • Winner, Choice Movie: Action Adventure
  • Winner, Choice Drama/Action Adventure Movie of the Summer
  • Winner, Choice Movie Actor: Drama/Action Adventure, Johnny Depp
  • Winner, Choice Scream, Keira Knightley
  • Winner, Choice Rumble, Will Turner vs. Commodore (Orlando Bloom & Jack Davenport)
  • Winner, Choice Hissy Fit, Keira Knightley
  • Winner, Choice Sleazebag, Bill Nighy
  • Nominee, Choice Movie Actress: Drama/Action Adventure, Keira Knightley
  • Nominee, Choice Movie Actor: Drama/Action Adventure, Orlando Bloom

Golden Trailer Awards

  • Nominee, Summer 2006 Blockbuster


64th Golden Globe Awards

  • Nominee, Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture: Comedy or Musical, Johnny Depp

[edit] Trivia

  • This is the first time Johnny Depp has portrayed the same character in more than one movie. Depp has said that he is willing to continue the role of Jack Sparrow beyond the current trilogy.[14]
  • For a dose of authenticity in the final twist at the end of the film, the actors were not told, prior to filming, that Geoffrey Rush would be appearing in the movie. They were told, before the scene was shot, that the person coming down the stairs would be Anamaria from The Curse of the Black Pearl; the looks of surprise on their faces as Rush descends are genuine.
  • Legendary rocker Keith Richards, Depp's personal friend and inspiration for his flamboyant pirate persona, had originally agreed to appear in a cameo role as Jack Sparrow's father, but had to pull out due to a commitment with the Rolling Stones concert tour.[15] He has now signed on to appear in a short cameo role in the third movie.[16]
  • For the film's release, the Walt Disney Company had the Pirates of the Caribbean rides in Walt Disney World and Disneyland redesigned to feature captain Jack Sparrow, Barbossa, and an appearance by the films' supernatural character Davy Jones as part of the attraction and reopened the day before the film's opening day.
  • The completely computer-generated[17][18][19] Davy Jones turned out to be so realistic that many reviewers mistakenly identified Nighy as wearing prosthetic makeup.[20][21][22][23][24]
  • This was also the first Disney film to use a new computer-generated Disney production logo before the film, but the old logo can still be seen in Brother Bear 2.[25]
  • Davy Jones' tentacle beard is comparable to the beard of Captain LeChuck from the Monkey Island series of videogames, specifically his wriggly, apparently living beard from Monkey Island 2: LeChuck's Revenge. Monkey Island creator Ron Gilbert has stated on his blog that "if I'd thought of the squid tentacles for a beard, I would have done that."[26]
  • During production, the "tank" set where many of the shipboard sequences are filmed was severely damaged by Hurricane Wilma.[citation needed]
  • According to the film's writers, Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio in the Dead Man's Chest DVD commentary, the captain that Mercer kills at the pier is named Hawkins. He is the father of Jim Hawkins, the lead character in Robert Lewis Stenvenson's Treasure Island. In the novel, Jim's father disappeared without a trace, and the writers decided to supply an explanation.

[edit] References to and similarities with the first film

There are various references throughout the movie to scenes and lines that were in the first film. These include, but are not limited to:

