Jack Sparrow: Difference between revisions
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{{ Pirates of the Caribbean |
{{Short description|Main character of the Pirates of the Caribbean film series}} |
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{{About||the song by The Lonely Island featuring Michael Bolton|Jack Sparrow (song)|the Jamaican singer|The Ethiopians}} |
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| name = Jack Sparrow |
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{{pp-pc}} |
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| image = [[Image:Jack Sparrow In Pirates of the Caribbean- At World's End.JPG|150px|]] |
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{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2012}} |
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| caption = Jack Sparrow in ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End]]''. |
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{{Infobox character |
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| gender = [[Male]] |
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| name = Captain Jack Sparrow |
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| occupation = [[Pirate]] [[Captain (nautical)|Captain]]<br>[[Brethren Court|Pirate Lord of the Caribbean Sea]] <br>'''Formerly:'''<br>[[East India Trading Company]] |
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| series = [[Pirates of the Caribbean]] |
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| image = Jack Sparrow In Pirates of the Caribbean- At World's End.JPG |
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| weapons = [[Pistol]]<br>[[Cutlass|Hanger]]<br>[[Musket]] |
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| caption = Johnny Depp as Captain Jack Sparrow{{efn|Promotional image for ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End]]'' (2007)}} |
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| bounty = 10001 [[Guineas]]<br>''(Wanted dead)''<ref name="crimes"/> |
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| first = ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl|The Curse of the Black Pearl]]'' (2003) |
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| family = Captain Teague (father) |
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| creator = [[Ted Elliott (screenwriter)|Ted Elliott]]<br />[[Terry Rossio]]<br />Johnny Depp |
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| appearance = [[Pirates of the Caribbean films|Film trilogy]]<br>[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Jack Sparrow|Book series]]<br>[[Pirates of the Caribbean (theme park ride)|Theme park ride]] |
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| portrayer = [[Johnny Depp]]<br />[[Anthony De La Torre]]{{efn|[[Anthony De La Torre]], with his face replaced with a CGI replica of a younger Depp's and his voice replaced by Jared Butler, played a younger Jack in ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales|Dead Men Tell No Tales]]'' (2017).}} (young) |
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| portrayed by = [[Johnny Depp]]}} |
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| voice = Johnny Depp (2006)<br />Jared Butler (2007–present)<br />[[James Arnold Taylor]] (2006) |
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| gender = Male |
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| occupation = [[Pirate]]<br>'''Formerly:''' Captain for the East India Trading Company |
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| family = [[Captain Teague|Edward Teague]] (father)<br />Jack (uncle) |
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| lbl21 = [[Pirates of the Caribbean (film series)|Appearance(s)]] |
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| data21 = {{ubl|[[Pirates of the Caribbean (film series)|Film series]]|[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Jack Sparrow|''Young Jack Sparrow'' books]]|''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: The Price of Freedom|The Price of Freedom]]''|[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Legends of the Brethren Court|''Legend of the Brethren Court'' books]]|[[Pirates of the Caribbean video games|Video games]]|[[Pirates of the Caribbean (attraction)|Ride]]|''[[Disney Infinity]]''|''[[Kingdom Hearts II]]''|''[[Kingdom Hearts III]]''|''[[Fortnite]]''|''[[Disney Speedstorm]]'}} |
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| species = Human |
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| nationality = [[English people|English]] |
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| title = [[Captain (nautical)|Captain]]<br>Pirate Lord of the Caribbean sea |
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| weapon = [[Cutlass]]<br>[[Flintlock]] |
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| nicknames = Jackie/Jacky <br> |
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Jackie boy/Jacky boy <br> |
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Jack the Sparrow <br> |
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| aliases = Smith/Smithy <br> |
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Justice Smith <br> |
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| affiliation = Crew of the [[Black Pearl]]<br>'''Formerly:''' East India Trading Company<br>Blackbeard's Crew |
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| lbl1 = |
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| data1 = |
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}} |
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[[Sea captain|Captain]] '''Jack Sparrow''' is a fictional character and the main [[protagonist]] of the ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean (film series)|Pirates of the Caribbean]]'' film series and franchise. An early iteration of Sparrow was created by screenwriters [[Ted Elliott (screenwriter)|Ted Elliott]] and [[Terry Rossio]], but the final version of the character was created by actor [[Johnny Depp]], who also portrayed him.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2018-10-14 |title=Johnny Depp Explained How He Created Captain Jack Sparrow |url=https://geektyrant.com/news/johnny-depp-explained-how-he-created-captain-jack-sparrow |access-date=2023-09-07 |website=GeekTyrant |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-11-16 |title=Johnny Depp created Captain Jack Sparrow by turning up sauna to '1000 degrees' until it affected him mentally |url=https://www.ladbible.com/entertainment/johnny-depp-captain-jack-sparrow-sauna-20221116 |access-date=2023-09-07 |website=LADbible |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=updated |first=Dirk Libbey last |date=2016-02-09 |title=How Cartoons Inspired Johnny Depp As He Created Captain Jack Sparrow |url=https://www.cinemablend.com/new/How-Cartoons-Inspired-Johnny-Depp-He-Created-Captain-Jack-Sparrow-111157.html |access-date=2023-09-07 |website=CINEMABLEND |language=en}}</ref> |
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The Sparrow character is based on a combination of [[The Rolling Stones]]' guitarist [[Keith Richards]] and [[Looney Tunes]] cartoons, specifically the characters [[Bugs Bunny]] and [[Pepé Le Pew]]. He first appears in the 2003 film ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl]]''. He appears in the later sequels ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest|Dead Man's Chest]]'' (2006), ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End|At World's End]]'' (2007), ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides|On Stranger Tides]]'' (2011), and ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales|Dead Men Tell No Tales]]'' (2017). |
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In the films, Sparrow is one of the nine pirate lords in the Brethren Court, the Pirate Lords of the Seven Seas. He can be treacherous and survives mostly by using wit, guile, and negotiation rather than force, opting to flee most dangerous situations and fight only when necessary. |
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Sparrow is the [[Brethren Court|Pirate Lord of the Caribbean Sea]], and enjoys the freedom of his occupation, drinking [[rum]] and seducing women while looking for [[supernatural]] treasures. He engages in much dealing and treachery, preferring to use negotiation and wits over weapons to survive. Sparrow is introduced as seeking to regain his ship the ''[[Black Pearl]]'' from his treacherous first mate [[Hector Barbossa]], and spends much of the sequels trying to escape his blood debt to [[Davy Jones (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Davy Jones]] and battling the [[East India Trading Company]]. Despite his rude or cowardly behaviour, he is nonetheless an honorable and likeable character. |
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Sparrow is introduced seeking to regain his ship, the ''[[Black Pearl]]'', from his mutinous first mate [[Hector Barbossa]]. After succeeding, he attempts to escape his blood debt to the legendary [[Davy Jones (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Davy Jones]] while fighting the [[East India Company|East India Trading Company]]. Later, when searching for the [[Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides|Fountain of Youth]], he is abducted and taken aboard [[Blackbeard]]'s [[Queen Anne's Revenge]]. Sparrow is subsequently forced to lead Blackbeard to the Fountain while the shrunken Black Pearl is trapped in a bottle. In a later adventure, when the ghost Spanish Captain [[Armando Salazar]] pursues him, he searches for the [[Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales|Trident of Poseidon]] while also seeking to restore the Pearl to its original form. |
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Initially Sparrow was conceived in the first film as a [[trickster]] who guides the hero [[Will Turner]] ([[Orlando Bloom]]), but Johnny Depp's performance completely changed that. His [[Eccentricity (behavior)|eccentric]] performance, inspired by [[Pepe LePew]] and [[Keith Richards]], turned Sparrow into the [[breakout character]] and earned Depp's first [[Academy Award]] nomination. Sparrow became an iconic [[anti-hero]], and in a case of life-imitates-art, Richards signed on to play [[Captain Teague|the character's father]] in the third film. |
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The ''Pirates of the Caribbean'' series was inspired by the Disney [[Pirates of the Caribbean (attraction)|theme park ride of the same name]]. When the ride was revamped in 2006, the Captain Jack Sparrow character was added. The character headlined the [[The Legend of Captain Jack Sparrow (attraction)|Legend of Captain Jack Sparrow]] attraction at [[Disney's Hollywood Studios]], and is the subject of spin-off novels, including a children's book series, ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Jack Sparrow]]'', which chronicles his childhood years. |
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==Appearances== |
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===Film trilogy=== |
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Jack Sparrow first appears in ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl]]'' (2003), where he arrives in [[Port Royal]] in a sinking boat, looking to commandeer a ship. Despite rescuing [[Elizabeth Swann]] ([[Keira Knightley]]), the daughter of [[Weatherby Swann|Governor Weatherby]] ([[Jonathan Pryce]]) from drowning, he is jailed for piracy. That night, the ghost ship, the ''[[Black Pearl]]'' attacks Port Royal and kidnaps Elizabeth, who [[Hector Barbossa|Captain Barbossa]] ([[Geoffrey Rush]]) believes can break an ancient Aztec curse they are under. The pirates are immortal skeletons. [[Will Turner]] ([[Orlando Bloom]]), a blacksmith who loves Elizabeth, frees Sparrow to help him rescue her. They hijack the HMS ''Interceptor'' and acquire a crew in [[Tortuga]] before heading to [[Isla de Muerta]], where Elizabeth is being held. They are quickly captured, and Barbossa maroons Sparrow and Elizabeth on a tiny island, the same island Sparrow, the ''Black Pearl's'' former captain, was marooned on when Barbossa and the crew mutinied, leaving him a pistol and only one shot. The island was used by [[rum-running|rum-runners]], which allowed Sparrow to bargain his passage off, although, over the years, a tall tale evolves that he escaped on two [[sea turtle]]s.<ref name="curse">{{cite video | people = [[Gore Verbinski]] (director) | title = [[Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl]] | format = [[Film]] | publisher = [[Walt Disney Pictures]] | year = [[2003 in film|2003]]}}</ref> |
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[[Image:Jack Sparrow -5.JPG|thumb|left|150px|Sparrow steps back into the moonlight, revealing his cursed form]] |
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Jack and Elizabeth are rescued by the British [[Royal Navy]], and Sparrow makes a deal to deliver them the ''[[Black Pearl]]''. During the final battle at Isla de Muerta, Sparrow swipes a cursed coin, making himself immortal, so he can fight Barbossa. He shoots him with the same shot he has carried for ten years just as Will breaks the curse, killing Barbossa. The Royal Navy capture the surviving pirates, including Sparrow, who is later sentenced to death. At his execution in Port Royal, Will saves him, but they are quickly caught. Governor Swann and Commodore Norrington are reluctant to resume the hanging, however. Will is pardoned, while Sparrow escapes by falling off the sea wall. He is rescued by the ''Black Pearl'' crew, and he is captain once more. Apparently impressed by the clever pirate, Commodore [[James Norrington]] ([[Jack Davenport]]) allows him one day's head start before giving chase.<ref name="curse"/> |
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==Concept and creation== |
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In the sequel ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest]]'' (2006), Sparrow searches for the [[Dead Man's Chest (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Dead Man's Chest]]. Thirteen years prior, Sparrow bartered his soul to the ghostly [[Davy Jones (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Captain Davy Jones]] ([[Bill Nighy]]) to raise the sunken ''Black Pearl'' and making him captain. Now Sparrow must either serve for 100 years aboard the ''[[The Flying Dutchman (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Flying Dutchman]]'', or be taken by the [[Kraken (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Kraken]] to [[Davy Jones' Locker (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Davy Jones' Locker]]. [[Lord Cutler Beckett]] ([[Tom Hollander]]) of the [[East India Trading Company]] wants to settle his own debt with Sparrow. He forces Will Turner to search for him while Elizabeth Swann is imprisoned. Sparrow wants to find the Dead Man's Chest containing Jones' heart to kill Jones and free himself from his blood debt. Sparrow and his crew hide from the Kraken on [[Pelegosto]] where the local cannibals believe he is a god in human form, and must be eaten to release his spirit. Will finds him, and they escape the island. Sparrow soon betrays Will to Davy Jones as part of a new deal to deliver 100 souls in exchange for his own. Sparrow recruits sailors in Tortuga where he unexpectedly encounters an escaped Elizabeth and the disgraced James Norrington. Convincing Elizabeth she can free Will by finding the Chest, they head for [[Isla Cruces]] after she uses the compass to pinpoint its location. Will also arrives, having escaped Jones' ship after stealing the key to the Chest. Will wants to stab the heart and free his father from Jones' service, while Norrington hopes to regain his career. Sparrow fears if Jones is dead, the Kraken will continue hunting him. Jones' crew arrives, and during the ensuing battle, Norrington steals the heart and the Letters of Marque that Beckett intended to recruit Jack Sparrow with. Jones summons the Kraken to attack the ''Black Pearl''. Realizing that the Kraken only wants Sparrow, Elizabeth tricks him and chains him to the mast to save herself and the crew; Sparrow and the ship are dragged to Davy Jones' Locker.<ref name="chest">{{cite video | people = [[Gore Verbinski]] (director) | title = [[Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest]] | format = [[Film]] | publisher = [[Walt Disney Pictures]] | year = [[2006 in film|2006]]}}</ref> |
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===Character=== |
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[[Image:Jack VS.. The Kraken.JPG|thumb|200px|Sparrow faces off against the Kraken just as he is dragged to Davy Jones' Locker]] |
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When writing the screenplay for ''The Curse of the Black Pearl'', [[Ted Elliott (screenwriter)|Ted Elliott]] and [[Terry Rossio]] envisioned Captain Jack Sparrow as a supporting character in the vein of [[Bugs Bunny]] and [[Groucho Marx]].<ref name="writers curse">{{cite video | people = [[Ted Elliott (screenwriter)|Ted Elliott]], [[Terry Rossio]], [[Stuart Beattie]], [[Jay Wolpert]] | title = Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl: Audio Commentary | type = DVD | publisher=Buena Vista |year=2003}}</ref> The producers saw him as a young [[Burt Lancaster]].<ref name="depp gold">{{cite news|author=Sean Smith |title=A Pirate's Life |work=Newsweek |date=June 26, 2006 |url=http://www.newsweek.com/pirates-life-111141 |access-date=May 30, 2007 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140110083047/http://www.newsweek.com/pirates-life-111141 |archive-date=January 10, 2014 }}</ref> Director [[Gore Verbinski]] admitted, "The first film was a movie, and then Jack was put into it almost. He doesn't have the obligations of the plot in the same ways that the other characters have. He meanders his way through, and he kind of affects everybody else."<ref name="chest verb">{{cite web|author=Jeff Otto |title=IGN Interviews Gore Verbinski |website=IGN |date=June 28, 2006 |url=http://uk.movies.ign.com/articles/714/714964p1.html |access-date=May 31, 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120119141047/http://uk.movies.ign.com/articles/714/714964p1.html |archive-date=January 19, 2012 }}</ref> Sparrow represents an ethical pirate, with [[Captain Barbossa]] as his corrupt [[foil (literature)|foil]], though both characters viewed as both light and dark [[trickster]]s.<ref name="writers curse"/> His true motives usually remain masked, and whether he is honorable or evil depends on the audience's perspective.<ref>{{cite web|title=Shipload of Characters Both New and Familiar |publisher=Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest Production Notes |url=http://madeinatlantis.com/pirates/production/production3.htm |access-date=May 31, 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927203635/http://madeinatlantis.com/pirates/production/production3.htm |archive-date=September 27, 2007 }}</ref> This acts as part of [[Will Turner]]'s arc, in which Sparrow tells him a pirate can be a good man, like [[Bootstrap Bill Turner|his father]].<ref name="writers curse"/> |
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In ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End]]'' (2007), with Davy Jones' heart now in Beckett's possession, the nine pirate lords of the [[Brethren Court]] are summoned to convene at Shipwreck Cove to combat the combined threat of Beckett and Jones. Sparrow, who is the Pirate Lord of the Caribbean, must attend, as he never bequeathed his "[[Pieces of Eight (piracy)|piece of eight]]", a pirate lord's identification marker, to an heir. The "pieces" can summon the sea goddess [[Calypso (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Calypso]]. A resurrected Barbossa leads Sparrow's crew to Davy Jones' Locker using Chinese pirate Sao Feng's navigational charts. There Sparrow has been hallucinating an entire crew comprised of himself, each representing a different facet of his personality. After the crew finds him, Sparrow deduces from a clue on the charts that they must capsize the ''Black Pearl'' to escape the Locker; at sunset, the ship upturns back into the living world. Sparrow and Barbossa arrive at the Brethren Court. Elizabeth, who was traded to Sao Feng, is made a pirate lord by him just before he dies. At the Brethren Court, she is elected "Pirate King" after Sparrow breaks a stalemate (the other lords always voted for themselves). During parley, he is traded for Will, who was captured by Jones and Beckett. The ''Black Pearl'' and the ''Flying Dutchman'' face off in battle during a [[maelstrom]] created by Calypso, Sparrow steals Davy Jones' heart to become immortal, but when Jones mortally wounds Will, Sparrow instead helps him stab the heart, killing Jones and making Will the ''Flying Dutchman's'' new captain. Together, the ''Black Pearl'' and the ''Flying Dutchman'' destroy Beckett's ship. Afterwards, Barbossa again commandeers the ''Black Pearl'' and strands Sparrow in Tortuga. Fortunately, Sparrow has already removed the middle of Feng's chart, and he sets sail in a small boat, using his compass and the chart to guide him to the [[Fountain of Youth]].<ref name="world">{{cite video | people = [[Gore Verbinski]] (director) | title = [[Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End]] | format = [[Film]] | publisher = [[Walt Disney Pictures]] | year = [[2007 in film|2007]]}}</ref> Jack Sparrow is currently in a relationship in this film with a goat named Sylvia. |
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Following the success of ''The Curse of the Black Pearl'', the challenge to creating a sequel was, according to Verbinski, "You don't want just the Jack Sparrow movie. It's like having a garlic milkshake. He's the spice and you need a lot of straight men ... Let's not give them too much Jack. It's like too much dessert or too much of a good thing."<ref name="chest verb"/> Although ''Dead Man's Chest'' was written to propel the trilogy's plot,<ref name="desperate"/> Sparrow's state-of-mind as he is pursued by Davy Jones becomes increasingly edgy, and the writers concocted the cannibal sequence to show that he was in danger whether on land or at sea. Sparrow is perplexed over his attraction to [[Elizabeth Swann]], and attempts to justify it throughout the film.<ref name="writers chest"/> |
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===Tie-ins=== |
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Jack Sparrow first appeared as a playable character in the 2005 video game ''[[Kingdom Hearts II]]'', where he was voiced by [[James Arnold Taylor]] in the English version and [[Hiroaki Hirata]] in the Japanese version. His role in the game is presumably non-canonical with the rest of ''Pirates'' fiction. Sparrow has since appeared in other video games, ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: The Legend of Jack Sparrow]]'' where he was voiced by [[Johnny Depp]], the adaptation of ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest (video game)|Dead Man's Chest]]'' and various game versions of ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End (video game)|At World's End]]'', where he was voiced by Jared Butler. The character is also set to appear in ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean Online]]'', which takes place before the films. |
