| PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: | |
| THE CURSE OF THE BLACK PEARL | |
| screenplay by | |
| Ted Elliott & Terry Rossio | |
| screen story by | |
| Jay Wolpert & Stuart Beattie | |
| and | |
| Ted Elliott & Terry Rossio | |
| FIRST DRAFT | |
| September 1, 2002 | |
| FADE IN: | |
| EXT. CARIBBEAN SEA - DAY | |
| A gray, impenetrable wall of fog. From somewhere comes the | |
| FAINT SOUND of a LITTLE GIRL'S VOICE, singing, slow tempo, | |
| almost under her breath: | |
| YOUNG ELIZABETH (O.S.) | |
| Yo, ho, yo, ho, a pirate's life for | |
| me. Yo, ho, yo, ho, it's a pirate's | |
| life for me ... | |
| Suddenly a massive SHIP emerges from the grey, the Winged | |
| Victory maidenhead looming. It's a British dreadnought, the | |
| H.M.S. Dauntless. Formidable, frightening, twenty-five gun | |
| ports on the side, and rail guns to boot. | |
| EXT. H.M.S. DAUNTLESS - FORECASTLE - DAY | |
| ELIZABETH SWANN, strawberry blonde hair, stands at the bow | |
| rail, gazing at the sea, still singing -- | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| ... drink up me hearties, yo, ho ... | |
| JOSHAMEE GIBBS, who was born old, skin a dark leather, clutches | |
| her shoulder, startling her. | |
| GIBBS | |
| (sotto) | |
| Quiet, missy! Cursed pirates sail | |
| these waters. You want to call 'em | |
| down on us? | |
| Elizabeth stares wide-eyed at him. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Mr. Gibbs. | |
| NORRINGTON, a dashing young man, Royal Navy to the core, glares | |
| sternly at Gibbs. Standing beside him is GOVERNOR WEATHERBY | |
| SWANN, a man of obvious high station, brass buttons on his | |
| thick blue jacket. He is Elizabeth's father. | |
| NORRINGTON (CONT'D) | |
| That will do. | |
| GIBBS | |
| She was singing about pirates. Bad | |
| luck to sing about pirates, with | |
| us mired in this unnatural fog -- | |
| mark my words. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Consider them marked. On your way. | |
| GIBBS | |
| 'Aye, Lieutenant. | |
| (as he moves off) | |
| Bad luck to have a woman on board, | |
| too. Even a mini'ture one. | |
| He returns to his deck-swabbing duties, surreptitiously takes a | |
| quick swig from a flask. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| I think it would be rather exciting | |
| to meet a pirate. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Think again, Miss Swann. Vile and | |
| dissolute creatures, the lot of | |
| them. I intend to see to it that | |
| any man who sails under a pirate | |
| flag, or wears a pirate brand, gets | |
| what he deserves: a short drop and | |
| a sudden stop. | |
| Elizabeth doesn't know what a 'short drop and a sudden stop' | |
| means. Gibbs helpfully mimes: a man being hung. | |
| SWANN | |
| Captain Norrington... I appreciate | |
| your fervor, but I am concerned | |
| about the effect this subject will | |
| have on my daughter. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| My apologies, Governor. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Actually, I find it all fascinating. | |
| SWANN | |
| And that's what concerns me. | |
| Elizabeth, we will be landing in | |
| Port Royal soon, and beginning our | |
| new lives. Wouldn't it be wonderful | |
| if we comport ourselves as befits | |
| our class and station? | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Yes, father. | |
| Chastised, she turns away, to look out over the bow rail. | |
| ELIZABETH (CONT'D) | |
| (to herself) | |
| I still think it would be exciting | |
| to meet a pirate ... | |
| The fog still hems in the ship; very little of the sea is | |
| visible -- | |
| -- but suddenly, a FIGURE comes into view. A young boy, WILL | |
| TURNER, floating on his back in the otherwise empty water. | |
| There is nothing to show where he came from, or how he came to | |
| be there. | |
| ELIZABETH (CONT'D) | |
| Look! A boy! There's a boy in the | |
| water! | |
| Norrington and Swann spot him -- | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Man overboard! | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Boy overboard! | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Fetch a hook -- haul him out of | |
