No I think jack and the kraken tops this one. Because jack usually flees battles but when he was face to face insted of running he smiled and stayed with "beastie" as the Pearl sunk.
If you're wondering why beckett hesitated because he didn't expect to be outsmarted. He assumed Jack will run away as he always does instead of confronting him head on. He assumed Jones is still in command of Dutchman so will side with him instead of against him. Its not how he pictured his day will end. Overconfidence is a killer. Guess he got a panic attack.
For those who don’t know why Lord Beckett didn’t give an order to fire is because he was so shocked by the fact that the deal turned against the dealer that he made himself.
In a sea occupied by the vengeful undead and eldritch creatures, Beckett stands out to me as the man who nearly came to dominate it all; not by a mastery over death or in voodoo magic, but through his sheer proficiency in the art of the deal. Cold and cunning to the very end, it’s only fitting that his demise was brought upon by the two most feared icons of the supernatural that the Caribbean had to offer.
He knew he lost everything when the Dutchman was no longer under his control. That ship alone could destroy him and his fleet, and every ship sunk can be risen back by it
@@thecommentguy9380 exactly. Is why he accepted his death. It gave his life a meaningful ending instead of just trying to survive. And for what? His entire life was his business
The look on Jack's face when he gives the order is GREAT. He's won the game that he, Jones and Beckett have been playing for 13 years. Not only has he won, but he's tied up all loose ends. The look of shock on Beckett's face when he says "It's just...good business." says he knows Jack has won, too. Now all that remains is to down with the ship as a man with the mind of a tycoon, but the soul of a pirate
The worst part is, Endeavour could’ve very easily defeated the Dutchmen and the black Pearl right there and then, That one moment where Beckett wasn’t in control was his downfall because now he didn’t know how to respond
@@JimmyBoy9878the Dutchman can also just resurrect the pearl and everyone on it at will if it were to ever sink, so the moment the Dutchman turned on the eatc, they were fucked
1:11 The pure glee and relief on Jack’s face to see Will alive and the chance to save his ship and crew, followed by a rare moment of camaraderie with Hector. Little moments like this truly elevate these movies.
I haven't watched the movies but I read a comment in another video this was the culmination of the franchise, so I don't get the scene? Like he didn't do anything... I thought it was an epic battle but the whip just put in position to get destroyed? What am I missing?
@@okiguess8103 So it was the first time Beckett (the white haired dude) was really outsmarted in the whole franchise, as he was always one step ahead of the Pirates. Also, he tried to, and thought he could, control the seas, and he didn't believe in the magic that he's now seeing with his own eyes (the ship and crew that come up from underwater). To see him finally fail, and get what he had coming to him (and actually accept defeat gracefully) was very satisfying.
@@mamasunshine83 ohh him not believing in magic makes me understand the context better. I just felt he had an army of ships and he went straight to get shot, but I get it now. Thanks
ReduxEditor335, Too bad he was killed at the battle of Fountain of Youth. Such a loss, he could have made a great creer, but ended only as luitenant-commander.
Because he thought that the Flying Dutchman, Davy Jone's former ship, was still under his command. When the BlackPearl AND the Dutchman turned against the "Endeavor", he just blanked; he had just made the biggest mistake of his life, and he couldn't do anything to escape his fate except going down with the ship like a real captain. But I'm only seen the "original" trilogy once at theaters, and didn't bother with 4&5, so I might not remember it perfectly...
I love how everything behind Beckett is being obliterated, it's almost symbolizing his trail of destruction across the sea, and now that trail has finally caught up with him…
It symbolises the material world he devoted his entire life to crumbling around him as he realizes that it's all meaningless. "It's just good business"
This is an amazing take on this scene! I've never thought about that before. I always found it kind of cheesy how the stairs are obliterated right behind him until the ship finally explodes, but now it actually makes sense with your perspective! Thanks for making this scene better for me lol
@@brandonsmith9098 Personally, if I were about to lose to them, I'd order every single cannon to fire until there was nothing left to shoot with. I might lose, but I will at least deny my enemies their final victory.
I believe that he could easily at least scar the Pearl really hard but he simply chose not to since "it's just good business" He accepted defeat like a gentleman
Not scar it. Outright sink it, the Endeavor (based off HMS Victory) had 72 pounder carronades which would’ve have killed half the Pearl’s crew with a single point blank shot
@@gabrielcarrasco9078 the sheer enormity of the caliber of the guns on Endeavor cannot be understated. 68 pound carronades coupled with a full deck of 32 pounders plus the fact that it’s very unlikely the Pearl’s underpowered guns would have been able to penetrate the thick hull of the endeavour like in the movie
One thing that impresses me a lot about this scene is the director’s choice of perspective. In your traditional movie, seeing as Beckett is the villain, it would be playing a triumphant victory song as his ship is blown to pieces. However this film decides to show this scene from Beckett’s perspective, there is no victory here, he has lost. So as he walks down the stairs a slow somber orchestral tune plays as he faces his demise. This, in my opinion, is what truly makes this scene phenomenal and really what most directors should strive for in their films.
Solid point. Kind of related, in the charge of the Rohirrim in RotK, the score is huge and awesome as they charge, and then cuts out when they actually hit the orcs. Like, the brave and awesome part was charging, but the actual fighting was just brutal and necessary, not to be glorified
It also relates to how Beckett lost, he felt like everything was under control until the last moment, but at the last second it blew up in his face. Just like he was able to easily walk down the stairs up to the point where his ship blew up
PoC was always really good at sympathizing with the villain. Barbossa, Davy Jones, Beckett. They were never completely one dimensional villains. PoC was just a combination of amazing storytelling, directing, cinematography, music, and acting. Truly a once in a lifetime achievement.
2:38- 3:43 This is cinema at its best, the cinematography, music, & detail are all perfect. It really shows you just how destructive two ships firing on one ship at the same time can really be. And after all these years it still looks amazing!
I was thinking the same thing. Few CGI heavy movies from this period can claim the honor of looking just as good today as they did when they were released. One of Zimmer's best film scores and one of his best pieces in general. I remember seeing this scene when 1080p was still new and just being mesmerized!
The reason he didn't fight back was because his career was already ruined. He declared that his company would control all trading routes by using the dutchman to destroy their rival ships, but now he's lost the dutchman so even if he fought he can no longer fulfil his promise and he will become an embarrassment, so he chose to die there then face the shame
This makes more sense when you read about him. Beckett always strived for a title and acclaim, he wanted to be held in high regards by everyone, it was his obsession all along. So besides him being shocked by the turn of events, him giving up makes perfect sense
This is so true. The highest commanding officers are always considering their own career first and foremost, not the lives under them. I once saw my CO freeze for 2 minutes straight when he heard his grand plan backfire, even though no one got hurt. He didn't even flinch when a training mishap killed 2 of his men.
@@okko3777 He had a child publicly executed. Sure the pirates are bad but he's arguably even worse. In the words of Dutch Van Der Linde: "You kill, I kill. You rob, I rob. The only difference I see between us is that I choose whom I kill and rob while you destroy everything in your path."
This scene is extremely cinematically beautiful to me. He accepted his fate, he chose to die with his head up rather than face the shame he would get if he survived. Sad, but beautiful
To add more to what you said, he’s in a Bri’ish ship, the ship is larger than the black pearl and Dutchmen, his ship has much more cannons than the black pearl and Dutchmen combined, his ship has no visible signs of rot, and his ships hull integrity would have been so strong cannons would have bounced off it multiple times. He could have ordered his men to fire on both ships and easily defeated them, but he chose not to as he had been embarrassed and his pride was ruined so he would rather die than live with the embarrassment.
At the time, this was the most expensive movie ever made, and even after being dethroned by other films at this point... AWE still looks like the most expensive movie ever made. It's breathtaking.
Rest of East India company fleet: Hey shouldn’t we do something? We still outnumber them by like 30 ships. Admiral: Nah, they just blew up Lord Beckett and the rules state when the main bad guy dies his minions automatically surrender
Davy Jones ship has sunk fleets of ships, and they cannot die, have power over death, basically the best strategy for dealing with the Dutchman, stay on land.
@@SebastianForal he suspended many civilian rights effectively making it impossible for anyone to plead their case should they be accused of any piracy related charge. He also wasn't above killing women and children.
This scene has to be one of the best in cinema history! The slow mo and ship splintering everywhere from the ruthless canon fire! Was epic as fuck! Lord Becket went down like a true captain too!
My only question was how the hell did none of those splinters hit him? Beckett must have the Death Star shield around him… Great scene regardless, and it’s a bit stupid to question logic in a Pirates of the Caribbean film. The shot is awesome and that’s all that matters!
To this day, I maintain that scene where he's walking down the stairs as one of the coolest shots in cinematic history. Edit: not a day goes by when I don't get a notification for this comment. And to all the haters: if it's such a terrible scene, why did you presumably look up the clip on UA-cam then?
This death scene, aside from just looking spectacular, is perfect for Beckett's character. His whole thing has been control. He has remained on top of nearly every interaction with every character, little has fazed him. He has clearly thought of all outcomes and knows what to do in each. And of course he has spent this entire film attempting to control the seas, which as proven by the existence of Calypso, is impossible to do. And now, his arrogance and total failure to understand the magic that he believes he has beaten is literally blowing up in his face. He did not predict this. He did not believe for a second this could happen. And all he can do now is completely fail to comprehend what is happening. He can only walk. Only because he believed himself un-defeatable is he now being defeated. And THAT'S what really makes this scene a masterpiece. Edit: Thanks for the positive feedback!
And when his body hits the flag, it represents not only his death, but also the death of the East India Trading Company's power over the Caribbean. With Beckett gone, the company loses most of its assets in the Caribbean. While the company is shown to be still going in the later films, it's not as strong as it used to be.
Well it's one of only two sea battles where Jack is in command of a ship from the onset of the battle. The only other time that happened was when the Dutchman attacked the Pearl in Dead Man's Chest when Jack just ordered them to run. In every other instance Jack only arrives mid-battle because he's locked in the brig or he ran away.
