Fun fact: Kiera Knightly was 17 during filming so they needed parental consent *_and presence_* during her kiss with Orlando Bloom. So during that scene, her parents are sitting just offscreen _watching_
The commodore was actually a pretty good guy throughout the series. He wasn't unfair and was simply doing his job. He let Elizabeth go instead of forcing her into a loveless relationship. He was a solid Royal Navy officer simply enforcing the law in a pretty lawless area of the world.
@Republic of Texas Yeah, the pirates in the series are the fictional romantic versions of pirates. There are subtle nods toward historical pirates, like naming the historical pirates Henry Morgan and Bartholomew Roberts (for formulating the rules of parley). I always find it funny that the Black Pearl is a full on man-o-war sized ship rather than the smaller, more maneuverable sloops that had shallow drafts and could hug the coast and reefs to evade or wait in ambush. Plus bigger ships require more crew and pirate crews (while democratic) weren't the most disciplined when it came to staying on a ship for long.
@@NA1c158 yes, but he also realized his error and sacrificed himself in part 3. He's the most real human in the series. He wants to do right, but is swayed by temptation until he sees the cost.
@@NA1c158 Historically speaking, as an officer of the Royal Navy, the Commodore was duty bound to aid and assist the East India Company. As far as London was concerned, the East India Company was the economic arm of overseas imports and goods and money needed to be protected by both the heavily armed cargo ships of the East India Company and the Royal Navy. The Commodore was probably also swayed by his desire to make his corner of the seas safe for commerce and travel. It wasn't until he realized how unethical Beckett was willing to be (in the name of profit instead of lawfulness), that the Commodore realized he was doing more harm than good.
First one is OK as a just one movie. Not much loose ends. But if you watch second you need to see also third. Fourth is a miss but fifth again ties some loose ends nicely.
The Pirates trilogy fits into that category of trilogy that wasn't initially conceived as a trilogy, but the first film was so successful they figured out a way to turn it into one. The giveaway is that unlike a trilogy like LoTR which is one of only a few true trilogies, the first film is basically a stand-alone film with a complete story. Sometimes these trilogies work, sometimes they fall flat, but the first three Pirate films are fun, with some original ideas and a satisfying wrap up.
@@NelsonStJames Lord of the rings is one movie cut in three parts. Hobbit is also one too long movie cut in three. In Trilogy all movies should be able to function as individual movies like dollar trilogy.
I think my favorite line from this whole film, is when Jack is on the gallows, and they're reading out his looooong list of crimes. You hear the guy say something like 'Impersonating a member of church" and Jack's expression is one of genuine confusion at hearing that. Then the memory dawns on him and he smiles and says "hehehe....awh yeaah" I just found that so good. That he's done so many things he just honestly forgot like half of them, and was surprised by some of the things he did "in his youth" 🤣
@@RayHardman7567 No clue...is that something referenced in one of the later films? I stopped watching after the 3rd one. I assumed it was probably just raiding some cloister for gold or something.
@@RayHardman7567 Well seeing as they didn't plan 4 movies ahead when they wrote that line, I'm guessing it was originally meant to just be a random crime he did of no real consequence other than the bit about it being him dressed up as a cleric of the church. I personally always pictured it as him raiding a nunnery and helping a lot of those ladies break their vow of chastity, probably while getting really drunk and then stealing their gold. That's my canon anyway.
This movie has no business being as dense and well thought out as it is. Best live-action Disney movie, hands down. You can watch it 20 times and still pick up things that you didn't before.
34:06 This moment is actually genius and shows Jack's. Jack would have been able to realize that Elizabeth tripped and fell from that very spot, so instead of diving, his best chance of not hitting rocks would be to fall just like she did.
Actress Keira Knightley, said in an interview, that Jack Sparrow was written as a straight or non-comedic character. She said that everything about him was all Johnny Depp's doing, even director Gore Verbinski was stunned most days.
"'Ello Poppet!" "... but you _have_ heard of me." "I am disinclined to acquiesce to your request. ... it means 'no'." Great quotes. Eminently quotable.
My favourite moment is when Elizabeth burns all the rum and jack takes his gun out and almost shots her for it with the bullet he saved for a fucking decade🤣
Barbossa’s dialogue is written so well. Actually, if you’re going to do the first 3 of these, Davy Jones also has some amazingly delivered, and we’ll written, lines.
There is a UA-camr, Jill Bearup, who does a breakdown of the fight between Jack Sparrow and Will Turner that explains just how close to perfect that fight scene is choreographed - I highly recommend it. Also, the perfection of Jack's intro scene in describing the kind of person he is, is a masterclass in how to show rather than tell in cinema.
@@Jzombi301 Casually transphobic in the 2nd-Wave dreg way very common in England. Not saying it isn't a problem in America or elsewhere, but she does fall right into the mode that the UK is lately all too known for.
The sword fighting in this movie was choreographed by Bob Anderson. Bob Anderson was the stunt performer in the Darth Vader suit during the lightsaber duel in The Empire Strikes Back, he did the fight choreography for the Errol Flynn Adventures of Robin Hood, he did the Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Zorro, he did the Antonio Banderas Zorro, he did The Lord of the Rings; the dude was a legend. He was also a member of the English Olympic Fencing team.
Geoffrey Rush was so great. My favorite tidbit was hearing how excited he was playing the part, and would call up the director on off days with thoughts and questions about Barbosa's character. His passion really paid off.
One of the most horrifying thoughts I had several years ago is realizing why the cursed pirates were hoping they could spare Elizabeth, but weren't willing to even try to spare Will. If you remember, they had talked earlier about the things they were no longer able to enjoy....
Yeah, when Natalie said that (if Jack wasn't there) Will could have broken their curse and "all would be good", she wasn't thinking about Elizabeth still being a prisoner of pirates, with their human desires reawakened.
Pirates is one of those "perfect" movies where every element of the film (the actors, the costumes, the visual effects, the action, the stunt work, the plot, the pacing, the editing, the music, the sound work, the actual cinematography) worked absolutely flawlessly together to make the best possible version of itself. The sequels chased that dragon ever since.
The reason Jack is "The worst pirate anyone had heard of" was because Jack Sparrow had worked for as part of the East Indian Trading Company. Yet, he was fired when he refused orders to transport slaves for the company. For his insubordination, Jack was branded as a pirate. Jack made it clear that he would rather be a pirate than have ended up like superiors, so he never got the moniker of pirate by doing pirate things, making him not a very good pirate.
He didn't just refuse orders, he took them like he was going to transport them then freed them, hence the line "I contracted you to transport cargo on my behalf, you chose to liberate it."
The East India Trading Company purchased those slaves fair and square from African slave traders on the coasts of Africa. From African Kingdoms and Empires built on the back of the international African slave trade. Liberating "cargo" is a legitimate act of piracy. Captain Jack's 100% legit, not just "technically" a pirate.
This movie had one of my all time favorite dvd commentary's with Kiera Knightly and Commodore Norrington's actor doing it. They had sooooo much fun talking about the movie and their experiences filming it. it was a riot, so hilarious. I remember he spent so much time learning fencing and sword fighting while Kiera, Orlando, and Depp were just riding the Disney ride over and over and having a blast in the park. I really feel Norrington got a poor treatment by the later movies as the chemistry he and Kiera had in the commentary and their dynamic was so fun. I always thought it would've been a better send off if he did become part of the Dutchman's crew and then ended up being first mate to Will. Him paying for his betrayal by serving on the crew and aiding Will do his duties so he can always go back to Elizabeth, so Norrington in his own way still cares for Elizabeth even though it's not romantic. Also being a navy man I'd imagine he'd like such a long life at sea, not to mention ferrying the souls of the dead. As a navy man who knows how many the sea claims he'd seem quite invested in making sure sailors got taken care of.