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''At World's End'' was meant to return it tonally to a [[character piece]]. Sparrow, in particular, is tinged with madness after extended solitary confinement in Davy Jones's Locker,<ref name="desperate">{{cite news | author=Ian Nathan | title = Pirates 3 | work=[[Empire (magazine)|Empire]] | pages = 88–92 | date = April 27, 2007}}</ref> and now desires immortality.<ref name="immortality">{{cite web|title=Characters (video) |publisher=Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End Official site |url=http://pirates.disney.com/pirates-of-the-caribbean-at-worlds-end |access-date=May 31, 2007 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131019173126/http://pirates.disney.com/pirates-of-the-caribbean-at-worlds-end |archive-date=October 19, 2013 }}</ref> Sparrow struggles with what it takes to be a moral person,<ref name="success">{{cite web |title=Success Can Be a Tough Taskmaster |work=Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End Production Notes |url=http://numberonestars.com/pirates3/production1.htm |access-date=May 31, 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070519042434/http://numberonestars.com/pirates3/production1.htm |archive-date=May 19, 2007 |df=mdy-all }}</ref> after his honest streak caused his doom in the second film. This is mainly shown by his increasingly erratic behaviour and Jack's hallucinations, which appeared to be simply his deranged mind in the beginning where dozens of "Jack Sparrows" appeared to crew the ship in his solitary exile, but later the hallucinations grew more important and there were mainly two "Jacks" constantly arguing about which path to follow: the immortality or the mortality. The last hallucination took place while Jack was imprisoned on the Dutchman, where his honest streak won.<ref>{{cite web|title=Chapter 3 – Revealing the True Nature of all the Characters |work=Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End Production Notes |url=http://numberonestars.com/pirates3/production3.htm |access-date=June 2, 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120711221541/http://numberonestars.com/pirates3/production3.htm |archive-date=July 11, 2012 }}</ref> By the end of ''At World's End'', Sparrow is sailing to the Fountain of Youth, an early concept for the second film.<ref>{{cite video | title = Charting the Return | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> Rossio said in 2007 that a fourth film was possible,<ref>{{cite news | title = Exclusive interview: Terry Rossio | publisher=Moviehole | date = February 12, 2007 | url = http://www.moviehole.net/interviews/20070212_exclusive_interview_terry_ross.html | access-date =February 12, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071011163402/http://www.moviehole.net/interviews/20070212_exclusive_interview_terry_ross.html |archive-date=October 11, 2007 }}</ref> and producer [[Jerry Bruckheimer]] expressed interest in a spin-off.<ref>{{cite news | title = Bruckheimer talks Pirates spin-off | work=Moviehole | date = May 10, 2007 | url = http://www.moviehole.net/news/20070510_bruckheimer_talks_pirates_spin.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070512134248/http://www.moviehole.net/news/20070510_bruckheimer_talks_pirates_spin.html |archive-date=May 12, 2007}}</ref> Gore Verbinski concurred that "all of the stories set in motion by the first film have been resolved. If there ever were another ''Pirates of the Caribbean'' film, I would start fresh and focus on the further adventures of Captain Jack Sparrow."<ref>{{cite news | author=Steve Fritz | title = Talking Pirates with Gore Verbinski | work=[[Newsarama]] | date = November 30, 2007 | url = http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=137989 | access-date=December 2, 2007|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090828033013/http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=137989|archive-date=August 28, 2009|url-status=dead}}</ref> |
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Sparrow's backstory is given in the ''The Complete Visual Guide'' that he was born on a ship during a [[typhoon]], and he was trained to fence by an Italian.<ref>{{cite book | author = Richard Platt | coauthor = Glenn Dakin | title = Pirates of the Caribbean: The Complete Visual Guide | publisher = [[Dorling Kindersley]] | date = 2007 | pages = 12-15 | id = ISBN 0756626765}}</ref> [[Rob Kidd]] wrote an ongoing series of books entitled ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Jack Sparrow]]'', following a teenage Sparrow and his crew on the ''Barnacle'' as they battle [[sirens]], [[mermaids]] and adult pirates while looking for various treasures. The first book, ''The Coming Storm'', was published on [[June 1]] [[2006]]. On the website for ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest]]'', it is explained that Sparrow used to work for the [[East India Trading Company]] and captained the ''Wicked Wench''. When he refused to transport [[African slave trade|slaves]], he was branded a pirate and his ship was sunk. Sparrow then commissions [[Davy Jones (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Davy Jones]] to raise his ship, which he rechristened the ''Black Pearl''.<ref name="wench">{{cite web | title = Black Pearl 101 | publisher = [[Walt Disney Pictures]] | url = http://adisney.go.com/disneyvideos/liveaction/pirates2/games/gameshell.html?bp101 | accessdate=2007-05-31}}</ref> |
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''On Stranger Tides'' was first announced on September 28, 2008, during a Disney event at the [[Kodak Theatre]]. Verbinski did not return to direct the fourth installment and was replaced by [[Rob Marshall]]. The movie uses elements from [[Tim Powers]]' novel [[On Stranger Tides|of the same name]], particularly [[Blackbeard]] and the Fountain of Youth, but the film is not a straight adaptation of the novel.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://herocomplex.latimes.com/uncategorized/johnny-depp-jack-sparrow-disney-costume/ |title=Johnny Depp (in Captain Jack Sparrow costume) surprises Disney D23 Expo audience |work=Los Angeles Times |date=September 11, 2009 |access-date=May 11, 2011 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130701195008/http://herocomplex.latimes.com/uncategorized/johnny-depp-jack-sparrow-disney-costume/ |archive-date=July 1, 2013 }}</ref> |
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==Characterization== |
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{| class="toccolours" style="float: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 2em; font-size: 85%; background:#c6dbf7; color:black; width:30em; max-width: 40%;" cellspacing="5" |
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| style="text-align: left;" |"Me? I'm dishonest. And a dishonest man you can always trust to be dishonest. Honestly. It's the honest ones you want to watch out for, because you can never predict when they're going to do something incredibly stupid." |
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| style="text-align: left;" |— The unpredictable Sparrow betrays Barbossa<ref name="curse"/> |
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According to screenwriters [[Ted Elliott]] and [[Terry Rossio]], Sparrow is a [[trickster]] who uses wit and deceit to achieve his goals.<ref name="iconic">{{cite news | title = Pirates Dead Man's Chest: Depp's Iconic Role | publisher = Emanuel Levy | date = 2006 | url = http://www.emanuellevy.com/article.php?articleID=2688 | accessdate=2007-05-31}}</ref> He walks in a slightly [[drunk]]en swagger, accompanied by [[relaxed pronunciation|slurred]] speech and flailing hand gestures.<ref name="writers curse"/> [[Will Turner]] initially believes Sparrow suffers from [[heatstroke]], but notes later that Sparrow often preplans his actions.<ref name="curse"/> Such tactics earned an admiring comment by Lieutenant Groves ([[Greg Ellis (actor)|Greg Ellis]]), who asks [[Cutler Beckett]], "Do you think he plans it all out, or just makes it up as he goes along?"<ref name="world"/> |
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Sparrow usually prefers non-violent [[negotiation|negotiations]] and turning his enemies against each other.<ref name="chest"/> He will invoke [[parley]] and tempts his enemies away from their murderous mindsets to see the bigger picture, as he does when he persuades [[Hector Barbossa]] to delay returning to mortal form to battle the British [[Royal Navy]].<ref name="curse"/> He often uses a confusing vocabulary to confound his enemies,<ref name="curse"/><ref name="chest"/> and it is suggested that his [[pacifist|pacifisim]] may be one reason Barbossa and the ''Black Pearl'' crew mutineed.<ref name="curse"/> |
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The fifth film, ''Dead Men Tell No Tales'', was co-directed by [[Joachim Rønning]] and [[Espen Sandberg]].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/pirates-caribbean-5-orlando-bloom-teases-plot-film-will-keira-knightley-return-complete-1479866 |title=Pirates of the Caribbean 5 Plot: Will Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley reunite with Captain Jack Sparrow? |newspaper=International Business Times |author=Varma, Arjun |date=December 21, 2014 |access-date=December 21, 2014 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141221032021/http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/pirates-caribbean-5-orlando-bloom-teases-plot-film-will-keira-knightley-return-complete-1479866 |archive-date=December 21, 2014 }}</ref> |
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Sparrow seems to have created, or at least contributes to, his own mythic legend. When Gibbs tells Will that Sparrow escaped from a desert island by strapping two [[sea turtles]] together, the captain embellishes the story by claiming the rope was made from hair off his back.<ref name="curse"/> In a script draft of ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest]]'' Will's guide says that he heard Sparrow escaped execution in [[Port Royal]] by grabbing two [[parrots]] and flying away.<ref name="writers chest">{{cite video | people = [[Ted Elliott]], [[Terry Rossio]] | title = Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest: Audio Commentary | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref> Actor [[Johnny Depp]] compared pirates to rock stars in that their legendary status preceded them, which may help fuel Sparrow's enormous ego.<ref name="iconic"/> When Barbossa accuses Sparrow of being a coward in front of the [[Brethren Court]], he vigorously defends his reputation.<ref name="world"/> Sparrow also insists on being addressed as "Captain" Jack Sparrow<ref name="curse"/> and often gives the farewell, "You will remember this as the day you ''almost'' caught Captain Jack Sparrow," which is sometimes humourously cut off.<ref name="curse"/><ref name="chest"/> When Norrington calls him, "the worst pirate I have ever heard of," Sparrow replies, "But you have heard of me."<ref name="curse"/> In a deleted scene from ''The Curse of the Black Pearl'' Sparrow ponders being "the immortal Captain Jack Sparrow",<ref>{{cite video | title = The Immortal Captain Jack | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2003}}</ref> and during the third film he continues his attempt to achieve immortality, although his father, Captain Teague, warns it can be a terrible curse. Sparrow also ponders being "Captain Jack Sparrow, the last pirate," as the East India Trading Company purges piracy.<ref name="world"/> |
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===Johnny Depp=== |
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Despite his many heroics, Sparrow is a pirate and a morally ambiguous character.<ref name="success">{{cite web | title = Success Can Be a Tough Taskmaster | publisher = ''Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End'' Production Notes | url = http://numberonestars.com/pirates3/production1.htm | accessdate=2007-05-31}}</ref> When agreeing to trade 100 souls, including Will, to [[Davy Jones (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Davy Jones]] in exchange for his freedom, Jones asks Sparrow whether he can, "condemn an innocent man — a friend — to a lifetime of servitude in your name while you roam free?" Sparrow merely replies, "Yep! I'm good with it!"<ref name="chest"/> He carelessly runs up debts with [[Anamaria]],<ref name="curse"/> Davy Jones, and the other pirate lords,<ref name="world"/> and [[Sao Feng]] ([[Chow Yun-Fat]]), pirate lord of [[Singapore]], has particularily hateful memories of him.<ref name="world"/> In a moment of cowardice, Sparrow abandons his crew during the [[Kraken (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Kraken]]'s attack, but underlying loyalty and morality compels him to return and save them.<ref>''Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest'' comic book adaptation, [[Disney Adventures]], 2006</ref> Sparrow claims to be a man of his word,<ref name="curse"/> and expresses surprise that people doubt his truthfulness.<ref name="chest"/> His morality is revealed in his official backstory in which he refused to transport slaves,<ref name="wench"/> nor is there [[murder]] or [[rape]] on his criminal record.<ref name="curse"/><ref name="crimes"/> |
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[[File:Johnny depp blurry CC-BY-cropped.jpg|thumb|left|Johnny Depp during filming, sporting Jack's 'goatee' applied in makeup]] |
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Looking to do a [[family film]], Johnny Depp visited the [[Walt Disney Studios (Burbank)|Walt Disney Studios]] in 2001 when he heard of plans to adapt the [[Pirates of the Caribbean (theme park ride)|Pirates of the Caribbean]] ride into a film. Depp was excited by the possibility of reviving an old Hollywood genre,<ref name="depp gold"/> and found the script met his quirky sensibilities: the crew of the ''Black Pearl'' were not in search of treasure but trying to return it to lift a curse on them, and the traditional mutiny had already occurred.<ref name="depp commentary">{{cite video | people = [[Gore Verbinski]], [[Johnny Depp]] | title = Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl Audio Commentary | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2003}}</ref> Depp was cast on June 10, 2002.<ref>{{cite web | author=Greg Dean Schmitz | title = Greg's Previews – Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) |publisher=Yahoo! | url = https://movies.yahoo.com/shop?id=1808405416| access-date=August 9, 2008| author-link = Greg Dean Schmitz }}{{dead link|date=March 2020|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> Producer Jerry Bruckheimer felt Depp would give the film an edge that could draw teenage and adult audiences despite Disney's reputation for soft children's fare.<ref name="talk"/> |
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According to various reports and interviews, Johnny Depp prepared for the role while rehearsing in the steam room of a sauna. At times, he claimed to turn the heat up to its max temperature of 1,000 degrees. The actor was quoted as saying, ''"Captain Jack was actually born in a sauna—my sauna. I figured this is a guy who has been on the high seas for probably all of his life, the majority of his life at least, and therefore probably dealt with a lot of inescapable heat to the brain."''<ref>[https://www.eonline.com/news/984803/um-did-johnny-depp-boil-his-brain-in-a-1-000-degree-sauna Um, Did Johnny Depp ''Boil His Brain'' in a 1000-Degree Sauna? – E! Online]</ref> Depp also said, due to his daughter [[Lily-Rose Depp]] being three years old at the time, he watched various cartoons, using [[Tex Avery]] and [[Wile E. Coyote]] as examples.<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ptkJKeTyuFg A Conversation with… Johnny Depp at Zurich Film Festival – YouTube]</ref><ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=98m6wkLgoWI Johnny Depp on Creating Jack Sparrow and Fighting Disney – YouTube]</ref> |
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Depp partly based the character on [[Pepe Le Pew]], a [[womaniser|womanising]] [[skunk]] from ''[[Looney Tunes]]''.<ref name="depp gold"/> Sparrow claims to have a "tremendous intuitive sense of the female creature",<ref name="chest"/> although his conquests are often left with a sour memory of him. Former flames, Scarlett and Giselle, usually slap him or anyone looking for him. His witty charm attracts women, and even has [[Elizabeth Swann]] questioning her feelings.<ref name="chest"/> However, Sparrows says his "first and only love is the sea,"<ref name="chest"/>, and the ''[[Black Pearl]]'' represents freedom.<ref name="curse"/> Director [[Gore Verbinski]] noted phallic connotations in Sparrow's relationship with his vessel,<ref name="depp commentary"/> which is described as "the only ship which can outrun the ''[[The Flying Dutchman (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Flying Dutchman]]''".<ref name="world"/> Because he loves the sea, [[Davy Jones' Locker (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Davy Jones' Locker]] is a desert to be Sparrow's personal [[hell]].<ref name="writers chest"/> Sparrow also has bad personal hygiene, another Pepe Le Pew trait. Verbinski described Sparrow's breath as "like a donkey's ass",<ref name="depp commentary"/> which Sparrow even uses to get Will off his ship by huffing at him.<ref name="world"/> Lastly, Sparrow has an insatiable thirst for [[rum]], which can confuse his magic compass as to what he wants most.<ref name="chest"/><ref name="world"/> According to his criminal record on the ''At World's End'' website, he even sacked a shipment of rum to quench his thirst.<ref name="crimes">{{cite web | title = "Port Royal" | publisher = Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End Official Website | url = http://disney.go.com/disneypictures/pirates/atworldsend/ | accessdate=2007-05-31}}</ref> |
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At the first [[read-through]], Depp surprised the cast and crew by portraying the character in an off-kilter manner.<ref name="cocky">{{cite magazine | author=Ian Nathan | title = Pirates of the Caribbean 2 | pages = 66–69 | magazine=[[Empire (magazine)|Empire]] | date = July 1, 2006}}</ref> He researched 18th-century pirates and, seeing parallels with modern rock stars, modeled his performance on [[Keith Richards]].<ref name="talk">{{cite web|author=Stax |title=Depp & Bruckheimer Talk Pirates |website=IGN |date=June 25, 2003 |url=http://uk.movies.ign.com/articles/425/425848p1.html |access-date=May 31, 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080102184110/http://uk.movies.ign.com/articles/425/425848p1.html |archive-date=January 2, 2008 }}</ref> Richards later appeared in two cameos as Jack's father, [[Captain Teague]], in ''At World's End'' and ''On Stranger Tides''. Verbinski and Bruckheimer had confidence in Depp, partly because [[Orlando Bloom]] would play the traditional [[Errol Flynn]]-type character.<ref name="depp commentary"/> Depp improvised the film's final line, "Now, bring me that horizon", which the writer called his favorite line.<ref name="cocky"/> Disney executives were initially confused by Depp's performance, questioning whether the character was drunk or gay. While watching the rushes, Disney CEO [[Michael Eisner]] proclaimed Depp was ruining the film.<ref name="cocky"/> Depp's response to Disney executives was they could trust him with his choices or let him go.<ref name="talk"/> Many industry insiders questioned Depp's casting, as he was an unconventional actor not known for working within the traditional studio system.<ref>{{cite magazine|author=Chris Nashawaty |title=Box Office Buccaneer |magazine=Entertainment Weekly |url=http://ew.com/article/2003/07/25/how-pirates-fits-johnny-depps-quirky-career/ |access-date=May 18, 2007 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151017212258/http://www.ew.com/article/2003/07/25/how-pirates-fits-johnny-depps-quirky-career |archive-date=October 17, 2015 }}</ref> |
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==Concept and creation== |
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===Character creation=== |
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When writing the screenplay for ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl]]'', [[Ted Elliott]] and [[Terry Rossio]] envisioned Jack Sparrow as a supporting character, citing [[Bugs Bunny]] and [[Groucho Marx]] as influences.<ref name="writers curse"/> The producers also envisioned him as like a young [[Burt Lancaster]].<ref name="depp gold">{{cite news | author = Sean Smith | title = A Pirate's Life | publisher = [[Newsweek]] | date = [[2006-06-26]] | url = http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/13391041/site/newsweek/page/3/ | accessdate=2007-05-30}}</ref> Director [[Gore Verbinski]] admitted, "The first film was a movie, and then Jack was put into it almost. He doesn't have the obligations of the plot in the same ways that the other characters have. He meanders his way through and he kind of affects everybody else."<ref name="chest verb">{{cite news | author = Jeff Otto | title = IGN Interviews Gore Verbinski | publisher = [[IGN]] | date = [[2006-06-28]] | url = http://uk.movies.ign.com/articles/714/714964p1.html | accessdate=2007-05-31}}</ref> Sparrow represents a good [[pirate]], with [[Captain Barbossa]] as his [[foil (literature)|foil]].<ref name="writers curse">{{cite video | people = [[Ted Elliott]], [[Terry Rossio]], [[Stuart Beattie]], [[Jay Wolpert]] | title = Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl: Audio Commentary | format = DVD | publisher = Buena Vista | year = 2003}}</ref> Sparrow is a mysterious character, with the question being whether he is a good or bad character, and how it depends on the audience's perspective.<ref>{{cite web | title = Shipload of Characters Both New and Familiar | publisher = ''Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest'' Production Notes | url = http://madeinatlantis.com/pirates/production/production3.htm | accessdate=2007-05-31}}</ref> This acts as part of [[Will Turner]]'s ([[Orlando Bloom]]) arc, in which he learns a pirate can be a good man, like [[Bootstrap Bill Turner|his father]].<ref name="writers curse"/> |
