Pirates des Caraïbes: La fontaine de jouvence
Jack Sparrow et Barbossa se lancent dans une quête pour trouver la fontaine de jeunesse insaisissable, seulement pour découvrir que Blackbeard (Barbe Noire) et sa fille la recherchent aussi.Jack Sparrow et Barbossa se lancent dans une quête pour trouver la fontaine de jeunesse insaisissable, seulement pour découvrir que Blackbeard (Barbe Noire) et sa fille la recherchent aussi.Jack Sparrow et Barbossa se lancent dans une quête pour trouver la fontaine de jeunesse insaisissable, seulement pour découvrir que Blackbeard (Barbe Noire) et sa fille la recherchent aussi.
- Prix
- 3 victoires et 31 nominations au total
- Gibbs
- (as Kevin R. McNally)
- The Spaniard
- (as Oscar Jaenada)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWhile filming in London in October 2010, Johnny Depp received a letter from a local nine-year old schoolgirl, telling him her classmates needed help to "mutiny" against her teachers. He turned up with almost no warning at the school in full Captain Jack Sparrow outfit, but advised against mutiny.
- Gaffes(at around 27 mins) Jack and Angelica jump into the Thames to escape King George's soldiers, and are shown swimming in clear water. The River Thames of the 1740s was a slurry of waste and a fall into the water could - and often did - kill.
- Citations
Jack Sparrow: You know the feeling you get when standing in a high place, the sudden urge to jump...
[looks over the cliff, as if considering jumping, then comes back to reality]
Jack Sparrow: I don't have it.
- Générique farfeluThere is a scene at the end of the closing credits: Angelica acquires Jack Sparrow's voodoo doll.
- Autres versionsThere are three versions available. Runtimes are "2h 17m (137 min), 2h 16m (136 min) (United States)" and "2h 17m (137 min) (Argentina)".
- ConnexionsFeatured in The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Episode #19.138 (2011)
- Bandes originalesTripping up the Stairs
Traditional
As promised in the end of "At World's End," Jack's looking for the Fountain of Youth if for nothing more than ships and giggles. First, however, he must take a side trip to London to rescue his old pal Gibbs (Kevin McNally) and subsequently the palace of King George (Richard Griffiths in a lovely cameo). There, he learns that his old pal Barbossa (Rush) has lost The Black Pearl as well as his leg and sold out to His Majesty's Royal Navy. He is to help the English find the Fountain before the Spaniards do. Jack, of course, knows the way there, thus continuing his ongoing role as an indispensable pestilence.
After a familiar improvised escape, he crosses paths with an old lover, Angelica (Penelope Cruz), who he once deflowered before she was to take her vows at a convent. She mentions she has a ship he can borrow, only it turns out that it's her father's ship, the Queen Anne's Revenge, captained by none other than Blackbeard the Pirate (Ian McShane), a feared and soulless scourge with a minor in black magic. So much for smooth sailing.
As overdone and cliché as the Fountain of Youth may be, it's perfect for the "Pirates" franchise and helps keep things very simple, something the last installment had more than a fair deal of trouble with. Only a few character subplots threaten to convolute the story, but all motivations lead to the Fountain regardless the reason. In fact, "On Stranger Tides" marks the first film to truly focus on Captain Jack. With Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley's characters out of the way, the franchise can keep the spotlight on the reason it's gotten four films deep. Depp has nothing new in store for us as the true center of attention, but by continuing to underplay the trademark quirks and mannerisms, he continues to prolong the deterioration of the Capt. Jack act. Some might disagree, but it depends how much you liked him the first place.
In terms of new faces, Ian McShane is impeccable as Blackbeard. Rush gave a wonderfully theatrical performance as the main villain in the first film, but McShane introduces the first true quantifiable force of evil the franchise has seen. Although his voodoo abilities and reputation for killing his men and bringing them back from the dead to serve as his zombie slaves are never entirely realized, he's the merciless villain this film needed. He never fully crosses into scare-your-children evil, but he could've at any instant and that feeling radiates from his performance. In general, this film aligns itself more with fantasy and traditional folklore than the supernatural like the previous film.
Among other new faces, Rob Marshall as the franchise's new director does serviceable work. The "Chicago" filmmaker chews the scenery well and creates effective moods and tones, but the action could have been a bit more inspired, especially considering the series' reputation for sword-fighting ingenuity.
Marshall's best work and the film's best sequence deals with mermaids, not the singing and seashell bra type, but seduce you with their looks and then try and devour you with fangs type. Quiet, suspenseful and culminating in a full-on action sequence, the mermaids constitute the one completely fresh element of the film. Their cove is the lone stop on the journey as well, so it's the only aspect of the plot that creates that classic seafaring adventure feeling akin to Homer's "The Odyssey."
Not much else deviates from the formula, so those hoping for a resurgence in the series or something as good as the first film, "The Curse of the Black Pearl," will remain wishful thinkers once again. It's hard to imagine where the series could go next without retreading over old ground or just introducing new characters for the sake of it, but Captain Jack Sparrow remains one of the few reliable comforts of blockbuster cinema, and any adventure with him at the wheel will struggle to be a total waste of time. "On Stranger Tides" makes just enough adjustments to the series to make for a successful installment.
~Steven C
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- Movie_Muse_Reviews
- 21 mai 2011
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides
- Lieux de tournage
- Kilauea Falls, Kilauea, Kaua'i, Hawaï, États-Unis(on location)
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 250 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 241 071 802 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 90 151 958 $ US
- 22 mai 2011
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 1 046 721 266 $ US
- Durée2 heures 17 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1