@William Darell not when he's facing the Black Pearl, a legendary ship, and the flying frikkin Dutchman which just turned on him. Mentally he was stunned and couldn't process it, so his failure to react sealed his chances of even putting up a fight. But even if he tried. He couldn't fight both of them let alone a ship like the flying Dutchman.
This scene, the end of Beckett, it's just perfect. The man was a mastermind in both movies, controlling even Davy Jones and the Dutchman against all odds. He thought of every scenario and calculated everything that his foes could possibly think of. Everything was until his command, under his control until the last second. His biggest mistake was underestimating the pirates that he regarded as depraved people not even capable of the most basic form of thinking. And then the exact scenario he thought impossible happened. He thought it impossible because for him, all the legends and stories about the Dutchman and pirates were nothing but fairy tales not even worth the attention of a man of his status. What really killed Beckett is actually his ego, and the fact that in the end, he finally came face to face with a situation that he could not comprehend, and thus not control. That makes me think of Javert from Victor Hugo's novel " the Miserables ", who spent years chasing Jean Valjean and took his life in the end because he came up to the conclusion that everything he believed in was a lie.
Even when his men were all begging him "SIR! ORDERS SIR! WHAT DO YOU COMMAND!?" Beckett knew it was over. There was nothing he could do. Not even the gigantic fleet could save them, they were too far away, they wouldn't have made it in time. Beckett accepted the fact it was over.
Out of all the death scenes I've ever seen in my 21 years of life, this is by far one of the best. Tom Hollander's acting was just out of this world. How his face turns from confidence and pure evil to genuine panic and fear in seconds is just something a great actor can achieve and he did it. And then he just... faces death himself, standing up, like a man. He can be evil, but he's a man, and he elegantly just lets himself be defeated like a man. The effects are superb as well. The music is just completely epic. Everything in this scene is so epic and I'll never forget when I first saw it at the movies. It really blows my mind. It doesn't matter how powerful you are; you're still vulnerable.
I've heard a lot of people saying "by far one of". Maybe this comment section is a weird place to ask this but is that term a right saying or just a common mistake? Because to me it doesn't make sense. I'm not a Native speaker though so please don't take this as an insult, I'm just interested. Greetings!
@@RianDenver English isn't my first language but I'll try to explain. By far = By a great extent. So saying by far the best is like saying something tops everything else in a particular category. And saying something is by far one of the best probably means that it is among the best ones of it's kind. Hope that helped. 😅
This CGI is 13 years old now and still looks absolutely amazing.. one of my favorite movie scenes of all time, bravo to the artists and designers responsible for this!
@@Alex-th3man I was talking about the movie as a whole but you are right with the Endeavor. Still these movies are a perfect example for how to mix CGI with practical effects.
1:55-4:18 this part is amazingly well done...Beckett realises his karma has come for his greed and even as his ship and life are being torn down in front of him he does not run he simply walks down to toe deck as one final show of power...even as the world around him is destroyed, even when everyone else around him is fleeing to save themselves he sees his ideals of power through to the very end even if it wasn't the ending he wanted. the whole movie he's been attempting to seize control of the ocean even holding the captain of the flying Dutchman hostage in order to stay in power and now that its all gone wrong and his time has come he walks down into the heart of chaos on his ship and embraces death like a true villain!
Everyone is talking about how beautiful 3:08 is, but no one is realizing how grand the entrance of the Flying Dutchman is at 0:27 accompanied with an orchestra playing Davy Jones's theme.
Just leave that hehehhe. I also made cringy things but I can assure you that at the end, nobody cares. You are the only person that gaves the importance of that and how it will affect you. Sooo leave it!, if it affects you a lot, learn from your mistakes and keep moving forward :D
He didn't cry, he didn't run in fear for his life, he accepted death like a man. Edit: Jeez I have a mixture of people attacking my comment and people defending it ._.
@@Yoursandmymom No. He accepted death than to face shame since without the Dutchman’s presence on his ship, he cannot control all trading routes without him.
Ahaha that's pretty funny. But fire all is what she said not trying to be rude. Fire all is the correct way of commanding to shoot the cannons actually so it's pretty sweet she said that.
@@pangestudumas625 Because there are things that are CGI (like Davy Jones's face) but this scene in particular, is a real explosion of a real ship mixed with the scene of Beckett walking, look for it, it's on youtube, it's incredible
15 years since its release and this still holds up better than most modern CGI. It is all about knowing the limitations and stretching them from there. There are break downs of how this was both practical and visual simulation which shows how the whole exploding ship part is an amazing piece of art.
It is amazing, and shows perfectly the best use for CGI, for inanimate objects. Try as they might, they still can't do living creatures right yet. But comping backgrounds with real effects and footage, works great, as well as breaking things. Water still isn't perfect though. In this scene I can still see some smoke and dust effects that miss, but overall, very good.
@@wiredforstereo Agreed. In the Sonic The Hedgehog 2 movie, (okay run in case this is a horrendous spoiler) When they filmed Robotnik taking the emerald and gaining unlimited power, honestly, it was the crappiest CGI I’ve even seen. Looked like amateurs on UA-cam playing with CGI effects. Not that I’d type that into a review, because otherwise I liked the movies enough, and the ‘critics’ (woke mob that want to ‘cancel’ and whine everything media out of existence) have been grasping for every string possible to take ratings off the movie, so I’m just not going to give them another string to pull.
It's just that its good, properly executed CGI. Its not CGI itself thats bad. Its BAD or cheaply implemented CGI that hold up horribly. Just like with practical effects...proper CGI can be timeless.
The Human Ego is so fragile. That once it’s broken, your identity becomes unclear. Everything you thought you knew and wanted, goes out the window. (Very very painful)
Aside from the spectacle that is the actual death scene, the shot at 3:43 is probably one of my favorite shots in cinema. There is something about it that has always stuck with me since I first saw this film in theaters back when I was 5 years old. It’s a shame this film received so much critical backlash when it first came out, but looking back, these films were so ahead of their time and I’d argue masterpieces of blockbuster cinema
That's how strong Beckett's iron grip was on them. NONE of them were to act without HIS command, and if they did, he'd be ruthless on them for even going so much as a millimeter out of line. Of course, when he fails to issue ANY commands because his brain cannot process the fact that things have gone way off course, they're left unable to act until it was clear that he was pretty much gone AND it was waaaaaay too late to fight back. In a way, the thing with his crew being unable to act without his order is a reflection of why he froze up in the first place: EVERYTHING must be in order, death to all who defy HIS order.
@@reyonXIII I mean technically all captains are like this because they are payed by their government pretty handsomely and had a share on the profit the ship makes to have the captains stay very loyal So if they were to punish the law is with them which of course comes abuse but less corruption Cause remember Captains dont own the ship they are just hired to run it For the monarchs or the rich Since they are now backed by the law the captain can threaten someone with either treason or prison
For those wondering what would have happened had the Endeavour opened fire…. Historically The pearl is a galleon…which would usually carry only 12 pounders on the main deck and 9 pounders on the top deck. Amounting to 32 cannons (which is 16 per side). The Dutchman is similar in cannon count at 36 guns but she Carries heavier guns on average which makes the broadside weight heavier. She’s also obviously the Dutchman (making her unsinkable, but that doesn’t mean it can’t take a shitload of damage). The endeavour is based off HMS victory which would be carrying an enormous array of 52 guns per side (32,24,12) pounder guns whose tertiary armament alone is bigger than the black pearls main armament…to add to this, a first rate like the endeavour had wooden sides up to 2 feet thick. This would be Enough to bounce every cannon up till about 18 pounders(depending on the range)…. You also have to take into account that this is a movie and the ships are firing their cannons at astronomical rates (loading a cannon took up to 5 minutes historically), where here they are basically rapid firing machine guns. Historically, a ship is also very hard to sink and a first rate especially would take more than a couple broadsides from 2 galleons before it turned into splinters as depicted. That’s why it was much easier to capture ships…. Anyways, if the endeavour opened fire, my guesss would be the pearl sinks (even tho it is a ghost ship, she has been known to take damage like any other ship, and at that close of range broadside to a first rate like the endeavour, that would cause havoc to not just the ship but also the crew). The Dutchman will also take a load of damage, she probably wouldn’t sink as such but could also lose cannons, have splinters flying, potential major hull damage etc… the endeavour sails away probably with moderate damage, (mostly from the side which the Dutchman shot her), and at this point the Dutchman will probably finish her just because of the ghost ship factor that she is “unsinkable”.
While I enjoyed reading your analysis of this scene, all I could think about was that one scene in POTC 1 where cutlery shot out of a cannon put a hole through both the wooden side of the Pearl and an iron cell door. _To hell with with physics. Let’s blow shit up._
That would have been something I'd have preferred over this scene. The Endeavour going down in a proper fight. I wanted to see a first rate actually fight
I actually can attest to that. When I was walking down the stairs of my high school, I actually thought of this - I even knew what the guy was thinking: “Well, I guess this is how it ends.”
They couldn’t order a fire without the Captain’s order. It was a code of ethics back then, if let’s say they would have fun the person that shouted the unofficial order would have been court marshaled. The captain had the last day, it was just a gentlemen’s agreement. It’s retarded but you also have to remember the British marched head on to their enemy while receiving bayonet fire and cannon fire. It was just the way things were done at its time
@@isaiahandrews442 Especially under a hyper-controlling tyrant like Beckett. One single foot out of line, even if it does save their bacons, will be rewarded with no less than horrific punishment. It really encapsulates how, ultimately, Beckett's iron grip was a ultimately his own undoing, since he couldn't even process the very notion that the Dutchman was now against him. Sure, it'd still revive after being blasted, but it'd still have been put out of commission long enough for the Endeavour to charge towards the rest of the pirate fleet. Then again, he doesn't know Jones is dead, but regardless of whose heart was in the chest, it'd still have been roughed up by the Endeavour's fire. Beckett had the upper hand...but lost it coz he couldn't comprehend such a major turnabout.