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Depp's performance won acclaim from film critics. Alan Morrison found it "Gloriously over-the-top ... In terms of physical precision and verbal delivery, it's a master-class in comedy acting."<ref>{{cite magazine|author=Alan Morrison |title=Pirates Of The Caribbean: The Curse Of The Black Pearl |magazine=[[Empire (magazine)|Empire]] |url=http://www.empireonline.com/movies/pirates-caribbean-curse-black-pearl/ |access-date=May 21, 2007 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161014173629/http://www.empireonline.com/movies/pirates-caribbean-curse-black-pearl/ |archive-date=October 14, 2016 }}</ref> [[Roger Ebert]] praised Depp for drawing away from the character as written and found Depp's performance "original in its every atom. There has never been a pirate, or for that matter a human being, like this in any other movie ... his behavior shows a lifetime of rehearsal".<ref name=Ebert2003>{{cite news|author=Roger Ebert |title=Pirates Of The Caribbean: The Curse Of The Black Pearl |work=Chicago Sun-Times |date=July 9, 2003 |url=http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/pirates-of-the-caribbean-the-curse-of-the-black-pearl-2003 |access-date=May 21, 2007 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141206033540/http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/pirates-of-the-caribbean-the-curse-of-the-black-pearl-2003 |archive-date=December 6, 2014 |author-link=Roger Ebert }}</ref> Depp won a [[Screen Actor's Guild]] award for his performance, and was nominated for a [[Golden Globe]]<ref>{{cite web |title=Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl Awards |website=[[Allmovie]] |url=http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:281052~T4 |access-date=May 31, 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080112201918/http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1%3A281052~T4 |archive-date=January 12, 2008 |df=mdy-all }}</ref> and the [[Academy Award for Best Actor]], the first in his career.<ref name="farewell?">{{cite news |title=Pirates World's End: Johnny Depp's Farewell? |publisher=Emanuel Levy |year=2007 |url=http://www.emanuellevy.com/article.php?articleID=5729 |access-date=May 31, 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071009180548/http://www.emanuellevy.com/article.php?articleID=5729 |archive-date=October 9, 2007 }}</ref> ''[[Film School Rejects]]'' argued the film made Depp as much a movie star as he was a [[character actor]].<ref>{{cite news|author=Neil Miller |title=The Ten Most Powerful Movie Franchises in History |publisher=Film School Rejects |url=http://www.filmschoolrejects.com/opinions/the-ten-most-powerful-movie-franchises-in-history.php |date=May 29, 2007 |access-date=May 31, 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070601164829/http://www.filmschoolrejects.com/opinions/the-ten-most-powerful-movie-franchises-in-history.php |archive-date=June 1, 2007 }}</ref> |
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Following the success of ''The Curse of the Black Pearl'', the challenge of the sequel was, according to Verbinski, "You don't want just the Jack Sparrow movie. It's like having a garlic milkshake. He's the spice and you need a lot of straight men... Let's not give them too much Jack. It's like too much dessert or too much of a good thing."<ref name="chest verb"/> Although the purpose of ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest]]'' was to keep the plot moving,<ref name="desperate"/> Sparrow's state of mind being chased by [[Davy Jones (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Davy Jones]] is increasingly edgy, and the writers concocted the cannibal sequence to show Sparrow was safe on neither land nor sea. Sparrow is also perplexed over his attraction to [[Elizabeth Swann]], and is trying to find a justification for it throughout the film.<ref name="writers chest"/> |
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Depp's return in ''Dead Man's Chest'' was the first time he had ever made a sequel.<ref name="cocky"/> [[Drew McWeeny]] wrote, "Remember how cool [[Han Solo]] was in ''[[Star Wars (film)|Star Wars]]'' the first time you saw it? And then remember how much cooler he seemed when ''[[The Empire Strikes Back|Empire]]'' came out? This is that big a jump."<ref>{{cite news|author=Drew McWeeny |title=Moriarty Reviews Pirates of the Caribbean 2: Dead Man's Chest!! |publisher=[[Ain't It Cool News]] |date=June 25, 2006 |url=http://www.aintitcool.com/node/23694 |access-date=May 29, 2007 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121209153032/http://www.aintitcool.com/node/23694 |archive-date=December 9, 2012 |author-link=Drew McWeeny }}</ref> Depp received an [[MTV Movie Award]]<ref>{{cite news|author=MTV |title=The MTV Movie Awards Winners! |publisher=Comingsoon.net |date=June 4, 2007 |url=http://www.comingsoon.net/movies/news/20777-the-mtv-movie-awards-winners |access-date=June 4, 2007 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141220220901/http://www.comingsoon.net/movies/news/20777-the-mtv-movie-awards-winners |archive-date=December 20, 2014 }}</ref> and a [[Teen Choice Award]] for ''Dead Man's Chest'', and was nominated for an [[Empire Award]] and another Golden Globe.<ref>{{cite web|title=Awards for Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest (2006) |website=[[Internet Movie Database]] |url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0383574/awards |access-date=May 31, 2007 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120319003230/http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0383574/awards |archive-date=March 19, 2012 }}</ref> For his performance in ''At World's End'', Depp won an MTV Movie Award for Best Comedic Performance, as well as a [[People's Choice Award]], a [[Kids' Choice Award]], and another Teen Choice Award. He has signed on to reprise the role for future sequels.<ref>{{cite news|author=Marc Graser |title=Disney, Depp return to 'Caribbean' |work=Variety |date=September 24, 2008 |url=https://variety.com/2008/digital/features/disney-depp-return-to-caribbean-1117992798/ |access-date=September 25, 2008 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150612231201/http://variety.com/2008/digital/features/disney-depp-return-to-caribbean-1117992798/ |archive-date=June 12, 2015 }}</ref> |
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The purpose of ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End]]'' was to return it tonally to a [[character piece]]. Sparrow in particular is tinged with madness after spending extended [[solitary confinement]] in [[Davy Jones' Locker (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Davy Jones' Locker]],<ref name="desperate">{{cite news | author = Ian Nathan | title = Pirates 3 | publisher = [[Empire (magazine)|Empire]] | pages = 88-92 | date = [[2007-04-27]] | accessdate=2007-05-02}}</ref> and he begins to desire [[immortality]].<ref name="immortality">{{cite web | title = Characters (video) | publisher = Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End Official site | url = http://disney.go.com/disneypictures/pirates/atworldsend/ | accessdate=2007-05-31}}</ref> As with all characters in the film, Sparrow struggles with what it takes to be a good person,<ref name="success"/> after his honest streak caused his doom in the second film.<ref>{{cite web | title = Chapter 3 - Revealing the True Nature of all the Characters | publisher = ''Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End'' Production Notes | url = http://numberonestars.com/pirates3/production3.htm | accessdate=2007-06-02}}</ref> By the end of ''At World's End'' Sparrow is boating to the [[Fountain of Youth]], an early concept for the second film.<ref>{{cite video | title = Charting the Return | format = DVD | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref> Rossio has said they may write the screenplay for a fourth film,<ref>{{cite news | title = Exclusive interview: Terry Rossio | publisher = Moviehole | date = [[2007-02-12]] | url = http://www.moviehole.net/interviews/20070212_exclusive_interview_terry_ross.html | accessdate = 2007-02-12}}</ref> and producer [[Jerry Bruckheimer]] has expressed interest in a [[spin-off]].<ref>{{cite news | title = Pirates of the Caribbean 4 Might Be a Spin-Off | publisher = [[USA Today]] | date = [[2007-05-10]] | url = http://asp.usatoday.com/community/othervoices/default.aspx?news&bbPostId=B67Sc04QhxD4BD3SVECZ8QgwBA4PCPjrYY9QCzB9cbZHV3b4G&req=blogburst&tag=news | accessdate=2007-05-10}}</ref> |
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===Make-up and costumes=== |
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[[File:OriginalSparrow.jpg|thumb|Early character sketches of Johnny Depp as Jack Sparrow by Crash McCreery. |
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[[Johnny Depp]] was looking to do a [[family film]] in 2001, and was visiting [[Walt Disney Studios (Burbank)|Walt Disney Studios]] when he heard of plans to adapt the ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean (theme park ride)|Pirates of the Caribbean]]'' ride into a film. Depp was excited by the possibility of reviving an old Hollywood genre,<ref name="depp gold"/> and was further delighted that the script met his quirky sensibilities: the crew of the ''[[Black Pearl]]'' were not trying to find treasure, but were instead trying to return it and lift their curse. In addition, the mutiny had already taken place.<ref name="depp commentary">{{cite video | people = [[Gore Verbinski]], [[Johnny Depp]] | title = Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl Audio Commentary | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2003}}</ref> Depp was cast on [[June 10]] [[2002]].<ref>{{cite web | author = Greg Dean Schmitz | title = Greg's Previews - Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) | publisher = [[Yahoo!]] | url = http://movies.yahoo.com/shop?d=hp&cf=prev&id=1808405416&gpt=ch | accessdate=2007-05-31}}</ref> Producer [[Jerry Bruckheimer]] felt Depp was, "an edgy actor who will kind of counter the Disney ''Country Bears'' soft quality and tell an audience that an adult and teenager can go see this and have a good time with it."<ref name="talk"/> |
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An initial costume concept before Depp's ideas took hold.]] |
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Depp wears a [[Dreadlocks|dreadlock]] wig in a [[rock-and-roll]] approach to a pirate aesthetic.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Scarf And Wig | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> He wears a red bandanna and numerous objects in his hair, influenced by Keith Richards' habit of collecting souvenirs from his travels;<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Dingles | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> Sparrow's decorations include his "piece of eight".<ref name="world"/> Sparrow wears [[kohl (cosmetics)|kohl]] around his eyes, which was inspired by Depp's study of nomads, whom he compared to pirates,<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Eye Make-Up | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> and he wore contacts that acted as sunglasses.<ref name="epic">{{cite video | title = An Epic At Sea: The Making of Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2003}}</ref> Sparrow has several gold teeth, two of which belong to Depp,<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Teeth/Johnny's Teeth | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> although they were applied during filming. Depp initially forgot to have them removed after shooting ''The Curse of the Black Pearl'',<ref>{{cite web|title=Depp's Golden Teeth |website=[[Internet Movie Database]] |date=June 23, 2003 |url=https://www.imdb.com/news/wenn/2003-06-23#celeb5 |access-date=May 21, 2007 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130823081330/http://www.imdb.com/news/wenn/2003-06-23 |archive-date=August 23, 2013 }}</ref> and wore them throughout the shooting of the sequels.<ref name="depp gold"/> Like all aspects of Depp's performance, Disney initially expressed great concern over Depp's teeth.<ref name="writers chest">{{cite video | people = [[Ted Elliott (screenwriter)|Ted Elliott]], [[Terry Rossio]] | title = Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest: Audio Commentary | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> Sparrow wears his goatee in two braids. Initially wire was used in them, but the wires were abandoned because they made the braids stick up when Depp lay down.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Beard | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> Sparrow has numerous tattoos,<ref name="world"/> and has been [[Human branding|branded]] a pirate on his right arm by Cutler Beckett,<ref name="chest"/> underneath a tattoo of a sparrow.<ref name="curse"/> |
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Depp collaborated with costume designer Penny Rose on his character's appearance, handpicking a [[tricorne]] as Sparrow's signature leather hat; to make Sparrow's unique, the other characters did not wear leather hats. A rubber version was used for the scene in ''Dead Man's Chest'' when the hat floats on water.<ref name="hat">{{cite video | title = Jack's Hat | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> Depp liked to stick to one costume, wearing one lightweight silk tweed frock coat throughout the series,<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Pirate Coat | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> and he had to be coaxed out of wearing his boots for a version without a sole or heel in beach scenes.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Boots | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> The official line is that none of the costumes from ''The Curse of the Black Pearl'' survived, which allowed the opportunity to create tougher linen shirts for stunts.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Shirt | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> However, one remains which has been displayed in an exhibition of screen costumes in [[Worcester, England|Worcester]], England.<ref>{{cite web |title=Starstruck: the Costumes |url=http://www.worcestercathedral.co.uk/media/List_of_costumes.pdf |archive-url=https://www.webcitation.org/5trR1H8jM?url=http://www.worcestercathedral.co.uk/media/List_of_costumes.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-date=October 30, 2010 |access-date=August 4, 2010 }}</ref> It was a nightmare for Rose to track down the same makers of Sparrow's sash in Turkey. Rose did not want to [[silkscreen]] it, as the homewoven piece had the correct worn feel.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Sash | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> Sparrow wears an additional belt in the sequels, because Depp liked a new buckle which did not fit with the original piece.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Belt | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> |
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At the first [[read-through]], Depp surprised the rest of the cast and crew by portraying the character in an off-kilter manner.<ref name="cocky">{{cite news | author = Ian Nathan | title = Pirates of the Caribbean 2 | pages = 66-69 | publisher = [[Empire (magazine)|Empire]] | date = [[2006-07-01]] | accessdate=2007-05-13}}</ref> After researching 18th century pirates, Depp compared them to modern rock stars and decided to base his performance on [[Keith Richards]].<ref name="talk">{{cite news | author=Stax | title = Depp & Bruckheimer Talk Pirates | publisher = [[IGN]] | date = [[2003-06-25]] | url = http://uk.movies.ign.com/articles/425/425848p1.html | accessdate=2007-05-31}}</ref> Verbinski and Bruckheimer had confidence in Depp, partly because [[Orlando Bloom]] would be playing the traditional [[Errol Flynn]]-type.<ref name="depp commentary"/> Depp also improvised the final line of the film, "Bring me that horizon!", which is the writer's favourite line.<ref name="cocky"/> Disney executives were confused, asking Depp whether the character was [[drunk]] or [[gay]], and [[Michael Eisner]] even proclaimed while watching rushes, "He's ruining the film!"<ref name="cocky"/> Depp answered back, "Look, these are the choices I made. You know my work. So either trust me or give me the boot."<ref name="talk"/> Many industry insiders also questioned Depp's casting, as he was an unconventional actor not known for working within the studio system.<ref>{{cite news | author = Chris Nashawaty | title = Box Office Buccaneer | publisher = [[Entertainment Weekly]] | url = http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20037288_20037290_465481,00.html | accessdate=2007-05-18}}</ref> |
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Sparrow's weapons are genuine 18th-century pieces: his sword dates to the 1740s and his pistol is from the 1760s. Both were made in London.<ref name="epic"/><ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Sword | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> Depp used two pistols on set, one of rubber. Both survived production of the first film.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Pistol | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> Sparrow's magic compass also survived into the sequels, though director Gore Verbinski had a red arrow added to the dial as it became a more prominent prop. As it does not act like a normal compass, a magnet was used to make it spin.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Compass | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> Sparrow wears four rings, two of which belong to Depp. Depp bought the green ring in 1989 and the gold ring is a replica of a 2400-year-old ring Depp gave to the crew, though the original was later stolen. The other two are props to which Depp gave backstories: the gold-and-black ring is stolen from a Spanish widow Sparrow seduced and the green dragon ring recalls his adventures in the Far East.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Rings | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> Among Depp's additional ideas was the necklace made of human toes that Sparrow wears as the Pelegosto prepare to eat him,<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Cannibal Toe Necklace | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> and the sceptre was based on one a friend of Depp's owned.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Cannibal Scepter | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2006}}</ref> |
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Depp's performance was highly acclaimed. Alan Morrison found it, "Gloriously over-the-top... In terms of physical precision and verbal delivery, it's a masterclass in comedy acting."<ref>{{cite news | author = Alan Morrison | title = Pirates Of The Caribbean: The Curse Of The Black Pearl | publisher = [[Empire (magazine)|Empire]] | url = http://www.empireonline.com/reviews/reviewcomplete.asp?FID=9271 | accessdate=2007-05-21}}</ref> [[Roger Ebert]] also found his performance "original in its every atom. There has never been a pirate, or for that matter a human being, like this in any other movie... his behavior shows a lifetime of rehearsal." Ebert praised Depp for also drawing away from the way the character was written.<ref>{{cite news | author = [[Roger Ebert]] | title = Pirates Of The Caribbean: The Curse Of The Black Pearl | publisher = [[Chicago Sun-Times]] | date = [[2003-07-09]] | url = http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20030709/REVIEWS/307090301/1023 | accessdate=2007-05-21}}</ref> Although he disliked the film, [[Kenneth Turan]] enjoyed Depp's performance,<ref>{{cite news | author = [[Kenneth Turan]] | title = 'Pirates of the Caribbean' | publisher = [[Los Angeles Times]] | url = http://www.calendarlive.com/movies/reviews/cl-et-turan9jul09,2,3211342.story | accessdate=2007-05-21}}</ref> but [[Mark Kermode]] felt it was some of Depp's "worst work to date... under [director [[Gore Verbinski]]]'s slack direction Depp defaults to an untrammelled showiness not seen since the sub-[[Buster Keaton]] antics of ''[[Benny & Joon]]''."<ref>{{cite news | author = [[Mark Kermode]] | title = Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest | publisher = [[The Observer]] | date = [[2006-07-09]] | url = http://film.guardian.co.uk/News_Story/Critic_Review/Guardian_Film_of_the_week/0,,1816109,00.html | accessdate=2007-05-31}}</ref> Depp won a [[Screen Actor's Guild]] award for his performance, and was also nominated for a [[Golden Globe]]<ref>{{cite web | title = Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl Awards | publisher = [[All Movie Guide]] | url = http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:281052~T4 | accessdate=2007-05-31}}</ref> and an [[Academy Award]], the first in his career.<ref name="farewell?">{{cite news | title = Pirates World's End: Johnny Depp's Farewell? | publisher = Emanuel Levy | date = 2007 | url = http://www.emanuellevy.com/article.php?articleID=5729 | accessdate=2007-05-31}}</ref> Ultimately, the film made Depp a [[movie star]] as well as a [[character actor]].<ref>{{cite news | author = Neil Miller | url = http://www.filmschoolrejects.com/opinions/the-ten-most-powerful-movie-franchises-in-history.php | title = The Ten Most Powerful Movie Franchises in History | publisher = Film School Rejects | url = http://www.filmschoolrejects.com/opinions/the-ten-most-powerful-movie-franchises-in-history.php | date = [[2007-05-29]] | accessdate=2007-05-31}}</ref> |
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[[Image:OriginalSparrow.jpg|thumb|150px|An initial costume concept for Jack Sparrow before Depp's ideas took hold]] |
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Johnny Depp returned as Jack Sparrow in 2006's ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest]]'', the first time the actor ever made a sequel.<ref name="cocky"/> [[Drew McWeeny]] noted, "Remember how cool [[Han Solo]] was in ''[[Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope|Star Wars]]'' the first time you saw it? And then remember how much cooler he seemed when ''[[Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back|Empire]]'' came out? This is that big a jump."<ref>{{cite news | author = [[Drew McWeeny]] | title = Moriarty Reviews PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN 2: DEAD MAN'S CHEST!! | publisher = [[Ain't It Cool News]] | date = [[2006-06-25]] | url = http://www.aintitcool.com/node/23694 | accessdate=2007-05-29}}</ref> Yet, Eric Vespe felt that, "In the first movie he was playing a fool that was hiding a great pirate on the inside and in this one he's a great pirate hiding a cowardly fool."<ref>{{cite news | author = Eric Vespe | title = Quint, The Crusty Seaman, scrapes the barnacles off of the DEAD MAN'S CHEST!!! | publisher = [[Ain't It Cool News]] | date = [[2006-07-03]] | url = http://www.aintitcool.com/?q=node/23753 | accessdate=2007-05-31}}</ref> By ''At World's End'' [[Peter Travers]] felt it proved "there can indeed be too much of a good thing."<ref>{{cite news | author = [[Peter Travers]] | title = Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End | publisher = [[Rolling Stone]] | date = [[2007-05-22]] | url = http://www.rollingstone.com/reviews/movie/9474908/review/14756791/pirates_of_the_caribbean_at_worlds_end | accessdate=2007-05-23}}</ref> Nonetheless, Depp received an [[MTV Movie Award]]<ref>{{cite news | author = [[MTV]] | title = The MTV Movie Awards Winners! | publisher = Comingsoon.net | date = [[2007-06-04]] | url = http://www.comingsoon.net/news/movienews.php?id=20777 | accessdate=2007-06-04}}</ref> and a [[Teen Choice Award]] for ''Dead Man's Chest'', and was also nominated for a [[Golden Globe]].<ref>{{cite web | title = Awards for Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest (2006) | publisher = [[Internet Movie Database]] | url = http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0383574/awards | accessdate=2007-05-31}}</ref> Depp has expressed further interest in portraying Sparrow for a fourth and fifth film, believing he has yet to explore the full potential of the character.<ref>{{cite news | author = John Hiscock | title = 'I'm not finished with Jack Sparrow' | publisher = [[The Telegraph]] | date = [[2007-05-21]] | url = http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2007/05/21/bfdepp121.xml | accessdate=2007-06-01}}</ref> |