The one reboot I think could be interesting - there was a 60s(?) Disney movie called Blackbeard's Ghost, where the ghost of an infamous pirate is cursed until he can find redemption. Geoffrey Rush's Barbossa would be great in a film like that and the modern FX could make it a lot of fun
If I remember correctly, I think one of the main reasons why Geoffrey Rush even agreed to doing the movie is because he loved the idea of being a pirate. So much so, there are moments in the franchise where you can really tell he was having a ton of fun playing Barbossa.
These films are genuinely, unironically fantastic and I'd love you to finish the initial trilogy with Dead Man's Chest and At World's End reactions (followed by deleted scenes in your own time because there's some really major backstory cut from them).
Dude this movie holds up so well. The special effects somehow still look great, the characters are all so good. It really is a classic adventure movie.
I'll second this. The first 3 movies were a masterpiece. The second film was ok, but the third is a must see. As for the others that followed, in my opinion, were pretty much throw away, milk the franchise, filler.
Rush's Barbossa is a callback to the pirates of previous decades, the one true Pirate Movie" pirate in the film. Johnny's choices were fantastic and untouchable. Yeah, the CGI still holds up, though I agree it might look even slightly better now. But the CGI in the next one is even more realistic than today's CGI and it can't be touched. I saw it in the theaters and, as someone who sews costumes, I would have SWORN that Davy Jones's outfit was practical and only his hands and face were CG.
Actually, the difference between Jack and Barbossa is showing the difference between a classic Hollywood pirate and the historical reality, respectively. Jack is the classic rogue with a heart of gold, while Barbossa shoots one of his own men to see if the curse was lifted!
@@jackabalas A truly legendary pirate, the Queen of the Pirates herself, but sadly she operated a century before the other big names. If anything she was too soon, active before the "golden age of piracy"
This trilogy as a whole really is under-rated - the writing is tight, the acting superb and the music is fantastic. Set design, cinematography, costumes - check, check, check. The second and third are even substantially better than the first, building on the mythology and expanding the story in natural, organic ways with an incredibly satisfying (is somewhat bittersweet) conclusion. It's a shame the follow-up films were so lackluster but the trilogy stands tall and ages very well.
Substantially better 😂😂😂. Dead wrong lmao. The first movie is a masterpiece. 2 and 3 are good, but absolutely not better. They do both have some flaws.
@@jabbadac I think "not as good" is a fair assessment of 2, but I think that's pretty generous for 3. At World's End is just flat out bad, in my opinion.
Over time 2 has become my favorite (I’m a sucker for Davy Jones). 2 and 3 both suffer from a few scenes that go on way to long, and take up way too much time, but they are still both excellent movies. The first one is nearly flawless.
The first one is the only one that is legitimately superb. The second is pretty good and the third is alright. How bad the next two are make the second and third look a lot better in comparison, though.
Jack most likely walks funny because he's spent so much time on the swaying ocean that when on land it probably feels like walking after spinning in a rotating chair
Actually, corsets weren't painful. The misconception arose, as far as I'm aware, from the fact that modern films and shows don't get their wardrobe right and actresses are wearing them without the padding that would have historically been worn underneath. TL;DR: If a corset's actually painful, you're wearing it wrong.
According to historians, a lot of the trope about Victorian women (and earlier) getting "the vapors" and swooning was due to tightly worn corsets that inhibited their breathing (but kept the waistline narrow). So there is historical precedent of corsets causing the problem shown in the movie.
From my understanding it was more like the majority of corsets weren't overly painful. Most were there to support the weight of heavy fabrics on the hips/ be bras/ act as back supports and at various time periods were worn by most women (and even some men) as they performed manual labour. However there were times when incredibly tight corsetry was popular amongst the aristocracy as high fashion. These corsets obvs. looked a certain way and have become a theatre/hollywood staple accordingly.
It's largely from the feminist movement of the 70s playing off the fact that bras came about in the 1910s when the "wasp-waist" and tightlacing were going out of fashion.
I will never forget this movie experience back in the day. The theatre was packed to the last seat and the reception to the movie was a riot. I must have missed near half of the dialogue because of the noise of everybody laughing their asses off. It was the hayday of blockbuster movies. It was though to get a ticket but the experience was something else. The theatres today feel abandoned by comparison.
This movie is the perfect popcorn movie honestly. It's endlessly quotable, pretty solid CGI and full of setups and payoffs. A brilliant score and villain, and the next two films somehow each improve on the score and villain that came before.
Corsets are only painful if worn incorrectly, which Elizabeth wouldn't have known because its new fashion for her. I hear corsets are very comfortable when worn properly, especially in the boobage area
Depp is said to have based the character of Jack Sparrow on Keith Richards. Disney wasn't happy: "They just couldn't stand him. Michael Eisner, the head of Disney at the time, was quoted as saying, 'He's ruining the movie.' Upper-echelon Disney-ites [were] going, 'What's wrong with him? Is he, you know, like some kind of weird simpleton? Is he drunk? Is he gay?'" They were were much more understanding once the movie released.
"Depp is said to have based the character of Jack Sparrow on Keith Richards" - No pal, it isn't "said" to be, it IS, Depp definitely did, it's why Keith Richards literally played his FATHER in the later movie.
@@christopherbacon1077 - 2003 movie execs would have a lot more problem with Jack Sparrow being gay than 2022 movie execs. Not even on religious or "moral" grounds, but on the grounds of limiting money making potential, because most movie execs have historically been as mercenary as hell for money
I'm glad that you acknowledged Geoffrey Rush's portrayal. Yes, Depp's Jack Sparrow is iconic, but Barbossa is his best adversary, and you do feel a little sympathy for him -- he didn't get to eat his apple at the end 😢
It wasn't in the reaction but I love the frienemy dynamic between Will and Jack, especially at the end when Will saves Jack and before leaving Jack compliments his hat and Will has this little cute smile it's lovely
As a half Trinidadian British person, every single person I know who’s of “Caribbean” descent says carra-be-an not cuh-rib-e-an. The latter is something I’ve only heard from Americans. Besides I don’t know anyone who actually refers to themselves or the islands as Caribbean, they all say West Indian or West Indies. Caribbean tends to be reserved for food. That’s just my experience with friends and family. The only island I’ve been to is Trini too. So it’s a small sample size, but I’ve genuinely never heard anyone but non-West Indians say Caribbean.
The fact Hans Zimmer reused the music for the initial battle scene that he wrote for Gladiator as the main theme for Pirates, gives Gladiator a really weird energy when you go back and rewatch it.
I feel like not enough people talk about Jack at the end of the movie. Like he knew exactly what he was doing. Deliberately going to the same exact spot Elizabeth fell, falling off in a similar way trying to mimic most of how it was done because he KNEW someone could survive that fall in the way she did.
It depends on the context. I always say "Pirates of the Care-uh-bee-un" when talking about the ride, the movies, or the region... but when I'm talking about a specific thing I say "Cuh-rib-eean" ...food, island, drums, cruise
The change between "the ca-RI-bbean" and "pirates of the carri-BE-an" has to do with something in linguistics called stress lapse. Basically you want syllables in a phrase to have alternating stress. Saying "pirates of the carri-BE-an" is more "bouncy", you could say -- it employs a more natural alternation of strong-weak syllables.
