Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End
Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End (2007)

Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End

2/5
(59 votos)
7.1IMDb50Metascore

Detalles

Elenco

Errores

When Captain Jack Sparrow is on the Black Pearl in Davy Jones' Locker, his right hand has several large scratches.

But a few minutes later when Barbossa leads the crew to Jack's rescue, those scratches are gone.

During the maelstrom battle scene, when Will Turner swings on a rope from the Black Pearl to the Flying Dutchman, it's obvious that a stunt double actually swings from the rope then falls to the deck several feet behind 'Orlando Bloom' (qv) who then rises into frame.

The stunt double lands on the deck and the camera cuts to a close up of Orlando standing up.

It is not one single take, but two.

Early on in the movie, Lord Beckett's curls are held in place by white hair pins of a modern manufacture.

Near the end, the birthmark beside Elizabeth's right eye appears and disappears while being on the beach with Will, and, second time, when waiting for Will 10 years later (after the credits).

When Elizabeth is giving the rousing speech to the pirates on the gunwales of the ship, all the close up frontal shots of her show her hair partly tied up.

Rear shots show her hair completely loose but damp and limp.

As she jumps down from the gunwales, her hair is loose, dry and bouncy.

Will Turner's hair in the same scenes sometimes appear neatly tied back, at other times flying in the wind in his face.

Some viewers have reported seeing braces on the teeth of the young boy singing in the opening scene.

In fact, the boy has metal caps on some of his teeth, much like Jack.

The only difference is, his are blackened and clearly not made of gold.

When Captain Sao Feng holds the coin to his ear when he first meets the others, you can clearly see half of his real nail under the fake "disgusting" nails he has on.

When Davy Jones is playing the organ, the music is a scale going down, but his tentacles move up and down on the keyboard, not matching the pitches of the music.

It's often believed that the founding and naming of Singapore postdate the period in which the films are set.

In fact, the name "Singapura" - "city of the lions" - was first given in the fourteenth century.

Singapore Harbour as depicted in the film is apparently surrounded by mountains.

In reality, Singapore is a small, flat island whose highest point is Bukit Timah, standing at a mere 164 meters above sea level.

Just after the Black Pearl has just been dragged into the sea from the sand there is a mooring line attached to the bow of the ship.

It disappears and reappears in several scenes after that.

All the gallows have a style of the trap door was not used until the 1800s.

When Sao Feng is killed, Elizabeth's "hat" flies off.

Her hair changes positions, from a lot of hair - almost all of it down - to a few small locks of it down.

It continues to change in the next few scenes where the crew claims her captain and she is talking to Norrington.

When Beckett sets the Dutchman to give no quarter in the maelstrom battle, he orders his officer to make semaphore signals to the other ship.

This is done by an officer holding two flags in different positions, the modern way.

However, the British Navy in the 18th century did this by hoisting sets of special flags on the masts of the ships, not by setting an officer on deck.

In "Bootstrap" Turner's first appearance, his bare skin is visible just below the nape of his neck where the makeup ends.

When Calypso is in the brig talking with Davy Jones, her right eye mascara runs from her tears.

In the next shot, her makeup is perfect again.

When Jack and Elizabeth leave the Dutchman by way of the makeshift parachute, one can clearly see Elizabeth's hair is dry even though heavy rain, wild sea and spray are all about.

When the three representatives of each side of the war step on a lanky piece of land in the middle of the sea to negotiate, there is a black piece of cloth tied to Jack Sparrow's right hand palm which disappears once during their negotiations and then appears again and remains there until the end of the scene.

More precisely, when he is saying the line"That debt was paid mate, with some help from.

(moving his hand toward Elizabeth)" the cloth is gone and right after it when saying the next line after Davy Jones' :"technically.

" the cloth is back and remains till the end of the scene.

When Jack is about to use the cannon to launch himself over to the Pearl, Beckett states he is mad for doing so.

When Jack agrees and lights the cannon, Beckett ducks for cover twice.

When the main characters meet on a small island of sand and King Elizabeth trades Jack for Will, Davy Jones needs to stand in a barrel of water because it hasn't been 10 years since his last day on land.

You can clearly see at least two buckets of water leading up to the barrel Jones is standing in, in one of the wide angle shots.

