Questions about Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End

  1. no, it doesn’t bother me. Jack is a “loveable rouge,” which is basically a euphemistic way of saying that he’s a charismatic sociopath who shamelessly takes advantage of people whenever he can. He richly deserves every ounce of shit that get smeared in his face :wink:

ETA:

Regarding the fourth movie, I’m actually curious to know if anybody on the Black Pearl except for the monkey is still alive, or if they all starved to death during the time the ship was trapped in the bottle.

If they ever make a fifth movie, I really hope the monkey gets thrown into a volcano as a sacrifice to a Polynesian god, or something like that. I really hate that damn thing.

To his credit, he would probably agree with you. “All right… I deserved that…”

Heh. I hate it, but kind of like it for being so hateful. It makes an excellent Nemesis. The main risk is for them to over-use it. So, tone it down a little, yes, but don’t eliminate it entirely.

(Same advice I would have given for Jar Jar Binks. Tone him way the hell down…but, yes, keep him.)

Warning: NSFW! This is the very excellent reason why. Warning: NSFW!

since this has been bumped i’ll go ahead and ask something i could never figure out-after will becomes captain of the dutchman, why couldn’t elizabeth go with him? will’s dad is free to go, but chooses to stay as part of his crew, so why couldn’t she do the same?

ExTank: I love you and want to explore your dungeons!

Or at least, go to sea on her own ship, where she can meet up with Will whenever they like. She is, after all, the Pirate Queen in her own right.

For those asking what Tia Dalma says just before she explodes

“Malfaiteur en Tombeau, Crochir l’Esplanade, Dans l’Fond d’l’eau!”. This roughly means "Across all the waters, find the path to he who wrongfully entombed me.‘’
or
“Malfaiteur en Tombeau, Crochir l’Esplanade, Dans l’Fond d’l’eau!”. Speaking in a form of French Creole roughly translated Calypso is saying “To your graves wrongdoers, I bend your path, to the depths of the sea”,

from the same wiki