God, sometimes I forget just how fucking cool the Pirates of the Caribbean movies were. Like, the soundtrack, the action sequences, the characters, the story, all of it. Fucking love this franchise. But not the fifth one, no. Let’s just pretend they ended with On Stranger Tides
I don't like stranger tides either, at least the last one had a conclusion with will and elizabeth being togehter again. On top of that, Jack has the Pearl once more.
I liked all of them. The stranger ties I find wasn't as good as the rest, which is a shame as it was the most costly film every mate in history. I am not an expert on this but I don't understand why everyone hates a fifth one, there where pretty cool shots and an average plot. However I would agree that the fifth did lack a bit because of the new bad villain that came out of nowhere which shows that they where running out of ideas, but its ending of braking every curse of free William was good and was a strong conclusion. Overall I find the fifth one was alright but don't know why u guys find it was shit. Please don't get mad at me for just sharing my opinion.
The way he excepted his fate and just did the most graceful walk down the stairs as the dramatic music plays was so beautiful. It honestly looked like a moving historical painting ❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥
I don't think he actually accepted his fate until the very last second; seems to me like he was more in severe shock. He couldn't understand what had just happened, the Dutchman turning against him and consequently his whole universe crumbling before his eyes was entirely beyond his comprehension. Hence his last words "It's just good business" as well: His mind was still caught in his own world. It's just in his very last split second that he begins to understand, his facial expression turning ever so slightly into horror as he looks into the camera just before he gets consumed by the flames. Brilliant scene execution, this.
The fact that they were able to give both antagonists of this film a dramatic and exceptionally satisfying conclusion to their characters is frankly, exceptionally impressive, and a thing that a lot of movies now typically fail at by undermining one of the antagonists with the others defeat. But that was something they avoided here, all while making both deaths unique and memorable. Davy Jones is sudden, after a long, hard fought battle against a wicked foe, the Menace of the Sea is ended swift, brief. And yet still, his death is all the more satisfying by the build up to it, and just seeing that knife plunge into his heart and his face of shock and pain, before he topples back off the ship he had traded everything for, finally abandoning it after his long, long life. Then Beckett, a villain only really introduced in this film, but representing the entirety of the British and the East India Trade Company. His death is more than just the death of his own character, its the defeat of one of the series larger antagonists, that being the British. As such, his death has equal build up to Davy Jones. But even then, his death as a character is emphasized, it's slow, drawn out and fantastically dramatic. It really represents the British placement in this world, so stuck out in a flurry of madness and magic.
Beautiful Mindfulness Nobody said this movie wasn’t good, in fact the comment you replied to was stating how good it was because it was the “last decent movie”.
Well they couldn't fight against the Dutchman b'cuzz its an Undead Ship. And on every heart of the sailors around seven seas. They fear the True might of The Dutchman itself
Its like the Imperial Fleet from the Battle of Endor of Star Wars. Despite having a numerical advantage they just decided to run away after hearing Palpatine's death and witnessing the destruction of Death Star 2.
That quiet "Fire" truly shows the nature of Captain Jack Sparrow.He was never a hero.He always won because he outplayed everyone he met,he was always a step ahead.Beckett could never think that Turner would become the captain of The Flying Dutchman.The way he said it was like "Gotcha,bitch".
Beckett was one of those villains that you love to hate, but I can't help but respect him in a weird way. He faces death with such poise, admitting that he was outsmarted, and coming to terms that this was the end for him.
But was he outsmarted? That walk and the look of shock on his face still baffle me. Had he wanted to, even with the Dutchman helping the Pearl, the Endeavor still had enough fire power to sink both ships and possibly win, or at least bring them with him, so why did he not give the order? Like I said, still baffled 🤷♂️
@@DKnight5170 "The reason he didn't fight back was because his career was already ruined. He declared that his company would control all trading routes by using the dutchman to destroy their rival ships, but now he's lost the dutchman so even if he fought he can no longer fulfil his promise and he will become an embarrassment, so he chose to die there then face the shame" from @ john daryne porras
@@cibo889 well, theres also the fact that the Dutchman and pearl are alone enough to take out at least some part of the army. add onto the other ships they have as backup, then the British navy is basically dead.
this scene depicts literally the absolute best of the marriage between Cinema, Music, Acting, and Special effects. Everything so cohesively and satisfyingly played out at the perfect pace of buildup, climax, and resolution! Incredible
This to me is one of the most Poetic and Epic deaths of a villain as Cutler Becket watched his world literally crumble around him. And that descend form the stair case was just amazing cinema photography. I will always love the first three Pirate films how they built up to this moment.
Beckett actually thought he had lost, when in reality he still could have won A businessman has no place on a battlefield The Endeavor could have blown both ships to pieces, but Beckett would rather die than admit defeat
I think he would’ve done substantial damage to either ship but sunk neither, especially given the Dutchman is unsinkable. Having two legendary ships squish your ship from two sides is devastating while only hitting one side of a ship doesn’t completely shred it. Also I think Beckett was considering what happens after this battle. He tried considering the possibilities given that the Dutchman isn’t out of commission now and saw that long term, he’d still lose as the Dutchman would just constantly hunt company ships
@@Uhdksurvhunter And as a main ship-of-the-line she'd be carrying the latest, heaviest guns ... 32 pounders. The only comparable guns would be the Dutchman's triple guns up front, which they chose not to use. Those look to be land cannon (long barrels).
@@lavreyPanop "Bethesda HQ Exploding because Todd put all Non Aniversary Paid Skyrim *Creations™ on another Bundle" ("New" thing Todd made for Verified Creators to make Paid Mods™ you cant get Achievments with them as they arent published by Bethesda*)
@@captaindonut5240 actually the first mate who ordered the abandon ship, lieutenant commander Groves, survived until the next movie where he got shot by a Spanish dude
Mr Grooves was the only english with enough brain to realise things like Sparrow being the best pirate he has ever seen or that something was wrong there, but he was dumbed down in the 4th when he faced the spanish.
I can't get enough of that heroic reprise of Davy Jones and the Flying Dutchman's leitmotif at 0:25. The new captain cleanses the ship from the sins of the old and the Dutchman is no longer a harbringer of doom, but the beacon of hope it was always meant to be.
@@theflyingwelshman5338 I think it brings up an interesting sailor dichotomy, do you surrender yourself to the sea, in which case being swallowed up by it was what you were heading to the whole time on purpose, or are you trapped by it, in which case dying at sea and succumbing to the darkness is the horrible doom you’re running from. What’s it gonna be? I mean I think spending eternity at the bottom of the ocean sounds peaceful but that’s just me.
I love this scene for being both epic and yet almost realistic. You rarely see the shock and panic from the bad guys or how the impact of the projectiles causes shrapnel. Still, Beckett's walk has something surreal to it, but it's not impossible. You can be hit by many shrapnel and still walk a fair bit before collapsing. Also, when I got surprised by a storm and saw trees falling around me and all sorts of debris flying like leaves, it felt like time was coming to a crawl. The funny thing in my case was that I didn't feel much more than a tiny fraction of the wind force that the trees experienced.
"Did you put your name into the Goblet of Fire, Harry?" - Dumbledore asked calmly. "IT'S JUST GOOD BUSINESS!!!" - screamed Beckett in a fit of rage, ordering his men to open fire.
Up against a mythical ship of Davy Jones himself and the fastest ship ever sailed to the Seven Seas, plus Beckett's terrible judgement, the Endeavor loses.
If you complete the exams, you're the Black Pearl and the Flying Dutchman, and the other ship I forget the name of is the exam. If you fail the exams, you're the ship I forget the name of.
There's something about the banister being destroyed after every step he takes that, to me, symbolises his empire crumbling. Everything he'd fought to build, everything he'd created was being destroyed behind him, leaving him with nothing but his own failures and loneliness. I agree that the reason he didn't give an order to attack was because he knew that they couldn't win and in that moment, as he watched the ships turn, he realised that he was just a small fish in an enormous pond. People can say what they want about this franchise and I've heard people say that the movies get worse as they progress but I think that this scene is one of the best in all 5 of the movies. Cinematic genius
@@waa.3754 He didn't give an order because he realised that it was completely pointless. He knew that they'd been beaten and he knew that Jack had played him, and he was simultaneously impressed and terrified
One the most iconic death scenes in cinema history. The way Beckett calmly feels the rail of the ship one last time while it literally explodes into forgottenness seconds later behind him. It’s also kind of poetic how the ship and then eventually himself disappears into the fleetingness of life. One second you are here and then next you are not. Make the most of it.
You know a movies good when they play a villain death like a hero death! Damn, what an amazing end to an amazing character.
Wykesicles he can not be a villain he is British 🇬🇧
@@windsormonarchist1096 Uhm... British people can be villains aswell.
The British are always the villains in movies just like the Russians, Germans, and everything else non American.
@@someguyontheinternet9305 Exactly! 😂
Agreed. And technically, if you turned the roles around, Beckett could be viewed as the hero.
Hans Zimmer absolutely killed it with this movie. I still, to this day, do not understand how this movie wasn"t nominated for best original soundtrack
My god ur soo right !! Zimmer gave potc the best soundtrack ever
@CJ2 you obviously haven't seen the movie
In my book, Hans Zimmer was nominated for all three movies. Don’t care what the Oscars have to say. His score *MADE* Pirates
@CJ2 yea u hear it everywhere cuz it’s from this movie u dumbass
Because oscar was script.. they give to another singer
Becket is just a victim of poor internet connection. Poor captain got disconnected in the middle of a team fight.
Ferdz Ferrer when you disconnect mid fight in sea of thiefs
Ferdz Ferrer
1. This movie was based in the 1720s
2. Please stop this and get out of here!
@florjan brudar you’re obviously not very fun at parties
r/woooosh
Florjan Brudar that’s why you have no friends
3:04 Probably the most majestic and glorious end a villain can get. Best I've seen in a movie. Makes me want to stand up and clap for Beckett.
this shot is so fucking cool bro
Fr I’m basing my MC off of him rn
As good as Jack into the Kraken, but, we didn’t want Jack dead, right?
I mean, Captain Jack. Both of them embraced death, full of fear, but still standing. That has to be the best franchise
The stairs just vaporizing behind him as he walks emotionless is just a chefs kiss
Probably the most epic scene of a captain going down with his ship ever.