The second and third one are absolutely worthy of including. They keep the brilliant magic of the first one, and build on the world in incredible ways. The fourth and fifth one I haven't seen, and haven't heard much good about.
I love watching pirates of the Caribbean and honestly johnny Depp is what made this franchise possible. Plus you're laughing more crazy then a squirrel in a nut factory. The special effects at the time are amazing even in today's standards number 2 and 3 are the prime of the series. Ironically my university work I'm doing now is on corsets and this era is one of the three I've chosen to look at.
@@BonzoDrummer yeah, it goes first, second, third in order of quality and then not worth discussing after that. Davy Jones as a character is what keeps me coming back to the second one. The current D&D character I’m playing is somewhat based on him. Much less powerful of course haha
@@BonzoDrummer ill admit it feels a little dragged on in some points but it has those moments in my opinion. The final battle itself was just awesome and I keep reaching the scene.
I remember playing these songs in band soo much from first playing it and it sounding so rough to when we performed and it being so good. Gave me chills every time and now when I hear it it keeps giving me that feeling.
This movie is SO FUN! So many great and creative action set pieces. The performances from the whole cast elevates this movie even more. I'm glad Natalie enjoyed this as much as I do when I rewatch it.
the most unbelievable part of this movie is how will and jack managed to pull down the small canoe to the bottom to get air, that is some strength right there lol
The Skelton transformation threw a monkey wrench for those working on Lord of the Rings. For Return of the King, they thought of doing something identical to it for the Army of the Dead until Pirates came out. They had to rework it and find a different solution
Nat, I’ve been watching your videos for about a year now and this is (by far), the most fun I can remember you ever having. It made the video so enjoyable to see you enjoying yourself. I hope you do the next 2 movies at least. “Drink up me harties, yo ho!”😁
In the film, Will and Elizabeth are 20 (around 12 in the opening), Jack is somewhere in his 20s/30s, Norrington is 28 (20 in the opening) and who knows how old the dog is.
I read somewhere that Gore Vorbinski (The director of Pirates) was one of the names in mind to direct the star wars sequels. It's such a shame that we never got the fun adventure that they could of been.
Eyyy this is gonna be fun! Glad you’re reacting to this one! Though I love this movie, I have to say: It’s just a shame that Master And Commander: The Far Side Of The World had to come out the same year, just a few months later. It’s an extremely underappreciated masterpiece! I don’t think enough people went to see it because both movies feature sailing ships. If you could please react to Master And Commander: The Far Side Of The World sometime, I’d love to hear your thoughts on it. Thanks and enjoy!
That is a terrific movie, but I feel it doesn't get all the love because people enjoy this version of pirates compared to a more realistic approach when it comes to sailing and fights at sea. Paul Bettany was so damn good in that movie. So good.
@@Do0msday you nailed it. More people need to give M&C a chance. If the supposed “prequel in the works” rumors are to be believed…they just might get their chance…
Trivia time! "Pirate speak" is just an English West Country accent. In the Disney film adaptation of "Treasure Island", Robert Newton played Long John Silver and decided to use his native accent. And now all pirates talk like they're from Dorchester. :D
Such a great movie. I feel compelled to call it out on one thing though. The corset thing. It’s done for laughs I know, but I blame this movie and Titanic for starting the wildly inaccurate depictions of corsets in modern films. I’m not the worlds leading expert, but I do have a history background and a keen interest in historical dress. A. In this time period she wouldn’t even be wearing what most people think of as a corset. That came later in the Victorian era. She would be wearing stays. They are similar, but not the same thing. B. Yes waist training and tight-lacing were real things, but they were practiced by a small group of women trying to achieve an extreme. C. Stays were sort of for silhouette, but they were mostly just to hold your boobs in place. D. If a women then or now can’t breath in stays or a corset, or is otherwise woefully uncomfortable… it hasn’t been fitted correctly and/or she’s wearing it wrong.
Well, the fun part is that she _is_ wearing it wrong in Pirates - which is _why_ she passes out. As her father pointed out, he's been _told_ it's the latest fashion in London; and none of their servants are familiar with the "device," either. Of course they put it on wrong and pulled it too tight.
I think this myth is perpetuated a lot by actresses. Actresses in Hollywood are put in ill-fitted costumes that aren’t made properly and don’t have them worn in before they make the actresses wear them all day and sometimes on bare skin so you have these big name actresses saying they are torture devices and the antithesis of feminism and people don’t question it
Glad to see you really enjoy this movie. For me this will always be my favorite of all of the Pirate movies. I enjoyed the others but there was something special about this one that has never been replicated successfully.
Such a great series. The original 3 are untouchable as modern masterpieces of the action adventure genre. I seriously hope you watch the other 2 in the future.
An absolutely legendary film. The beginning of one of my favorite trilogies ever! They really don't make movies like these anymore. Such a unique feel and energy, and gosh, Johnny Depp nailed it but also the music. THAT. SCORE. IS. UNMATCHED. Keep being awesome Nat! 🙌🏻😊 EDIT: that stay golden sign looks awesome, love it!
@@jmsmys13ify 2 and 3 are great imo, I think they're pretty underrated and have a lot of good qualities. 4 and 5 is where the greatness is really not there anymore.
Typical b.s sound effects. Evertime somebody pulls out a sword. And it's obvious they were trained by some idiot fencing wimp. Pirates used cutlasses which were held with both hands, and these morons use one hand as if they were using rapiers.
Good call on not doing this during the trial. You're a class act. Pirate of the Carribean gets better every time I watch it, and I thought so highly of it when it came out I took everybody I knew to go see it even though nobody wanted to go see a film "based on a ride at Disneyland". This movie is a throwback to the type of filmmaking where the screenwriters actually took the task of writing a cohesive adventure film seriously. The story makes sense and is internally consistent. All the characters are well defined. And I don't care what anybody says Johnny Depp should have easily taken home a best supporting actor's oscar for Jack Sparrow, a character with one of the most iconic introductions in cinema.
Before Johnny Depp was cast as Jack Sparrow, Harrison Ford, Jim Carrey, Michael Keaton, Robin Williams, Christopher Walken, Matthew McConaughey, and Robert DeNiro were almost cast. Tobey McGuire, Christopher Masterson, Christian Bale and Ben Peyton were considered for Will Turner. Amanda Bynes, Jamie Alexander and Jessica Alba were considered for Elizabeth. Steven Spielberg was almost picked to direct the film but was too busy working on Minority Report and Catch Me If You Can, both released in 2002.
Lol are you serious? Now I’m having this absurd mental image of these guys auditioning going “I’m captain Jack sparrow, savvy?” in their stereotypical impressionist style. Ford would be cynical and 100% done with everything, Keaton would just be Batman from 1989 again, Carey and Williams would be off the wall, Walken would just be…wAlken, etc.
I've always liked the bit of trivia about how when showing the higher-ups dailies of Johnny Depp's performance, they demanded that he change it and that pirates don't act or talk like that. That nobody watching the movie would like it. Johnny essentially responded that it was an acting choice he was consciously making, that he was going to keep doing it, and if they didn't like it that they could fire him. And fast forward to now and he's created the most iconic movie pirate in the history of movie pirates.