| there! | |
| Quick movement and activity on deck. Sailors use a boathook to | |
| snag the boy when he passes. Norrington and Swann haul him | |
| aboard, and lay him on the deck. Elizabeth sidles in for a | |
| closer look. | |
| NORRINGTON (CONT'D) | |
| He's still breathing. | |
| SWANN | |
| Where did he come from? | |
| GIBBS | |
| Mary mother of God ... | |
| Attention is turned away from the boy -- | |
| The sea is no longer empty. WRECKAGE from a ship litters the | |
| water ... along with the bodies of its crew. What is left of | |
| the ship's hull BURNS, a ragged British flag hanging limply | |
| from the stern. | |
| The H.M.S. Dauntless slips silently through it all. The scene | |
| calls for hushed voices. | |
| SWANN | |
| What happened here? | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| An explosion in the powder magazine. | |
| Merchant vessels run heavily armed. | |
| GIBBS | |
| Lot of good it did them ... | |
| (off Swann's look) | |
| Everyone's thinking it! I'm just | |
| saying it! Pirates! | |
| SWANN | |
| There is no proof of that. It could | |
| have been an accident. Captain, | |
| these men were my protection. If | |
| there is even the slightest chance | |
| one of those poor devils is still | |
| alive, we cannot abandon them! | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Of course not. | |
| (to a sailor) | |
| Rouse the Captain, immediately. | |
| (to the crew) | |
| Come about and strike the sails! | |
| Unlash the boats! Gunnery crew ... | |
| jackets off the cannons! | |
| (to Swann) | |
| Hope for the best...prepare for the | |
| worst. | |
| (to two sailors) | |
| Move the boy aft. We'll need the | |
| deck clear. | |
| They lift the boy. Swann pulls Elizabeth away from the rail, | |
| away from the hideous scene in the water. | |
| SWANN | |
| Elizabeth, I want you to accompany | |
| the boy. He's in your charge now. | |
| You'll watch over him? | |
| Elizabeth nods gravely. Swann hurries away to help unstow the | |
| longboat. The sailors lay the boy gently on the poop deck, | |
| behind the wheel, they hurry off. Elizabeth kneels down beside | |
| the boy. | |
| His good looks are not lost on her. She reaches out, gently | |
| brushes the blond hair from his eyes -- | |
| Suddenly, he grabs her wrist, awake now. Elizabeth is startled, | |
| but their eyes lock. She takes his hand in hers. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| My name is Elizabeth Swann. | |
| YOUNG WILL | |
| Will Turner. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| I'm watching over you, Will. | |
| He clutches her hands, then slips back into unconsciousness. | |
| His movement has opened the collar of his shirt; Elizabeth sees | |
| he wears a chain around his neck. She tugs it free, | |
| revealing -- | |
| A GOLD MEDALLION. One side is blank. She turns it over -- | |
| A SKULL gazes up at her. Vaguely Aztec in design, but to her | |
| eyes, it can mean one thing only -- | |
| ELIZABETH (CONT'D) | |
| You're a pirate. | |
| She glances back at the crew. Sees Norrington, giving orders, | |
| moving toward her. | |
| She looks back at Will -- comes to a quick decision. Takes the | |
| medallion from around his neck. Hides it under her coat. | |
| Norrongton arrives. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Did he speak? | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| His name is Will Turner -- that's | |
| all I found out. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Very good. | |
| Norrington hurries off. Elizabeth steals away to the stern of | |
| the ship. Examines her prize -- the gold medallion. A wisp of | |
| wind, and she looks up -- | |
| Out over the dea, moving through the fog, silent as a ghost, is | |
| a large sailing ship, a schooner -- | |
| It has BLACK SAILS. | |
| Elizabeth stares, too frightened to move, or cry out. | |
| The ship is obscured by the fog as it passes -- but not the | |
| mizzen-top ... and there hangs the frightening skull and | |
| corssbones of the Jolly Roger. | |