Yes, facts.
No I think jack and the kraken tops this one. Because jack usually flees battles but when he was face to face insted of running he smiled and stayed with "beastie" as the Pearl sunk.
ShiveryBeast .....he was handcuffed TO the ship. He couldn’t go anywhere
@@KrisKbob_Gaming yes he WAS handcuffed and broke free as soon as the kraken approached. He had the chance to run but he didn't.
@@shiveryshark3582 when he broke free from the handcuff the Kraken was already literally beside him he's trapped there anyway
If you're wondering why beckett hesitated because he didn't expect to be outsmarted.
He assumed Jack will run away as he always does instead of confronting him head on.
He assumed Jones is still in command of Dutchman so will side with him instead of against him.
Its not how he pictured his day will end. Overconfidence is a killer. Guess he got a panic attack.
In the best way possible. He asked for it big time.
Well said!
Thank you I was so lost at why he was not firing back
Remind yourself that overconfidence is a slow and insidious killer.
Bit he's got a vastly better ship. If he just started shooting theyd be dead.
For those who don’t know why Lord Beckett didn’t give an order to fire is because he was so shocked by the fact that the deal turned against the dealer that he made himself.
I didn't get the deal though. What was his deal that he made?
Pure karma 😎
@الجيلالي من عهد الكوازاكي It is the best villain death ever
Still, he could've tried to fight.
@@walterfielding9079 Yeah lol
You know this scene is Goat, when it's been 16 years and it's still one of the best cinematic sequences in history.
One of the best death sequences for a villain ever, for sure.
For me, it's the charge of the rohirim in lord of the rings return of the king. But this scene is in my top five favorites
disney lost their touch when it comes to making big masterpieces
In a sea occupied by the vengeful undead and eldritch creatures, Beckett stands out to me as the man who nearly came to dominate it all; not by a mastery over death or in voodoo magic, but through his sheer proficiency in the art of the deal. Cold and cunning to the very end, it’s only fitting that his demise was brought upon by the two most feared icons of the supernatural that the Caribbean had to offer.
Your comment need more likes honestly, thats the perfect way to phrase it!
He knew he lost everything when the Dutchman was no longer under his control. That ship alone could destroy him and his fleet, and every ship sunk can be risen back by it
it's all for good business
@@thecommentguy9380 exactly. Is why he accepted his death. It gave his life a meaningful ending instead of just trying to survive. And for what? His entire life was his business
Couldn't of said it any better myself.
Faces death like a champ, calmly walks down those stairs into hell like a boss. Great death scene
A captain always goes down with his ship. You can say he was evil person, but he was a good captain
Lord Gaben good captan????
Pfft
Two sided canons and he still died
Good captain if he decided to retaliate no matter what.
Captain is good captain if he will defend his ship, even if the defeat is inevitable.
Dude was catatonic, he just froze there, it wasn't bravery it was uter fear that froze him in place
Dont exactly think he had a choice at this point
The look on Jack's face when he gives the order is GREAT. He's won the game that he, Jones and Beckett have been playing for 13 years. Not only has he won, but he's tied up all loose ends. The look of shock on Beckett's face when he says "It's just...good business." says he knows Jack has won, too. Now all that remains is to down with the ship as a man with the mind of a tycoon, but the soul of a pirate
The tastiest dish of revenge ever served
I caught that, too. Very much like how Jack just gives a rather quiet "Fire.." order to Gibbs.
The worst part is, Endeavour could’ve very easily defeated the Dutchmen and the black Pearl right there and then, That one moment where Beckett wasn’t in control was his downfall because now he didn’t know how to respond
@@ambush_akula5261the dutchman literally cant be destroyed. And the black pearl is led by Captain Jack Sparrow
@@JimmyBoy9878the Dutchman can also just resurrect the pearl and everyone on it at will if it were to ever sink, so the moment the Dutchman turned on the eatc, they were fucked
1:11 The pure glee and relief on Jack’s face to see Will alive and the chance to save his ship and crew, followed by a rare moment of camaraderie with Hector. Little moments like this truly elevate these movies.
I haven't watched the movies but I read a comment in another video this was the culmination of the franchise, so I don't get the scene? Like he didn't do anything... I thought it was an epic battle but the whip just put in position to get destroyed? What am I missing?
@@okiguess8103 So it was the first time Beckett (the white haired dude) was really outsmarted in the whole franchise, as he was always one step ahead of the Pirates. Also, he tried to, and thought he could, control the seas, and he didn't believe in the magic that he's now seeing with his own eyes (the ship and crew that come up from underwater). To see him finally fail, and get what he had coming to him (and actually accept defeat gracefully) was very satisfying.
@@mamasunshine83 ohh him not believing in magic makes me understand the context better. I just felt he had an army of ships and he went straight to get shot, but I get it now. Thanks
meh, imagine these wooden ship of line vs a modern day air craft carriers.
for some reason ive always loved how that one officer was sensible enough to order abandon ship and jumps off without hestitation
ReduxEditor335, Too bad he was killed at the battle of Fountain of Youth. Such a loss, he could have made a great creer, but ended only as luitenant-commander.
ReduxEditor335 i did not understand this scene why they wait without do anything
Ahmet Yüksel Have you seen the movie?
Clash Gamer yes but why beckett wait, and ve did not do anything
Because he thought that the Flying Dutchman, Davy Jone's former ship, was still under his command.
When the BlackPearl AND the Dutchman turned against the "Endeavor", he just blanked; he had just made the biggest mistake of his life, and he couldn't do anything to escape his fate except going down with the ship like a real captain.
But I'm only seen the "original" trilogy once at theaters, and didn't bother with 4&5, so I might not remember it perfectly...
I love how everything behind Beckett is being obliterated, it's almost symbolizing his trail of destruction across the sea, and now that trail has finally caught up with him…
It symbolises the material world he devoted his entire life to crumbling around him as he realizes that it's all meaningless. "It's just good business"
@@edeliteedelite1961 Lord Business
This is an amazing take on this scene! I've never thought about that before. I always found it kind of cheesy how the stairs are obliterated right behind him until the ship finally explodes, but now it actually makes sense with your perspective! Thanks for making this scene better for me lol
*Masterpiece Of 2007 Year.*
@@brandonsmith9098 Personally, if I were about to lose to them, I'd order every single cannon to fire until there was nothing left to shoot with. I might lose, but I will at least deny my enemies their final victory.
0:10 When you breeze through the singleplayer campaign
3:07 Then you try multiplayer for the first time
_ Chean _ underrated comment . Needs more likes
Lmaooo
_ Chean _ me with call of duty in a nutshell. 0:10 me with bots
3:07 me playing online cod
_ Chean _ LOLOL
Waking into the lobby be like
I believe that he could easily at least scar the Pearl really hard but he simply chose not to since "it's just good business"
He accepted defeat like a gentleman
Not scar it. Outright sink it, the Endeavor (based off HMS Victory) had 72 pounder carronades which would’ve have killed half the Pearl’s crew with a single point blank shot
That still gets me, 50 canons and not 1 fired back
Given the sheer amount of canons its quite probable he would have sunk the Pearl. The Dutchman would have stood purely because it can't be sunk.
@@gabrielcarrasco9078 the sheer enormity of the caliber of the guns on Endeavor cannot be understated. 68 pound carronades coupled with a full deck of 32 pounders plus the fact that it’s very unlikely the Pearl’s underpowered guns would have been able to penetrate the thick hull of the endeavour like in the movie
@@gabrielcarrasco9078I think the entirety of watching his entire plan unfold left him in such a state of shock
Soldier: Sir, what do you command?!
[Beckett has left the game]
xx_will turner_xx: get rekt noob
Ban this guy forever
Start-up-a-up-a
Drowning sailor on fire: gg ez report leaver pls
No it’s
Crew:ORDERS,Sir?
[Beckett.exe has stopped working]
One thing that impresses me a lot about this scene is the director’s choice of perspective. In your traditional movie, seeing as Beckett is the villain, it would be playing a triumphant victory song as his ship is blown to pieces. However this film decides to show this scene from Beckett’s perspective, there is no victory here, he has lost. So as he walks down the stairs a slow somber orchestral tune plays as he faces his demise.
This, in my opinion, is what truly makes this scene phenomenal and really what most directors should strive for in their films.
This made me rethink my entire perspective on direction
Solid point. Kind of related, in the charge of the Rohirrim in RotK, the score is huge and awesome as they charge, and then cuts out when they actually hit the orcs. Like, the brave and awesome part was charging, but the actual fighting was just brutal and necessary, not to be glorified
It also relates to how Beckett lost, he felt like everything was under control until the last moment, but at the last second it blew up in his face. Just like he was able to easily walk down the stairs up to the point where his ship blew up
PoC was always really good at sympathizing with the villain. Barbossa, Davy Jones, Beckett. They were never completely one dimensional villains. PoC was just a combination of amazing storytelling, directing, cinematography, music, and acting. Truly a once in a lifetime achievement.
Well, in the end, it was.. just that... a good business. With a great deal of consequencies... but a good business nonetheless.
15 years old and it still looks glorious.
I cant believe this shits already 15 😭😭
I cant believe this shits already 15 😭😭
It’s 15?!, that’s my age *wtf*
That’s incredible though how well this scene…this movie did at its time
Tis the curse (rather blessing) of the black pearl
you had me double check if it was 15 years lmao... and indeed... were did the time go lmao....
2:38- 3:43 This is cinema at its best, the cinematography, music, & detail are all perfect. It really shows you just how destructive two ships firing on one ship at the same time can really be. And after all these years it still looks amazing!
Well the firing is definitely sped up since it’s a movie, cannons can’t fire that fast in such a short period of time. But still, ur point remains.
I mean those cannons were really fast firing and extra powerful, but when its two ghost ships that can be excused
I was thinking the same thing. Few CGI heavy movies from this period can claim the honor of looking just as good today as they did when they were released. One of Zimmer's best film scores and one of his best pieces in general. I remember seeing this scene when 1080p was still new and just being mesmerized!