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During the course of the films, Sparrow undergoes physical transformations. In ''The Curse of the Black Pearl'', Sparrow curses himself to battle the undead Barbossa. Like all the actors playing the ''Black Pearl'' crew, Depp had to shoot scenes in costume as a reference for the animators, and his shots as a skeleton were shot again without him. Depp reprised the scene again on a [[motion capture]] stage.<ref name="epic"/> In ''At World's End'', Sparrow hallucinates a version of himself as a member of Davy Jones's crew, adhered to a wall and encrusted with barnacles. Verbinski oversaw that the design retained Sparrow's distinctive look,<ref>{{cite web|author=Scott Collura, Eric Moro |title=Designing At World's End |website=IGN |date=May 29, 2007 |url=http://uk.movies.ign.com/articles/792/792383p3.html |access-date=June 2, 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120118153529/http://uk.movies.ign.com/articles/792/792383p3.html |archive-date=January 18, 2012 }}</ref> and rejected initial designs which portrayed him as over 100 years old.<ref>{{cite news|author=Drew McWeeny |title=AICN Exclusive! Pirates of the Caribbean 3 New Crew Member Designs! |publisher=[[Ain't It Cool News]] |date=April 27, 2007 |url=http://www.aintitcool.com/node/32457 |access-date=June 2, 2007 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070610063321/http://www.aintitcool.com/node/32457 |archive-date=June 10, 2007 |author-link=Drew McWeeny }}</ref> In Dead Men Tell No Tales, a young Jack Sparrow appears during a flashback sequence. |
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===Make-up and costumes=== |
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[[Johnny Depp]] wore a wig to portray Sparrow's [[dreadlocks]], an aesthetic influenced by Depp's [[rock n' roll]] approach to pirates, and also wore a red [[bandana]] over it.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Scarf And Wig | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref> Sparrow wears numerous objects in his hair, which was influenced by [[Keith Richards]]' manner of keeping souvenirs from his travels,<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Dingles | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref> which includes Sparrow's "[[Pieces of Eight (piracy)|piece of eight]]".<ref name="world"/> Sparrow wears [[kohl (cosmetics)|kohl]] around his eyes, which was inspired by Depp's study of [[nomads]] who he compared to pirates,<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Eye Make-Up | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref> and Depp also wore contacts that acted as [[sunglasses]].<ref name="epic">{{cite video | title = An Epic At Sea: The Making of Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2003}}</ref> Sparrow has gold teeth, two of which belong to Depp,<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Teeth/Johnny's Teeth | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref> although they were applied during filming. Depp forgot to have them removed after shooting ''The Curse of the Black Pearl'',<ref>{{cite news | title = Depp's Golden Teeth | publisher = [[Internet Movie Database]] | date = [[2003-06-23]] | url = http://www.imdb.com/news/wenn/2003-06-23#celeb5 | accessdate=2007-05-21}}</ref> and decided to keep them throughout shooting of the sequels.<ref name="depp gold"/> Like all of Depp's performance, Disney initially expressed great concern over Depp's teeth.<ref name="writers chest"/> Sparrow wears his goatee in two braids, and initially wire was used in them, but they were abandoned when they stuck up when Depp laid down.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Beard | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref> Sparrow also has numerous tattoos,<ref name="world"/> and has been [[Human branding|branded]] a pirate on his right arm by [[Cutler Beckett]],<ref name="chest"/> underneath a tattoo of a [[sparrow]].<ref name="curse"/> |
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==Fictional character biography== |
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Depp heavily collaborated with costume designer Penny Rose on the look of the character, handpicking the [[tricorne]] as Sparrow's signature [[leather]] hat: the other characters in the series could not wear leather hats, to make Sparrow's unique. For the scene when it floats on water in ''Dead Man's Chest'', a rubber version was used.<ref name="hat">{{cite video | title = Jack's Hat | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref> Depp liked to stick to one costume, wearing one lightweight [[silk]] tweed coat throughout the series,<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Pirate Coat | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref> and he had to be coaxed out of wearing his boots for a version without a sole or heel in beach scenes.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Boots | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref> None of the costumes from ''The Curse of the Black Pearl'' survived: this allowed an opportunity to use tougher linen shirts for stunts,<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Shirt | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref> though it was a nightmare for Rose to track down the same makers of Sparrow's [[sash]] in [[Turkey]]. Rose did not want to [[silkscreen]] it, as the homemade piece had the correct worn feel.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Sash | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref> Sparrow wears an additional belt in the sequels, because Depp liked a new buckle which did not fit with the original piece.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Belt | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref> |
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===Before the films=== |
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''Pirates of the Caribbean: The Complete Visual Guide'' gives a backstory to Jack Sparrow in which he was born on a pirate ship during a typhoon in the Indian Ocean and was trained to [[Fencing|fence]] by an Italian.<ref>{{cite book | author=Richard Platt |author2=Glenn Dakin | title = Pirates of the Caribbean: The Complete Visual Guide | publisher=[[Dorling Kindersley]] | year = 2007 | pages = 12–15 | isbn = 978-0-7566-2676-1}}</ref> |
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Books following Jack Sparrow's adventures before the events of the film include a twelve-book series focusing on his teenage years entitled ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Jack Sparrow]]'',<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.goodreads.com/series/50050-pirates-of-the-caribbean-jack-sparrow |title=Pirates of the Caribbean: Jack Sparrow series |publisher=Goodreads |access-date=December 7, 2014 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141124122909/http://www.goodreads.com/series/50050-pirates-of-the-caribbean-jack-sparrow |archive-date=November 24, 2014 }}</ref> and a five-books ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Legends of the Brethren Court]]'' series.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.goodreads.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&query=Pirates+of+the+Caribbean%3A+Legends+of+the+Brethren+Court | title = Pirates of the Caribbean: Legends of the Brethren Court | publisher = Goodreads | access-date = December 7, 2014 | archive-date = June 9, 2015 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150609033529/http://www.goodreads.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&query=Pirates+of+the+Caribbean%3A+Legends+of+the+Brethren+Court | url-status = live }}</ref> |
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The weapons used by Sparrow are genuine 18th century pieces: his sword dates back to the 1740s, while his pistol dates back from the 1760s. Both were made in London.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Sword | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref><ref name="epic"/> Depp used two pistols on set, one of which was rubber. Both props survived after production of the first film.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Pistol | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref> Sparrow's magic compass also survived into the sequels, though director [[Gore Verbinski]] had a red arrow added to the dial as it became a more prominent prop. As it does not act like a normal compass, a magnet was put in for it to spin.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Compass | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref> Sparrow wears four rings, two of which belong to Depp. Depp bought the green ring in 1989, and the gold ring is a replica of a 2400-year old ring Depp gave to the crew, though the original was later stolen. The other two are props which Depp gave backstories to: the gold-and-black ring is stolen from a Spanish widow Sparrow seduced, and the green dragon ring recalls his adventures in the Far East.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Rings | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref> Among Depp's additional ideas was the necklace made of human toes that Sparrow wears as the [[Pelegosto]] prepare to eat him,<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Cannibal Toe Necklace | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref> and the scepter was based on one a friend of Depp's owned.<ref>{{cite video | title = Jack's Cannibal Scepter | format = [[DVD]] | publisher = [[Buena Vista]] | year = 2006}}</ref> |
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<!-- PER WP: DO NOT ADD SPECULATION CONCERNING THE BLACK PEARL AND THE WICKED WENCH BEING THE SAME SHIP, AS IT WAS NEVER DIRECTLY STATED IN THE FILM NOR THE CAST, CREW OR ANY OTHER PROMOTIONAL MATERIAL.--> |
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During the course of the trilogy, Sparrow undergoes physical transformations. In ''The Curse of the Black Pearl'' Sparrow curses himself to battle the undead Barbossa. Like all the actors playing the ''Black Pearl'' crew, Depp had to shoot scenes in costume as a reference for the animators, and his shots as a skeleton were shot again without him. Depp reprised the scene again on a [[motion capture]] stage.<ref name="epic"/> In ''At World's End'', Sparrow hallucinates a version of himself as a member of Davy Jones' crew, adhered to a wall and encrusted with [[barnacles]]. Director [[Gore Verbinski]] led the design in order to not lose Sparrow's iconic look.<ref>{{cite news | author = Scott Collura, Eric Moro | title = Designing At World's End | publisher = [[IGN]] | date = [[2007-05-29]] | url = http://uk.movies.ign.com/articles/792/792383p3.html | accessdate=2007-06-02}}</ref> Initial designs of Sparrow in this form portrayed him as over 100 years old, before being drawn closer to Depp's appearance.<ref>{{cite news | author = [[Drew McWeeny]] | title = AICN EXCLUSIVE! PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN 3 New Crew Member Designs! | publisher = [[Ain't It Cool News]] | date = [[2007-04-27]] | url = http://www.aintitcool.com/node/32457 | accessdate=2007-06-02}}</ref> |
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The 2017 film, ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales]]'', features a flashback with how "Jack the Sparrow" meets the [[Spanish Navy]] Captain Armando Salazar. Sparrow was the helmsman aboard the ''Wicked Wench'', a pirate ship which may or may not be the ''Black Pearl'', under the command of Captain Morgan, who was killed in battle. In the flashback, as reminisced upon by Salazar, the ''Silent Mary'' attacked pirate ships in battle until Captain Morgan died aboard the ''Wicked Wench'', giving captaincy to young Sparrow. Sparrow outmaneuvers Salazar while being chased into the Devil's Triangle, in which the crew of the ''Wicked Wench'' throw ropes around nearby reefs off the port side and use the rigging to slingshot the ship in the opposite direction. Jack steers the ship through the reef, saving the crew and the ship by changing the ship's course at the last second. Afterward, on the deck of the ''Wicked Wench'', the crew rewards Sparrow with "tribute" and bestows Jack with his famous hat and other personal effects.<ref name="salazar"/> |
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[[Ann C. Crispin]] wrote the Disney Publishing novel titled ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: The Price of Freedom]]'', published in 2011, which focuses more on the films' continuity rather than the other prequel books, and follows Jack's adventures as a merchant captain for the [[East India Company|East India Trading Company]], which was hinted in ''At World's End'', due to Crispin reading the screenplay, though the scenes were deleted from the final cut of the film.<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z0bxfIb4KLc A. C. Crispin interview – The Price of Freedom – Fast Forward: Contemporary Science Fiction – YouTube]</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://michaelaventrella.com/2011/07/01/interview-with-author-a-c-crispin/ | title=Interview with author A. C. Crispin | date=July 2011 }}</ref> Jack Sparrow captained the [[merchant ship]] ''Wicked Wench'' for Cutler Beckett for about a year, hauling various cargoes, but he refused to haul slaves. Hoping to recruit Sparrow as one of his many "operatives", Beckett indulged what he regarded as an odd peccadillo of Sparrow's until he and the captain came to part ways. Beckett had dispatched Sparrow on a mission to find the lost island of Kerma, and the treasure at the heart of its underground labyrinth, but Sparrow double-crossed the EITC official and claimed he couldn't locate the island. Suspicious that Sparrow had indeed found the island and the treasure, but had not given him its accurate location, Beckett determined to browbeat the captain into obedience and demanded that the young captain transport a cargo of slaves to the New World. Initially, Sparrow agreed, but when he realized that he was betraying the ''Wicked Wench'', as well as himself, he rebelled and freed the slaves by taking them to Kerma for safe asylum. Furious that Sparrow had flouted his orders and stolen the "cargo" of "black gold", Beckett had Sparrow thrown into jail. After allowing him to languish for a couple of months, Beckett had Sparrow transported to the ''Wicked Wench''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s anchorage, about a mile from the coast of West Africa, near Calabar on the [[Bight of Benin]]. After personally branding Sparrow with the "P" brand (so he'd be forever identifiable as a pirate), Cutler Beckett gave the order to fire incendiary carcass charges at the ''Wicked Wench'', to demoralize her captain. Sparrow fought his way free from his guards, dove overboard, and attempted to rescue his burning, foundering ship, but he was too late. The ''Wicked Wench'' turned into an inferno, then sank, taking Jack with her. But, while dying, Sparrow called upon [[Davy Jones (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Davy Jones]], and struck a bargain with him: his soul and one hundred years of service aboard the ''Flying Dutchman'', in return for continued human existence of thirteen years as captain, plus saving the ''Wicked Wench'' and transforming her into the fastest, most dangerous pirate ship on the seven seas. Jones agreed and raised the ship from the sea floor, now a charred vessel with an angel figurehead.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2017-04-11 |title=The Legend of the Black Pearl |url=https://www.pirateshowcancun.com/blog/famous-buccaneer-blaggards/legend-black-pearl/ |access-date=2022-06-09 |website=Pirate Show Cancun |language=en-US |archive-date=June 24, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230624041612/https://www.pirateshowcancun.com/blog/famous-buccaneer-blaggards/legend-black-pearl/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> In keeping with her scorched appearance, Jack painted his ship black and added black sails, rechristening her "the ''Black Pearl''".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/4558004-pirates-of-the-caribbean |title=Pirates of the Caribbean: The Price of Freedom |publisher=Goodreads |access-date=December 7, 2014 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150609033536/http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/4558004-pirates-of-the-caribbean |archive-date=June 9, 2015 }}</ref> |
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==Sparrow in popular culture== |
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When ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest]]'' grossed over $1 billion worldwide, Ian Nathan attributed this to Sparrow's popularity: "''Pirates'', the franchise, only had to turn up. There was a powerful holdover from the cheeky delights of its debut, something we hadn't felt since the [[Clone Wars (Star Wars)|Clone Wars]] called it a day."<ref>{{cite news | author = Ian Nathan | pages = 176 | publisher = [[Empire (magazine)|Empire]] | title = How Pirates' feckless hero won over the fans before he even showed up | date = [[2006-10-27]] | accessdate=2007-05-31}}</ref> ''[[Empire (magazine)|Empire]]'' declared [[Johnny Depp]]'s performance to be the seventy-fourth "thing that rocked our world" in 2006 when celebrating 200 issues.<ref>{{cite news | title = 200 things that rocked our world | pages = 118 | publisher = [[Empire (magazine)|Empire]] | date = [[2006-01-02]] | accessdate = 2007-05-31}}</ref> A survey of more than 3,000 people showed Jack Sparrow was the most popular [[Halloween]] costume of 2006,<ref>{{cite news | title = Captain Jack Sparrow top pick for 2006 Most Popular Halloween Costume | publisher = Extreme Halloween Network | date = [[2006-10-17]] | url = http://www.anniescostumes.com/popularhalloweencostumes2006.htm | accessdate=2007-06-02}}</ref> and a 2007 poll held by the [[Internet Movie Database]] showed Sparrow to be the second most popular [[live action]] hero, after [[Indiana Jones]].<ref>{{cite web | title = From this list of live-action heroes, who is your favorite? | publisher = [[Internet Movie Database]] | date = [[2007-06-03]] | url = http://www.imdb.com/poll/results/2007-06-03 | accessdate=2007-06-03}}</ref> In a 2007 [[Pearl & Dean]] poll, Jack Sparrow is Depp's most popular performance.<ref>{{cite news | url = http://people.monstersandcritics.com/news/article_1307679.php | title = Johnny Depp's great Captain role | publisher = [[People (magazine)|People]] | date = [[2007-05-22]] | accessdate=2007-06-04}}</ref> |
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At some point, [[Hector Barbossa]] joins Jack Sparrow as his [[first mate]]. The original backstory was that Jack recruited Barbossa and his cronies prior to the voyage to [[Isla de Muerta]].<ref name="writers curse"/> However, in the ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Legends of the Brethren Court|Legends of the Brethren Court]]'' book series, Hector Barbossa was Sparrow's first mate in the quest for the Shadow Gold, where [[Tia Dalma]] tasks them with securing seven vials of shadow gold to stop the evil [[Henry Morgan|Shadow Lord]] from gaining total control over the seas by destroying the Brethren Court with his Shadow Army. Over the course of the novels, they are able to collect all vials shattered across the world by allying with or fighting against the other Pirate Lords. They are able to defeat the Shadow Lord with the combined efforts of all Pirate Lords, after which Jack wants to sail for [[List of locations in Pirates of the Caribbean#Tortuga|Tortuga]] to recruit a new crew. Barbossa offers him to handle that in his stead, implying that he recruited men with the intent to [[mutiny]] against his captain.<ref>''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Legends of the Brethren Court: Day of the Shadow]]'' "Epilogue"</ref> |
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Emanuel Levy feels the character is the only iconic film character of the 2000s,<ref name="iconic"/> while Todd Gilchrist feels Sparrow is the only element of the films that will remain timeless.<ref>{{cite news | author = Todd Gilchrist | url = http://uk.movies.ign.com/articles/791/791309p1.html | title = Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End | publisher = [[IGN]] | date = [[2007-05-24]] | accessdate=2007-05-24}}</ref> According to Sharon Eberson, the character's popularity can be attributed to being "scoundrel whose occasional bouts of conscience allow viewers to go with the flaws because, as played to the larger-than-life hilt by Depp, he owns every scene he is in."<ref>{{cite news | author = Sharon Eberson | title = Jack Sparrow joins a unique line of iconic characters | publisher = Post Gazette | date = [[2007-05-24]] | url = http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07144/788381-254.stm | accessdate=2007-06-02}}</ref> Film history professor at [[UCLA]] Jonathan Kuntz also attributed his popularity to the increased questioning of [[masculinity]] in the 21st century, and Sparrow's personality contrasts to previous action-adventure heroes in cinema. [[Leonard Maltin]] concurs that Sparrow has a carefree attitude and does not take himself seriously.<ref>{{cite news | author = Sandy Cohen | title = Depp’s Sparrow smashes cinematic pirate mold | publisher = Pantagraph | date = [[2007-05-24]] | url = http://www.pantagraph.com/articles/2007/05/24/freetime/doc4654bef24a573940671942.txt | accessdate = 2007-06-02}}</ref> Mark Fox also noted Sparrow is an escapist fantasy figure for women, free of much of the responsibility from most heroes.<ref>{{cite news | author = Mark Fox | title = Besting Jack Sparrow | publisher = Crave Online | date = [[2007-05-24]] | url = http://www.craveonline.com/humor/articles/04647967/besting_jack_sparrow.html | accessdate=2007-06-04}}</ref> |
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Two years after his deal with Davy Jones,<ref name="chest"/> Jack Sparrow sailed the ''Black Pearl'' and used his magical compass in search of the mysterious Isla de Muerta with a new crew, where the legendary Treasure of [[Hernán Cortés|Cortés]] was hidden. [[Bootstrap Bill Turner]] was already a member of Jack's crew, while the other crewmen, like [[Pintel and Ragetti]], were recruited in Tortuga. Jack was also the one who told his first mate Hector Barbossa and the rest of the crew about the curse that was upon the treasure, though nobody believed this [[ghost story]]. Captain and crew agreed to equal shares of the treasure, but devious first mate Barbossa persuaded Jack that equal shares included knowing the treasure's location. Jack complied, and soon after Barbossa led a [[mutiny]] and marooned Jack on an island with nothing but a pistol containing one shot. Although Jack was okay with Bootstrap Bill staying on board with Captain Barbossa, Jack hated Barbossa for having violated the Pirate's Code. Jack was able to escape after three days on the island and began his pursuit of the ''Black Pearl''. Within the next ten years, Jack learned of how Barbossa's crew found the [[Aztec]] gold and became cursed, despite not believing in the curse placed on it, as well as how they are trying to get all the gold back and add their blood to the chest.<ref name="writers curse"/> |
