Pirates of the Caribbean 2: The Curse of the Black Pearl
I am reminded of my Math 30 teacher when reading reviews for Gore
Verbinski's Pirates of the Caribbean 2: The Curse of the Black Pearl.
She said "Math 30 is a course 70% of you will do worse at than you did
in Math 20. Math 30 is longer, tougher, more difficult to understand
and misses all the fun stuff you got to take in Math 20. Not only that
but Math 30 is really just a precursor to Math 31 - Calculus, and though
you have to take Math 30, you aren't required to take Math 31, though
its only the two together that you are going to really understand
things."
But why is this the case? For one Pirates of the Caribbean 2: The Curse
of the Black Pearl is long. At almost 2 and a half hours in length,
only the title of the movie is longer. Secondly, though the special
effects are nothing short of miraculous and breathtaking, they get
repetitive. After rolling about in humorous danger in a sphere made of
bones and sinew it wasn't really necessary to see a duel upon an out of
control water wheel, barreling down the island-side. Though still
enjoyable, breathtaking and interesting there's only so much rolling
around you really want to see in a two hour and a half stretch.
Several critics disdain the acting in the film, stating that Ms.
Knightly and Mr. Bloom are just going through the motions and that
Johnny Depp's Captain Jack has lost his edge. Those critics also
lamented the script and the pseudo romance between the leads. But I went
back to the reviews many of the critics wrote about the first movie and
they lamented the acting then! So either they are even further
criticizing the actors in the movie, or they are suffering from a memory
seen through rose colored glasses. My counterpart at calgarymovies.com,
Son Tran, is of the opinion that the shininess has worn off of Captain
Jack Sparrow but I think that this isn't the case. To those reviewers
and critics I sternly shake my head at. It is my opinion, after having
read so many reviews that they disdain the unoriginal as boring and
scoff at the original for having reached too far. Pirates of the
Caribbean 2: The Curse of the Black Pearl delivers exactly what it
promises to, and then winks knowingly and tells you that it's thankfully
not over yet, as Pirates 3 looms on the imminent horizon of 2007. It's
not perfect. This isn't the perfect movie. But I could think of worse
ways to spend my 2.5 hours. Rolling down hills in a sphere made of
bones and sinew would definitely be one of them.
I hated my Math 30 teacher, but she was right. So I will give Pirates
of the Caribbean the same grade I, myself, got almost 11 years ago. 64%
Kyle Gould is a University of Calgary Graduate in
English devoutly trying to make the 25,000 dollar piece of parchment
not just a glorified ink blot. Currently it would serve better as a
Rorschach test. Feel free to throw some ink his way at wkkgould@hotmail.com.