The ship that plays the Interceptor (Lady Washington) occasionally tours the west coast (OR, WA, CA) and does dockside tours for donations or sailing tours for a ticket price. You know, just in case anyone needed a fun date idea
Hope you also react to Pirates 2 and 3. The first 3 Pirates movies tell one big overarching story with a beginning, middle and end. Pirates 4 and 5 are standalone stories starring Jack Sparrow and they're nowhere as good as the OG trilogy, imo.
I don't see it mentioned anywhere in the comments yet, but a fun little note about Sparrow's character and being more intelligent than he sometimes comes across -- when he trips at the end and falls into the water he falls at the same place Elizabeth did, and it can reasonably be assumed that was intentional and not an accident. He knows Elizabeth FELL and didn't jump, and that she survived the fall given he's the one who rescued her; his best chance at escape can reasonably be assumed falling from the same spot to land in more or less the same place and not hit any of the rocks.
I'm pissed that they're replacing Johnny Depp. Not because I hate the idea of Margot Robbie. If anything, they should do a movie with both of them. It would be cool seeing them both on screen portraying their roles.
The reason that Jack at the end walks backwards and trips over the side of the wall is because he knew that is how Elizabeth fell and she missed the rocks and survived so he tried to do it the same way so he would miss the rocks as well. This script is masterful at using things from the beginning later in the movie.
With all respect to the remaining cast, this would have been just an average run-of-the-mill pirate adventure movie without Johnny Depp. Like him or not, can't deny his talent. I seem to remember he took his inspiration for his mannerisms and some speech patterns from the Rolling Stone's legendary guitarist Keith Richards. It worked beautifully.
Please do watch the series! 🥺 Watching this movie was like going down memory lane for me too lol. If you havent seen the rest, I highly recommend you do!
When I went back to college at 35, I did a presentation in class that included a funny meme about the movie Gladiator with Russel Crowe. The class stared at me blankly. I then realized most of them were born after the movie came out, and felt extremely old. (FYI the presentation was about the drug war, and the meme featured Maximus saying "Am I being detained?", a reference to "Are you not entertained?" and Crowe's frequent arrests)
was willing to watch until you proclaimed "we love johnny depp on this channel"; i do not. while i try to sperate the art from the artist whenever possible if you're just going to pretend he's a decent human i can't support it.
He was with a violent, narcissistic liar who, when together, brought out the worst in each other, amplified their worst character traits. Just remember that not a SINGLE, previous intimate partner of Depp's supported or corroborated Amber Turd's FALSE accusations. One brief, toxic relationship does not a bad person make. Other than that, you are more than welcome to FUCK OFF.
Yes! Please finish the series! The original trilogy is so good! I love watching these movies, some of my all time favorites! I too was very young when this movie came out, about 7, so it also makes me feel old realizing it'll be 20 years next year!
I think the 2nd one is made specifically for children because (while there are definitely aspects to have fun with and love) I remember not enjoying it even half as much as this beauty of a film. I do echo the sentiments of everyone in the comments section though when I say the 3rd one is a blast and lifts the 2nd one up because it completes a trilogy. I don't expect you to watch the 4th one here on the channel but if you ever get the chance to watch the 5th either by yourself or with your bf, it's actually VERY good
The correct way to pronounce the word Caribbean is "Caribbean." Hope this helps!
Honestly don't know why Nat hasn't pinned such a helpful comment.
There are two ways to pronounce it
Ca-ri-bi-an and ca-ra-be-an
I'm Jamaican, and people pronounce it both ways.
Aluminium
I was struggling so hard w this word but this finally helped me pronounce the word “Caribbean” correctly. Thanks Ryan!
@@MilkT0ast Heck, I say it both ways myself. And I can never for the life of my spell it correct the first (or second) time.
Fun fact: Kiera Knightly was 17 during filming so they needed parental consent *_and presence_* during her kiss with Orlando Bloom. So during that scene, her parents are sitting just offscreen _watching_
The commodore was actually a pretty good guy throughout the series. He wasn't unfair and was simply doing his job. He let Elizabeth go instead of forcing her into a loveless relationship. He was a solid Royal Navy officer simply enforcing the law in a pretty lawless area of the world.
@Republic of Texas Yeah, the pirates in the series are the fictional romantic versions of pirates. There are subtle nods toward historical pirates, like naming the historical pirates Henry Morgan and Bartholomew Roberts (for formulating the rules of parley). I always find it funny that the Black Pearl is a full on man-o-war sized ship rather than the smaller, more maneuverable sloops that had shallow drafts and could hug the coast and reefs to evade or wait in ambush. Plus bigger ships require more crew and pirate crews (while democratic) weren't the most disciplined when it came to staying on a ship for long.
Um, he kind of screwed over her by giving beckett davy Jones heart in the sequel. He has his ups and downs.
@@NA1c158 yes, but he also realized his error and sacrificed himself in part 3. He's the most real human in the series. He wants to do right, but is swayed by temptation until he sees the cost.
@@NA1c158 Historically speaking, as an officer of the Royal Navy, the Commodore was duty bound to aid and assist the East India Company. As far as London was concerned, the East India Company was the economic arm of overseas imports and goods and money needed to be protected by both the heavily armed cargo ships of the East India Company and the Royal Navy.
The Commodore was probably also swayed by his desire to make his corner of the seas safe for commerce and travel. It wasn't until he realized how unethical Beckett was willing to be (in the name of profit instead of lawfulness), that the Commodore realized he was doing more harm than good.
@@juvandy i said ups and downs.
She definitely needs to complete the og pirates trilogy the next two are really good
First one is OK as a just one movie. Not much loose ends. But if you watch second you need to see also third.
Fourth is a miss but fifth again ties some loose ends nicely.
The Pirates trilogy fits into that category of trilogy that wasn't initially conceived as a trilogy, but the first film was so successful they figured out a way to turn it into one. The giveaway is that unlike a trilogy like LoTR which is one of only a few true trilogies, the first film is basically a stand-alone film with a complete story. Sometimes these trilogies work, sometimes they fall flat, but the first three Pirate films are fun, with some original ideas and a satisfying wrap up.
@@jukopliut All three movies are really good.
@@NelsonStJames Lord of the rings is one movie cut in three parts. Hobbit is also one too long movie cut in three. In Trilogy all movies should be able to function as individual movies like dollar trilogy.
Natalie best start believing in love stories, she'll be in one/two🤔❤☠💔😀🏴☠
WOAH NEW HAIR ALERT
It looks awesome!!
Me likey!
It’s not rly new, sometimes she just straightens it, but it always does look great
Only women noticed.
Iti medeusu, o cabelo dela tá tão lindinho
I think my favorite line from this whole film, is when Jack is on the gallows, and they're reading out his looooong list of crimes. You hear the guy say something like 'Impersonating a member of church" and Jack's expression is one of genuine confusion at hearing that. Then the memory dawns on him and he smiles and says "hehehe....awh yeaah" I just found that so good. That he's done so many things he just honestly forgot like half of them, and was surprised by some of the things he did "in his youth" 🤣
Yeah its perfect
Wonder if that impersonation of the church was when he seduced Blackbeard's daughter.
@@RayHardman7567 No clue...is that something referenced in one of the later films? I stopped watching after the 3rd one. I assumed it was probably just raiding some cloister for gold or something.
@@happyninja42 In the 4th movie. The search for the fountain of youth. It was the whole contentious thing between the two leads.
@@RayHardman7567 Well seeing as they didn't plan 4 movies ahead when they wrote that line, I'm guessing it was originally meant to just be a random crime he did of no real consequence other than the bit about it being him dressed up as a cleric of the church. I personally always pictured it as him raiding a nunnery and helping a lot of those ladies break their vow of chastity, probably while getting really drunk and then stealing their gold. That's my canon anyway.
