PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: "CONSEQUENCES"
Has anyone noticed something odd about the main characters in 2007's "PIRATES OF THE CARIBBAN: AT WORLD'S END"? Most or all of them either ended up with a less than happy ending or with their fates up in the air.
If one must be brutally honest, the trilogy's main characters had committed some kind of questionable act or one dangerous to others. Jack Sparrow was a pirate, who had no qualms about using others for his own personal gain. And that included bartering Will Turner to Captain Davy Jones in 2006's "PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN'S CHEST" in order to avoid paying his debt to Jones, lying to Elizabeth about it, and contemplating leaving the other pirates to the mercy of Jones' monster, the Kracken. Hector Barbossa, as we all know, was a murderous pirate who had led a mutiny against Jack, threatened the lives of many and also double-crossed Tia Dalma by tossing her into the Black Pearl's brig in "AT WORLD'S END". And then there is straight arrow Will Turner, who turned out to be not so noble. He had left Jack to the mercies of Barbossa and the latter's crew in 2003's "PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: CURSE OF THE BLACK PEARL" and double-crossed the Pearl's crew to Sao Feng and the East India Trading Company in order to get his hands on the ship in the 2007 movie. Will's beloved and the future Pirate King, Elizabeth Swann, committed one of the worst acts in the movie's franchise by leaving Jack shackled to the Black Pearl for the latter to be killed by the Kracken in "DEAD MAN'S CHEST". And in the same movie, former Commodore James Norrington betrayed his new crew members from the Black Pearl by stealing Davy Jones' heart from Jack and handing it over to Lord Cutler Beckett in order to regain his military position in society.
Not exactly a sweet bunch, were they? Many societies, religions and what-have-you seemed to believe in the old adage of what goes around, comes around. Or paying the consequences of one's actions. My favorite happens to be - "Payback's a bitch". And judging from the fates of the major characters in the movie franchise, all of them - in one form or the other - seemed to have paid the consequences of their actions by the end of "AT WORLD'S END".
For James Norrington, payback came in the form of death at the hands of the poor deluded Bootstrap Bill Turner, when he helped Elizabeth and Sao Feng's crew escape from the Flying Dutchman's brig. After marrying Will during the Pearl's battle against Jones and his crew, Elizabeth nearly found herself a widow and facing the first ten years of marriage . . . without her husband by her side. And why? Because during the battle, Jones stabbed him with the sword he had originally made for Norrington in the first film. And when Jack helped him stab Jones' heart before he could die, Will became the new captain of the Flying Dutchman, ferrying souls lost at sea to "the other side", while apart from Elizabeth and their child for ten years. Barbossa seemed to have had it made in the end. He managed to get back the Black Pearl from Jack. Unfortunately, he found himself facing a possible mutiny due to Jack's theft of Sao Feng's chart that could lead them all to a new treasure. And as moviegoers later learned in the 2011 film, "PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES", Barbossa lost the Pearl and his leg from an attack made by fellow pirate Captain Edward Teach aka "Blackbeard". And what about dear old Jack? Well . . . he found himself abandoned at Tortuga . . . after Barbossa took the Black Pearl from him again.
Mind you some of the characters like Norrington and Will suffered a more severe consequence than the other characters. But not one of them had the glowing "happily ever after" that was seen in the conclusion of "AT WORLD'S END". Even though Will and Elizabeth were finally reunited in the film's post-credits scene, I wonder if there were some shadows in their reunion. After all, Will and Elizabeth have to adjust to being married. And Will has to learn to be a father . . . something of which Elizabeth already has ten years of experience.