  • Governor Swann accidentally pulls a candlestick off the prison wall, mirroring Will pulling one off of the Governor's wall in the first film.
  • In the first film, when Elizabeth has just fallen off the cliff, Jack is having a conversation with the two soldiers, and is in the proccess of saying "and then they made me their chief", before he jumps in to save her. This becomes a reality in the second film with the Cannibals making Jack their chief.
  • When Lord Cutler Beckett says in the beginning, "Jack Sparrow", Will and Elizabeth correct him saying, "Captain", a reference to Jack's habitual response whenever someone forgot or deliberately omitted his rank.
  • Jack asks "Why is the rum always gone?" and advises people to keep the rum away from Elizabeth ("Hide the rum!") when he recognizes her as one of the new crew signed on in Tortuga. This mirrors a scene in the first film, in which Elizabeth destroyed a large cache of rum. Jack (who had particularly enjoyed the rum), had asked, "Why is the rum gone?" twice. (In Dead Man's Chest he answers his own question when he gets up, staggers slightly drunkenly, and says, "Oh, that's why...")
  • While Will was searching for Jack, one of the fellows reported that Jack could definitely be found in Singapore. In the first movie, when Jack saves Elizabeth by cutting open her corset, one of the soldiers remarked that he wouldn't have thought of that, and Jack responded "Clearly, you've never been to Singapore."
  • Another reference to rum is during an attempt to repel the Kraken; finding out there is no more gunpowder, Will gives the order to use the rum for the explosive device and the crew looked at each other in shock at this statement, but after a moment of hesitation, Gibbs orders that the rum be loaded, too, and walks away with a pained look on his face.
  • Captain Barbossa is portrayed eating an apple, which was the symbol of desire he felt in the previous film.
  • While Will is searching for Jack at Tortuga, he runs into Giselle and Scarlett. During their brief meeting Giselle slaps Will in the face as a message to be given to Jack; this is a nod to the first film when Jack and Will visit Tortuga where Scarlett and Giselle slap Jack in the face. Will's facial reaction to the slap is also similar to Jack's facial reaction in the first film. "Not sure I deserved that!"
  • When Will gets to the cannibal Island he swims to the shore and looks back at the French sailor who took him to the island. It is exactly similar to the shot when Jack and Elizabeth are marooned on an island the second time in the previous film.
  • Will's comment about getting to the island using a pair of sea turtles strapped to his feet echoes the story Gibbs told Will to explain how Jack escaped from the island he was marooned on prior to the events of the first film. Jack comments in response, "Not so easy, is it?"
  • Just before the crew of the Black Pearl is to leave the island that the Dead Man's Chest is buried on, Jack hits Will over the head with an oar. Will did this to Jack in the first film.
  • While Jack, Will, & Norrington are swordfighting, Elizabeth tries to break it up by pretending to faint from the heat to get them to save her. This references two scenes from first film: one where she faints (due to her corset) and falls from the fort, and one where she pretends to faint in order to distract Norrington and her father as Will saves Jack from being executed.
  • While in the prison corridor at Port Royal, Governor Swann asks "Now where is that dog with the keys?". This is a reference to the dog being the guardian of the prison keys in the first movie. Prisoners often tempted the dog with a bone in an attempt to get the keys.
  • Another reference to the dog is made when the prisoners are seen calling to Elizabeth in the same manner that they called to the dog.
  • When escaping from the cannibals and climbing aboard the Black Pearl, Jack says, "Alas, my children! This is the day you shall always remember as the day that you almost... ['caught' is inaudible because he gets splashed in the face by a wave] ... Captain Jack Sparrow." Jack says the same line at the beginning of the first film when he escapes after briefly holding Elizabeth hostage. He also says it at the end of the film before he falls off a ledge.
  • When Jack and Will swordfight in the first movie, Jack asks Will, "You're not a eunuch are you?" He also tells Barbossa that Will's a eunuch after the Interceptor explodes. In the second film, when the cannibals bring Will to Jack, Jack describes Will as "Eunuchy snip-snip" while making a cutting motion with his fingers. In the special deleted scenes disk for the first movie, Pintel states, "I used to date a eunuch." Jack also describes Will as having a "lovely singing voice" in the first film (in relation to the eunuch joke). In the second film Jack calls Will a "terrific soprano."
  • In both films, we see Jack Sparrow using a rather unorthodox method of transportation in his first scene. In the first film he stands atop the mast of a sinking dinghy. In the second, he uses a coffin and a skeletal leg as a paddle.
  • Pintel says "Ello Poppet" to Elizabeth as he did in the first film.
  • At the end of the first film Jack tells Norrington he was rooting for him. In the second film Jack says he's still rooting for him.
  • In the first scene of The Curse of the Black Pearl, Mr. Gibbs makes Elizabeth stop singing about pirates because it's bad luck, he says. In Gibbs' first scene in Dead Man's Chest, Gibbs is singing a pirate song himself (although this is mainly because he is now a pirate himself).
  • In one scene of the movie, Ragetti and Pintel are seen on a boat, rowing away. Then a dog appears with a set of keys. This implies they used the whistle and bone trick to attract the dog and retrieve the keys, the hopeful end result in the ride.
  • When Jack takes Elizabeth hostage in Curse of the Black Pearl, he remarks, "I knew you'd warm up to me." When Norrington attempts to stop Will from stabbing Davy Jones' heart in Dead Man's Chest, Jack begins to say the same line before Norrington turns on him as well.
  • After being knocked out by the oar swung by Jack, Will recovers on the Black Pearl while Elizabeth watches over him, recalling how they met in the first film.
  • Both films feature a swordfight that ends up being fought on strange objects. In Curse it was a flat-bed cart, and in this film it is a giant wheel.
  • Jack gives Barbossa's monkey to Tia Dalma, calling it an "undead" monkey. In a scene after the credits of the first movie, the monkey was seen stealing one of the pieces of cursed Aztec gold, thus becoming undead again.
  • In the first movie, Barbossa looks at a ship through a telescope and Jack jumps right in front of him. In the second movie, Jack is looking at a ship through a telescope and Davy Jones appears right in front of him.
  • In the first movie, Jack and Will find Gibbs lying unconscious in a sty. Norrington ends up in the same position after the bar fight and being knocked unconscious by Elizabeth.
  • After the kraken destroys the boat Will escapes to, he is seen climbing onto a plank of wood, recalling the way he was found as a child in the first movie
  • The shot of the East India Trading Company's flag at the beginning of Dead Man's Chest mirrors the shot of the Black Pearl's Jolly Roger at the beginning of Curse of the Black Pearl.
  • During the scene in which Lord Cutler Beckett is talking to Will, he pulls out a metal branding iron with a P at the end, inferring that the East India Company brands captured pirates. Jack Sparrow has such as brand on his forearm, as shown in the first film.
  • In Dead Man’s Chest, when Elizabeth escapes the henchman Mercer and goes to Beckett to validate the Letters of Marque at gunpoint, she says "I’m here to negotiate..." - Beckett cuts her off ("I'm listening") and she pulls a pistol ("I'm listening intently.") This is a callback to a line in The Curse of the Black Pearl, when Pintel and Regetti take her to the Black Pearl, she says to Captain Barbossa, "I’m here to negotiate [the cessation of hostilities against Port Royal.]"