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In addition to his role in the ''Pirates of the Caribbean'' series, Sparrow was parodied as "Jack [[Swallow]]s" in ''[[Epic Movie]]'' ([[2007 in film|2007]]), where he was played by [[Darrell Hammond]].<ref>{{cite video | people = [[Jason Friedberg]], [[Aaron Seltzer]] (directors) | title = [[Epic Movie]] | format = [[Film]] | publisher = [[Regency Enterprises]] | year = 2007}}</ref> Sparrow also cameos in the [[DC Comics]] series ''[[52 (comic book)|52]]'' with a group of time-displaced pirates and robots.<ref>{{Comic book reference | Writer = [[Geoff Johns]], [[Grant Morrison]], [[Greg Rucka]], [[Mark Waid]] | Title = [[52 (comic book)|52]] | Issue = 24 | Date = [[2006-10-18]] | Publisher = [[DC Comics]]}}</ref> In the video game [[Fable (video game)|''Fable'']], a tombstone in Lychfield Graveyard reads "Cpt. J. Sparrow. A wind at your back forever, sir". |
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===Films=== |
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====''The Curse of the Black Pearl''==== |
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{{Main|Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl}} |
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Captain Jack Sparrow first appears in ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl|The Curse of the Black Pearl]]'' (2003). |
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In his debut scene, Sparrow arrives in [[Port Royal]], Jamaica on a sinking boat, seeking to commandeer a new ship. Despite rescuing [[Elizabeth Swann]], the daughter of [[Weatherby Swann|Governor Weatherby Swann]], from drowning, he is jailed for [[piracy]]. That night, a cursed [[Piracy|pirate]] ship called the ''[[Black Pearl]]'' attacks Port Royal and Elizabeth is kidnapped. The ''Black Pearl''{{'}}s [[Sea captain|captain]], [[Hector Barbossa]], desperately seeks one last gold coin to break an ancient [[Aztec]] curse that he and his crew are under. A [[blacksmith]] named [[Will Turner]] frees Sparrow to aid him in rescuing Elizabeth. They commandeer HMS ''Interceptor'' and recruit a motley crew in Tortuga, [[Haiti]] before heading to [[Isla de Muerta]], where Elizabeth is held. Along the way, Will learns that Sparrow was the ''Black Pearl''{{'}}s original captain until Barbossa led a mutiny ten years earlier and took over the ship, [[marooning]] Sparrow on an island to die. Sparrow tells Turner that his father was a pirate known as "Bootstrap" Bill Turner.<ref name="curse">{{cite video | people = [[Gore Verbinski]] (director) | title = [[Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl]] | type = Film | publisher=[[Walt Disney Pictures]] |year=2003}}</ref> |
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The rescue goes awry after Will betrays Sparrow, thinking Sparrow was going to betray him,<ref name="writers curse"/> and Barbossa later maroons Jack and Elizabeth on the same island upon which he had stranded Sparrow before. Elizabeth creates a signal fire from rum barrels and they are rescued by the [[Royal Navy]]. Sparrow cuts a deal with [[Commodore (Royal Navy)|Commodore]] [[James Norrington]] to lead Norrington to the ''Black Pearl''. Norrington refuses until Elizabeth, desperate to save Will, spontaneously accepts Norrington's earlier [[marriage proposal]]. Right before the film's climactic battle with the pirates at Isla de Muerta, Sparrow swipes a cursed coin from the treasure chest, making himself immortal and capable of dueling Barbossa. He shoots his nemesis with the pistol he has carried for ten years just as Will breaks the curse, killing Barbossa. Despite having assisted the Navy, Sparrow is sentenced to hang.<ref name="curse" /> |
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At Sparrow's execution in Port Royal, Will saves Sparrow, but they are quickly captured. Elizabeth intervenes, declaring her love for Will who is pardoned, while Sparrow escapes by tumbling off a sea wall. The ''Black Pearl'' and her new crew arrive in time to retrieve him, and he becomes captain once more. Impressed by the wily pirate, Norrington allows him one day's head start before giving chase.<ref name="curse"/> |
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====''Dead Man's Chest''==== |
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[[File:Pirate Flag of Henry Every.svg|thumb|Jack Sparrow's Jolly Roger, flown from the mast of the ''Black Pearl'' after becoming her captain again. Also the flag of [[Henry Every]].]] |
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{{Main|Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest}} |
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A year following the events of the first film, Sparrow searches for the Dead Man's Chest, which contains the heart of [[Davy Jones (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Davy Jones]]. Thirteen years prior to the events of the film, Sparrow made a bargain with Jones to raise the sunken ''Black Pearl'' and make Sparrow captain for thirteen years. Now the debt is due, and Bootstrap Bill Turner warns that Sparrow must either serve one hundred years aboard the ''Flying Dutchman'', or be dragged to [[Davy Jones's Locker (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Davy Jones's Locker]] by the [[Kraken (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Kraken]]. Jack believes if he can find the Dead Man's Chest, he can free his soul as well as control Jones and the seas.<ref name="chest">{{cite video | people = [[Gore Verbinski]] (director) | title = [[Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest]] | type = Film | publisher=[[Walt Disney Pictures]] |year=2006}}</ref> |
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Adding to Sparrow's woes, [[Cutler Beckett|Lord Cutler Beckett]] of the East India Trading Company has a personal score to settle and wants the chest himself. Beckett arrests Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann, forcing Turner to search for Sparrow and his magic compass. Turner locates Sparrow's crew on [[Pelegosto]], held captive by cannibals who intend to eat Sparrow. They escape, and voyage to [[Tia Dalma]] (a magical woman later revealed to be the Goddess, Calypso, bound in human form as Dalma, and former lover of Jones). Dalma immediately sees destiny in Will, and provides Sparrow with a jar of dirt – Jones can only set foot on land once every 10 years, and since land is where Sparrow is safe, Dalma suggests with the dirt that he takes land with him.<ref name="chest"/> |
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Sparrow strikes a new deal with Jones to deliver one hundred souls in exchange for his own. Jones agrees but keeps Turner as a "good faith payment". Sparrow is recruiting sailors in Tortuga when he encounters Elizabeth Swann and James Norrington, the latter having succumbed to alcohol. Sparrow convinces Elizabeth that Turner can be freed by using the magic compass to find the chest. The duo head for [[Isla Cruces]] and find Will, who escaped Jones's ship and has stolen the key to the Chest. Turner wants to stab Jones's heart and free his father from Jones's servitude, while Norrington plots to restore his career by delivering the heart to Beckett. Sparrow wants it to convince Jones to call off the Kraken.<ref name="chest"/> |
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Norrington escapes with the heart amid a battle with Jones's crew, and Jones summons the Kraken. Realizing Sparrow is the target, Elizabeth traps him aboard the ''Black Pearl'' as the crew abandons the ship, and kisses him while she handcuffs him to the mast. Then, the monster devours Sparrow and drags the ship and his soul to Davy Jones's Locker. The surviving crew seeks refuge with Tia Dalma who produces a captain she says can rescue Sparrow: a resurrected Hector Barbossa.<ref name="chest"/> |
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====''At World's End''==== |
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{{Main|Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End}} |
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Two months following the events of the second film, with Davy Jones's heart in his possession and the ''Flying Dutchman'' under his command, Cutler Beckett begins exterminating all pirates. To combat Beckett, the nine pirate lords of the [[Brethren Court]] convene at Shipwreck Cove. Only Jack Sparrow is missing, killed and sent to Davy Jones's Locker at the end of the previous film. Sparrow, as Pirate Lord of the Caribbean, must attend, as he did not bequeath to a designated heir his "[[Spanish dollar|piece of eight]]", a pirate lord's marker. The collective "nine pieces of eight" are needed to free sea goddess [[Calypso (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Calypso]] to defeat Beckett. With Elizabeth and Will, Barbossa leads Sparrow's crew to Davy Jones's Locker using stolen navigational charts from the pirate lord [[Sao Feng]]. After the crew locate him, Sparrow deciphers a clue on the charts allowing them to escape the Locker.<ref name="world">{{cite video | people = [[Gore Verbinski]] (director) | title = [[Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End]] | type = Film | publisher=[[Walt Disney Pictures]] |year=2007}}</ref> |
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At the Brethren Court, Elizabeth has succeeded Captain Sao Feng as a Pirate Lord and is elected "Pirate King" after Sparrow breaks a stalemate vote. Sparrow is briefly reunited with his father, Captain Teague. During a [[parley]] with Beckett and Jones, Sparrow is traded for Turner, whom Jones and Beckett had captured. The ''Black Pearl'' battles the ''Flying Dutchman'' during a maelstrom created by Calypso, during which Sparrow fights Jones for the chest so that he may acquire Jones' heart to become immortal. When Jones mortally wounds Turner, Sparrow instead chooses to save Turner by helping him stab the heart, which kills Jones and makes Turner the ''Dutchman''{{'}}s captain. Together, the ''Pearl'' and the ''Dutchman'' destroy Beckett's ship. At the end, Barbossa again commandeers the ''Pearl'' and Sao Feng's charts, stranding Sparrow and Gibbs in Tortuga. However, Sparrow had managed to cut out the navigational section of the charts and with them begins to search for the legendary [[Fountain of Youth]].<ref name="world"/> |
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====''On Stranger Tides''==== |
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{{Main|Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides}} |
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Prior to the events of the film, Jack Sparrow gained some renown as the pirate who knew and memorized the Fountain of Youth's location. In the film, Joshamee Gibbs was put on trial in London until Sparrow himself arrived to rescue him as a disguised [[judge]] at the [[Old Bailey]] courthouse. However, they are captured at [[St James's Palace]]. Jack is dragged into a forced audience with [[George II of Great Britain|King George II]], who wants Sparrow to guide an expedition to the Fountain. Hector Barbossa, now a [[privateer]] in the service to the British with a [[peg leg]], reveals to Jack that he lost his leg and the ''Black Pearl'', which he believes to be sunk. Jack Sparrow escapes and crosses paths with a "Jack Sparrow" impostor, [[Angelica (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Angelica]], a woman from Sparrow's past and ruthless [[con artist]]. Angelica [[Shanghaiing|shanghais]] Jack aboard the ''[[Queen Anne's Revenge]]'', the ship captained by [[Blackbeard (Pirates of the Caribbean)|Blackbeard]]. |
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<ref name="stranger">{{cite video | people = [[Rob Marshall]] (director) | title = [[Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides]] | type = Film | publisher=[[Walt Disney Pictures]] |year=2011}}</ref> |
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Angelica tells Jack she is conning about being Blackbeard's daughter, though later revealed she was telling the truth, and that Blackbeard wanting to find the Fountain to avoid a prophesied death. Although Jack incites a [[mutiny]], saving the [[missionary]] named [[List of Pirates of the Caribbean characters#Philip Swift|Philip Swift]] and fighting [[zombie]] [[officer]]s, Blackbeard himself subdues the mutineers, using a sword that controls ships, a power that Jack's crew of mutineers are unaware of. Blackbeard also practices voodoo magic and fashions a [[voodoo doll]] to bend Jack Sparrow to his will. Jack learns from Angelica that the ritual for the Fountain requires a [[mermaid]]'s tear and two silver [[chalice]]s located on Ponce de León's ship, the ''Santiago'', and the person who drinks the water with the tear gets all the years of life from the other. Angelica also shows Jack Blackbeard's collection of [[Ship in a bottle|ships in bottles]], including the ''Black Pearl''. After capturing the mermaid [[List of Pirates of the Caribbean characters#Syrena|Syrena]] at Whitecap Bay, Blackbeard sends Jack to get the chalices, taking his compass and threatening his own daughter at gunpoint. Aboard the ''Santiago'', Jack meets Barbossa, but both find that the chalices have been taken by the Spanish. Before retrieving the chalices, Barbossa reveals his true agenda: [[revenge]] against Blackbeard for the attack on the ''Black Pearl'', which Barbossa truly believes to be sunk,{{efn|Screenwriter [[Terry Rossio]] released his unproduced screenplay for ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales]]'' (2017), which includes additional information in extensive footnotes.<ref name="Terry Rossio Dead Men Tell No Tales">[http://www.wordplayer.com/archives/PIRATES5.cover.html PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MEN TELL NO TALES by Terry Rossio - Wordplayer.com]</ref> Pertaining to ''On Stranger Tides'', Rossio notes that Jack and Barbossa were each conning the other, while not knowing they were at the same time being conned. Barbossa does not know that the ''Black Pearl'' in a bottle, and Jack does not know the importance of Blackbeard's sword.}} which led to cutting off his leg via [[Dismemberment|self-dismemberment]]. Jack returns to give Blackbeard the chalices in exchange for Angelica's safety and Jack's compass, which Jack sends Gibbs off with.<ref name="stranger"/> |
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After locating the Fountain of Youth, a battle ensues until Angelica cuts her hand trying to remove Barbossa's [[Poison dart frog|poisoned]] sword from Blackbeard's chest. Jack receives the chalices from Syrena, who tells him to not waste her tear. Filling the chalices with the remaining drops of water from the Fountain, Jack tricks Blackbeard into drinking the chalice lacking the mermaid's tear. Despite Blackbeard choosing to murder her so he can live, Angelica is mad at Jack about her father's death. Acknowledging their feelings for one another, Jack maroons Angelica with on a small island named Sola Fide Beach, unsure if he can trust her. Angered, Angelica then uses the one shot from her pistol to kill Jack as he rows away, but misses. Jack reunites with Gibbs, who used Sparrow's compass to locate and retrieved the shrunken ''Black Pearl''. Though he has forfeited his opportunity for immortality, Sparrow tells Gibbs he's settling for being famous as the one who found the Fountain of Youth and determined to continue living the pirate's life. Following the film's end credits, the Jack Sparrow voodoo doll drifted to the island that Angelica is marooned on.<ref name="stranger"/> |
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====''Dead Men Tell No Tales''==== |
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{{Main|Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales}} |
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Prior to the events of the film, Jack Sparrow's rival Hector Barbossa has become the richest and most powerful pirate of the seven seas, commanding a fleet of ten ships. Meanwhile, Jack has the ''Black Pearl'' still trapped in a bottle. Sparrow's new ship the ''Dying Gull'' has never left berth, and his latest plans have met with failure.<ref name="salazar">{{cite video | people = [[Joachim Rønning]] and [[Espen Sandberg]] (directors) | title = Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales | type = Film | publisher=[[Walt Disney Pictures]] |year=2017}}</ref> |
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Sparrow and his crew attempt to rob the new bank of [[Saint Martin (island)|St. Martin]]. The robbery is a success, but all the gold in it had fallen while they were dragging the locker, and Sparrow's crew abandons him. Despondent, Jack trades his magical compass for a drink. However, this betrayal of the compass releases an old enemy, who holds a serious grudge against Sparrow; the ruthless [[ghost]]ly pirate hunter Captain Armando Salazar. Years previously, Jack had defeated Salazar by tricking him into sailing his ship into the Devil's Triangle, where Salazar and his crew were cursed to live as the undead. Salazar states that Jack perched in the ship's rigging like a "little bird", earning him the name "Jack the Sparrow".<ref name="salazar"/> |
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While in prison, Jack is contacted by Henry Turner, the son of Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann, who asks for aid in finding the Trident of Poseidon, as both are in need of its power to break curses related to the sea. The Trident could help save Sparrow from Salazar's revenge and free Will from the ''Flying Dutchman''. Remembering Will and Elizabeth, expressing some hesitation, Jack agrees. The next day, Sparrow is sentenced to be executed by [[guillotine]] (by Jack's accidental choosing), but is rescued by his crew. Aided by aspiring astronomer Carina, Jack and Henry attempt to locate the Trident of Poseidon. Barbossa releases the ''Pearl'' from its bottle, giving them a chance to outrun Salazar. Jack and Barbossa discuss the fact that Carina is Hector's long-lost daughter, whom he had left at an orphanage in order to give her a chance for a better life. Jack attempts to use the secret to [[blackmail]] Barbossa, but fails.<ref name="salazar"/> |
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They are able to track the Trident to its resting place. Though Salazar nearly kills Jack, they are able to destroy the Trident. With the destruction of the Trident, Salazar and his crew become mortal again. Jack, Henry and Carina escape as Barbossa sacrifices himself to kill Salazar. Despite their differences, Jack mourns Barbossa's death. Later, Jack watches Will and Elizabeth's reunion before he departs, sailing with the ''Black Pearl'' and his compass once again in his possession.<ref name="salazar"/> |
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==Characterization== |
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According to screenwriters Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio, Sparrow is a [[trickster]] who uses wit and deceit to attain his goals, preferring to end disputes verbally instead of by force.<ref name="iconic">{{cite news |title=Pirates Dead Man's Chest: Depp's Iconic Role |publisher=Emanuel Levy |year=2006 |url=http://www.emanuellevy.com/article.php?articleID=2688 |access-date=May 31, 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927184450/http://www.emanuellevy.com/article.php?articleID=2688 |archive-date=September 27, 2007 }}</ref><ref name="DMCPressKit">[https://web.archive.org/web/20060902043515/http://adisney.go.com/disneypictures/pirates/downloads/POTC2_PressKit_Final.pdf POTC2 Presskit]</ref><ref>[https://www.dvdizzy.com/pirates-tedandterry-interview.html An Interview with Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio, writers of Pirates of the Caribbean – DVDizzy.com]</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://collider.com/terry-rossio-interview-pirates-caribbean-4-on-stranger-tides/74250/ |title=Terry Rossio Interview PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN 4: ON STRANGER TIDES {{!}} Collider |website=[[Collider (website)|Collider]] |access-date=October 21, 2022 |archive-date=November 26, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121126170214/http://collider.com/terry-rossio-interview-pirates-caribbean-4-on-stranger-tides/74250/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> He walks with a slightly drunken swagger and has slurred speech and flailing hand gestures. Sparrow is shrewd, calculating, and eccentric. He fools Norrington and his crew to set sail on the royal ship ''Interceptor'', which compels the admiration of Lieutenant Groves as he concedes: "That's got to be the best pirate I have ever seen". Norrington himself acquiesces to this praise: "So it would seem", in sharp contrast to his earler assertion: "You are without doubt the worst pirate I have ever heard of". In the third film, while Sparrow leaves Beckett's ship stranded and makes off, Lieutenant Groves asks: "Do you think he plans it all out, or just makes it up as he goes along?"<ref name="world"/> Jack also tricks Blackbeard into saving his daughter by switching places the two chalices required to use the fountain of youth.<ref name=":0">''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides]]''</ref> |
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Though a skilled swordsman, Sparrow prefers to use his superior intelligence during combat, exploiting his environment to turn the tables on his foes, reasoning "Why fight when you can negotiate?" and using non-violent negotiation to turn his enemies against each other.<ref name="chest"/> He invokes parleys and tempts his enemies away from their murderous intentions, encouraging them to see the bigger picture, as when he persuades Barbossa to delay returning to mortal form so he can battle the Royal Navy.<ref name="curse"/> He often uses complex wordplay and vocabulary to confound his enemies,<ref name="curse"/><ref name="chest"/> and it is suggested that his pacifism may be one reason Barbossa and the crew of the ''Black Pearl'' mutinied.<ref name="curse"/> |
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{| class="toccolours" style="float: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 2em; font-size: 85%; background:#c6dbf7; color:black; width:30em; max-width: 40%;" cellspacing="5" |
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| style="text-align: left;" | "Gentlemen, m'lady, you will always remember this as the day that you almost caught Captain Jack Sparrow." |
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|- |
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| style="text-align: left;" |—Jack almost escapes another sticky situation<ref name="curse"/> |
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|} |