| Elizabeth looks from it to the medallion -- the skull on the | |
| flag is the same as the one on the medallion. | |
| Fog surrounds and closes in on the black ship -- except for the | |
| black flag. As Elizabeth watches, the skull appears to TURN and | |
| GRIN at her -- | |
| Elizabeth shuts her eyes tight -- | |
| EIGHT YEARS LATER | |
| INT. GOVERNOR'S MANSION - ELIZABETH'S BEDROOM | |
| -- and then snap open again, startled wide with fear. | |
| But this is no longer twelve-year-old Elizabeth on the stern of | |
| the Dauntless; this is twenty-year-old Elizabeth, lying in bed | |
| in the dark. | |
| She remains motionless (were the images we just saw a | |
| nightmare, or a jumbled childhood memory?) | |
| Elizabeth slowly looks as far out the corner of her eyes as | |
| possible without moving. Might there be someone in the room | |
| with her, looming over her? | |
| She turns, ready for anything. She is alone. | |
| Elizabeth sits up, turns up the flame on an oil lamp beside the | |
| canopied bed. She carries the lamp across the room to a | |
| dressing table, sits down. | |
| She pulls one of the small drawers all the way out, reaches | |
| into a space beneath it and removes -- | |
| The MEDALLION. She has kept it all this time. It has not lost | |
| its luster -- or its sense of menace. She gazes at it as she | |
| absently returns the draw to its place -- | |
| A BOOMING knock on the door; Elizabeth jumps up, startled, | |
| knocking over the chair. | |
| SWANN (O.S.) | |
| Elizabeth? Is everything all right? | |
| Are you decent? | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Yes -- yes. | |
| She puts on the medallion, throws a dressing gown on as Swann | |
| enters, carrying a large box. A uniformed maid, ESTRELLA, | |
| follows. | |
| SWANN | |
| Still abed at this hour? It's a | |
| beautiful day! | |
| Estrella pulls back the heavy curtains, revealing: | |
| Beneath a blue sky lies the bucolic town of PORT ROYAL, built | |
| on a natural harbor. On a bluff at the mouth of the harbor | |
| stands FORT CHARLES, its stone parapets lined with cannons. | |
| SWANN (CONT'D) | |
| I have a gift for you. | |
| He opens the box, and displays for her a gorgeous velvet | |
| dress. She lets out an admiring gasp. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| It's -- beautiful. May I inquire as | |
| to the occasion? | |
| SWANN | |
| Is an occasion necessary for a | |
| father to dote upon his daughter | |
| with gifts? | |
| Elizabeth happily takes it, goes behind a screened-off dressing | |
| area. Estrella follows, carrying the box. | |
| SWANN (CONT'D) | |
| Although ... I did think you could | |
| wear it to the ceremony today. | |
| ELIZABETH (O.S.) | |
| Ceremony? | |
| SWANN | |
| Captain Norrington's promotion | |
| ceremony. | |
| Elizabeth peeks around the screen. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| I knew it. | |
| SWANN | |
| Or, rather, Commodore Norrington | |
| ... a fine gentleman, don't you | |
| think? | |
| (no answer) | |
| He fancies you, you know. | |
| Behind the screen, Elizabeth GASPS. | |
| SWANN (CONT'D) | |
| Elizabeth? How's it coming? | |
| ON ELIZABETH -- She holds her hair and the medallion (still | |
| around her neck) out of the way as the maid cinches her into a | |
| corset over her slip. Estrella has her foot in Elizabeth's | |
| back as she pulls the laces tight. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Difficult ... to say. | |
| SWANN (O.S.) | |
| I'm told that dress is the very | |
| latest fashion in London. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| (holding her breath) | |
| Women in London must have learned | |
| to not breathe. | |
| Estrella is finished. Elizabeth takes a breath -- and winces. | |
| A butler appears in the doorway of the room. | |
| BUTLER | |
| Governor? A caller is here for you. | |
| INT. GOVERNOR'S MANSION - FOYER - DAY | |
| The caller, dressed in rough clothing, stands in the foyer, | |
| looking very out of place, and knowing it. He holds a long | |
| presentation case. He polishes the toes of his boots on the | |
