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Pirates of the caribbean curse of the black pearl
Pirates of the caribbean curse of the black pearl





pirates of the caribbean curse of the black pearl

This track is played in the final scenes of the film. The beginning of the track plays when the curse is lifted and the pirates are beaten, and the end plays during their underwater march. This track plays when the pirates attack the Dauntless. The very end plays when Will appears on The Black Pearl.

pirates of the caribbean curse of the black pearl

This track is played during the climatic battle near the close of the film. This track plays during the climactic fight and when Jack kills Barbossa. This track plays when Will rescues Jack from being hanged. This track is played predominantly when Will and Jack commandeer the Interceptor. This track is played during the battle between The Black Pearl and the Interceptor. This track plays while Jack and Will are walking underwater with the boat, preparing to commandeer the Interceptor. This track plays during Elizabeth's dinner with Barbossa, when she discovers the cursed pirates for the first time. This track plays during the fight between Will and Jack in the Blacksmith shop. This track plays after Jack saves Elizabeth and while he escapes the British. This track plays when Captain Jack Sparrow drifts into Port Royal in his sinking boat. It is also the name of the shop at the exit of The Pirates Attraction in Disneyland.This track is heard at the beginning of the film, when the young Elizabeth meets Will Turner. Part of the Caribbean Beach Resort at Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida, is called "Port Royal". There are references to cursed treasure in the ride: old pirates speak of cursed treasure and how you probably don't believe in it, and the line "Who knows when that evil curse will strike the greedy beholders of this bewitched treasure." The woman wearing a red dress at Tortuga island that slaps Jack and he wonders if he deserved it is a character in the ride. In Tortuga, we see a pirate drinking rum on top of two barrels and is wobbling just like in the ride. During the battle scene between the two ships, Black Pearl and the Interceptor, Captain Barbossa refers to his crew as "bloomin cockroaches" just like the captain in the ride does when his ship attacks a local town fort. A skeletal Barbossa drinks wine, which trickles through his exposed ribcage, as one of the skeletal pirates do. During the raid on the town, seen is a man being dunked into a well. A quick shot of a skeleton sprawled on the beach of the Isla de Muerta, with a crab nearby. The line "Dead men tell no tales", said by the macaw, which is repeated throughout the ride's narration. Jack's initial discovery of Gibbs sleeping with the pigs. The "burning town" sequence, and within it, the redheaded prostitute (who slaps Jack), the "stuffed pirate" drinking the rum spurting out of a barrel, and the pirate chasing the lady (in the ride they're circling a barrel or pillar). Jack later tries to tempt it with a bone, as does one of the audio-animatronic pirates in the ride.

#Pirates of the caribbean curse of the black pearl movie

Jack says, "That dog is never going to move" - although the movie dog eventually does, the one in the ride doesn't. The jail scenes, in which the prisoners try to tempt the dog who holds the key to their cell. References to the Disneyland attractions include (but are not limited to): three uses of the song "(Yo Ho, Yo Ho) A Pirate's Life for Me" by Xavier Atencio and George Bruns in the opening scene (sung by young Elizabeth), when Jack and Elizabeth are marooned on the island, and in the end by Jack.







Pirates of the caribbean curse of the black pearl