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The character is portrayed as having created, or at least contributed to, his own reputation. When Gibbs tells Will that Sparrow escaped from a desert island by strapping two [[sea turtle]]s together, Sparrow embellishes the story by claiming the rope was made of hair from his own back, while in reality, Sparrow escaped the island by bartering with rum traders. The video game ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: The Legend of Jack Sparrow]]'' bases itself on these [[tall tale]]s, including the sacking of [[Nassau, Bahamas|Nassau]] port without firing a shot.<ref name="curse"/> Depp has likened pirates to rock stars in that their fame preceded them.<ref name="iconic"/> Sparrow insists on being addressed as "Captain"<ref name="curse"/> and often gives the farewell, "This is the day you will always remember as the day that you ''almost'' caught Captain Jack Sparrow!" which proclamation is sometimes humorously cut short.<ref name="curse"/><ref name="chest"/> When Norrington accuses him of being the worst pirate he has ever heard of, Sparrow replies, "But you ''have'' heard of me."<ref name="curse"/> In a deleted scene from ''The Curse of the Black Pearl'' Sparrow ponders being "the immortal Captain Jack Sparrow",<ref>{{cite video | title = The Immortal Captain Jack | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2003}}</ref> and during ''At World's End'' he again is interested in immortality, although his father, Captain Teague, warns it can be a terrible curse. Sparrow ponders being "Captain Jack Sparrow, the last pirate," as the East India Trading Company purges piracy.<ref name="world"/> The topic of immortality is brought up again during ''On Stranger Tides,'' when Jack says "But better to not know which moment may be your last, every morsel of your entire being alive to the infinite mystery of it all".<ref name=":0" /> |
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Despite his many heroics, Sparrow is a pirate and a morally ambiguous character.<ref name="success"/> When agreeing to trade 100 souls, including Will, to Davy Jones in exchange for his freedom, Jones asks Sparrow whether he can "condemn an innocent man—a ''friend''—to a lifetime of servitude in your name while you roam free?" After a hesitation Sparrow merrily replies, "Yep! I'm good with it!"<ref name="chest"/> He carelessly runs up debts with [[List of Pirates of the Caribbean characters#Anamaria|Anamaria]],<ref name="curse"/> Davy Jones, and the other pirate lords.<ref name="world"/> Sao Feng, pirate lord of [[Singapore]], is particularly hateful towards him.<ref name="world"/> In a cowardly moment, Sparrow abandons his crew during the Kraken's attack, but underlying loyalty and morality compel him to return and save them.<ref>''Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest'' comic book adaptation, [[Disney Adventures]], 2006</ref> Sparrow claims to be a man of his word,<ref name="curse"/> and expresses surprise that people doubt his truthfulness.<ref name="chest"/> There is no murder on his criminal record.<ref name="curse"/><ref name="crimes">{{cite web|title=Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End |publisher=Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End Official Website |url=http://pirates.disney.com/pirates-of-the-caribbean-at-worlds-end |access-date=May 31, 2007 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131019173126/http://pirates.disney.com/pirates-of-the-caribbean-at-worlds-end |archive-date=October 19, 2013 }}</ref> He is shown to genuinely care about his allies and even people he doesn't know. He genuinely cared for Angelica, and even admits to her at the end of the film that he does love her, and even saves Phillip Swift, a missionary trapped on Blackbeard's ship whom he had never met before.<ref name=":0" /> |
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Depp partly based the character on [[Pepé Le Pew]], a [[Promiscuity#Male promiscuity|womanizing]] [[skunk]] from ''[[Looney Tunes]]''.<ref name="depp gold"/> Sparrow claims to have a "tremendous intuitive sense of the female creature,"<ref name="chest"/> although his conquests are often left with a sour memory of him. Former flames, Scarlett and Giselle, usually slap him<ref name="curse"/> or anyone looking for him.<ref name="chest"/> Likewise, Angelica claims that Jack "seduced her and used her".<ref name=":0" /> His witty charm easily attracts women, and even has Elizabeth questioning her feelings.<ref name="chest"/> Verbinski noted phallic connotations in Sparrow's relationship with his vessel, as he grips the [[ship's wheel]].<ref name="depp commentary"/> The ''Black Pearl'' is described as "the only ship which can outrun the ''Flying Dutchman''".<ref name="world"/> The [[Freudian]] overtones continue in the third film when Sparrow and Barbossa battle for captaincy of the ''Black Pearl'', showing off the length of their telescopes, and in a deleted scene, they fight over the steering wheel.<ref>{{cite video | people = [[Gore Verbinski]] | title = Two Captains, One Ship audio commentary | type = DVD | publisher=[[Buena Vista (Walt Disney Company)|Buena Vista]] |year=2007}}</ref> Sparrow claims his "first and only love is the sea,"<ref name="chest"/> and describes his ship as representing freedom.<ref name="curse"/> Davy Jones's Locker is represented as a desert, symbolizing his personal hell.<ref name="writers chest"/> |
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According to writer [[Giles Milton]], Jack Sparrow was inspired by the seventeenth-century [[English people|English]] pirate [[Jack Ward]].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Milton |first1=Giles |author-link=Giles Milton |title=Pirate John Ward: the real Captain Jack Sparrow |url=https://www.historyextra.com/period/elizabethan/pirate-john-ward-the-real-captain-jack-sparrow/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210118143525/https://www.historyextra.com/period/elizabethan/pirate-john-ward-the-real-captain-jack-sparrow/ |archive-date=January 18, 2021 |access-date=December 20, 2020 |website=HistoryExtra |publisher=BBC History Revealed}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Breverton |first1=Terry |title=A Gross of Pirates: From Alfhild the Shield Maiden to Afweyne the Big Mouth |date=December 15, 2018 |publisher=Amberley Publishing Limited |isbn=9781445682938 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SLCIDwAAQBAJ&q=jack+sparrow+jack+ward&pg=PT81 |access-date=February 14, 2021 |archive-date=May 18, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210518180350/https://books.google.com/books?id=SLCIDwAAQBAJ&q=jack+sparrow+jack+ward&pg=PT81 |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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==Reception and impact on pop culture== |
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{{expand section|date=April 2022}} |
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When ''Dead Man's Chest'' grossed over {{Nowrap|$1 billion}} worldwide, Ian Nathan attributed this to Sparrow's popularity: "''Pirates'', the franchise, only had to turn up. There was a powerful holdover from the cheeky delights of its debut, something we hadn't felt since the [[Clone Wars (Star Wars)|Clone Wars]] called it a day."<ref>{{cite magazine | author=Ian Nathan | page = 176 | magazine=[[Empire (magazine)|Empire]] | title = How Pirates' feckless hero won over the fans before he even showed up | date = October 27, 2006}}</ref> ''[[Empire (magazine)|Empire]]'' in 2006 declared Depp's performance the seventy-fourth "thing that rocked our world" and later named him the eighth greatest movie character of all time.<ref>{{cite magazine | title = 200 things that rocked our world | page = 118 | magazine=[[Empire (magazine)|Empire]] | date = January 2, 2006}}</ref> In 2015, a new poll of the 100 greatest film characters of all time placed him as the fourteenth greatest.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.empireonline.com/movies/features/100-greatest-movie-characters/ |title=100 Greatest Movie Characters |date=November 4, 2015 |work=Empire |access-date=April 1, 2016 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160329121320/http://www.empireonline.com/movies/features/100-greatest-movie-characters/ |archive-date=March 29, 2016 }}</ref> A survey of more than 3,000 people showed Jack Sparrow was the most popular [[Halloween]] costume of 2006,<ref>{{cite news | title = Captain Jack Sparrow top pick for 2006 Most Popular Halloween Costume | publisher=Extreme Halloween Network | date = October 17, 2006 | url = http://www.anniescostumes.com/popularhalloweencostumes2006.htm | access-date=June 2, 2007 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070606083704/http://www.anniescostumes.com/popularhalloweencostumes2006.htm <!--Added by H3llBot--> | archive-date = June 6, 2007}}</ref> and a 2007 poll held by the [[Internet Movie Database]] showed Sparrow to be the second most popular live action hero after [[Indiana Jones (character)|Indiana Jones]].<ref>{{cite web|title=From this list of live-action heroes, who is your favorite? |website=[[Internet Movie Database]] |date=June 3, 2007 |url=https://www.imdb.com/poll/results/2007-06-03 |access-date=June 3, 2007 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130823083329/http://www.imdb.com/poll/results/2007-06-03 |archive-date=August 23, 2013 }}</ref> In a 2007 [[Pearl & Dean]] poll, Jack Sparrow was listed as Depp's most popular performance.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=http://people.monstersandcritics.com/news/article_1307679.php |title=Johnny Depp's great Captain role |magazine=[[People (magazine)|People]] |date=May 22, 2007 |access-date=June 4, 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070901125559/http://people.monstersandcritics.com/news/article_1307679.php |archive-date=September 1, 2007 }}</ref> |
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Todd Gilchrist feels Sparrow is the only element of the films that will remain timeless.<ref>{{cite web|author=Todd Gilchrist |url=http://uk.movies.ign.com/articles/791/791309p1.html |title=Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End |website=IGN |date=May 24, 2007 |access-date=May 24, 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070811175521/http://uk.movies.ign.com/articles/791/791309p1.html |archive-date=August 11, 2007 }}</ref> According to Sharon Eberson, the character's popularity can be attributed to his being a "scoundrel whose occasional bouts of conscience allow viewers to go with the flaws because, as played to the larger-than-life hilt by Depp, he owns every scene he is in".<ref>{{cite news|author=Sharon Eberson |title=Jack Sparrow joins a unique line of iconic characters |newspaper=Post Gazette |date=May 24, 2007 |url=http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07144/788381-254.stm |access-date=June 2, 2007 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070526080117/http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07144/788381-254.stm |archive-date=May 26, 2007 }}</ref> Film history professor Jonathan Kuntz attributed Sparrow's popularity to the increased questioning of masculinity in the 21st century, and Sparrow's personality contrasts with action-adventure heroes in cinema. [[Leonard Maltin]] concurs that Sparrow has a carefree attitude and does not take himself seriously.<ref>{{cite news |author=Sandy Cohen |title=Depp's Captain Jack Sparrow smashes enduring cinematic mold of swashbuckling seafarers |agency=Associated Press |date=May 25, 2007 |url=http://www.themonitor.com/entertainment/pirate-2623-pirates-sparrow.html |access-date=July 30, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110928050838/http://www.themonitor.com/entertainment/pirate-2623-pirates-sparrow.html |archive-date=September 28, 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Mark Fox noted Sparrow is an escapist fantasy figure for women, free from much of the responsibility of most heroes.<ref>{{cite news|author=Mark Fox |title=Besting Jack Sparrow |publisher=Crave Online |date=May 24, 2007 |url=http://www.craveonline.com/articles/humor/04647967/besting_jack_sparrow.html |access-date=June 4, 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080103054857/http://www.craveonline.com/articles/humor/04647967/besting_jack_sparrow.html |archive-date=January 3, 2008 }}</ref> Sparrow is listed by ''[[IGN]]'' as one of their ten favorite film outlaws, as he "lives for himself and the freedom to do whatever it is that he damn well pleases. Precious few film characters have epitomized what makes the outlaw such a romantic figure for audiences as Captain Jack Sparrow has."<ref>{{cite web|title=Top Ten Movie Outlaws |website=IGN |date=September 19, 2007 |url=http://www.ign.com/articles/2007/09/19/top-ten-movie-outlaws |access-date=September 22, 2007 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121030074221/http://www.ign.com/articles/2007/09/19/top-ten-movie-outlaws |archive-date=October 30, 2012 }}</ref> ''[[Entertainment Weekly]]'' put it on its end-of-the-decade, "best-of" list, saying, "Part Keith Richards rift, part sozzled lounge lizard, Johnny Depp's swizzleshtick pirate was definitely one of the most dazzling characters of the decade."<ref>Geier, Thom; Jensen, Jeff; Jordan, Tina; Lyons, Margaret; Markovitz, Adam; Nashawaty, Chris; Pastorek, Whitney; Rice, Lynette; Rottenberg, Josh; Schwartz, Missy; Slezak, Michael; Snierson, Dan; Stack, Tim; Stroup, Kate; Tucker, Ken; Vary, Adam B.; Vozick-Levinson, Simon; Ward, Kate (December 11, 2009), "The 100 Greatest Movies, TV Shows, Albums, Books, Characters, Scenes, Episodes, Songs, Dresses, Music Videos, and Trends That Entertained Us over the Past 10 Years". Entertainment Weekly. (1079/1080):74–84</ref> In June 2010, Sparrow was named one of ''Entertainment Weekly''{{'s}} ''100 Greatest Characters of the Last 20 Years''.<ref>{{cite magazine|title=The 100 Greatest Characters of the Last 20 Years: Here's our full list! |url=http://ew.com/article/2010/06/01/100-greatest-characters-of-last-20-years-full-list/ |magazine=[[Entertainment Weekly]] |publisher=[[Time Inc.]] |access-date=July 7, 2012 |author=Adam B. Vary |date=June 1, 2010 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150214081853/http://www.ew.com/article/2010/06/01/100-greatest-characters-of-last-20-years-full-list |archive-date=February 14, 2015 }}</ref> In the [[May 2012 Greek legislative election|May 2012 Greek elections]], a voter gained media coverage when he "voted" for Jack Sparrow by writing his name on the [[Pirate Party of Greece]] ballot.<ref>{{Cite web |last=IEFIMERIDA.GR |first=NEWSROOM |date=2012-05-07 |title=Ψηφοφόρος από τη Ρόδο ψήφισε τον Τζακ Σπάροου στο Κόμμα των Πειρατών! |url=https://www.iefimerida.gr/news/49337/%CF%88%CE%B7%CF%86%CE%BF%CF%86%CF%8C%CF%81%CE%BF%CF%82-%CE%B1%CF%80%CF%8C-%CF%84%CE%B7-%CF%81%CF%8C%CE%B4%CE%BF-%CF%88%CE%AE%CF%86%CE%B9%CF%83%CE%B5-%CF%84%CE%BF%CE%BD-%CF%84%CE%B6%CE%B1%CE%BA-%CF%83%CF%80%CE%AC%CF%81%CE%BF%CE%BF%CF%85-%CF%83%CF%84%CE%BF-%CE%BA%CF%8C%CE%BC%CE%BC%CE%B1-%CF%84%CF%89%CE%BD-%CF%80%CE%B5%CE%B9%CF%81%CE%B1%CF%84%CF%8E%CE%BD |access-date=2023-08-28 |website=iefimerida.gr |language=el}}</ref> |
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An internet hoax about a [[reality program]] on the now-defunct [[Quibi]] platform called ''Jack Sparrow House'' gained traction in the early 2020s. The program supposedly featured fourteen Jack Sparrow impersonators living in a house together, with them being eliminated if they broke character. The hoax included a detailed Wikipedia article, which was eventually deleted.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-12-01 |title=Some Evil Genius Made The Internet Think There's A Quibi Show About Jack Sparrow Impersonators |url=https://junkee.com/jack-sparrow-house-quibi-show/280653 |access-date=2022-08-04 |website=Junkee |language=en-US}}</ref><ref name="Snopes">{{Cite web |last=Evon|first=Dan|title=Did 'Jack Sparrow House' Air on Quibi? |url=https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/jack-sparrow-house-quibi/ |date= November 30, 2020|access-date=August 4, 2022|website=Snopes |language=en-US}}</ref> [[Snopes]] said that comedian Rory Strahan-Mauk was behind it, and that a photo claiming to be of the contestants were actually fans attending the Tokyo premiere of ''Dead Men Tell No Tales''.<ref name="Snopes"/> |
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==In other media== |
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{{expand section|date=April 2022}} |
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[[File:Jack_Sparrow_in_the_Pirates_Play_Set_included_in_Disney_Infinity_1.0.jpg|right|thumb|Jack Sparrow in the Pirates of the Caribbean campaign of the 2013 [[Toys-to-life]] video game [[Disney Infinity (video game)|Disney Infinity]]]] |
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Jack Sparrow appears in [[Pirates of the Caribbean video games|video games]] and books spun off the ''Pirates of the Caribbean'' [[media franchise]]. Some notable ''Pirates'' video games in which Jack Sparrow appears as a playable character in include ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: The Legend of Jack Sparrow]]'', voiced by Johnny Depp, ''[[Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End (video game)|Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End]]'', voiced by Jared Butler, and ''[[Lego Pirates of the Caribbean: The Video Game]]'', with archive audio of Johnny Depp's vocal effects.{{Citation needed|date=August 2024}} Jack was one of the first playable characters in the ''[[Disney Infinity]]'' series, where he is reprised by Jared Butler. He also appears in the ''[[Kingdom Hearts]]'' series, first in 2005's ''[[Kingdom Hearts II]]'', where he is voiced by [[James Arnold Taylor]], and again in 2019's ''[[Kingdom Hearts III]]'', reprised again by Butler.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://venturebeat.com/2018/06/11/kingdom-hearts-iii-is-getting-a-new-pirates-of-caribbean-level/|title=Kingdom Hearts III is getting a new Pirates of Caribbean level|last=Minotti|first=Mike|work=[[VentureBeat]]|date=June 11, 2018|access-date=June 26, 2018|archive-date=June 26, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180626135955/https://venturebeat.com/2018/06/11/kingdom-hearts-iii-is-getting-a-new-pirates-of-caribbean-level/|url-status=live}}</ref> In the ''A Pirate's Life'' expansion for the video game ''[[Sea of Thieves]]'' he is voiced again by Butler.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.seaofthieves.com/news/a-pirates-life-announcement|title=Disney's Pirates of the Caribbean Collides with Sea of Thieves!|website=www.seaofthieves.com|access-date=September 8, 2021|archive-date=September 9, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210909120448/https://www.seaofthieves.com/news/a-pirates-life-announcement|url-status=live}}</ref> Jack Sparrow also appears as playable character in ''[[Disney Magic Kingdoms]]'',<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iOR0ziOwl2Q |title=Update 4: Pirates of the Caribbean {{!}} Trailer|publisher=[[YouTube]]|date=September 15, 2016}}</ref>''<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CcNpxjkf-44&ab_channel=DisneyMagicKingdoms |title=Update 22: Pirates of the Caribbean Part 2, Peter Pan Part 2 {{!}} Livestream|publisher=[[YouTube]]|date=July 5, 2018}}</ref> [[Disney Heroes: Battle Mode]]'',<ref>{{Cite web |date=2018-05-07 |title=Update 0.4 Notes |url=https://discourse.disneyheroesgame.com/t/update-0-4-notes/1317 |access-date=2024-01-22 |website=Disney Heroes: Battle Mode |language=en}}</ref> and ''[[Disney Speedstorm]]''. A purchasable cosmetic outfit of Jack Sparrow was added to ''[[Fortnite Battle Royale]]'' on July 19, 2024, as part of the Cursed Sails [[Battle pass|Event Pass]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2024-07-19 |title= Disney's Pirates of the Caribbean Docks Into Fortnite BR for "Cursed Sails" |url= https://www.fortnite.com/news/disneys-pirates-of-the-caribbean-docks-into-fortnite-br |website=[[Fortnite]] |language=en}}</ref> Jack also appears in ''[[Disney Speedstorm]]''. |
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In 2011, comedy group [[the Lonely Island]], in collaboration with [[Michael Bolton]], released a song [[Jack Sparrow (song)|named for Jack]].<ref name="Bierly">{{cite journal|url=http://popwatch.ew.com/2011/05/09/snl-michael-bolton-jack-sparrow// |title=Michael Bolton returns to ''SNL'' after 20 years: Best thing he did in between appearances? |last=Bierly |first=Mandi |date=May 9, 2011 |journal=Entertainment Weekly (Via Archive.org) |location=New York |access-date=June 8, 2015 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110511000025/http://popwatch.ew.com/2011/05/09/snl-michael-bolton-jack-sparrow// |archive-date=May 11, 2011 }}</ref> |
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In July 2022, Depp portrayed a [[parody]] of Sparrow, Phillip Artoosh, in ''Adventurer's Game'', a promotional short film for the mobile game ''Sea of Dawn''.<ref name="Artoosh">{{cite web | url=https://screenrant.com/johnny-depp-acting-return-sea-dawn-short-film/ | title=Johnny Depp Returns to Acting with Short Film for Sea of Dawn | website=[[Screen Rant]] | date=July 29, 2022 }}</ref> |
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==Notes== |
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{{Notelist}} |
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==References== |
==References== |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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{{Commons category}} |
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*[http://pirates.wikia.com/wiki/Jack_Sparrow Jack Sparrow] at the [http://pirates.wikia.com ''Pirates of the Caribbean'' wiki] |
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{{Portal|Disney|United States}} |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20170730221343/http://www.imdb.com/character/ch0001274/ Jack Sparrow] on [[IMDb]] |
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*{{Inducks character|Jack+Sparrow+the+pirate}} |
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{{Johnny Depp}} |
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Latest revision as of 15:10, 9 January 2025
Captain Jack Sparrow | |
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Pirates of the Caribbean character | |
First appearance | The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) |
Created by | Ted Elliott Terry Rossio Johnny Depp |
Portrayed by | Johnny Depp Anthony De La Torre[b] (young) |
Voiced by | Johnny Depp (2006) Jared Butler (2007–present) James Arnold Taylor (2006) |
In-universe information | |
Aliases | Smith/Smithy Justice Smith |
Nicknames | Jackie/Jacky Jackie boy/Jacky boy |
Species | Human |
Gender | Male |
Title | Captain Pirate Lord of the Caribbean sea |
Occupation | Pirate Formerly: Captain for the East India Trading Company |
Affiliation | Crew of the Black Pearl Formerly: East India Trading Company Blackbeard's Crew |
Weapon | Cutlass Flintlock |
Family | Edward Teague (father) Jack (uncle) |
Nationality | English |
Appearance(s) |
Captain Jack Sparrow is a fictional character and the main protagonist of the Pirates of the Caribbean film series and franchise. An early iteration of Sparrow was created by screenwriters Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio, but the final version of the character was created by actor Johnny Depp, who also portrayed him.[1][2][3]
The Sparrow character is based on a combination of The Rolling Stones' guitarist Keith Richards and Looney Tunes cartoons, specifically the characters Bugs Bunny and Pepé Le Pew. He first appears in the 2003 film Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl. He appears in the later sequels Dead Man's Chest (2006), At World's End (2007), On Stranger Tides (2011), and Dead Men Tell No Tales (2017).