| back of his calves, but it doesn't help. | |
| SWANN | |
| Ah, Mr. Turner! It's good to see | |
| you again! | |
| The caller turns -- it is WILL TURNER. Handsome, with a watchful | |
| demeanor that gives him a weight beyond his years. | |
| WILL | |
| Good day, sir. | |
| (holds out the case) | |
| I have your order. | |
| Swann hurries to him, opens the case. Inside is a beautiful | |
| dress sword and scabbard. Swann takes it out reverently. | |
| WILL (CONT'D) | |
| The blade is folded steel. That's | |
| gold filigree laid into the handle. | |
| If I may -- | |
| He takes the sword from Swann, and balances it on one finger at | |
| the point where the blade meets the guard. | |
| WILL (CONT'D) | |
| Perfectly balanced. The tang is | |
| nearly the full width of the blade. | |
| SWANN | |
| Impressive ... very impressive. | |
| Commodore Norrington will be | |
| pleased, I'm sure. Do pass my | |
| compliments on to your master. | |
| Will's face falls. Clearly, the work is his, and he is proud | |
| of it. With practiced ease, he flips the sword around, catches | |
| it by the hilt and returns it to the case. | |
| WILL | |
| (bows slightly) | |
| I shall. A craftsman is always | |
| pleased to hear his work is | |
| appreciated -- | |
| He stops speaking abruptly, staring past Swann -- | |
| Elizabeth stands on the stairs. Granted, the dress may be | |
| painful to wear, but holy smokes! | |
| SWANN | |
| Elizabeth! You look stunning! | |
| Will tries to speak, but can't. He gives up, smiles to himself, | |
| and simply nods emphatically. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Will! It's so good to see you! | |
| Her hand goes to the chain around her throat (the medallion is | |
| hidden in the bodice of her dress). | |
| ELIZABETH (CONT'D) | |
| I dreamt about you last night. | |
| Will reacts with surprise: "Really?" | |
| SWANN | |
| Elizabeth, this is hardly | |
| appropriate -- | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| (ignores her father) | |
| About the day we met. Do you | |
| remember? | |
| WILL | |
| I could never forget it, Miss Swann. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Will, how many times must I ask you | |
| to call me 'Elizabeth'? | |
| WILL | |
| At least once more, Miss Swann. | |
| As always. | |
| Elizabeth is disappointed and little hurt by his responce. | |
| SWANN | |
| Well said! There's a boy who | |
| understands propriety. Now, we must | |
| be going. | |
| Swann takes the case from Will, opens the door for Elizabeth. | |
| Elizabeth straightens her back, gathers her skirts and strides | |
| past Will. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Good day, Mr. Turner. | |
| EXT. GOVERNOR'S MANSION - DAY | |
| Swann follows Elizabeth out the door. | |
| WILL | |
| Good day. | |
| He watches as she is helped aboard a carriage by the driver. | |
| WILL (CONT'D) | |
| (to himself) | |
| Elizabeth. | |
| IN THE CARRIAGE: Swann glowers at his daughter. | |
| SWANN | |
| Dear, I do hope you demonstrate a | |
| bit more decorum in front of | |
| Commodore Norrington. After all, it | |
| is only through his efforts that | |
| Port Royal has become at all | |
| civilized. | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - HARBOR - DAY | |
| The skeletal remains of four pirates, still clad in buccaneer | |
| rags, hang from gallows erected on a rocky promontory. There is | |
| a fifth, unoccupied gallow, bearing a sign: | |
| PIRATES - YE BE WARNED | |
| The top of a billowing sail passes regally in front of them. | |
| On the landward face of the sail, apparently high in the | |
| rigging, is a man for whom the term 'swashbuckling rogue' was | |
| coined: Captain JACK SPARROW. | |
| He gazes keen-eyed at the display as they pass. Raises a | |
| tankard in salute. Suddenly, something below catches his | |
| attention. He jumps from the rigging -- | |
| -- and that's when we see that his ship is not an imposing | |
| three-master, but just a small fishing dory with a single | |
| sail, plowing through the water -- the Jolly Mon. | |
| And it leaks. Which is why he has the tankard: to bail. | |
