On Stranger Tides was a logistical marvel. It was the first live-action film shot with the revolutionary Red Epic digital cameras and marked the franchise’s most ambitious location shooting, including real jungles and beaches in Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and London’s historic Greenwich Hospital. Notably, it was also the first Pirates film to be converted to 3D in post-production, following the trend of post- Avatar cinema.
After the epic — and some would say overstuffed — trilogy that concluded with At World’s End in 2007, Disney faced a dilemma. How do you continue a swashbuckling saga that had already sent its hero to Davy Jones’s Locker and back? The answer, for 2011’s Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides , was a deliberate reset. Gone was the sprawling ensemble cast of Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann. In their place was a leaner, more focused narrative centered squarely on the franchise’s magnetic core: Captain Jack Sparrow. index of pirates of the caribbean 4
The first crew is led by a ghost from Jack’s past: the ruthless, manipulative Angelica (Penélope Cruz), who claims Jack broke her heart. She sails under the flag of the terrifying pirate Blackbeard (Ian McShane), a man who wields supernatural swordplay and commands a zombified crew. The second crew is a Spanish expedition, determined to destroy the Fountain for religious reasons, and a British one led by the persistent Captain Barbossa (Geoffrey Rush), who has shockingly traded his peg leg for a letter of marque as a privateer in King George’s navy. On Stranger Tides was a logistical marvel
On Stranger Tides is the franchise’s “bridge” movie. It neither recaptures the lightning-in-a-bottle magic of The Curse of the Black Pearl nor matches the ambitious scope of its sequels. However, it succeeds as a standalone adventure. With McShane’s menacing Blackbeard, Rush’s scene-stealing Barbossa, and a leaner plot, the film proved that Captain Jack Sparrow could still carry a ship on his own. It set the stage for the fifth film ( Dead Men Tell No Tales ), but remains a unique entry: the one where the world’s most unreliable pirate finally got his bearings, found the Fountain, and learned that the real treasure might just be walking the plank for another adventure. After the epic — and some would say