If you didn’t notice, when the wind changes when the pendant first touches the water the clouds form a hand reaching for land.
I watched this movies so many times and I never noticed this.
This movie has no business being as dense and well thought out as it is. Best live-action Disney movie, hands down. You can watch it 20 times and still pick up things that you didn't before.
Oo! I hadn’t noticed that
@@MFBloosh Not even joking, you're completely correct. Its massively superior to all the sequels too, even the ones I still consider 'good'.
Wow!!!
34:06 This moment is actually genius and shows Jack's. Jack would have been able to realize that Elizabeth tripped and fell from that very spot, so instead of diving, his best chance of not hitting rocks would be to fall just like she did.
DAMN!!!!
I never thought about that fall that way, but it makes sense when you realize how Jack's mind & luck works
Actress Keira Knightley, said in an interview, that Jack Sparrow was written as a straight or non-comedic character. She said that everything about him was all Johnny Depp's doing, even director Gore Verbinski was stunned most days.
I cannot even imagine. That would genuinely be a _completely_ different movie! Lol 🤯
"You'd best start believin' in ghost stories Miss Turner. You're in one!" - My favourite line in the entire film.
"'Ello Poppet!"
"... but you _have_ heard of me."
"I am disinclined to acquiesce to your request. ... it means 'no'."
Great quotes. Eminently quotable.
same
"Not possible." "Not probable."
@@davelister2961 you forgot the best one:
"But why is the rum gone! "
My favourite moment is when Elizabeth burns all the rum and jack takes his gun out and almost shots her for it with the bullet he saved for a fucking decade🤣
Barbossa’s dialogue is written so well. Actually, if you’re going to do the first 3 of these, Davy Jones also has some amazingly delivered, and we’ll written, lines.
There is a UA-camr, Jill Bearup, who does a breakdown of the fight between Jack Sparrow and Will Turner that explains just how close to perfect that fight scene is choreographed - I highly recommend it.
Also, the perfection of Jack's intro scene in describing the kind of person he is, is a masterclass in how to show rather than tell in cinema.
Yep, seen Jill's video(s), she's very good.
Really good at the media analysis and stage combat stuff, yes.
...misses the mark in certain other ways all too common to Brits, I'm afraid...
The breakdown video. ua-cam.com/video/mACKHGfdLlo/v-deo.html
@@christopherb501 which ways are those?
@@Jzombi301 Casually transphobic in the 2nd-Wave dreg way very common in England. Not saying it isn't a problem in America or elsewhere, but she does fall right into the mode that the UK is lately all too known for.
The sword fighting in this movie was choreographed by Bob Anderson. Bob Anderson was the stunt performer in the Darth Vader suit during the lightsaber duel in The Empire Strikes Back, he did the fight choreography for the Errol Flynn Adventures of Robin Hood, he did the Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Zorro, he did the Antonio Banderas Zorro, he did The Lord of the Rings; the dude was a legend. He was also a member of the English Olympic Fencing team.
Geoffrey Rush was so great. My favorite tidbit was hearing how excited he was playing the part, and would call up the director on off days with thoughts and questions about Barbosa's character.
His passion really paid off.
He did a phenomenal job as Barbosa! Easily my favorite character in the franchise.
One of the most horrifying thoughts I had several years ago is realizing why the cursed pirates were hoping they could spare Elizabeth, but weren't willing to even try to spare Will.
If you remember, they had talked earlier about the things they were no longer able to enjoy....
Barbossa's "Waste not" line is actually pretty goddamned chilling if you think about it.
Yeah, when Natalie said that (if Jack wasn't there) Will could have broken their curse and "all would be good", she wasn't thinking about Elizabeth still being a prisoner of pirates, with their human desires reawakened.
@@mmattson8947 I mean to be fair. Her not thinking that is probably societal coding about movies from the mouse...
Oh shit.
@@NotMe6044 That's the craziest thing about it. Never seen such implications in a Disney movie
Pirates is one of those "perfect" movies where every element of the film (the actors, the costumes, the visual effects, the action, the stunt work, the plot, the pacing, the editing, the music, the sound work, the actual cinematography) worked absolutely flawlessly together to make the best possible version of itself. The sequels chased that dragon ever since.
The reason Jack is "The worst pirate anyone had heard of" was because Jack Sparrow had worked for as part of the East Indian Trading Company. Yet, he was fired when he refused orders to transport slaves for the company. For his insubordination, Jack was branded as a pirate. Jack made it clear that he would rather be a pirate than have ended up like superiors, so he never got the moniker of pirate by doing pirate things, making him not a very good pirate.
He didn't just refuse orders, he took them like he was going to transport them then freed them, hence the line "I contracted you to transport cargo on my behalf, you chose to liberate it."
@@ForgeofAule "People arent cargo mate"
@@infinitygauntlet101 At that time... of course they were!
@@ForgeofAule rightrightright. it's been a while since i brought up that bit of trivia, should have looked it up first lol
The East India Trading Company purchased those slaves fair and square from African slave traders on the coasts of Africa. From African Kingdoms and Empires built on the back of the international African slave trade. Liberating "cargo" is a legitimate act of piracy. Captain Jack's 100% legit, not just "technically" a pirate.
This movie had one of my all time favorite dvd commentary's with Kiera Knightly and Commodore Norrington's actor doing it. They had sooooo much fun talking about the movie and their experiences filming it. it was a riot, so hilarious. I remember he spent so much time learning fencing and sword fighting while Kiera, Orlando, and Depp were just riding the Disney ride over and over and having a blast in the park.
I really feel Norrington got a poor treatment by the later movies as the chemistry he and Kiera had in the commentary and their dynamic was so fun. I always thought it would've been a better send off if he did become part of the Dutchman's crew and then ended up being first mate to Will. Him paying for his betrayal by serving on the crew and aiding Will do his duties so he can always go back to Elizabeth, so Norrington in his own way still cares for Elizabeth even though it's not romantic. Also being a navy man I'd imagine he'd like such a long life at sea, not to mention ferrying the souls of the dead. As a navy man who knows how many the sea claims he'd seem quite invested in making sure sailors got taken care of.
Love these movies so much
Also Geoffrey Rush as Barbossa =the most authentic pirate in any movie ever.
Hope you're watching all the movies
The one reboot I think could be interesting - there was a 60s(?) Disney movie called Blackbeard's Ghost, where the ghost of an infamous pirate is cursed until he can find redemption. Geoffrey Rush's Barbossa would be great in a film like that and the modern FX could make it a lot of fun
Yes, all three movies.
I suppose another Sparrow film will be coming!
Rush does ceartaily do a fantastic job...but most authentic, I'd give to Walter Matthau in Roman Polanski's "Pirates" (1986).
Authentic Pirate in movies 🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣
If I remember correctly, I think one of the main reasons why Geoffrey Rush even agreed to doing the movie is because he loved the idea of being a pirate. So much so, there are moments in the franchise where you can really tell he was having a ton of fun playing Barbossa.
She do curls, she do bangs, she do straight - Nattie is the master of all hairstyles!
😂😂😂
Kinda read that with a tune in my head for some reason
She's growing it out - and it looks gorgeous - but she'll always be that curly-headed Nat from the Shire to me!
What I appreciates about her hair is its so healthy and shiny. You can tell she takes real good care of it.