| Jack steps back to the tiller, and using a single sheet to | |
| control the sail, and the Jolly Mon comes around the | |
| promontory, the whole of Port Royal laid out before him. | |
| The huge British dreadnaught, H.M.S. Dauntless dominates the | |
| bay. But Jack's attention is on a different ship: the H.M.S. | |
| Interceptor, a small sleek vessel with rail guns and a mortor | |
| in the middle of the main deck. It is tied up at the Navy | |
| landing, at the base of the cliffs below Fort Charles. | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - DOCKS - DAY | |
| Smoothly and with no wasted movement, Jack hauls down the sail, | |
| stows it, guides the dory alongside a dock. The HARBORMASTER, | |
| a long ledger tucked under his arm, is there to catch the line | |
| and help Jack tie up. | |
| HARBORMASTER | |
| If you're rolling scuppers in this | |
| tub, you're either incredibly brave | |
| or incredibly stupid. | |
| JACK | |
| It's remarkable how often those | |
| two traits coincide. | |
| He starts up the dock, starpping on his sword belt; besides the | |
| scabbard, it also carries a compass, pistol and small powder | |
| horn. The Harbormaster cuts him off. | |
| HARBORMASTER | |
| It's a shilling for the dock space, | |
| and you're going to have to give me | |
| your name. | |
| JACK | |
| What do you sat three shillings, | |
| and we forget the name? | |
| He tosses three shillings onto the ledger. The Harbormaster | |
| considers, then shuts the ledger on the coins, steps aside. | |
| HARBORMASTER | |
| Welcome to Port Royal, Mr. Smith. | |
| Jack gives him a half-salute as he goes past. Looks across the | |
| water toward the Interceptor -- and smiles. Above the | |
| Interceptor, among the parapets of Fort Charles, a ceremony is | |
| underway -- | |
| EXT. FORT CHARLES - DAY | |
| With choreographed percision, Swann removes the sword and | |
| scabbard from the presentation case, held by a uniformed Navy | |
| man. He slides the sword into the scabbard, holds it out | |
| vertically to Norrington, in full dress uniform. | |
| Norrington grasps the scabbard above Swann's hand, and Swann | |
| lets go. Norrington draws the sword, flourishes the sword, and | |
| snaps the blade up in front of his face. Swann steps forward, | |
| pins a medal to Norrington's jacket, steps back. | |
| Norrington nods, turns smartly and nods to his fellow officers, | |
| turns again and nods to the audience -- dignitaries, merchants, | |
| plantation owners, their families. Another flourish, and he | |
| returns the sword to its scabbard. | |
| The silence is broken loud APPLAUSE. Backslapping from the Navy | |
| men. | |
| In the audience, Elizabeth doesn't look so good, out beneath | |
| the hot sun. She applauds briefly, then winces. Discretely | |
| tries to adjust the corset through the material of the dress, | |
| then resumes clapping, trying to hide her discomfort. | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - NAVY DOCK - DAY | |
| Two sailors on sentry duty, MURTOGG and MULLROY, take advantage | |
| of what little shade there is on the dock. But when Jack | |
| saunters up, they are immediately on alert. | |
| MURTOGG | |
| This dock is off-limits to | |
| civilians. | |
| JACK | |
| Sorry, I didn't know. | |
| Music drifts down from Fort Charles. Jack looks up, shields his | |
| eyes. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Some sort of to-do up at the fort, | |
| eh? You two weren't invited? | |
| MURTOGG | |
| No ... somone has to make sure this | |
| dock stays off-limits to civilians. | |
| JACK | |
| This must be some important boat. | |
| MULLROY | |
| Ship. | |
| JACK | |
| Ship. | |
| MURTOGG | |
| Captain Norrington's made it his | |
| flagship. He'll use it to hunt | |
| down the last dregs of piracy on | |
| the Spanish Lake. | |
| MULLOY | |
| Commodore. | |
| MURTOGG | |
| Right. Commodore Norrington. | |
| JACK | |
| That's a fine goal, I'm sure ... | |
| But it seems to me a ship like | |
| that -- | |
| (indicates the Dauntless) | |
| -- makes this one here just a wee | |
| superflous. | |