[edit] DVD & iTunes release

The 2-disc Special Edition DVD.
Enlarge
The 2-disc Special Edition DVD.

The film became available on DVD on December 5, 2006 for Region 1, and has sold more than five million copies on its first day alone. The versions for Regions 2 and 4 had already been released on November 15 and November 20, 2006, respectively [27]. Most of the Region 3 two-disc collector's edition disc have been wrongly labelled. The 2-disc special edition boasts almost four hours of additional features, including:

  • Captain Jack: From Head to Toe – Secrets & Legends Revealed by Johnny Depp and Others
  • Meet Davy Jones: Discover the Creation, Mystery & Mythology of the Sea’s Ghostly Ruler
  • Bloopers of the Caribbean
  • Mastering the Blade – Sword Fighting With the Film’s Stars
  • Audio Commentary: Screenwriters Ted Elliott & Terry Rossio
  • “Charting the Return” – A Preproduction Diary
  • “According to Plan” – Journal of Filming the Movie
  • “Fly on the Set” Featurette: The Bone Cage
  • Creating The Kraken
  • Dead Men Tell New Tales: Re-Imagineering the Attraction
  • Pirates on Main Street: The World Premiere
  • A Producer's Photo Diary With Jerry Bruckheimer

The DVD also included Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound, French and Spanish language tracks, French and Spanish subtitles, as well as a widescreen (2.35:1) presentation of the film.[28] The region 2 release also includes a DTS soundtrack.

As an alternative to the DVD release, Dead Man's Chest was also made available as a download from the iTunes Store.