Finally a worthy opponent, our battle will be legendary! 😂
"You best start believing in Ghost stories, Ms. Turner... you're in one" that a mic drop statement and such an epic reveal.
These films are genuinely, unironically fantastic and I'd love you to finish the initial trilogy with Dead Man's Chest and At World's End reactions (followed by deleted scenes in your own time because there's some really major backstory cut from them).
Dude this movie holds up so well. The special effects somehow still look great, the characters are all so good. It really is a classic adventure movie.
The first 3 movies are just gems❤🔥.
Also Jack has one of the best character intros ever!🤣
First 3 are a perfect trilogy. Number 4 was good, but not amazing, and then 5 I just pretend never existed.
@@justinmcgough3958 oof that hits, I REALLY forgot that there was a fifth movie... the fourth is foggy but the fifth is not in my memory. 😅
I'll second this. The first 3 movies were a masterpiece. The second film was ok, but the third is a must see. As for the others that followed, in my opinion, were pretty much throw away, milk the franchise, filler.
Fun Fact: the actor who played Governor Swann, Jonathan Pryce, played the High SPARROW, in Game of Thrones fifth season.
Rush's Barbossa is a callback to the pirates of previous decades, the one true Pirate Movie" pirate in the film. Johnny's choices were fantastic and untouchable.
Yeah, the CGI still holds up, though I agree it might look even slightly better now. But the CGI in the next one is even more realistic than today's CGI and it can't be touched. I saw it in the theaters and, as someone who sews costumes, I would have SWORN that Davy Jones's outfit was practical and only his hands and face were CG.
The digital effects crew for dead man's chest are legends. Such beautiful blending of CG and film.
Grace or Gráinne?
Actually, the difference between Jack and Barbossa is showing the difference between a classic Hollywood pirate and the historical reality, respectively. Jack is the classic rogue with a heart of gold, while Barbossa shoots one of his own men to see if the curse was lifted!
@@jackabalas A truly legendary pirate, the Queen of the Pirates herself, but sadly she operated a century before the other big names. If anything she was too soon, active before the "golden age of piracy"
This trilogy as a whole really is under-rated - the writing is tight, the acting superb and the music is fantastic. Set design, cinematography, costumes - check, check, check. The second and third are even substantially better than the first, building on the mythology and expanding the story in natural, organic ways with an incredibly satisfying (is somewhat bittersweet) conclusion. It's a shame the follow-up films were so lackluster but the trilogy stands tall and ages very well.
Substantially better 😂😂😂. Dead wrong lmao. The first movie is a masterpiece. 2 and 3 are good, but absolutely not better. They do both have some flaws.
First movie is great. Better than anyone expected from a movie based on a ride. Second and third are not as good. Same with the Matrix trilogy.
@@jabbadac I think "not as good" is a fair assessment of 2, but I think that's pretty generous for 3. At World's End is just flat out bad, in my opinion.
Over time 2 has become my favorite (I’m a sucker for Davy Jones). 2 and 3 both suffer from a few scenes that go on way to long, and take up way too much time, but they are still both excellent movies. The first one is nearly flawless.
The first one is the only one that is legitimately superb. The second is pretty good and the third is alright. How bad the next two are make the second and third look a lot better in comparison, though.
Jack most likely walks funny because he's spent so much time on the swaying ocean that when on land it probably feels like walking after spinning in a rotating chair
Sea legs - sea + rum = 🥴🏃🏽♂️
This series is still one of my favorite movie series, it never gets old and Johny Depp is perfection in this role. 🥰
Actually, corsets weren't painful. The misconception arose, as far as I'm aware, from the fact that modern films and shows don't get their wardrobe right and actresses are wearing them without the padding that would have historically been worn underneath.
TL;DR: If a corset's actually painful, you're wearing it wrong.
read this in an old British Ladies voice.
According to historians, a lot of the trope about Victorian women (and earlier) getting "the vapors" and swooning was due to tightly worn corsets that inhibited their breathing (but kept the waistline narrow). So there is historical precedent of corsets causing the problem shown in the movie.
@@claytonepich2132 or in Karolina Zebrowska’s adorable Polish accented English
From my understanding it was more like the majority of corsets weren't overly painful. Most were there to support the weight of heavy fabrics on the hips/ be bras/ act as back supports and at various time periods were worn by most women (and even some men) as they performed manual labour. However there were times when incredibly tight corsetry was popular amongst the aristocracy as high fashion. These corsets obvs. looked a certain way and have become a theatre/hollywood staple accordingly.
It's largely from the feminist movement of the 70s playing off the fact that bras came about in the 1910s when the "wasp-waist" and tightlacing were going out of fashion.
You should complete the trilogy. Pirates 1-3 is connected as one story and a lot of fun.
I saw the title, and "He's a Pirate" automatically started playing in my head.
I will never forget this movie experience back in the day. The theatre was packed to the last seat and the reception to the movie was a riot. I must have missed near half of the dialogue because of the noise of everybody laughing their asses off.
It was the hayday of blockbuster movies. It was though to get a ticket but the experience was something else. The theatres today feel abandoned by comparison.
Everything is just too expensive now
This movie is the perfect popcorn movie honestly. It's endlessly quotable, pretty solid CGI and full of setups and payoffs. A brilliant score and villain, and the next two films somehow each improve on the score and villain that came before.
Corsets are only painful if worn incorrectly, which Elizabeth wouldn't have known because its new fashion for her.
I hear corsets are very comfortable when worn properly, especially in the boobage area
Depp is said to have based the character of Jack Sparrow on Keith Richards. Disney wasn't happy: "They just couldn't stand him. Michael Eisner, the head of Disney at the time, was quoted as saying, 'He's ruining the movie.' Upper-echelon Disney-ites [were] going, 'What's wrong with him? Is he, you know, like some kind of weird simpleton? Is he drunk? Is he gay?'"
They were were much more understanding once the movie released.
Money people make money, but most have ZERO concept of what will be popular or why it will be popular.
"Depp is said to have based the character of Jack Sparrow on Keith Richards" -
No pal, it isn't "said" to be, it IS, Depp definitely did, it's why Keith Richards literally played his FATHER in the later movie.
What would his being gay have to do with anything?
@@christopherbacon1077 - 2003 movie execs would have a lot more problem with Jack Sparrow being gay than 2022 movie execs. Not even on religious or "moral" grounds, but on the grounds of limiting money making potential, because most movie execs have historically been as mercenary as hell for money
I'm glad that you acknowledged Geoffrey Rush's portrayal. Yes, Depp's Jack Sparrow is iconic, but Barbossa is his best adversary, and you do feel a little sympathy for him -- he didn't get to eat his apple at the end 😢
This is an absolutely brilliant piece of film making. Rightfully nominated for 4 Oscars. For a historical fantasy film, it's practically flawless.
It wasn't in the reaction but I love the frienemy dynamic between Will and Jack, especially at the end when Will saves Jack and before leaving Jack compliments his hat and Will has this little cute smile it's lovely
"She hasn't taken it out in a while. It's pretty dusty." That's what she said.
Popped into my head. Had to say it.
As a half Trinidadian British person, every single person I know who’s of “Caribbean” descent says carra-be-an not cuh-rib-e-an. The latter is something I’ve only heard from Americans. Besides I don’t know anyone who actually refers to themselves or the islands as Caribbean, they all say West Indian or West Indies. Caribbean tends to be reserved for food. That’s just my experience with friends and family. The only island I’ve been to is Trini too. So it’s a small sample size, but I’ve genuinely never heard anyone but non-West Indians say Caribbean.
huh, interesting.