The reason he didn't fight back was because his career was already ruined. He declared that his company would control all trading routes by using the dutchman to destroy their rival ships, but now he's lost the dutchman so even if he fought he can no longer fulfil his promise and he will become an embarrassment, so he chose to die there then face the shame
Now i understand
This makes more sense when you read about him. Beckett always strived for a title and acclaim, he wanted to be held in high regards by everyone, it was his obsession all along. So besides him being shocked by the turn of events, him giving up makes perfect sense
Plus, he couldn't go against the Flying Dutchman
don't read too much into it. it's good but, it's still just a flippin' movie...peace john
This is so true. The highest commanding officers are always considering their own career first and foremost, not the lives under them. I once saw my CO freeze for 2 minutes straight when he heard his grand plan backfire, even though no one got hurt. He didn't even flinch when a training mishap killed 2 of his men.
One of the best movies Villains ever and he was only ever outsmarted by something he could never picture happening.
Michael Carney he outsmarted himself
Pirates is the villains lol.. the soldier is only protecting his country
@@okko3777 He had a child publicly executed. Sure the pirates are bad but he's arguably even worse. In the words of Dutch Van Der Linde:
"You kill, I kill. You rob, I rob. The only difference I see between us is that I choose whom I kill and rob while you destroy everything in your path."
@@SF-ow9ym I hAvE a pLaN
@@far0145 wE JusT NeEd mOre MoNeY
This scene is extremely cinematically beautiful to me. He accepted his fate, he chose to die with his head up rather than face the shame he would get if he survived. Sad, but beautiful
Good thing Groves was sensible and told everyone else to abandon ship
To add more to what you said, he’s in a Bri’ish ship, the ship is larger than the black pearl and Dutchmen, his ship has much more cannons than the black pearl and Dutchmen combined, his ship has no visible signs of rot, and his ships hull integrity would have been so strong cannons would have bounced off it multiple times. He could have ordered his men to fire on both ships and easily defeated them, but he chose not to as he had been embarrassed and his pride was ruined so he would rather die than live with the embarrassment.
He wasn’t accepting, he was in shock
@@Archalias100 Thats how I took it as well. Beckett isn't honorable enough not to try to survive at the expense of everyone else.
He was in shock
Dude sticks a whole new definition to 'An elegant death.'.
Can we all agree that the CGI in this scene is just on a whole nother level??!
moaz wagdy The CGI in all of these movies was on another PLANE. Even compared to today with some modern CGI, this looks a lot better
Because cgi back then is not overused unlike today
At the time, this was the most expensive movie ever made, and even after being dethroned by other films at this point... AWE still looks like the most expensive movie ever made. It's breathtaking.
Plot twist the explosions were real
They really make the things explode. Look at this. ua-cam.com/video/B5fKHCMAml4/v-deo.html
3:07 walking out of the classroom knowing you just failed that test
Indeed
Hmmmmmm no
Agreed, unless you do the old fashion “I convinced myself I got all those answers right”
Jackson I really felt that.
Agreed
Rest of East India company fleet: Hey shouldn’t we do something? We still outnumber them by like 30 ships.
Admiral: Nah, they just blew up Lord Beckett and the rules state when the main bad guy dies his minions automatically surrender
well Becketts ship had bigger fire power and with the leader gone the other ran off!
Davy Jones ship has sunk fleets of ships, and they cannot die, have power over death, basically the best strategy for dealing with the Dutchman, stay on land.
But they're the good guys, when their leader dies they just get more motivated.
“I’m sorry, sir. They won.”
“What do you mean they won?!”
Well if I saw the flying Dutchman blow up my leaders ship I'd fuck off too. How do you fight a ship you can't sink?
A true Captain shall always go down with his ship . RIP Lord Becket
An Good Captain
I don't see him as a villain to be honest, he is justice
@@SebastianForalit’s just a good business
Honor , a man can lose everything in his life including his own life , but not his honor .
@@SebastianForal he suspended many civilian rights effectively making it impossible for anyone to plead their case should they be accused of any piracy related charge. He also wasn't above killing women and children.
This movie was fun and good, and I’m tired of pretending it’s not.
Preach.
I feel like anyone who dislikes this movie is way to over critical, like even if you think it has narrative flaws you can’t deny the pure fun.
U kidding me ? This movie is so overrated
I mean underrated sry keyboard typo
Oh why hello their Haedox. Yes the first , second and third pirates of the Caribbean are all fantastic
Why have you ever pretended such a thing, though?
Why pretending?
when your controller batteries die in the middle of a fight
Splinters and fire= Your team raging at you
Hahahhahahhahahahahahahahhaah
So true!
Ah feck
100M Subscribers No Videos Challenge Spiceo shut up
Best comment I've ever read
I'll never forget the sound of those cannons in the theater.
My ears were ringing for a week.
watching this at a theater at the beach gave the movie a realistic feel.
Hearing them again be like "I know those guns.." *checks out window to see neighbors watching POTC*
And them flying through the air. Just the best scene.
@Aaron Miller you lucky, lucky man. I wish i wasn't 7 months old and was able to see it in the cinemas. :(
This scene has to be one of the best in cinema history! The slow mo and ship splintering everywhere from the ruthless canon fire! Was epic as fuck! Lord Becket went down like a true captain too!
This lol 😂
My only question was how the hell did none of those splinters hit him? Beckett must have the Death Star shield around him…
Great scene regardless, and it’s a bit stupid to question logic in a Pirates of the Caribbean film. The shot is awesome and that’s all that matters!
To this day, I maintain that scene where he's walking down the stairs as one of the coolest shots in cinematic history.
Edit: not a day goes by when I don't get a notification for this comment. And to all the haters: if it's such a terrible scene, why did you presumably look up the clip on UA-cam then?
In reality he'd have been shredded by shrapnel but I guess it looks kinda cool
Agree. And has meme potential too.
It's the contrast between his serenity and the utter chaos around him.
It’s a perfect metaphor for humanity going through 2020.
FACTS!!!!
This death scene, aside from just looking spectacular, is perfect for Beckett's character. His whole thing has been control. He has remained on top of nearly every interaction with every character, little has fazed him. He has clearly thought of all outcomes and knows what to do in each. And of course he has spent this entire film attempting to control the seas, which as proven by the existence of Calypso, is impossible to do. And now, his arrogance and total failure to understand the magic that he believes he has beaten is literally blowing up in his face. He did not predict this. He did not believe for a second this could happen. And all he can do now is completely fail to comprehend what is happening. He can only walk. Only because he believed himself un-defeatable is he now being defeated. And THAT'S what really makes this scene a masterpiece.
Edit: Thanks for the positive feedback!
Very well said about his character. An underrated one in the Pirates series if you ask me.
A tale of overconfidence indeed
And when his body hits the flag, it represents not only his death, but also the death of the East India Trading Company's power over the Caribbean.
With Beckett gone, the company loses most of its assets in the Caribbean. While the company is shown to be still going in the later films, it's not as strong as it used to be.
Outstanding summary.
I mean he could of told them to fire back but no
Fun fact: This is the only time Jack Sparrow orders "FIRE" in the entire franchise, uptil now
Dang, I've researched every movie,
You're actually right. Cuz most of the time it's Gibbs shouting fire
And they fired him instead 😂
Yeah it's because Gibbs is the Quartermaster. It was their job usually the Captain would often just nod
@@balajibala9271 bruh haha
Well it's one of only two sea battles where Jack is in command of a ship from the onset of the battle. The only other time that happened was when the Dutchman attacked the Pearl in Dead Man's Chest when Jack just ordered them to run. In every other instance Jack only arrives mid-battle because he's locked in the brig or he ran away.
3:04 me leaving the thanksgiving dinner table after bringing up politics
I'm so lucky my entire family has the same political beliefs 💀💀
😮😮@@thekellanator2642
sounds fun
bro
"It's just a.....good scene"
Loll wkwkwk
@PaPBra Gaming it is funny I laughed
Abandon commentary!
PaPBra Gaming mind your own business lol
😂😂
This movie is 13 years old now.
God damn this aged well.
Like wine
@@NICSU667 like rum
@@theyellowbrad8168 Wait.... does rum actually aged well in real life?
@@panzerschliffehohenzollern4863
No actually it loses it's test with time.
Like fine wine 🥂
This scene does a good job displaying how untouchable Beckett literally was until he wasn’t.
HowlingNinjaDog he should’ve known it would come down to this
@@OGBoogs Live by the cannon, die by the cannon.
@William Darell that's not the point
@William Darell no he wasn't considering he was fired upon both sides of the ship.
@William Darell not when he's facing the Black Pearl, a legendary ship, and the flying frikkin Dutchman which just turned on him. Mentally he was stunned and couldn't process it, so his failure to react sealed his chances of even putting up a fight. But even if he tried. He couldn't fight both of them let alone a ship like the flying Dutchman.
This scene, the end of Beckett, it's just perfect. The man was a mastermind in both movies, controlling even Davy Jones and the Dutchman against all odds. He thought of every scenario and calculated everything that his foes could possibly think of. Everything was until his command, under his control until the last second. His biggest mistake was underestimating the pirates that he regarded as depraved people not even capable of the most basic form of thinking. And then the exact scenario he thought impossible happened. He thought it impossible because for him, all the legends and stories about the Dutchman and pirates were nothing but fairy tales not even worth the attention of a man of his status. What really killed Beckett is actually his ego, and the fact that in the end, he finally came face to face with a situation that he could not comprehend, and thus not control. That makes me think of Javert from Victor Hugo's novel " the Miserables ", who spent years chasing Jean Valjean and took his life in the end because he came up to the conclusion that everything he believed in was a lie.
Even when his men were all begging him "SIR! ORDERS SIR! WHAT DO YOU COMMAND!?" Beckett knew it was over. There was nothing he could do. Not even the gigantic fleet could save them, they were too far away, they wouldn't have made it in time. Beckett accepted the fact it was over.