| MURTOGG | |
| Oh, the Dauntless is the power in | |
| these waters, true enough -- but | |
| there's no ship that can match the | |
| Interceptor for speed. | |
| JACK | |
| That so? I've heard of one, | |
| supposed to be fast, neigh | |
| uncatchable ... the Black Pearl? | |
| Mullroy scoffs at the name. | |
| MULLROY | |
| There's no *real* ship as can match | |
| the Interceptor. | |
| MURTOGG | |
| The Black Pearl is a real ship. | |
| MULLROY | |
| No, it's not. | |
| MURTOGG | |
| Yes it is. I've seen it. | |
| MULLROY | |
| You've seen it? | |
| MURTOGG | |
| Yes. | |
| MULLROY | |
| You've seen the Black Pearl? | |
| MURTOGG | |
| Yes. | |
| MULLROY | |
| You haven't seen it. | |
| MURTOGG | |
| Yes, I have. | |
| MULLROY | |
| You've seen a ship with black sails | |
| that's crewed by the damned and | |
| captained by a man so evil that | |
| hell itself spat him back out? | |
| MURTOGG | |
| ... No. | |
| MULLROY | |
| No. | |
| MURTOGG | |
| But I've seen a ship with black | |
| sails. | |
| MULLROY | |
| Oh, and no ship that's not crewed | |
| by the damned and captained by a | |
| man so evil that hell itself spat | |
| him back out could possibly have | |
| black sails and therefore couldn't | |
| possibly be any ship other than | |
| the Black Pearl. Is that what | |
| you're saying? | |
| MURTOGG | |
| ... no. | |
| MULLROY | |
| (turns back to Jack) | |
| Like I said, there's no real ship | |
| as can match -- Hey! | |
| But Jack's not there. Murtogg and Mullroy look around, spot -- | |
| Jack standing at the wheel of the Interceptor, casually | |
| examining the mechanism. | |
| MULLROY (CONT'D) | |
| You! | |
| Jack looks over in exaggeratedly innocent surprise. The | |
| sailors hurry toward the gangplank. | |
| MULLROY (CONT'D) | |
| Get away from there! You don't | |
| have permission to be aboard there! | |
| Jack spreads his hands in apology. | |
| JACK | |
| I'm sorry. It's just such a pretty | |
| boat. Ship. | |
| The sailors study him suspiciously. | |
| MURTOGG | |
| What's your name? | |
| JACK | |
| Smith. | |
| MULLROY | |
| What's your business in Port Royal, | |
| 'Mr. Smith'? | |
| MURTOGG | |
| And no lies! | |
| JACK | |
| None? Very well. You rumbled me. | |
| I confess: I intend to commandeer | |
| one of these ships, pick up a crew | |
| in Tortuga, and go on the account, | |
| do a little honest pirating. | |
| MURTOGG | |
| I said, no lies. | |
| MULLROY | |
| I think he's telling the truth. | |
| MURTOGG | |
| He's not telling the truth. | |
| MULLROY | |
| He may be. | |
| MURTOGG | |
| If he were telling truth he | |
| wouldn't have told us. | |
| JACK | |
| Unless, of course, he knew you | |
| wouldn't believe the truth if he | |
| told you it. | |
| Murtogg and Mullroy consider that point -- | |
| EXT. FORT CHARLES - DAY | |
| Elizabeth, pale and perspiring, fans herself weakly, oblivious | |
| to the music and chatter. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| May I have a moment? | |
| He extends his hand. She takes it. He walks her away from the | |
| party, toward the parapet. A rather too long of a silence as | |
| Norrington works up his courage. | |
| NORRINGTON (CONT'D) | |
| (a burst) | |
| You look lovely. Elizabeth. | |
| Elizabeth frowns, unable to focus. Norrington mistakes her | |
| expression as disapproval. | |
| NORRINGTON (CONT'D) | |
| I apologize if I seem forward -- | |
| but I must speak my mind. | |
| (working up his | |
| confidence to do so) | |
| This promotion confirms that I have | |
| accomplished the goals I set for | |
| myself in my career. But it also | |
| casts into sharp relief that which | |
| I have not achieved. The thing all | |
| men most require: a marriage to a | |
| fine woman. | |
| (beat) | |
| You have become a fine woman, | |
| Elizabeth. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| I can't breathe. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| (smiles) | |
| I'm a bit nervous, myself -- | |
| Elizabeth loses her balance, stumbles away from Norrington. She | |
| reaches a hand out to the parapet to steady herself, but it | |