[edit] See also

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:

[edit] References

  1. ^ Ted Elliott. MOVIES Message Board - ARCHIVE 7. Wordplay Forums. Retrieved on 2006-07-09.
  2. ^ Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest (2006). Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved on 2006-09-04.
  3. ^ Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest (2006). Internet Movie Database. Retrieved on 2006-09-04.
  4. ^ Michael Medved's Eye On Entertainment (PDF). Retrieved on 2006-07-11.
  5. ^ Aye, mates: "Pirates" sequel is worth the doubloons. Retrieved on 2006-07-23.
  6. ^ Harry Knowles. "Harry loves PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN'S CHEST", Ain't It Cool News, 2006-06-29.
  7. ^ a b Peter Travers. Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest. Rolling Stone. Retrieved on 2006-07-09.
  8. ^ Steven Rose. "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest", The Guardian, June 30, 2006.
  9. ^ "Film row over Pirates 'cannibals'", BBC, February 14, 2005.
  10. ^ Michael Polonio. Letter from Michael Polonio to Walt Disney Company-Must Read. Seine Bight. Retrieved on 2006-07-09.
  11. ^ All Time Box Office>Single Day Records. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved on 2006-07-10.
  12. ^ Records. patesta at IMDb.
  13. ^ Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest (2006). Box Office Mojo.
  14. ^ Depp on More Pirates. FilmForce. IGN. Retrieved on 2006-07-11.
  15. ^ Trivia for Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest. Internet Movie Database. amazon. Retrieved on 2006-07-09.
  16. ^ Jeff Otto. Keith Richards Aboard Pirates 3. FilmForce. IGN. Retrieved on 2006-07-09.
  17. ^ An interview with Director Gore Verbinski. Post Magazine.
  18. ^ Various quotations and references. Never Been Typed. Retrieved on 2006-07-09.
  19. ^ An interview with Bill Nighy. ComingSoon.net. Retrieved on 2006-07-09.
  20. ^ Review by Rich Cline. Real Movie News. Retrieved on 2006-07-09.
  21. ^ Review by Russ Breimeier. ChristianityToday.com. Retrieved on 2006-07-09.
  22. ^ A review by Iloz Zoc. BlogCritics.org. Retrieved on 2006-07-09.
  23. ^ A review by Ryan Gilbey. NewStatesman.com.
  24. ^ A review by Anthony Quinn. BelfastTelegraph.co.uk.
  25. ^ The New Disney Logo on YouTube. YouTube. Retrieved on 2006-07-28.
  26. ^ http://grumpygamer.com/8123463
  27. ^ Amazon.co.uk: Pirates Of The Caribbean - Dead Man's Chest. Retrieved on 2006-11-04.
  28. ^ http://adisney.go.com/disneyvideos/liveaction/pirates2/main.html

[edit] External links

Walt Disney's Pirates of the Caribbean
Films Curse of the Black PearlDead Man's ChestAt Worlds End
Music Yo Ho (A Pirate's Life for Me)Pirates of the Caribbean soundtrackCurse of the Black Pearl soundtrackDead Man's Chest soundtrackPirates Remixed
Video games Pirates of the CaribbeanThe Legend of Jack SparrowDead Man's ChestPirates of the Caribbean OnlinePirates of the Caribbean Multiplayer Mobile
Locations Port RoyalIsla de MuertaTortugaPelegostoIsla Cruces
Primary characters Captain Jack SparrowWill TurnerElizabeth SwannHector BarbossaDavy JonesJames Norrington"Bootstrap Bill" Turner
Other characters
and creatures
Captain Grant SparrowWeatherby SwannJoshamee GibbsAnamariaPintel and RagettiCutler BeckettTia DalmaJack the monkeyKrakenMinor characters
Ships The Black PearlThe Flying DutchmanThe DauntlessThe InterceptorThe Empress
Other Theme park attractionTimeline of filmsEast India Trading Company
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The Voice in the Desert
https://www.thevoiceinthedesert.org

Confessione d'un amore fascista
https://www.amorefascista.it

Malinverno
https://www.malinverno.org

Debito formativo
https://www.debitoformativo.it

Adina Spire
https://www.adinaspire.com