Out of all the death scenes I've ever seen in my 21 years of life, this is by far one of the best. Tom Hollander's acting was just out of this world. How his face turns from confidence and pure evil to genuine panic and fear in seconds is just something a great actor can achieve and he did it. And then he just... faces death himself, standing up, like a man. He can be evil, but he's a man, and he elegantly just lets himself be defeated like a man.
The effects are superb as well. The music is just completely epic. Everything in this scene is so epic and I'll never forget when I first saw it at the movies. It really blows my mind. It doesn't matter how powerful you are; you're still vulnerable.
Damn , well said 👏👏
I've heard a lot of people saying "by far one of". Maybe this comment section is a weird place to ask this but is that term a right saying or just a common mistake? Because to me it doesn't make sense. I'm not a Native speaker though so please don't take this as an insult, I'm just interested.
Greetings!
We got Tom Holland and Tom Hollander
@@RianDenver English isn't my first language but I'll try to explain. By far = By a great extent. So saying by far the best is like saying something tops everything else in a particular category. And saying something is by far one of the best probably means that it is among the best ones of it's kind. Hope that helped. 😅
Actually the whole ship deck was a set that they blew up! The end result is amazing!
It's crazy how he didn't get a single wood splinter in his eyes.
NOT THE FACE NOT THE FUCKIN FACE
I believe he did, it's just too small and he didn't even care... And also, Disney...
You know its a movie right
How do I delete someone else's comment-
He still had plot armor
This CGI is 13 years old now and still looks absolutely amazing.. one of my favorite movie scenes of all time, bravo to the artists and designers responsible for this!
The only CGI were the backgrounds everything else was pratical
@@Alex-th3man there is still a lot of cgi
@@user7516 watch this and ill prove it
ua-cam.com/video/B5fKHCMAml4/v-deo.html
@@Alex-th3man I was talking about the movie as a whole but you are right with the Endeavor. Still these movies are a perfect example for how to mix CGI with practical effects.
@@user7516 Apart from the multiple Johnny Depps CGI which looks atrocious. They do look impressive.
1:55-4:18 this part is amazingly well done...Beckett realises his karma has come for his greed and even as his ship and life are being torn down in front of him he does not run he simply walks down to toe deck as one final show of power...even as the world around him is destroyed, even when everyone else around him is fleeing to save themselves he sees his ideals of power through to the very end even if it wasn't the ending he wanted.
the whole movie he's been attempting to seize control of the ocean even holding the captain of the flying Dutchman hostage in order to stay in power and now that its all gone wrong and his time has come he walks down into the heart of chaos on his ship and embraces death like a true villain!
Everyone is talking about how beautiful 3:08 is, but no one is realizing how grand the entrance of the Flying Dutchman is at 0:27 accompanied with an orchestra playing Davy Jones's theme.
Leave it to lord Zimmer for such genius
In conclusion, every shot in this movie are miraculously amazing.
Over 9000
i dont think it is davy jones theme
@@pthtrink It is Davy Jones's theme. Did you try turning up your volume?
3:08 when you‘re trying to step into future with positivity but that cringy thing you did 10 years ago still haunts you
XD
Same
Just leave that hehehhe. I also made cringy things but I can assure you that at the end, nobody cares. You are the only person that gaves the importance of that and how it will affect you. Sooo leave it!, if it affects you a lot, learn from your mistakes and keep moving forward :D
Amen
You missed the extra walk of shame at 2:59 lol.
He didn't cry, he didn't run in fear for his life, he accepted death like a man. Edit: Jeez I have a mixture of people attacking my comment and people defending it ._.
Que the meme of the guy standing upset with his hands on his hips with the caption "the rest of the crew"
Legends dearh
I felt sorry for him.
He wasn't a man😂 he literally was just in shock my dude
@@Yoursandmymom No. He accepted death than to face shame since without the Dutchman’s presence on his ship, he cannot control all trading routes without him.
Disney greatest live action adaptation from a little slow boat ride.
Missed you Captain Jack Sparrow.
3:07 me walking downstairs to tell my parents my grades
YES
We’ve all been there
2:21
Me: "its just...bad grades"
My ass: *"ABANDON SHIP! ABANDON SHIP!"*
LMAO
3:32 Your parent's after they were told...
3:08 when your parents call you downstairs by your full name
Gold
😂😂😂😂
XDDD
Most underated comment ever
I haven’t laughed this hard at a comment in a _long_ time. No nose exhale. The more I look at it, the more stupid giggling I do.
Everyone else: FIIIIIRRRRRRRE!!
Elizabeth Swan: FYE ROOOOOOOAAAAAAAR!!
AplhaConservative007 she said fire all
@@walter8154 and?
Oh, Dein Arsch My third time seeing my profile pic twin
@@epicface5993, yes
Ahaha that's pretty funny. But fire all is what she said not trying to be rude. Fire all is the correct way of commanding to shoot the cannons actually so it's pretty sweet she said that.
0:25 still gives me chills ️. Loved how happy Jack is to see Will survived at 1:11 .
My parents: *Arguing and about to get divorced *
Me going downstairs to restart the internet router: 2:59
Underrated Comment
I think it also fits with this scene 3:07 😂
as soemone whos parents actually got divorced with huge fights going on everyday, this is exactly how it feels
Nice comment bro
En español suena mejor
Alternate ending:
Groves: "ORDERS, SIR?"
Beckett: "Fire"
Black Pearl and Dutchmen: Wasted
They are lucky they have plot armor
Mmm nah, they weren’t getting out of that one, they would have only been prepared to fire one side anyway.
@@TheOldBlackShuckyDog Taking one ship down with you is better then none don't you think?
Put Thomas Cochrane as captain on the Endeavour, and the Peal and the Dutchmen would've been obliterated.
Black pearl, Yes,
But dutchman can sail underwater, you really think you can destroy it, it supernatural ship,
The details and effects on this 2007 movie is way better than the 2011 movie
I kinda disagree.
Because is not cgi
@@pangestudumas625 Because there are things that are CGI (like Davy Jones's face) but this scene in particular, is a real explosion of a real ship mixed with the scene of Beckett walking, look for it, it's on youtube, it's incredible
I edited it to effects
@@ArteAstral exactly!!! Thanks for correcting people :)
It's 2024 and every now and then I like to come back to scenes from great movies like this to remind myself how good we used to have it.
2:22 You can see the fireball reflection in his eye. That's some real attention to detail
They just was very brave
woah i did not notice that
@@constructknowledge-p8z I still don't see it at 1080p.
@@tsujan3984 His left eye / to your right. Just a small orange flash
Plot twist: this was all real. God just gave some of his recordings to us
15 years since its release and this still holds up better than most modern CGI. It is all about knowing the limitations and stretching them from there. There are break downs of how this was both practical and visual simulation which shows how the whole exploding ship part is an amazing piece of art.
It is amazing, and shows perfectly the best use for CGI, for inanimate objects. Try as they might, they still can't do living creatures right yet. But comping backgrounds with real effects and footage, works great, as well as breaking things. Water still isn't perfect though. In this scene I can still see some smoke and dust effects that miss, but overall, very good.
@@wiredforstereo Agreed. In the Sonic The Hedgehog 2 movie, (okay run in case this is a horrendous spoiler)
When they filmed Robotnik taking the emerald and gaining unlimited power, honestly, it was the crappiest CGI I’ve even seen. Looked like amateurs on UA-cam playing with CGI effects.
Not that I’d type that into a review, because otherwise I liked the movies enough, and the ‘critics’ (woke mob that want to ‘cancel’ and whine everything media out of existence) have been grasping for every string possible to take ratings off the movie, so I’m just not going to give them another string to pull.
Well it was quite modern and cutting edge for its time lol
There's a place for and not for CGI
These movies knew where to put and where to keep out CGI perfectly
It's just that its good, properly executed CGI. Its not CGI itself thats bad. Its BAD or cheaply implemented CGI that hold up horribly.
Just like with practical effects...proper CGI can be timeless.
The Human Ego is so fragile. That once it’s broken, your identity becomes unclear.
Everything you thought you knew and wanted, goes out the window. (Very very painful)
Fjj
Indeed he did.
@Jdabomb93, that’s actually quite profound. Bravo!
Xytan C22
Thank you Sir. 😊
This quote perfectly sums up a villain named Griffith from a manga/anime called Berserk.
"The Human Ego is so fragile. That once it’s broken, your identity becomes unclear." "I sexually identify as an attack helicopter."
Aside from the spectacle that is the actual death scene, the shot at 3:43 is probably one of my favorite shots in cinema. There is something about it that has always stuck with me since I first saw this film in theaters back when I was 5 years old. It’s a shame this film received so much critical backlash when it first came out, but looking back, these films were so ahead of their time and I’d argue masterpieces of blockbuster cinema
I’m surprised Beckett’s crew didn’t just say screw it and fire back when the pirates started firing.
@@spongepantssquarebob5863 But they were already loaded weren't they?
That's how strong Beckett's iron grip was on them. NONE of them were to act without HIS command, and if they did, he'd be ruthless on them for even going so much as a millimeter out of line.
Of course, when he fails to issue ANY commands because his brain cannot process the fact that things have gone way off course, they're left unable to act until it was clear that he was pretty much gone AND it was waaaaaay too late to fight back. In a way, the thing with his crew being unable to act without his order is a reflection of why he froze up in the first place: EVERYTHING must be in order, death to all who defy HIS order.
@@spongepantssquarebob5863 Obviously you have watched too much TV, it takes a lot of cannon fire to even disable a ship.
Yeah, they like destroyed two ships in the opening scene
@@reyonXIII I mean technically all captains are like this because they are payed by their government pretty handsomely and had a share on the profit the ship makes to have the captains stay very loyal
So if they were to punish the law is with them which of course comes abuse but less corruption
Cause remember Captains dont own the ship they are just hired to run it
For the monarchs or the rich
Since they are now backed by the law the captain can threaten someone with either treason or prison
For those wondering what would have happened had the Endeavour opened fire…. Historically The pearl is a galleon…which would usually carry only 12 pounders on the main deck and 9 pounders on the top deck. Amounting to 32 cannons (which is 16 per side).