So he simply walked from one barrel to the next.

Right after the battle aboard the Dutchman, we see Jack and Elizabeth leaving with a made-up "parasail" and they land straight to the sea.

In the next scene, we see them boarding the Pearl, and they should be soaking wet since they are just coming out of water, yet no water is visibly dripping off of them.

Elizabeth is a little wet from the rain but Jack is remarkably dry.

When Barbosa and Jack come to the island after returning to the real world, as they stand beside the Kraken talking, when the camera is pointed towards the water you see rocks, the angle changes and when it returns, you can see the tentacles floating in the water behind them.

When Tia Dalma has a hold of Barbossa's wrist after entering Shipwreck Cove and telling him it was by her power he returned from the dead, she is making contact with his hand above the cuff.

In the next shot, her hand is holding onto the cuff of his coat and not touching the hand at all.

The shot that shows Singapore harbor shows a craggy, rocky harbor.

Singapore is in fact an island without any mountains or cliffs and it's highest point is 538ft above sea-level known as Bukit Timah, a hill in the middle of the island.

The British fleet seen in the film consists of some ten three-decked ships of the line.

In 1720 the Royal Navy only had six such ships in commission world-wide.

All the British Men of War in the film are painted in the "Nelson Checker" (black and yellow bands with black gun-ports).

However this pattern was not common until 1805 when used by Admiral Nelson.

Before Barbossa releases Calypso, you get a clear look at the bowl with the Pirate Lords' nine pieces of eight.

However there is an extra piece of eight in the form of a ball of string making it that there are already eight of the nine pieces of eight when Jack and Elizabeth's pieces of eight have clearly not been added since the next shot is of Barbossa adding them.

In some close up shots, you can see the contacts that Barbossa is wearing to make his eyes appear yellow.

When the British break into the Singapore hideout and the battle starts, one soldier stumbles over on a fallen table.

The next shot, which is facing the soldiers, shows him falling over again from another angle.

He also falls in the exact same manner, meaning they had two cameras filming the scene.

When Will and Elizabeth are on the beach at the end, from the wide view you can see the camera tracks appear and disappear in the sand, and the footsteps change to the other side of the rock.

Aboard the Black Pearl in Davy Jones' Locker, while the crew is attempting to capsize the Pearl, the charts are on a table on deck.

Nowhere is it seen that Barbossa, who was standing next to them, or anyone else grabs the charts.

So, when the ship capsizes, the charts would sink in the ocean along with other loose object on the ship, but we clearly see them throughout the rest of the movie.

However, physics are arbitrary in the Locker.

In the early-mid 1700s, the inhabitants of Singapore would not have been Chinese but instead Malay due to the proximity of the Malaysian Peninsula to the island.

The triangular hats worn by the citizens of Singapore are actually Taiwanese in culture and are not worn by Singaporeans.

While Jack is viewing the map to the Fountain of Youth, in the Straits of Florida it can be seen written "Ponce De Leon 1523.

" Although possibly just an example of poor records, De Leon first sailed to Florida in 1513 and died in 1521.

Near the end of the film, just before the Endeavour is sunk by the Flying Dutchman and the Black Pearl, we see a shot of the Endeavour from behind.

A wake can clearly be seen, suggesting the ship is driven by a diesel engine.

Not even steam engines were invented in the period when this film is meant to be set, neither did sailing ships create such a visible wake, since they did not travel as fast as modern ships.

In the beginning of the tea drinking scene with William, Lord Beckett adds a sugar cube into his tea.

The first sugar cubes were invented in the Czech town of Dacice during 1840s, decades after when the movie is set.

When Jack is laying on the floor after giving up trying to pull his ship, the Black Pearl's shadow is on the right side of the Pearl where Jack is standing.

When the scene progresses to the next scene, the shadow is on the left side of the Pearl.

Sao Feng and his crew are heard using primarily Cantonese while the main Chinese dialect in Singapore is Mandarin, not Cantonese.

When Will Turner is brought before Lord Beckett, a close-up shot shows Beckett has a decanter in his hand and pours himself a glass as he talks to Will.

The next shot is over the shoulder of Will and shows Beckett picking up the decanter, removing its stopper, and beginning to pour the same glass.

