Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest
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A Note Regarding Spoilers

The following FAQ entries may contain spoilers. Only the biggest ones (if any) will be covered with spoiler tags. Spoiler tags have been used sparingly in order to make the page more readable.

For detailed information about the amounts and types of (a) sex and nudity, (b) violence and gore, (c) profanity, (d) alcohol, drugs, and smoking, and (e) frightening and intense scenes in this movie, consult the IMDb Parents Guide for this movie. The Parents Guide for Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest can be found here.

No. Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest is based on a screenplay by writers Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio, who based their screenplay on the "Pirates of the Caribbean" ride at the Disneyland theme park. It is the second movie in a series of three (so far) Pirates of the Caribbean movies, the first being Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) and the third being Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End (2007).

He was in search for the key to the Dead Man's Chest, he was aware that his debt owed to Davy Jones was approaching and knew that he could use the chest as leverage. Jack found out the cloth with the image of key on it was in the prison, so he went in after it.

In the writer's commentary for the DVD, Terry Rossio states that once summoned, the Kraken hunts down its target and destroys him and his possessions.

One of the fishermen is talking in Turkish, the other one is talking in Greek, albeit in the Greek-Cypriot dialect. The Greek-Cypriot fisherman is commanding the Turkish fisherman to hand him the hat. He then puts it on his head and says that he is a proper dandy. After the kraken makes its presence felt, the Greek-Cypriot fisherman says that he doesn't want the hat, and that the other fisherman should have it.

The word the Greek-Cypriot fisherman uses for dandy is an anachronism, since the word "magkas" was introduced into Greek sometime in the 19th century (some sources claim earlier), but, nevertheless, back then it referred to a specific kind of social outcast; it therefore had a negative meaning. In the 20th century, the meaning of "magkas" kept changing with each generation, and it wasn't until the late 20th century that the word "magkas" was also used when referring to a dandy. Its other contemporary meaning is that of a fearless person.

The answer to this question is never revealed, but it's possibly either: a) a black mark on his record, or b) (and this is more likely) Jack made him a eunuch!

Although the first Aztec curse that was on the pirates of the Black Pearl is broken, Jack the monkey can be seen stealing a coin from the treasure chest in a brief scene after the credits. His theft brings a curse upon himself and this time only himself.

The game is a variant of Liar's Dice. Each player rolls five dice. They must bid how many of each amount have been rolled on the fifteen dice, but they may only see their own dice. Bids get increased until a bid is challenged. Each player rolls:

Davy Jones: 4-5-5-5-5

Will: 1-2-5-5-5

Bootstrap Bill: 2-2-2-3-3

So there is one 1, four 2's, two 3's, one 4, seven 5's and zero 6's.

Bill bids three 2's; he knows this to be correct as there are three 2's in his own five dice.

Jones bids four 4's, a risky bid as he can only see his one 4. If Will had challenged this bid, he would have won the game.

Will bids four 5's.

Bill bids six 3's.

Jones bids seven 5's. This is an unbeatable bid.

Will bids eight 5's. Jones seems certain that this is too high. It is, but given that he can see four of his dice are showing 5, there is still a decent chance that four of the other ten could show a 5 also.

Bill knows that he has zero 5's and that it is very unlikely that eight of the other ten dice are showing a 5. So he bids twelve 5's, losing on purpose to save Will's soul.

Many people seem to think this part is pointless but it is very much necessary. After Bootstrap tells Jack that the Kraken is after him, Jack needs to find land so that he's safe from the beast. He discovers, however, that he's not safe on land either - not just because of savage tribes but also because the East India Trading Company is colonizing the island. (He finds their logo on some merchandise inside one of the huts.) Jack realizes that soon all islands in the Caribbean will be under the control of his enemies. We learn that Jack can't stay on land or the sea, and therefore his only option is to find the dead man's chest and the key to open it so he can kill Davy Jones.

Yes, like the first film we get a bonus scene after the credits. This time it's not important to the plot. It shows the dog as king of the Cannibal tribe as they worship him like they did with Jack right before they tried to eat him.

What have critics said?

PRO

'Complications arose, ensued, were overcome,' Jack says at one point. Not entirely, but Dead Man's Chest is worth weighing anchor for, regardless. -- Peter Howell, Toronto Star

It's like an amusement park excursion where the entry fee is so high you feel compelled to stay until you get a stomachache to get your money's worth. -- Terry Lawson, Detroit Free Press

For the most part, Dead Man's Chest stands on its own and even makes a few halfhearted attempts to say something. -- Robert Denerstein, Denver Rocky Mountain News

The second Pirates of the Caribbean movie is a sweet umbrella drink leaving no hangover, two hours and 20 minutes of escapism that once again makes the movies safe for guilt-free fun. -- Michael Booth, Denver Post

At two hours and 30 minutes, the story has its repetitive and wearisome passages, and the plot emerges only to bog things down, but for most of its length it positively dances with gusto. -- Colin Covert, Minneapolis Star Tribune

CON:

It batters you with novelty and works so hard to top itself that exhaustion sets in long before the second hour is over... Mr. Bloom, as is his custom, leaps about, trying to overcome his incurable blandness, and is upstaged by special effects, musical cues, octopus tentacles and pieces of wood. -- A.O. Scott, New York Times

The new plot has all the appeal of a seaweed sandwich, being dark, salty, and indigestible. -- Anthony Lane, New Yorker

A bustling sequel that outperforms its predecessor as a special-effects extravaganza but one that can't match the feeling of discovery that came with the original. -- Bill Muller, Arizona Republic

This second film is pretty much all thrills, special effects and nonstop action -- but with virtually no cohesive or compelling story line. -- Bill Zwecker, Chicago Sun-Times

Yes, it's brightly colored carnival fun. But this ride, in the end, only goes round and round and round. Which is ultimately more ho-hum than ho-ho-ho. -- Tom Long, Detroit News

In every other way -- as adventure yarn or as satire on that form or merely as an enjoyable entertainment featuring a wonderfully sly and subtle actor -- it is not merely a loser. It is a disaster. -- Richard Schickel, TIME Magazine

This chest is overfilled with exposition and physical comedy, without a doubloon's worth of the scary suspense that made the laughs in the first one such brilliant comic relief. -- Kyle Smith, New York Post

Calling a summer movie 'action-packed' is supposed to be a compliment, but there's nothing so tedious as nonstop excitement. -- Stephanie Zacharek Salon.com

Rum, monotony and the lash. -- Stephen Whitty, Newark Star-Ledger

It's often unclear what's going on, beyond a zillion dollars of splashy effects washing over the screen. -- Bruce Westbrook, Houston Chronicle

When you find out at the end that what you've just seen is merely the overture to yet another sequel, you can't help wondering what more can be extracted from this franchise. Gold, me hearties, more gold! -- Gene Seymour, Newsday

All of it evidently based on another notion, that great length equals great importance. -- Joe Morgenstern, Wall Street Journal

Although there are memorable bits and pieces, the new Pirates of the Caribbean is a movie with no particular interest in coherence, economy or feeling. -- A.D. Scott, New York Times

The Curse of the Black Pearl, this second installment in the promised trilogy (Parts 2 & 3 were shot concurrently) lacks the swash and buckle of the original. And then some. -- Stephen Rea, Philadelphia Enquirer

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