The Dutchman is similar in cannon count at 36 guns but she Carries heavier guns on average which makes the broadside weight heavier. She’s also obviously the Dutchman (making her unsinkable, but that doesn’t mean it can’t take a shitload of damage).
The endeavour is based off HMS victory which would be carrying an enormous array of 52 guns per side (32,24,12) pounder guns whose tertiary armament alone is bigger than the black pearls main armament…to add to this, a first rate like the endeavour had wooden sides up to 2 feet thick. This would be Enough to bounce every cannon up till about 18 pounders(depending on the range)….
You also have to take into account that this is a movie and the ships are firing their cannons at astronomical rates (loading a cannon took up to 5 minutes historically), where here they are basically rapid firing machine guns.
Historically, a ship is also very hard to sink and a first rate especially would take more than a couple broadsides from 2 galleons before it turned into splinters as depicted. That’s why it was much easier to capture ships….
Anyways, if the endeavour opened fire, my guesss would be the pearl sinks (even tho it is a ghost ship, she has been known to take damage like any other ship, and at that close of range broadside to a first rate like the endeavour, that would cause havoc to not just the ship but also the crew).
The Dutchman will also take a load of damage, she probably wouldn’t sink as such but could also lose cannons, have splinters flying, potential major hull damage etc… the endeavour sails away probably with moderate damage, (mostly from the side which the Dutchman shot her), and at this point the Dutchman will probably finish her just because of the ghost ship factor that she is “unsinkable”.
Thanks for interesting input
While I enjoyed reading your analysis of this scene, all I could think about was that one scene in POTC 1 where cutlery shot out of a cannon put a hole through both the wooden side of the Pearl and an iron cell door.
_To hell with with physics. Let’s blow shit up._
That would have been something I'd have preferred over this scene. The Endeavour going down in a proper fight. I wanted to see a first rate actually fight
dude it's a film about magic ghost pirates, keep your furious naval wankings in the here and now where they belong
Okay
3:07 is like when you step outside your highschool for the final time and your childhood is officially over.
This one is actually quite clever ngl
And the explosion represents adulthood
I actually can attest to that. When I was walking down the stairs of my high school, I actually thought of this - I even knew what the guy was thinking: “Well, I guess this is how it ends.”
True
The entire world crashes
1:11 Rare moment of Barbossa following Jack's orders
"Orders, sir?!"
(stares with eyes of a dead person)
"It's just...good business"
"Uhh.....o-kay, then. ABANDON SHIP!!!!!!!!!!!!"
averythesuperhero I would have yelled fire as soon as physically possible to try survive enough for an escape to the armada
@Rubric Marine Ordering fire or not they would last 5 seconds either way
@@p_eabean they could obliterate the 2 other ships as well just as a final act if they have enough men to fire cannons on both sides simultaneously
They couldn’t order a fire without the Captain’s order. It was a code of ethics back then, if let’s say they would have fun the person that shouted the unofficial order would have been court marshaled. The captain had the last day, it was just a gentlemen’s agreement. It’s retarded but you also have to remember the British marched head on to their enemy while receiving bayonet fire and cannon fire. It was just the way things were done at its time
@@isaiahandrews442 Especially under a hyper-controlling tyrant like Beckett. One single foot out of line, even if it does save their bacons, will be rewarded with no less than horrific punishment. It really encapsulates how, ultimately, Beckett's iron grip was a ultimately his own undoing, since he couldn't even process the very notion that the Dutchman was now against him. Sure, it'd still revive after being blasted, but it'd still have been put out of commission long enough for the Endeavour to charge towards the rest of the pirate fleet. Then again, he doesn't know Jones is dead, but regardless of whose heart was in the chest, it'd still have been roughed up by the Endeavour's fire.
Beckett had the upper hand...but lost it coz he couldn't comprehend such a major turnabout.
God, sometimes I forget just how fucking cool the Pirates of the Caribbean movies were. Like, the soundtrack, the action sequences, the characters, the story, all of it. Fucking love this franchise. But not the fifth one, no. Let’s just pretend they ended with On Stranger Tides
I don't like stranger tides either, at least the last one had a conclusion with will and elizabeth being togehter again. On top of that, Jack has the Pearl once more.
LMAO this movie was AWFUL along with Stranger Tides. Really the only good one was the first one and that released almost 20 years ago.
@@SycoticForeverNeverAF mate did u just seriously just come out here to laugh at his opinion to then share yours and like ur own comment
I liked all of them. The stranger ties I find wasn't as good as the rest, which is a shame as it was the most costly film every mate in history. I am not an expert on this but I don't understand why everyone hates a fifth one, there where pretty cool shots and an average plot. However I would agree that the fifth did lack a bit because of the new bad villain that came out of nowhere which shows that they where running out of ideas, but its ending of braking every curse of free William was good and was a strong conclusion. Overall I find the fifth one was alright but don't know why u guys find it was shit. Please don't get mad at me for just sharing my opinion.
the trilogy was perfect but the four it feels like a tv movie and i don't even watch the fifth
When you are about to get hit by a truck.
*Brain* : ...
*Body* : "Sir order, Sir?!"
*Heart* : "It's just...Good business"
*Soul* : *ABANDON SHIP!*
Fart: proceeds to leave the body
*Driver: FIIIIREEEEE*
Well, it would be late to run.
The way he excepted his fate and just did the most graceful walk down the stairs as the dramatic music plays was so beautiful. It honestly looked like a moving historical painting ❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥
I don't think he actually accepted his fate until the very last second; seems to me like he was more in severe shock.
He couldn't understand what had just happened, the Dutchman turning against him and consequently his whole universe crumbling before his eyes was entirely beyond his comprehension. Hence his last words "It's just good business" as well: His mind was still caught in his own world.
It's just in his very last split second that he begins to understand, his facial expression turning ever so slightly into horror as he looks into the camera just before he gets consumed by the flames.
Brilliant scene execution, this.
So that's how Poland felt during the second world war
AgentIce77 this is underrated 😂😂
That vary true
@Hrvoje Tonkovac Ya, they lasted longer then France at least.
No, poland would've been like 2 endeavours shooting at a small civil fishing ship.
@james morgan You've just proven that you know nothing about Poland
3:08 When your entire team leaves the game and you're the only one left
PUBG
Bruh that happened to me
Haha
Happens to me and i feel betrayed
MVM in TF2
-“It’s just good business”
-“Got you sir, abandon ship”
The expression the crew made when they decided to abandon ship is priceless.
But why he did not order to fire ?
@@syedtoufeeq7823 he was in complete shock
@@syedtoufeeq7823 because Dutchman is unsinkable . And Elizabeth was on the Black pearl
@@PogFinder ok
@@ledovex k
The fact that they were able to give both antagonists of this film a dramatic and exceptionally satisfying conclusion to their characters is frankly, exceptionally impressive, and a thing that a lot of movies now typically fail at by undermining one of the antagonists with the others defeat. But that was something they avoided here, all while making both deaths unique and memorable. Davy Jones is sudden, after a long, hard fought battle against a wicked foe, the Menace of the Sea is ended swift, brief. And yet still, his death is all the more satisfying by the build up to it, and just seeing that knife plunge into his heart and his face of shock and pain, before he topples back off the ship he had traded everything for, finally abandoning it after his long, long life.
Then Beckett, a villain only really introduced in this film, but representing the entirety of the British and the East India Trade Company. His death is more than just the death of his own character, its the defeat of one of the series larger antagonists, that being the British. As such, his death has equal build up to Davy Jones. But even then, his death as a character is emphasized, it's slow, drawn out and fantastically dramatic. It really represents the British placement in this world, so stuck out in a flurry of madness and magic.
Both their last words are incredibly fitting as well.
Beckett was introduced in the same movie as Davy jones
Both appeared in At worlds end and Dead mans chest
For a 2007 movie...
This was AWESOME!
@@jillvalentinedontcryformea8966 the hell you going on about, guess you can do better huh??? I would pay to see you make a movie
Beautiful Mindfulness That’s not our responsibility, and that inability does not take away from anybody’s opinion.
@@sun290 you are right😔😔😔 but I love this movie bro
Beautiful Mindfulness
Nobody said this movie wasn’t good, in fact the comment you replied to was stating how good it was because it was the “last decent movie”.
@@sun290 holy shit! I was drunk as hell last night...😅😅😅
2:33 is my favorite, the helmsman just yeets himself off the ship.
ABANDON SHIP - because his boss has gone bonkers and can’t give anymore orders...
@@my_MillenniumFalcon I understand that, I'm just saying the way he throws himself off the ship is amazing.
FUCK THIS SHIT I'M OUT
Captain has gone Coo coo *Adios!!!*
@@RandomUA-camChannel.... exactly
Beckett: *dies*
The rest of Beckett's Armada: aight we're out
Well they couldn't fight against the Dutchman b'cuzz its an Undead Ship. And on every heart of the sailors around seven seas. They fear the True might of The Dutchman itself
Its like the Imperial Fleet from the Battle of Endor of Star Wars. Despite having a numerical advantage they just decided to run away after hearing Palpatine's death and witnessing the destruction of Death Star 2.
@@captainvalourous6668 Well remember, they did also end up losing the Executor as well, which was the most powerful ship in the Imperial fleet.
@@Spiralpaladin Is the eclipse class canon, because if it is that would be the largest
@@dawsonreum8096 The Eclipse Class is extended universe. And, it was manufactured six years AFTER the Battle of Endor.
No matter how many times i watched this scene, it's always giving me 100% goosebumps
That quiet "Fire" truly shows the nature of Captain Jack Sparrow.He was never a hero.He always won because he outplayed everyone he met,he was always a step ahead.Beckett could never think that Turner would become the captain of The Flying Dutchman.The way he said it was like "Gotcha,bitch".
@Plo Koon Would you have liked it to?
@Plo Koon I know. But thank God it didn't. That ending would be shitty.
@Plo Koon and besides, even if he beat both ships, he still had every other pirate to fight off.
@@stipe9k HEY WHO THE FUCK ARE YOU
Plo Koon They are both magical ships, no normal ship can defeat them.