When Jack Sparrow is in Davy Jone's locker, he makes a comment about there being no wind at all, but in the shots right after that, some of his hair can be seen blowing in the wind, showing that there actually is wind.

When the pirates remove the grate beneath the Chinese pirates den, the grate flops around as if it's made of rubber.

Just before the Flying Dutchman was to go into battle, Calypso was stirring the clouds and Davy Jones gripped the hole where his heart once was.

You can see under his tentacle beard that it is his real hand gripping his chest - PLOTThe Endevour is a first rate ship of the line.

This means that, despite her armament, she was quite slow (3-4 knots at the most).

Yet, she somehow manages to catch up with vessels like the Black Pearl and the Flying Dutchman, regarded to be the fastest ones afloat.

At the final scene in Tortuga, Master Gibbs is seen to be holding a teddy bear while in his sleep.

But teddy bears were not invented till 1902.

During the waterfall scene before the ship goes over the side everyone is scrambling about deck.

You hear at least two characters including Elizabeth give the command "Hard a port".

When this film was taking place the type of commands for steering ships at sea were called tiller commands.

The tiller on a ship is what actually moves the rudder and a hard to port command would have made the ship turn right and not left as it did.

Tiller commands were replaced by rudder commands in the early 20th century.

The modern rudder command would have made the ship turn as it did.

Directly after the battle between the Black Pearl and the Flying Dutchman near the end of the film, Barbarossa says "Belay that, or we'll be a sitting duck!" in response to Jack's command.

but the phrase "sitting duck" was not introduced until the early 1900s.

In the scene where Will gives his heart to Elizabeth for safekeeping, after he moves towards the shore, Elizabeth runs to kiss him.

While kissing there are no visible trails in the sand on her path (slightly different than Will's), although the waves clearly didn't reach enough to erase them.

(Wills' trails are visible though).

Later, after the Duchman disappears, her trails are visible instead of Will's and there are clearly less trails behind the rock with the locker than in the first scene.