In the films, Sparrow is one of the nine pirate lords in the Brethren Court, the Pirate Lords of the Seven Seas. He can be treacherous and survives mostly by using wit, guile, and negotiation rather than force, opting to flee most dangerous situations and fight only when necessary.
Sparrow is introduced seeking to regain his ship, the Black Pearl, from his mutinous first mate Hector Barbossa. After succeeding, he attempts to escape his blood debt to the legendary Davy Jones while fighting the East India Trading Company. Later, when searching for the Fountain of Youth, he is abducted and taken aboard Blackbeard's Queen Anne's Revenge. Sparrow is subsequently forced to lead Blackbeard to the Fountain while the shrunken Black Pearl is trapped in a bottle. In a later adventure, when the ghost Spanish Captain Armando Salazar pursues him, he searches for the Trident of Poseidon while also seeking to restore the Pearl to its original form.
The Pirates of the Caribbean series was inspired by the Disney theme park ride of the same name. When the ride was revamped in 2006, the Captain Jack Sparrow character was added. The character headlined the Legend of Captain Jack Sparrow attraction at Disney's Hollywood Studios, and is the subject of spin-off novels, including a children's book series, Pirates of the Caribbean: Jack Sparrow, which chronicles his childhood years.
Concept and creation
[edit]Character
[edit]When writing the screenplay for The Curse of the Black Pearl, Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio envisioned Captain Jack Sparrow as a supporting character in the vein of Bugs Bunny and Groucho Marx.[4] The producers saw him as a young Burt Lancaster.[5] Director Gore Verbinski admitted, "The first film was a movie, and then Jack was put into it almost. He doesn't have the obligations of the plot in the same ways that the other characters have. He meanders his way through, and he kind of affects everybody else."[6] Sparrow represents an ethical pirate, with Captain Barbossa as his corrupt foil, though both characters viewed as both light and dark tricksters.[4] His true motives usually remain masked, and whether he is honorable or evil depends on the audience's perspective.[7] This acts as part of Will Turner's arc, in which Sparrow tells him a pirate can be a good man, like his father.[4]
Following the success of The Curse of the Black Pearl, the challenge to creating a sequel was, according to Verbinski, "You don't want just the Jack Sparrow movie. It's like having a garlic milkshake. He's the spice and you need a lot of straight men ... Let's not give them too much Jack. It's like too much dessert or too much of a good thing."[6] Although Dead Man's Chest was written to propel the trilogy's plot,[8] Sparrow's state-of-mind as he is pursued by Davy Jones becomes increasingly edgy, and the writers concocted the cannibal sequence to show that he was in danger whether on land or at sea. Sparrow is perplexed over his attraction to Elizabeth Swann, and attempts to justify it throughout the film.[9]
At World's End was meant to return it tonally to a character piece. Sparrow, in particular, is tinged with madness after extended solitary confinement in Davy Jones's Locker,[8] and now desires immortality.[10] Sparrow struggles with what it takes to be a moral person,[11] after his honest streak caused his doom in the second film. This is mainly shown by his increasingly erratic behaviour and Jack's hallucinations, which appeared to be simply his deranged mind in the beginning where dozens of "Jack Sparrows" appeared to crew the ship in his solitary exile, but later the hallucinations grew more important and there were mainly two "Jacks" constantly arguing about which path to follow: the immortality or the mortality. The last hallucination took place while Jack was imprisoned on the Dutchman, where his honest streak won.[12] By the end of At World's End, Sparrow is sailing to the Fountain of Youth, an early concept for the second film.[13] Rossio said in 2007 that a fourth film was possible,[14] and producer Jerry Bruckheimer expressed interest in a spin-off.[15] Gore Verbinski concurred that "all of the stories set in motion by the first film have been resolved. If there ever were another Pirates of the Caribbean film, I would start fresh and focus on the further adventures of Captain Jack Sparrow."[16]
On Stranger Tides was first announced on September 28, 2008, during a Disney event at the Kodak Theatre. Verbinski did not return to direct the fourth installment and was replaced by Rob Marshall. The movie uses elements from Tim Powers' novel of the same name, particularly Blackbeard and the Fountain of Youth, but the film is not a straight adaptation of the novel.[17]
The fifth film, Dead Men Tell No Tales, was co-directed by Joachim Rønning and Espen Sandberg.[18]
Johnny Depp
[edit]Looking to do a family film, Johnny Depp visited the Walt Disney Studios in 2001 when he heard of plans to adapt the Pirates of the Caribbean ride into a film. Depp was excited by the possibility of reviving an old Hollywood genre,[5] and found the script met his quirky sensibilities: the crew of the Black Pearl were not in search of treasure but trying to return it to lift a curse on them, and the traditional mutiny had already occurred.[19] Depp was cast on June 10, 2002.[20] Producer Jerry Bruckheimer felt Depp would give the film an edge that could draw teenage and adult audiences despite Disney's reputation for soft children's fare.[21]
According to various reports and interviews, Johnny Depp prepared for the role while rehearsing in the steam room of a sauna. At times, he claimed to turn the heat up to its max temperature of 1,000 degrees. The actor was quoted as saying, "Captain Jack was actually born in a sauna—my sauna. I figured this is a guy who has been on the high seas for probably all of his life, the majority of his life at least, and therefore probably dealt with a lot of inescapable heat to the brain."[22] Depp also said, due to his daughter Lily-Rose Depp being three years old at the time, he watched various cartoons, using Tex Avery and Wile E. Coyote as examples.[23][24]
At the first read-through, Depp surprised the cast and crew by portraying the character in an off-kilter manner.[25] He researched 18th-century pirates and, seeing parallels with modern rock stars, modeled his performance on Keith Richards.[21] Richards later appeared in two cameos as Jack's father, Captain Teague, in At World's End and On Stranger Tides. Verbinski and Bruckheimer had confidence in Depp, partly because Orlando Bloom would play the traditional Errol Flynn-type character.[19] Depp improvised the film's final line, "Now, bring me that horizon", which the writer called his favorite line.[25] Disney executives were initially confused by Depp's performance, questioning whether the character was drunk or gay. While watching the rushes, Disney CEO Michael Eisner proclaimed Depp was ruining the film.[25] Depp's response to Disney executives was they could trust him with his choices or let him go.[21] Many industry insiders questioned Depp's casting, as he was an unconventional actor not known for working within the traditional studio system.[26]
Depp's performance won acclaim from film critics. Alan Morrison found it "Gloriously over-the-top ... In terms of physical precision and verbal delivery, it's a master-class in comedy acting."[27] Roger Ebert praised Depp for drawing away from the character as written and found Depp's performance "original in its every atom. There has never been a pirate, or for that matter a human being, like this in any other movie ... his behavior shows a lifetime of rehearsal".[28] Depp won a Screen Actor's Guild award for his performance, and was nominated for a Golden Globe[29] and the Academy Award for Best Actor, the first in his career.[30] Film School Rejects argued the film made Depp as much a movie star as he was a character actor.[31]
Depp's return in Dead Man's Chest was the first time he had ever made a sequel.[25] Drew McWeeny wrote, "Remember how cool Han Solo was in Star Wars the first time you saw it? And then remember how much cooler he seemed when Empire came out? This is that big a jump."[32] Depp received an MTV Movie Award[33] and a Teen Choice Award for Dead Man's Chest, and was nominated for an Empire Award and another Golden Globe.[34] For his performance in At World's End, Depp won an MTV Movie Award for Best Comedic Performance, as well as a People's Choice Award, a Kids' Choice Award, and another Teen Choice Award. He has signed on to reprise the role for future sequels.[35]
Make-up and costumes
[edit]Depp wears a dreadlock wig in a rock-and-roll approach to a pirate aesthetic.[36] He wears a red bandanna and numerous objects in his hair, influenced by Keith Richards' habit of collecting souvenirs from his travels;[37] Sparrow's decorations include his "piece of eight".[38] Sparrow wears kohl around his eyes, which was inspired by Depp's study of nomads, whom he compared to pirates,[39] and he wore contacts that acted as sunglasses.[40] Sparrow has several gold teeth, two of which belong to Depp,[41] although they were applied during filming. Depp initially forgot to have them removed after shooting The Curse of the Black Pearl,[42] and wore them throughout the shooting of the sequels.[5] Like all aspects of Depp's performance, Disney initially expressed great concern over Depp's teeth.[9] Sparrow wears his goatee in two braids. Initially wire was used in them, but the wires were abandoned because they made the braids stick up when Depp lay down.[43] Sparrow has numerous tattoos,[38] and has been branded a pirate on his right arm by Cutler Beckett,[44] underneath a tattoo of a sparrow.[45]
Depp collaborated with costume designer Penny Rose on his character's appearance, handpicking a tricorne as Sparrow's signature leather hat; to make Sparrow's unique, the other characters did not wear leather hats. A rubber version was used for the scene in Dead Man's Chest when the hat floats on water.[46] Depp liked to stick to one costume, wearing one lightweight silk tweed frock coat throughout the series,[47] and he had to be coaxed out of wearing his boots for a version without a sole or heel in beach scenes.[48] The official line is that none of the costumes from The Curse of the Black Pearl survived, which allowed the opportunity to create tougher linen shirts for stunts.[49] However, one remains which has been displayed in an exhibition of screen costumes in Worcester, England.[50] It was a nightmare for Rose to track down the same makers of Sparrow's sash in Turkey. Rose did not want to silkscreen it, as the homewoven piece had the correct worn feel.[51] Sparrow wears an additional belt in the sequels, because Depp liked a new buckle which did not fit with the original piece.[52]
Sparrow's weapons are genuine 18th-century pieces: his sword dates to the 1740s and his pistol is from the 1760s. Both were made in London.[40][53] Depp used two pistols on set, one of rubber. Both survived production of the first film.[54] Sparrow's magic compass also survived into the sequels, though director Gore Verbinski had a red arrow added to the dial as it became a more prominent prop. As it does not act like a normal compass, a magnet was used to make it spin.[55] Sparrow wears four rings, two of which belong to Depp. Depp bought the green ring in 1989 and the gold ring is a replica of a 2400-year-old ring Depp gave to the crew, though the original was later stolen. The other two are props to which Depp gave backstories: the gold-and-black ring is stolen from a Spanish widow Sparrow seduced and the green dragon ring recalls his adventures in the Far East.[56] Among Depp's additional ideas was the necklace made of human toes that Sparrow wears as the Pelegosto prepare to eat him,[57] and the sceptre was based on one a friend of Depp's owned.[58]
During the course of the films, Sparrow undergoes physical transformations. In The Curse of the Black Pearl, Sparrow curses himself to battle the undead Barbossa. Like all the actors playing the Black Pearl crew, Depp had to shoot scenes in costume as a reference for the animators, and his shots as a skeleton were shot again without him. Depp reprised the scene again on a motion capture stage.[40] In At World's End, Sparrow hallucinates a version of himself as a member of Davy Jones's crew, adhered to a wall and encrusted with barnacles. Verbinski oversaw that the design retained Sparrow's distinctive look,[59] and rejected initial designs which portrayed him as over 100 years old.[60] In Dead Men Tell No Tales, a young Jack Sparrow appears during a flashback sequence.
Fictional character biography
[edit]Before the films
[edit]Pirates of the Caribbean: The Complete Visual Guide gives a backstory to Jack Sparrow in which he was born on a pirate ship during a typhoon in the Indian Ocean and was trained to fence by an Italian.[61]
Books following Jack Sparrow's adventures before the events of the film include a twelve-book series focusing on his teenage years entitled Pirates of the Caribbean: Jack Sparrow,[62] and a five-books Pirates of the Caribbean: Legends of the Brethren Court series.[63]
The 2017 film, Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales, features a flashback with how "Jack the Sparrow" meets the Spanish Navy Captain Armando Salazar. Sparrow was the helmsman aboard the Wicked Wench, a pirate ship which may or may not be the Black Pearl, under the command of Captain Morgan, who was killed in battle. In the flashback, as reminisced upon by Salazar, the Silent Mary attacked pirate ships in battle until Captain Morgan died aboard the Wicked Wench, giving captaincy to young Sparrow. Sparrow outmaneuvers Salazar while being chased into the Devil's Triangle, in which the crew of the Wicked Wench throw ropes around nearby reefs off the port side and use the rigging to slingshot the ship in the opposite direction. Jack steers the ship through the reef, saving the crew and the ship by changing the ship's course at the last second. Afterward, on the deck of the Wicked Wench, the crew rewards Sparrow with "tribute" and bestows Jack with his famous hat and other personal effects.[64]
Ann C. Crispin wrote the Disney Publishing novel titled Pirates of the Caribbean: The Price of Freedom, published in 2011, which focuses more on the films' continuity rather than the other prequel books, and follows Jack's adventures as a merchant captain for the East India Trading Company, which was hinted in At World's End, due to Crispin reading the screenplay, though the scenes were deleted from the final cut of the film.[65][66] Jack Sparrow captained the merchant ship Wicked Wench for Cutler Beckett for about a year, hauling various cargoes, but he refused to haul slaves. Hoping to recruit Sparrow as one of his many "operatives", Beckett indulged what he regarded as an odd peccadillo of Sparrow's until he and the captain came to part ways. Beckett had dispatched Sparrow on a mission to find the lost island of Kerma, and the treasure at the heart of its underground labyrinth, but Sparrow double-crossed the EITC official and claimed he couldn't locate the island. Suspicious that Sparrow had indeed found the island and the treasure, but had not given him its accurate location, Beckett determined to browbeat the captain into obedience and demanded that the young captain transport a cargo of slaves to the New World. Initially, Sparrow agreed, but when he realized that he was betraying the Wicked Wench, as well as himself, he rebelled and freed the slaves by taking them to Kerma for safe asylum. Furious that Sparrow had flouted his orders and stolen the "cargo" of "black gold", Beckett had Sparrow thrown into jail. After allowing him to languish for a couple of months, Beckett had Sparrow transported to the Wicked Wench's anchorage, about a mile from the coast of West Africa, near Calabar on the Bight of Benin. After personally branding Sparrow with the "P" brand (so he'd be forever identifiable as a pirate), Cutler Beckett gave the order to fire incendiary carcass charges at the Wicked Wench, to demoralize her captain. Sparrow fought his way free from his guards, dove overboard, and attempted to rescue his burning, foundering ship, but he was too late. The Wicked Wench turned into an inferno, then sank, taking Jack with her. But, while dying, Sparrow called upon Davy Jones, and struck a bargain with him: his soul and one hundred years of service aboard the Flying Dutchman, in return for continued human existence of thirteen years as captain, plus saving the Wicked Wench and transforming her into the fastest, most dangerous pirate ship on the seven seas. Jones agreed and raised the ship from the sea floor, now a charred vessel with an angel figurehead.[67] In keeping with her scorched appearance, Jack painted his ship black and added black sails, rechristening her "the Black Pearl".[68]
At some point, Hector Barbossa joins Jack Sparrow as his first mate. The original backstory was that Jack recruited Barbossa and his cronies prior to the voyage to Isla de Muerta.[4] However, in the Legends of the Brethren Court book series, Hector Barbossa was Sparrow's first mate in the quest for the Shadow Gold, where Tia Dalma tasks them with securing seven vials of shadow gold to stop the evil Shadow Lord from gaining total control over the seas by destroying the Brethren Court with his Shadow Army. Over the course of the novels, they are able to collect all vials shattered across the world by allying with or fighting against the other Pirate Lords. They are able to defeat the Shadow Lord with the combined efforts of all Pirate Lords, after which Jack wants to sail for Tortuga to recruit a new crew. Barbossa offers him to handle that in his stead, implying that he recruited men with the intent to mutiny against his captain.[69]
Two years after his deal with Davy Jones,[44] Jack Sparrow sailed the Black Pearl and used his magical compass in search of the mysterious Isla de Muerta with a new crew, where the legendary Treasure of Cortés was hidden. Bootstrap Bill Turner was already a member of Jack's crew, while the other crewmen, like Pintel and Ragetti, were recruited in Tortuga. Jack was also the one who told his first mate Hector Barbossa and the rest of the crew about the curse that was upon the treasure, though nobody believed this ghost story. Captain and crew agreed to equal shares of the treasure, but devious first mate Barbossa persuaded Jack that equal shares included knowing the treasure's location. Jack complied, and soon after Barbossa led a mutiny and marooned Jack on an island with nothing but a pistol containing one shot. Although Jack was okay with Bootstrap Bill staying on board with Captain Barbossa, Jack hated Barbossa for having violated the Pirate's Code. Jack was able to escape after three days on the island and began his pursuit of the Black Pearl. Within the next ten years, Jack learned of how Barbossa's crew found the Aztec gold and became cursed, despite not believing in the curse placed on it, as well as how they are trying to get all the gold back and add their blood to the chest.[4]
Films
[edit]The Curse of the Black Pearl
[edit]Captain Jack Sparrow first appears in The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003).