The fact Hans Zimmer reused the music for the initial battle scene that he wrote for Gladiator as the main theme for Pirates, gives Gladiator a really weird energy when you go back and rewatch it.
Hans Zimmer has a tendency to reuse a lot of his scores
I feel like not enough people talk about Jack at the end of the movie. Like he knew exactly what he was doing. Deliberately going to the same exact spot Elizabeth fell, falling off in a similar way trying to mimic most of how it was done because he KNEW someone could survive that fall in the way she did.
It depends on the context. I always say "Pirates of the Care-uh-bee-un" when talking about the ride, the movies, or the region... but when I'm talking about a specific thing I say "Cuh-rib-eean" ...food, island, drums, cruise
Yes exactly. I only say it like Care-uh-bee-un when I’m talking about the movies
It just sounds better that way.
In Jamaica we say Cah-ru-bee-an
The change between "the ca-RI-bbean" and "pirates of the carri-BE-an" has to do with something in linguistics called stress lapse. Basically you want syllables in a phrase to have alternating stress. Saying "pirates of the carri-BE-an" is more "bouncy", you could say -- it employs a more natural alternation of strong-weak syllables.
Aluminium
The second and third one are absolutely worthy of including. They keep the brilliant magic of the first one, and build on the world in incredible ways. The fourth and fifth one I haven't seen, and haven't heard much good about.
I love watching pirates of the Caribbean and honestly johnny Depp is what made this franchise possible. Plus you're laughing more crazy then a squirrel in a nut factory. The special effects at the time are amazing even in today's standards number 2 and 3 are the prime of the series.
Ironically my university work I'm doing now is on corsets and this era is one of the three I've chosen to look at.
It's not a franchise; it's one great movie and decent sequel.
@@BonzoDrummer yeah, it goes first, second, third in order of quality and then not worth discussing after that. Davy Jones as a character is what keeps me coming back to the second one. The current D&D character I’m playing is somewhat based on him. Much less powerful of course haha
@@MrDevintcoleman The third one is a pretentious, overlong mess.
"More crazy than a squirrel in a nut factory" wtf did you actually just say that? Jesus the cringe
@@BonzoDrummer ill admit it feels a little dragged on in some points but it has those moments in my opinion. The final battle itself was just awesome and I keep reaching the scene.
Actually I am LIVING for this whole reaction, it was so fun to watch this 🤗
“Caribbean” is definitely the correct way to say it
wow this almost flew over my head. I read it the way I say it and was going to comment how can you claim that's right. have a like
@@alsims2007 🤣🤣🤣
I remember playing these songs in band soo much from first playing it and it sounding so rough to when we performed and it being so good. Gave me chills every time and now when I hear it it keeps giving me that feeling.
That's great, kinda wish that was one the songs we woulda done when I was in school!
The "stay golden" sign reveal was TOP tier.
This movie is SO FUN! So many great and creative action set pieces. The performances from the whole cast elevates this movie even more. I'm glad Natalie enjoyed this as much as I do when I rewatch it.
the most unbelievable part of this movie is how will and jack managed to pull down the small canoe to the bottom to get air, that is some strength right there lol
The Skelton transformation threw a monkey wrench for those working on Lord of the Rings. For Return of the King, they thought of doing something identical to it for the Army of the Dead until Pirates came out. They had to rework it and find a different solution
Nat, I’ve been watching your videos for about a year now and this is (by far), the most fun I can remember you ever having. It made the video so enjoyable to see you enjoying yourself.
I hope you do the next 2 movies at least.
“Drink up me harties, yo ho!”😁
She did have so much fun with this movie. Warmed my soul.
I truly wish I had someone as entertaining as you to watch movies with! Your first time reviews are so fun to watch
Same!!
Your natural curls are beautiful, but i just wanted to say you look amazing with your hair this way!
In the film, Will and Elizabeth are 20 (around 12 in the opening), Jack is somewhere in his 20s/30s, Norrington is 28 (20 in the opening) and who knows how old the dog is.
Jack's sinking ship, and the tripping at the end is so funny
18:14 i love that quote so much and the delivery so well done. Barbosa, legendary villain
Natalie: "A fun, nostalgic movie".
Me: *Feels old*.
I read somewhere that Gore Vorbinski (The director of Pirates) was one of the names in mind to direct the star wars sequels. It's such a shame that we never got the fun adventure that they could of been.
He's also been trying to make a Bioshock movie - but he's given up because no studio will let him make it true to the source material.
That would have been great
Eyyy this is gonna be fun! Glad you’re reacting to this one! Though I love this movie, I have to say: It’s just a shame that Master And Commander: The Far Side Of The World had to come out the same year, just a few months later. It’s an extremely underappreciated masterpiece! I don’t think enough people went to see it because both movies feature sailing ships. If you could please react to Master And Commander: The Far Side Of The World sometime, I’d love to hear your thoughts on it. Thanks and enjoy!
Absolutely! Master and Commander is a fantastic movie!
Can't agree enough. Master and Commander is amazing!
Master and Commander - one of my favorite movies EVER.
That is a terrific movie, but I feel it doesn't get all the love because people enjoy this version of pirates compared to a more realistic approach when it comes to sailing and fights at sea. Paul Bettany was so damn good in that movie. So good.
@@Do0msday you nailed it. More people need to give M&C a chance. If the supposed “prequel in the works” rumors are to be believed…they just might get their chance…
Trivia time! "Pirate speak" is just an English West Country accent. In the Disney film adaptation of "Treasure Island", Robert Newton played Long John Silver and decided to use his native accent. And now all pirates talk like they're from Dorchester. :D
Aw, this’ll be fun! Still hope you react to The Mummy and The Mummy Returns sometime!!
Such a great movie. I feel compelled to call it out on one thing though. The corset thing. It’s done for laughs I know, but I blame this movie and Titanic for starting the wildly inaccurate depictions of corsets in modern films.
I’m not the worlds leading expert, but I do have a history background and a keen interest in historical dress.
A. In this time period she wouldn’t even be wearing what most people think of as a corset. That came later in the Victorian era. She would be wearing stays. They are similar, but not the same thing.
B. Yes waist training and tight-lacing were real things, but they were practiced by a small group of women trying to achieve an extreme.
C. Stays were sort of for silhouette, but they were mostly just to hold your boobs in place.
D. If a women then or now can’t breath in stays or a corset, or is otherwise woefully uncomfortable… it hasn’t been fitted correctly and/or she’s wearing it wrong.
Well, the fun part is that she _is_ wearing it wrong in Pirates - which is _why_ she passes out.
As her father pointed out, he's been _told_ it's the latest fashion in London; and none of their servants are familiar with the "device," either. Of course they put it on wrong and pulled it too tight.
I think this myth is perpetuated a lot by actresses. Actresses in Hollywood are put in ill-fitted costumes that aren’t made properly and don’t have them worn in before they make the actresses wear them all day and sometimes on bare skin so you have these big name actresses saying they are torture devices and the antithesis of feminism and people don’t question it
Glad to see you really enjoy this movie.
For me this will always be my favorite of all of the Pirate movies. I enjoyed the others but there was something special about this one that has never been replicated successfully.
I'm loving your hair it's truly ✨GIVING ✨
I love how real everything feels, compared to the fifth movie, for example. The sea, the ships, it's fun you don't get to see very often.