When you realize you were never meant for multiplayer.
When you play sea of thieves for the first time and try to fight
hard to heart when you play Battlefront II as an soldier, and you go in the middle :”v
ben outlaw and you were the leader of the team for first time
Oh, this brings back memories. My first Online-games, used to the primitive AI of Singleplayer back then, were a brutal wakeup-call.
That’s me in Halo
one of the most legendary scenes in cinema history.
acting 💯
sound effects 💯
theme 💯
scenario 💯
Best. Cinematic. Death. Scene. Ever.
One of the best for sure.
Tbh Beckett is probs best and most intelligent villain.
When I go to bed 3:46
One of the best movie scenes period. It plucks this one from the jaws of mediocrity.
One word, satisfaction🙌
Beckett was one of those villains that you love to hate, but I can't help but respect him in a weird way. He faces death with such poise, admitting that he was outsmarted, and coming to terms that this was the end for him.
The deal he made went south for him. He rather choose death than embarrassment.
He killed innocence without due process by the dozens. No sympathy from me.
But was he outsmarted? That walk and the look of shock on his face still baffle me. Had he wanted to, even with the Dutchman helping the Pearl, the Endeavor still had enough fire power to sink both ships and possibly win, or at least bring them with him, so why did he not give the order? Like I said, still baffled 🤷♂️
@@DKnight5170 "The reason he didn't fight back was because his career was already ruined. He declared that his company would control all trading routes by using the dutchman to destroy their rival ships, but now he's lost the dutchman so even if he fought he can no longer fulfil his promise and he will become an embarrassment, so he chose to die there then face the shame"
from @
john daryne porras
@@cibo889 well, theres also the fact that the Dutchman and pearl are alone enough to take out at least some part of the army. add onto the other ships they have as backup, then the British navy is basically dead.
this scene depicts literally the absolute best of the marriage between Cinema, Music, Acting, and Special effects. Everything so cohesively and satisfyingly played out at the perfect pace of buildup, climax, and resolution! Incredible
I like how the cannons just have unlimited ammunition.
No they don’t. They just have hella
Hella what
@@Hendriklover ammunition obviously
Can we talk about how either Becketts ship or the pearl and dutchman sailed with like 10-15 knots against the wind with improper sail-positions?
@@alexanderzippel8809counterpoint: it’s the Black Pearl and the Flying Dutchman. They don’t care.
3:08 when you realize you‘re wrong in an argument
So true
True
Damn that’s true
2:04 is more accurate
True
This to me is one of the most Poetic and Epic deaths of a villain as Cutler Becket watched his world literally crumble around him. And that descend form the stair case was just amazing cinema photography. I will always love the first three Pirate films how they built up to this moment.
I particularly love how every step he takes is instantly blown away behind him.
This scene describes the downfall of the british empire
Beckett actually thought he had lost, when in reality he still could have won
A businessman has no place on a battlefield
The Endeavor could have blown both ships to pieces, but Beckett would rather die than admit defeat
The endeavor would have inflicted massive damage but it still would have been sunk
lol his ship was gettin throttled either way. the dutchman cant be sunk and the pearl can take out multiple ships alone if captained correctly.
I think he would’ve done substantial damage to either ship but sunk neither, especially given the Dutchman is unsinkable. Having two legendary ships squish your ship from two sides is devastating while only hitting one side of a ship doesn’t completely shred it.
Also I think Beckett was considering what happens after this battle. He tried considering the possibilities given that the Dutchman isn’t out of commission now and saw that long term, he’d still lose as the Dutchman would just constantly hunt company ships
If the Pearl and the Dutchman werent mythical ships i would be inclined to agree.
Look at the number of guns the Endeavor is carrying! Holy smokes.
@@Uhdksurvhunter And as a main ship-of-the-line she'd be carrying the latest, heaviest guns ... 32 pounders. The only comparable guns would be the Dutchman's triple guns up front, which they chose not to use. Those look to be land cannon (long barrels).
Beckett's Catchphrase: It's just good business.
Beckett's Last Words: It's...just...good business.
I know someone with a similar signature phrase: It's... just... Works!
@@lavreyPanop "Bethesda HQ Exploding because Todd put all Non Aniversary Paid Skyrim *Creations™ on another Bundle"
("New" thing Todd made for Verified Creators to make Paid Mods™ you cant get Achievments with them as they arent published by Bethesda*)
0:38 Beckett's first mate already senses that something is off
Shame none of the british survived as far as we can see
@@captaindonut5240 actually the first mate who ordered the abandon ship, lieutenant commander Groves, survived until the next movie where he got shot by a Spanish dude
@@trutle88 poor Groves. He actually had a brain
Mr Grooves was the only english with enough brain to realise things like Sparrow being the best pirate he has ever seen or that something was wrong there, but he was dumbed down in the 4th when he faced the spanish.
@@antilope5267 NOBODY EXPECTS THE SPANISH INQUISITION
I can't get enough of that heroic reprise of Davy Jones and the Flying Dutchman's leitmotif at 0:25. The new captain cleanses the ship from the sins of the old and the Dutchman is no longer a harbringer of doom, but the beacon of hope it was always meant to be.
I can’t lol 😂
@@wasay5722yeah. Hope that there’s more beyond the world of the living.
Big words
@@theflyingwelshman5338 I think it brings up an interesting sailor dichotomy, do you surrender yourself to the sea, in which case being swallowed up by it was what you were heading to the whole time on purpose, or are you trapped by it, in which case dying at sea and succumbing to the darkness is the horrible doom you’re running from. What’s it gonna be? I mean I think spending eternity at the bottom of the ocean sounds peaceful but that’s just me.
@@fenixmacariuscornett1675Well if you don't need to worry about breathing then yeah
One of the coolest death scenes of any villain ever.
He isn't villain. He's a Navy
Well hes not a villain. If it was reeal life he'd be the hero.
@@Webby104 was deep👌
I love this scene for being both epic and yet almost realistic. You rarely see the shock and panic from the bad guys or how the impact of the projectiles causes shrapnel. Still, Beckett's walk has something surreal to it, but it's not impossible. You can be hit by many shrapnel and still walk a fair bit before collapsing. Also, when I got surprised by a storm and saw trees falling around me and all sorts of debris flying like leaves, it felt like time was coming to a crawl. The funny thing in my case was that I didn't feel much more than a tiny fraction of the wind force that the trees experienced.
"Did you put your name into the Goblet of Fire, Harry?" - Dumbledore asked calmly.
"IT'S JUST GOOD BUSINESS!!!" - screamed Beckett in a fit of rage, ordering his men to open fire.
Maybe too difficult to be a perfect joke
😂😂😂😂😂
lmao
The great polar opposites in movies and books. XD
“Why didn’t beckett fire back.”
wasn’t in their budget lmao
because the Endeavor actually might have won that fight, seeing as she out gunned both of her opponents
@@nighthawkf1174 that would have been the best alternative ending to this trilogy. The Endeavor kills everyone in a minute or less!
Knowing the Mouse Monopoly, that sounds about right.
Up against a mythical ship of Davy Jones himself and the fastest ship ever sailed to the Seven Seas, plus Beckett's terrible judgement, the Endeavor loses.
Hunter McNeer maybe, but they probably wouldn’t be able to fire fast enough to take them both out
3:08 the teacher coming back to the classroom after being away for 2 minutes
Teacher: “ABANDON THE CLASSROOM!” (Jumps out of window)
3:00 teacher leaving classroom knowing what’s gonna go down while they gone
@@themightyangustma2753 the director after trying to calm the room: 2:30
I just imagined the classroom getting demolished and the students flying everywhere
@@mtransport-u3q Same lol.
Ugh one of my all time favorite deaths in movies/shows. It’s so damn goooood, the music, the symbolism, the FXs… chefs kiss🤌
The Dutchman: *Shows Up*
Beckett:Ah,she's fine...
Also the Ducthman: *Targets Beckett's ship*
*_Beckett_*_ stopped working_
Fine Banana I think he says “Ah, she(‘s?) survived.”
I think it's actually, "Ah, she's arrived"...
Clearly he said "Ah, she survived."
Beckett.exe has stopped working
Sonny he said she survived
more like me walking out of my exams scene
best joker YES!!!!!
Tho the death comes when your results come
If you complete the exams, you're the Black Pearl and the Flying Dutchman, and the other ship I forget the name of is the exam.
If you fail the exams, you're the ship I forget the name of.
best joker lol
best joker those jokes are so old
There's something about the banister being destroyed after every step he takes that, to me, symbolises his empire crumbling. Everything he'd fought to build, everything he'd created was being destroyed behind him, leaving him with nothing but his own failures and loneliness. I agree that the reason he didn't give an order to attack was because he knew that they couldn't win and in that moment, as he watched the ships turn, he realised that he was just a small fish in an enormous pond. People can say what they want about this franchise and I've heard people say that the movies get worse as they progress but I think that this scene is one of the best in all 5 of the movies. Cinematic genius
I still didn't understand why he didn't give an order ..can u tell me ? i don't watch Carribbean 😅😅
@@waa.3754 He didn't give an order because he realised that it was completely pointless. He knew that they'd been beaten and he knew that Jack had played him, and he was simultaneously impressed and terrified
@@eccentricblobfish4250 but his ship have more canon tho
@@waa.3754 But they were caught unprepared and unawares, there was no time for him to command the men
@@waa.3754 Also, there's only enough men to load the cannons on one side of the ship, not the other, but they were being attacked from both sides
One the most iconic death scenes in cinema history. The way Beckett calmly feels the rail of the ship one last time while it literally explodes into forgottenness seconds later behind him. It’s also kind of poetic how the ship and then eventually himself disappears into the fleetingness of life. One second you are here and then next you are not. Make the most of it.
Oh I love this explanation, thank you
3:33 the face I make when I flush the toilet and the water starts to rise
Such an underated comment😂
Holy carp the timing when I saw this comment was golden
That profile pic, it's gumball right? But from which episode?
@@klif4755
*YOU HAVE FORFITED LIFE PRIVLEGES*
And then the fire represents all the water overflowing