In his debut scene, Sparrow arrives in Port Royal, Jamaica on a sinking boat, seeking to commandeer a new ship. Despite rescuing Elizabeth Swann, the daughter of Governor Weatherby Swann, from drowning, he is jailed for piracy. That night, a cursed pirate ship called the Black Pearl attacks Port Royal and Elizabeth is kidnapped. The Black Pearl's captain, Hector Barbossa, desperately seeks one last gold coin to break an ancient Aztec curse that he and his crew are under. A blacksmith named Will Turner frees Sparrow to aid him in rescuing Elizabeth. They commandeer HMS Interceptor and recruit a motley crew in Tortuga, Haiti before heading to Isla de Muerta, where Elizabeth is held. Along the way, Will learns that Sparrow was the Black Pearl's original captain until Barbossa led a mutiny ten years earlier and took over the ship, marooning Sparrow on an island to die. Sparrow tells Turner that his father was a pirate known as "Bootstrap" Bill Turner.[45]
The rescue goes awry after Will betrays Sparrow, thinking Sparrow was going to betray him,[4] and Barbossa later maroons Jack and Elizabeth on the same island upon which he had stranded Sparrow before. Elizabeth creates a signal fire from rum barrels and they are rescued by the Royal Navy. Sparrow cuts a deal with Commodore James Norrington to lead Norrington to the Black Pearl. Norrington refuses until Elizabeth, desperate to save Will, spontaneously accepts Norrington's earlier marriage proposal. Right before the film's climactic battle with the pirates at Isla de Muerta, Sparrow swipes a cursed coin from the treasure chest, making himself immortal and capable of dueling Barbossa. He shoots his nemesis with the pistol he has carried for ten years just as Will breaks the curse, killing Barbossa. Despite having assisted the Navy, Sparrow is sentenced to hang.[45]
At Sparrow's execution in Port Royal, Will saves Sparrow, but they are quickly captured. Elizabeth intervenes, declaring her love for Will who is pardoned, while Sparrow escapes by tumbling off a sea wall. The Black Pearl and her new crew arrive in time to retrieve him, and he becomes captain once more. Impressed by the wily pirate, Norrington allows him one day's head start before giving chase.[45]
Dead Man's Chest
[edit]A year following the events of the first film, Sparrow searches for the Dead Man's Chest, which contains the heart of Davy Jones. Thirteen years prior to the events of the film, Sparrow made a bargain with Jones to raise the sunken Black Pearl and make Sparrow captain for thirteen years. Now the debt is due, and Bootstrap Bill Turner warns that Sparrow must either serve one hundred years aboard the Flying Dutchman, or be dragged to Davy Jones's Locker by the Kraken. Jack believes if he can find the Dead Man's Chest, he can free his soul as well as control Jones and the seas.[44]
Adding to Sparrow's woes, Lord Cutler Beckett of the East India Trading Company has a personal score to settle and wants the chest himself. Beckett arrests Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann, forcing Turner to search for Sparrow and his magic compass. Turner locates Sparrow's crew on Pelegosto, held captive by cannibals who intend to eat Sparrow. They escape, and voyage to Tia Dalma (a magical woman later revealed to be the Goddess, Calypso, bound in human form as Dalma, and former lover of Jones). Dalma immediately sees destiny in Will, and provides Sparrow with a jar of dirt – Jones can only set foot on land once every 10 years, and since land is where Sparrow is safe, Dalma suggests with the dirt that he takes land with him.[44]
Sparrow strikes a new deal with Jones to deliver one hundred souls in exchange for his own. Jones agrees but keeps Turner as a "good faith payment". Sparrow is recruiting sailors in Tortuga when he encounters Elizabeth Swann and James Norrington, the latter having succumbed to alcohol. Sparrow convinces Elizabeth that Turner can be freed by using the magic compass to find the chest. The duo head for Isla Cruces and find Will, who escaped Jones's ship and has stolen the key to the Chest. Turner wants to stab Jones's heart and free his father from Jones's servitude, while Norrington plots to restore his career by delivering the heart to Beckett. Sparrow wants it to convince Jones to call off the Kraken.[44]
Norrington escapes with the heart amid a battle with Jones's crew, and Jones summons the Kraken. Realizing Sparrow is the target, Elizabeth traps him aboard the Black Pearl as the crew abandons the ship, and kisses him while she handcuffs him to the mast. Then, the monster devours Sparrow and drags the ship and his soul to Davy Jones's Locker. The surviving crew seeks refuge with Tia Dalma who produces a captain she says can rescue Sparrow: a resurrected Hector Barbossa.[44]
At World's End
[edit]Two months following the events of the second film, with Davy Jones's heart in his possession and the Flying Dutchman under his command, Cutler Beckett begins exterminating all pirates. To combat Beckett, the nine pirate lords of the Brethren Court convene at Shipwreck Cove. Only Jack Sparrow is missing, killed and sent to Davy Jones's Locker at the end of the previous film. Sparrow, as Pirate Lord of the Caribbean, must attend, as he did not bequeath to a designated heir his "piece of eight", a pirate lord's marker. The collective "nine pieces of eight" are needed to free sea goddess Calypso to defeat Beckett. With Elizabeth and Will, Barbossa leads Sparrow's crew to Davy Jones's Locker using stolen navigational charts from the pirate lord Sao Feng. After the crew locate him, Sparrow deciphers a clue on the charts allowing them to escape the Locker.[38]
At the Brethren Court, Elizabeth has succeeded Captain Sao Feng as a Pirate Lord and is elected "Pirate King" after Sparrow breaks a stalemate vote. Sparrow is briefly reunited with his father, Captain Teague. During a parley with Beckett and Jones, Sparrow is traded for Turner, whom Jones and Beckett had captured. The Black Pearl battles the Flying Dutchman during a maelstrom created by Calypso, during which Sparrow fights Jones for the chest so that he may acquire Jones' heart to become immortal. When Jones mortally wounds Turner, Sparrow instead chooses to save Turner by helping him stab the heart, which kills Jones and makes Turner the Dutchman's captain. Together, the Pearl and the Dutchman destroy Beckett's ship. At the end, Barbossa again commandeers the Pearl and Sao Feng's charts, stranding Sparrow and Gibbs in Tortuga. However, Sparrow had managed to cut out the navigational section of the charts and with them begins to search for the legendary Fountain of Youth.[38]
On Stranger Tides
[edit]Prior to the events of the film, Jack Sparrow gained some renown as the pirate who knew and memorized the Fountain of Youth's location. In the film, Joshamee Gibbs was put on trial in London until Sparrow himself arrived to rescue him as a disguised judge at the Old Bailey courthouse. However, they are captured at St James's Palace. Jack is dragged into a forced audience with King George II, who wants Sparrow to guide an expedition to the Fountain. Hector Barbossa, now a privateer in the service to the British with a peg leg, reveals to Jack that he lost his leg and the Black Pearl, which he believes to be sunk. Jack Sparrow escapes and crosses paths with a "Jack Sparrow" impostor, Angelica, a woman from Sparrow's past and ruthless con artist. Angelica shanghais Jack aboard the Queen Anne's Revenge, the ship captained by Blackbeard. [70]
Angelica tells Jack she is conning about being Blackbeard's daughter, though later revealed she was telling the truth, and that Blackbeard wanting to find the Fountain to avoid a prophesied death. Although Jack incites a mutiny, saving the missionary named Philip Swift and fighting zombie officers, Blackbeard himself subdues the mutineers, using a sword that controls ships, a power that Jack's crew of mutineers are unaware of. Blackbeard also practices voodoo magic and fashions a voodoo doll to bend Jack Sparrow to his will. Jack learns from Angelica that the ritual for the Fountain requires a mermaid's tear and two silver chalices located on Ponce de León's ship, the Santiago, and the person who drinks the water with the tear gets all the years of life from the other. Angelica also shows Jack Blackbeard's collection of ships in bottles, including the Black Pearl. After capturing the mermaid Syrena at Whitecap Bay, Blackbeard sends Jack to get the chalices, taking his compass and threatening his own daughter at gunpoint. Aboard the Santiago, Jack meets Barbossa, but both find that the chalices have been taken by the Spanish. Before retrieving the chalices, Barbossa reveals his true agenda: revenge against Blackbeard for the attack on the Black Pearl, which Barbossa truly believes to be sunk,[c] which led to cutting off his leg via self-dismemberment. Jack returns to give Blackbeard the chalices in exchange for Angelica's safety and Jack's compass, which Jack sends Gibbs off with.[70]
After locating the Fountain of Youth, a battle ensues until Angelica cuts her hand trying to remove Barbossa's poisoned sword from Blackbeard's chest. Jack receives the chalices from Syrena, who tells him to not waste her tear. Filling the chalices with the remaining drops of water from the Fountain, Jack tricks Blackbeard into drinking the chalice lacking the mermaid's tear. Despite Blackbeard choosing to murder her so he can live, Angelica is mad at Jack about her father's death. Acknowledging their feelings for one another, Jack maroons Angelica with on a small island named Sola Fide Beach, unsure if he can trust her. Angered, Angelica then uses the one shot from her pistol to kill Jack as he rows away, but misses. Jack reunites with Gibbs, who used Sparrow's compass to locate and retrieved the shrunken Black Pearl. Though he has forfeited his opportunity for immortality, Sparrow tells Gibbs he's settling for being famous as the one who found the Fountain of Youth and determined to continue living the pirate's life. Following the film's end credits, the Jack Sparrow voodoo doll drifted to the island that Angelica is marooned on.[70]
Dead Men Tell No Tales
[edit]Prior to the events of the film, Jack Sparrow's rival Hector Barbossa has become the richest and most powerful pirate of the seven seas, commanding a fleet of ten ships. Meanwhile, Jack has the Black Pearl still trapped in a bottle. Sparrow's new ship the Dying Gull has never left berth, and his latest plans have met with failure.[64]
Sparrow and his crew attempt to rob the new bank of St. Martin. The robbery is a success, but all the gold in it had fallen while they were dragging the locker, and Sparrow's crew abandons him. Despondent, Jack trades his magical compass for a drink. However, this betrayal of the compass releases an old enemy, who holds a serious grudge against Sparrow; the ruthless ghostly pirate hunter Captain Armando Salazar. Years previously, Jack had defeated Salazar by tricking him into sailing his ship into the Devil's Triangle, where Salazar and his crew were cursed to live as the undead. Salazar states that Jack perched in the ship's rigging like a "little bird", earning him the name "Jack the Sparrow".[64]
While in prison, Jack is contacted by Henry Turner, the son of Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann, who asks for aid in finding the Trident of Poseidon, as both are in need of its power to break curses related to the sea. The Trident could help save Sparrow from Salazar's revenge and free Will from the Flying Dutchman. Remembering Will and Elizabeth, expressing some hesitation, Jack agrees. The next day, Sparrow is sentenced to be executed by guillotine (by Jack's accidental choosing), but is rescued by his crew. Aided by aspiring astronomer Carina, Jack and Henry attempt to locate the Trident of Poseidon. Barbossa releases the Pearl from its bottle, giving them a chance to outrun Salazar. Jack and Barbossa discuss the fact that Carina is Hector's long-lost daughter, whom he had left at an orphanage in order to give her a chance for a better life. Jack attempts to use the secret to blackmail Barbossa, but fails.[64]
They are able to track the Trident to its resting place. Though Salazar nearly kills Jack, they are able to destroy the Trident. With the destruction of the Trident, Salazar and his crew become mortal again. Jack, Henry and Carina escape as Barbossa sacrifices himself to kill Salazar. Despite their differences, Jack mourns Barbossa's death. Later, Jack watches Will and Elizabeth's reunion before he departs, sailing with the Black Pearl and his compass once again in his possession.[64]
Characterization
[edit]According to screenwriters Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio, Sparrow is a trickster who uses wit and deceit to attain his goals, preferring to end disputes verbally instead of by force.[72][73][74][75] He walks with a slightly drunken swagger and has slurred speech and flailing hand gestures. Sparrow is shrewd, calculating, and eccentric. He fools Norrington and his crew to set sail on the royal ship Interceptor, which compels the admiration of Lieutenant Groves as he concedes: "That's got to be the best pirate I have ever seen". Norrington himself acquiesces to this praise: "So it would seem", in sharp contrast to his earler assertion: "You are without doubt the worst pirate I have ever heard of". In the third film, while Sparrow leaves Beckett's ship stranded and makes off, Lieutenant Groves asks: "Do you think he plans it all out, or just makes it up as he goes along?"[38] Jack also tricks Blackbeard into saving his daughter by switching places the two chalices required to use the fountain of youth.[76]
Though a skilled swordsman, Sparrow prefers to use his superior intelligence during combat, exploiting his environment to turn the tables on his foes, reasoning "Why fight when you can negotiate?" and using non-violent negotiation to turn his enemies against each other.[44] He invokes parleys and tempts his enemies away from their murderous intentions, encouraging them to see the bigger picture, as when he persuades Barbossa to delay returning to mortal form so he can battle the Royal Navy.[45] He often uses complex wordplay and vocabulary to confound his enemies,[45][44] and it is suggested that his pacifism may be one reason Barbossa and the crew of the Black Pearl mutinied.[45]
"Gentlemen, m'lady, you will always remember this as the day that you almost caught Captain Jack Sparrow." |
—Jack almost escapes another sticky situation[45] |
The character is portrayed as having created, or at least contributed to, his own reputation. When Gibbs tells Will that Sparrow escaped from a desert island by strapping two sea turtles together, Sparrow embellishes the story by claiming the rope was made of hair from his own back, while in reality, Sparrow escaped the island by bartering with rum traders. The video game Pirates of the Caribbean: The Legend of Jack Sparrow bases itself on these tall tales, including the sacking of Nassau port without firing a shot.[45] Depp has likened pirates to rock stars in that their fame preceded them.[72] Sparrow insists on being addressed as "Captain"[45] and often gives the farewell, "This is the day you will always remember as the day that you almost caught Captain Jack Sparrow!" which proclamation is sometimes humorously cut short.[45][44] When Norrington accuses him of being the worst pirate he has ever heard of, Sparrow replies, "But you have heard of me."[45] In a deleted scene from The Curse of the Black Pearl Sparrow ponders being "the immortal Captain Jack Sparrow",[77] and during At World's End he again is interested in immortality, although his father, Captain Teague, warns it can be a terrible curse. Sparrow ponders being "Captain Jack Sparrow, the last pirate," as the East India Trading Company purges piracy.[38] The topic of immortality is brought up again during On Stranger Tides, when Jack says "But better to not know which moment may be your last, every morsel of your entire being alive to the infinite mystery of it all".[76]
Despite his many heroics, Sparrow is a pirate and a morally ambiguous character.[11] When agreeing to trade 100 souls, including Will, to Davy Jones in exchange for his freedom, Jones asks Sparrow whether he can "condemn an innocent man—a friend—to a lifetime of servitude in your name while you roam free?" After a hesitation Sparrow merrily replies, "Yep! I'm good with it!"[44] He carelessly runs up debts with Anamaria,[45] Davy Jones, and the other pirate lords.[38] Sao Feng, pirate lord of Singapore, is particularly hateful towards him.[38] In a cowardly moment, Sparrow abandons his crew during the Kraken's attack, but underlying loyalty and morality compel him to return and save them.[78] Sparrow claims to be a man of his word,[45] and expresses surprise that people doubt his truthfulness.[44] There is no murder on his criminal record.[45][79] He is shown to genuinely care about his allies and even people he doesn't know. He genuinely cared for Angelica, and even admits to her at the end of the film that he does love her, and even saves Phillip Swift, a missionary trapped on Blackbeard's ship whom he had never met before.[76]
Depp partly based the character on Pepé Le Pew, a womanizing skunk from Looney Tunes.[5] Sparrow claims to have a "tremendous intuitive sense of the female creature,"[44] although his conquests are often left with a sour memory of him. Former flames, Scarlett and Giselle, usually slap him[45] or anyone looking for him.[44] Likewise, Angelica claims that Jack "seduced her and used her".[76] His witty charm easily attracts women, and even has Elizabeth questioning her feelings.[44] Verbinski noted phallic connotations in Sparrow's relationship with his vessel, as he grips the ship's wheel.[19] The Black Pearl is described as "the only ship which can outrun the Flying Dutchman".[38] The Freudian overtones continue in the third film when Sparrow and Barbossa battle for captaincy of the Black Pearl, showing off the length of their telescopes, and in a deleted scene, they fight over the steering wheel.[80] Sparrow claims his "first and only love is the sea,"[44] and describes his ship as representing freedom.[45] Davy Jones's Locker is represented as a desert, symbolizing his personal hell.[9]
According to writer Giles Milton, Jack Sparrow was inspired by the seventeenth-century English pirate Jack Ward.[81][82]
Reception and impact on pop culture
[edit]This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (April 2022) |
When Dead Man's Chest grossed over $1 billion worldwide, Ian Nathan attributed this to Sparrow's popularity: "Pirates, the franchise, only had to turn up. There was a powerful holdover from the cheeky delights of its debut, something we hadn't felt since the Clone Wars called it a day."[83] Empire in 2006 declared Depp's performance the seventy-fourth "thing that rocked our world" and later named him the eighth greatest movie character of all time.[84] In 2015, a new poll of the 100 greatest film characters of all time placed him as the fourteenth greatest.[85] A survey of more than 3,000 people showed Jack Sparrow was the most popular Halloween costume of 2006,[86] and a 2007 poll held by the Internet Movie Database showed Sparrow to be the second most popular live action hero after Indiana Jones.[87] In a 2007 Pearl & Dean poll, Jack Sparrow was listed as Depp's most popular performance.[88]
Todd Gilchrist feels Sparrow is the only element of the films that will remain timeless.[89] According to Sharon Eberson, the character's popularity can be attributed to his being a "scoundrel whose occasional bouts of conscience allow viewers to go with the flaws because, as played to the larger-than-life hilt by Depp, he owns every scene he is in".[90] Film history professor Jonathan Kuntz attributed Sparrow's popularity to the increased questioning of masculinity in the 21st century, and Sparrow's personality contrasts with action-adventure heroes in cinema. Leonard Maltin concurs that Sparrow has a carefree attitude and does not take himself seriously.[91] Mark Fox noted Sparrow is an escapist fantasy figure for women, free from much of the responsibility of most heroes.[92] Sparrow is listed by IGN as one of their ten favorite film outlaws, as he "lives for himself and the freedom to do whatever it is that he damn well pleases. Precious few film characters have epitomized what makes the outlaw such a romantic figure for audiences as Captain Jack Sparrow has."[93] Entertainment Weekly put it on its end-of-the-decade, "best-of" list, saying, "Part Keith Richards rift, part sozzled lounge lizard, Johnny Depp's swizzleshtick pirate was definitely one of the most dazzling characters of the decade."[94] In June 2010, Sparrow was named one of Entertainment Weekly's 100 Greatest Characters of the Last 20 Years.[95] In the May 2012 Greek elections, a voter gained media coverage when he "voted" for Jack Sparrow by writing his name on the Pirate Party of Greece ballot.[96]
An internet hoax about a reality program on the now-defunct Quibi platform called Jack Sparrow House gained traction in the early 2020s. The program supposedly featured fourteen Jack Sparrow impersonators living in a house together, with them being eliminated if they broke character. The hoax included a detailed Wikipedia article, which was eventually deleted.[97][98] Snopes said that comedian Rory Strahan-Mauk was behind it, and that a photo claiming to be of the contestants were actually fans attending the Tokyo premiere of Dead Men Tell No Tales.[98]
In other media
[edit]This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (April 2022) |
Jack Sparrow appears in video games and books spun off the Pirates of the Caribbean media franchise. Some notable Pirates video games in which Jack Sparrow appears as a playable character in include Pirates of the Caribbean: The Legend of Jack Sparrow, voiced by Johnny Depp, Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End, voiced by Jared Butler, and Lego Pirates of the Caribbean: The Video Game, with archive audio of Johnny Depp's vocal effects.[citation needed] Jack was one of the first playable characters in the Disney Infinity series, where he is reprised by Jared Butler. He also appears in the Kingdom Hearts series, first in 2005's Kingdom Hearts II, where he is voiced by James Arnold Taylor, and again in 2019's Kingdom Hearts III, reprised again by Butler.[99] In the A Pirate's Life expansion for the video game Sea of Thieves he is voiced again by Butler.[100] Jack Sparrow also appears as playable character in Disney Magic Kingdoms,[101][102] Disney Heroes: Battle Mode,[103] and Disney Speedstorm. A purchasable cosmetic outfit of Jack Sparrow was added to Fortnite Battle Royale on July 19, 2024, as part of the Cursed Sails Event Pass.[104] Jack also appears in Disney Speedstorm.
In 2011, comedy group the Lonely Island, in collaboration with Michael Bolton, released a song named for Jack.[105]
In July 2022, Depp portrayed a parody of Sparrow, Phillip Artoosh, in Adventurer's Game, a promotional short film for the mobile game Sea of Dawn.[106]
Notes
[edit]- ^ Promotional image for Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End (2007)
- ^ Anthony De La Torre, with his face replaced with a CGI replica of a younger Depp's and his voice replaced by Jared Butler, played a younger Jack in Dead Men Tell No Tales (2017).
- ^ Screenwriter Terry Rossio released his unproduced screenplay for Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales (2017), which includes additional information in extensive footnotes.[71] Pertaining to On Stranger Tides, Rossio notes that Jack and Barbossa were each conning the other, while not knowing they were at the same time being conned. Barbossa does not know that the Black Pearl in a bottle, and Jack does not know the importance of Blackbeard's sword.
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External links
[edit]- Jack Sparrow on IMDb
- Jack Sparrow at Inducks
- Adventure film characters
- Disney characters originating in film
- Fictional castaways
- Film characters introduced in 2003
- Fictional English people
- Fictional characters who have made pacts with devils
- Fictional helmsmen
- Fictional outlaws
- Fictional sea pirate captains
- Fictional swordfighters in films
- Fictional tricksters
- Fictional undead
- Johnny Depp
- Male characters in film
- Pirates of the Caribbean characters
- Fictional gentleman thieves