Box Office

FechaÁreaBruto
4 October 2007 USA USD 309,420,425
30 September 2007 USA USD 309,404,152
23 September 2007 USA USD 309,302,628
16 September 2007 USA USD 309,132,842
9 September 2007 USA USD 308,929,593
2 September 2007 USA USD 308,681,208
26 August 2007 USA USD 308,140,022
19 August 2007 USA USD 307,771,457
12 August 2007 USA USD 307,592,347
5 August 2007 USA USD 307,318,071
29 July 2007 USA USD 306,888,712
22 July 2007 USA USD 306,034,458
8 July 2007 USA USD 301,725,691
1 July 2007 USA USD 295,703,075
24 June 2007 USA USD 287,001,716
17 June 2007 USA USD 274,145,510
10 June 2007 USA USD 253,441,723
3 June 2007 USA USD 217,545,728
27 May 2007 USA USD 153,042,234
22 July 2007 UK GBP 40,125,303
8 July 2007 UK GBP 39,731,979
1 July 2007 UK GBP 39,128,783
24 June 2007 UK GBP 37,960,243
17 June 2007 UK GBP 36,339,948
10 June 2007 UK GBP 33,660,185
3 June 2007 UK GBP 29,280,729
27 May 2007 UK GBP 13,412,294
25 November 2011 Worldwide USD 963,420,425
2007 Non-USA USD 654,000,000
22 July 2007 Brazil BRL 30,805,123
8 July 2007 Brazil BRL 30,696,455
1 July 2007 Brazil BRL 30,407,588
24 June 2007 Brazil BRL 29,786,004
17 June 2007 Brazil BRL 28,601,615
10 June 2007 Brazil BRL 25,826,505
3 June 2007 Brazil BRL 18,393,521
27 May 2007 Brazil BRL 9,452,091
24 May 2007 Finland EUR 302,863
2 July 2007 Italy EUR 16,120,355
27 May 2007 Netherlands EUR 2,614,612
3 June 2007 Norway USD 4,949,439
1 July 2007 Philippines PHP 156,192,700
24 June 2007 Philippines PHP 155,095,571
17 June 2007 Philippines PHP 151,443,822
10 June 2007 Philippines PHP 141,836,264
3 June 2007 Philippines PHP 119,628,014
27 May 2007 Philippines PHP 51,496,034
2007 Romania USD 449,942
1 July 2007 Russia RUR 792,671,572
24 June 2007 Russia RUR 789,078,901
17 June 2007 Russia RUR 777,728,105
10 June 2007 Russia RUR 737,479,268
3 June 2007 Russia RUR 648,275,361
27 May 2007 Russia RUR 359,385,168
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
27 May 2007 USA USD 139,802,190 4,362
27 May 2007 UK GBP 13,412,294 552
27 May 2007 Brazil BRL 9,452,091 789
27 May 2007 Estonia USD 160,434 6
24 May 2007 Finland EUR 302,863 80
27 May 2007 Netherlands EUR 2,210,809 178
27 May 2007 New Zealand NZD 2,034,200 122
27 May 2007 Philippines PHP 51,496,034 175
27 May 2007 Russia RUR 359,385,168 703
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
30 September 2007 USA USD 72,876 150
23 September 2007 USA USD 120,310 216
16 September 2007 USA USD 146,519 252
9 September 2007 USA USD 192,046 280
2 September 2007 USA USD 391,536 311
26 August 2007 USA USD 310,765 327
19 August 2007 USA USD 100,195 123
12 August 2007 USA USD 136,536 139
5 August 2007 USA USD 192,124 182
29 July 2007 USA USD 405,624 298
22 July 2007 USA USD 730,059 517
15 July 2007 USA USD 1,396,749 928
8 July 2007 USA USD 3,008,962 1,869
1 July 2007 USA USD 4,960,368 2,162
24 June 2007 USA USD 7,202,086 2,802
17 June 2007 USA USD 12,411,786 3,329
10 June 2007 USA USD 21,143,905 4,002
3 June 2007 USA USD 44,206,660 4,362
27 May 2007 USA USD 139,802,190 4,362
22 July 2007 UK GBP 36,584 95
8 July 2007 UK GBP 366,937 357
1 July 2007 UK GBP 683,054 402
24 June 2007 UK GBP 967,437 438
17 June 2007 UK GBP 1,613,764 458
10 June 2007 UK GBP 2,315,951 530
3 June 2007 UK GBP 5,381,920 550
27 May 2007 UK GBP 13,412,294 552
22 July 2007 Brazil BRL 8,438 16
8 July 2007 Brazil BRL 114,167 73
1 July 2007 Brazil BRL 270,489 253
24 June 2007 Brazil BRL 622,703 459
17 June 2007 Brazil BRL 1,431,549 582
10 June 2007 Brazil BRL 3,782,077 732
3 June 2007 Brazil BRL 5,718,743 772
27 May 2007 Brazil BRL 9,452,091 789
24 May 2007 Finland EUR 302,863
27 May 2007 Netherlands EUR 2,210,809 178
29 May 2007 Norway NOK 19,268,512 90
27 May 2007 Philippines PHP 51,496,034 175

Comentarios

And now Im down in it. Look this movie is honestly pathetic.

My Take: Though confusing, this third 'Pirates' movie isn't out of batteries just yet. (Pardon me with using the abbreviations, but I guess you know exactly what they stand for.

I'll start off by saying this would easily be an 8 or a 9 if it wasn't so long. Its almost 3 hours which I felt it could've been shorter.

It's a tragedy: Another case of wrecking a very good movie with a poor second and a poor third part of the story! I hope my abilities of writing in English are sufficient to express what I want to say - they wanted too much.

Oh dear. Somewhere between the 1st and this outing the filmmakers have forgotten that these movies are supposed to be fun.

After some time of consideration, I finally decided to rent the Pirates of the Caribbean trilogy and have a nice, quiet movie marathon with my girl. It started out great, Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl was hilarious with a decent plot and so was Dead Man's Chest.

Adventure. Continuation of a successful series about the adventures of the world famous Captain Jack Sparrow.

As we arrive into the third film in the series, things have taken a much stranger turn. Ever more so than the final movie.

A long movie that entertained me from the beginning to the end. Those who aren't fans of the franchise might think this movie is tiring and feel a bit lost along the way, but it's definitely a good movie in my opinion.

Comentarios