Such a great series. The original 3 are untouchable as modern masterpieces of the action adventure genre. I seriously hope you watch the other 2 in the future.
An absolutely legendary film. The beginning of one of my favorite trilogies ever! They really don't make movies like these anymore. Such a unique feel and energy, and gosh, Johnny Depp nailed it but also the music. THAT. SCORE. IS. UNMATCHED.
Keep being awesome Nat! 🙌🏻😊
EDIT: that stay golden sign looks awesome, love it!
Except the second two films were pretty terrible.
@@jmsmys13ify 2 and 3 are great imo, I think they're pretty underrated and have a lot of good qualities. 4 and 5 is where the greatness is really not there anymore.
@@darquidarqui imo 2 and 3 are what's wrong with sequels. Comparable to the Transformers sequels.
Typical b.s sound effects. Evertime somebody pulls out a sword. And it's obvious they were trained by some idiot fencing wimp. Pirates used cutlasses which were held with both hands, and these morons use one hand as if they were using rapiers.
Good call on not doing this during the trial. You're a class act.
Pirate of the Carribean gets better every time I watch it, and I thought so highly of it when it came out I took everybody I knew to go see it even though nobody wanted to go see a film "based on a ride at Disneyland". This movie is a throwback to the type of filmmaking where the screenwriters actually took the task of writing a cohesive adventure film seriously. The story makes sense and is internally consistent. All the characters are well defined.
And I don't care what anybody says Johnny Depp should have easily taken home a best supporting actor's oscar for Jack Sparrow, a character with one of the most iconic introductions in cinema.
your hair looks amazing
This movie is close to perfect. I will happily watch it through any time it is on. Same cannot be said for any one of the sequels.
Before Johnny Depp was cast as Jack Sparrow, Harrison Ford, Jim Carrey, Michael Keaton, Robin Williams, Christopher Walken, Matthew McConaughey, and Robert DeNiro were almost cast.
Tobey McGuire, Christopher Masterson, Christian Bale and Ben Peyton were considered for Will Turner.
Amanda Bynes, Jamie Alexander and Jessica Alba were considered for Elizabeth.
Steven Spielberg was almost picked to direct the film but was too busy working on Minority Report and Catch Me If You Can, both released in 2002.
Lol are you serious?
Now I’m having this absurd mental image of these guys auditioning going “I’m captain Jack sparrow, savvy?” in their stereotypical impressionist style.
Ford would be cynical and 100% done with everything, Keaton would just be Batman from 1989 again, Carey and Williams would be off the wall, Walken would just be…wAlken, etc.
Well DeNiro is a marvelous pirate captain in Stardust...
Amanda Byrnes would’ve been so great!
I've always liked the bit of trivia about how when showing the higher-ups dailies of Johnny Depp's performance, they demanded that he change it and that pirates don't act or talk like that. That nobody watching the movie would like it.
Johnny essentially responded that it was an acting choice he was consciously making, that he was going to keep doing it, and if they didn't like it that they could fire him.
And fast forward to now and he's created the most iconic movie pirate in the history of movie pirates.
you being visually flustered to the bone by will turner made me choke on my lunch 😂😂😂😂
The ship that plays the Interceptor (Lady Washington) occasionally tours the west coast (OR, WA, CA) and does dockside tours for donations or sailing tours for a ticket price.
You know, just in case anyone needed a fun date idea
Hope you also react to Pirates 2 and 3.
The first 3 Pirates movies tell one big overarching story with a beginning, middle and end.
Pirates 4 and 5 are standalone stories starring Jack Sparrow and they're nowhere as good as the OG trilogy, imo.
I don't see it mentioned anywhere in the comments yet, but a fun little note about Sparrow's character and being more intelligent than he sometimes comes across -- when he trips at the end and falls into the water he falls at the same place Elizabeth did, and it can reasonably be assumed that was intentional and not an accident. He knows Elizabeth FELL and didn't jump, and that she survived the fall given he's the one who rescued her; his best chance at escape can reasonably be assumed falling from the same spot to land in more or less the same place and not hit any of the rocks.
The first three films directed by Gore Verbinski are so great, might be my favorite trilogy.
I’ll give On Stranger Tides a pass because of Penelope Cruz and the mermaid subplot; but you are right on the mark
it’s soo good
I'm pissed that they're replacing Johnny Depp. Not because I hate the idea of Margot Robbie. If anything, they should do a movie with both of them. It would be cool seeing them both on screen portraying their roles.
The reason that Jack at the end walks backwards and trips over the side of the wall is because he knew that is how Elizabeth fell and she missed the rocks and survived so he tried to do it the same way so he would miss the rocks as well. This script is masterful at using things from the beginning later in the movie.
With all respect to the remaining cast, this would have been just an average run-of-the-mill pirate adventure movie without Johnny Depp. Like him or not, can't deny his talent. I seem to remember he took his inspiration for his mannerisms and some speech patterns from the Rolling Stone's legendary guitarist Keith Richards. It worked beautifully.
Please do watch the series! 🥺
Watching this movie was like going down memory lane for me too lol. If you havent seen the rest, I highly recommend you do!
When Disney could still write humor - good times
33:11 I like this little call back to will throwing his sword at the door to stop jack from escaping.
The year is 2022
Internet: This movie came out in 2003.
Nat: I've seen this movie 15 years ago in theaters!
that first initial sequence of you absolutely losing it over Orlando Bloom was the most relatable content i've seen in my life
Please watch STAR TREK! 🖖
When I went back to college at 35, I did a presentation in class that included a funny meme about the movie Gladiator with Russel Crowe. The class stared at me blankly.
I then realized most of them were born after the movie came out, and felt extremely old.
(FYI the presentation was about the drug war, and the meme featured Maximus saying "Am I being detained?", a reference to "Are you not entertained?" and Crowe's frequent arrests)
“Jack didn’t do anything wrong!”
That will not age well…
I love how you are so excited and into this movie even though you saw it once before. You Channel is so awesome.
was willing to watch until you proclaimed "we love johnny depp on this channel"; i do not. while i try to sperate the art from the artist whenever possible if you're just going to pretend he's a decent human i can't support it.
He was with a violent, narcissistic liar who, when together, brought out the worst in each other, amplified their worst character traits.
Just remember that not a SINGLE, previous intimate partner of Depp's supported or corroborated Amber Turd's FALSE accusations.
One brief, toxic relationship does not a bad person make.
Other than that, you are more than welcome to FUCK OFF.
Yeah that really bummed me out. I love this channel. I DO NOT love Johnny Depp. Can’t f*cking stand him actually.
The choreographer for the sword fight in the blacksmith's is the same guy who choreographed the sword fight in Princess Bride (Bob Anderson).
Love the sign! It’s so sweet of Tyler to get it for you!
Yes! Please finish the series! The original trilogy is so good! I love watching these movies, some of my all time favorites! I too was very young when this movie came out, about 7, so it also makes me feel old realizing it'll be 20 years next year!
Your hair game is ON POINT today!!! Looks awesome!
I think the 2nd one is made specifically for children because (while there are definitely aspects to have fun with and love) I remember not enjoying it even half as much as this beauty of a film. I do echo the sentiments of everyone in the comments section though when I say the 3rd one is a blast and lifts the 2nd one up because it completes a trilogy.
I don't expect you to watch the 4th one here on the channel but if you ever get the chance to watch the 5th either by yourself or with your bf, it's actually VERY good
I’m so glad to see you tackle this, I hope you do the whole series because I love these movies!