| slides off -- | |
| -- and then she vanishes over the wall. Gone. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Elizabeth! | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - NAVY DOCKS - DAY | |
| Jack reacts, pushes Murtogg aside to see -- | |
| Elizabeth plummets from the top of the cliff. It seems to take | |
| her a long to reach the sea -- | |
| Elizabeth hits the water, narrowly missing the sharp rocks. A | |
| wave breakes, and then she is washed out away from the cliff, | |
| struggling feebly. | |
| AT THE FORT, | |
| Norrington looks down -- | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| ELIZABETH! | |
| He leaps to the top of the parapet, prepared to dive -- a | |
| lieutenant, GILLETTE, catches his arm. | |
| GILLETTE | |
| The rocks, sir! It's a miracle she | |
| missed them! | |
| Norrington shakes off his arm, looks down -- and realizes | |
| Gillette is right. He jumps down and runs -- | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - NAVY DOCKS - DAY | |
| Jack, Murtogg and Mullroy are still in shock from the sight. | |
| JACK | |
| Aren't you going to save her? | |
| MULLROY | |
| I can't swim. | |
| Murtogg shakes his head -- neither does he. | |
| JACK | |
| (rolls his eyes) | |
| Sailors. | |
| Above where Elizabeth struggles in the water, Norrington and | |
| several other men pick their way down the cliffs. They are too | |
| far away to get to her in time. | |
| Jack scowls. He has no choice -- and it pisses him off. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Fine. | |
| He pulls a pistol from his sword belt, hands it to Murtogg; | |
| then hands the belt to Mullroy. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Don't lose these. | |
| And then he dives into the water, swims toward Elizabeth. | |
| Elizabeth struggles to keep above water, gasping for air -- | |
| then a swell rolls over her, and she is submerged -- | |
| UNDERWATER, | |
| Elizabeth drifts down, unconscious. The current turns her, and | |
| the MEDALLION slips loose from her bodice. | |
| The MEDALLION turns slowly, until the SKULL is fully visible. | |
| A shaft of filtered sunlight hits it, and it GLINTS -- | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - VARIOUS - DAY | |
| FORT CHARLES: The British flag flies, blown from an offshore | |
| breeze. Suddenly the wind dies, and the flag goes limp. | |
| ON THE DOCKS: Wood and metal fittings on the lines bang against | |
| masts. The wind dies, and there is silence. | |
| ON THE EDGE OF TOWN: A CARIBE WOMAN feeds clucking chikens, | |
| frowns when they all suddenly go quit ... | |
| IN THE VILLAGE: A weather vane moves slightly in the wind. The | |
| wind stops, and all is still. And then ... | |
| ... the weather vanes TURNS, and holds steady -- the wind has | |
| picked up again, but now blows from the sea toward the land. | |
| ON THE BEACH: an OLD SALT pulls a rope line, pauses. Turns and | |
| gazes at the sky, frowning. The mangy hound at his side starts | |
| BARKING incessantly -- | |
| ON THE DOCKS: The lines bang against the other sides of the | |
| masts, the wind far stronger now. | |
| FORT CHARLES: the British flag flies in the opposite direction, | |
| snapping in the new onshore breeze. | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - CLIFFSIDE - DAY | |
| Norrington rushes down, intent on the climb. Beyond him, past | |
| the rocky point, far out to sea, FOG gathers -- | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - OCEAN - DAY | |
| UNDERWATER: the medallion hangs below Elizabeth's unmoving | |
| form -- and then Jack is there. He wraps an arm around her | |
| and makes for the surface. | |
| ON THE SURFACE, | |
| Jack swims toward the dock, struggling. It is far more | |
| difficult than it should be. He stops stroking, and they | |
| submerge. | |
| UNDERWATER: Jack realizes that it is Elizabeth's heavy velvet | |
| dress that is weighing them down. He pulls at the buttons on | |
| the back, and they give way. He skins her out of the dress, and | |
| kicks away from it. | |
| The dress falls like a cloud into darkness -- | |
| ON THE SURFACE: Jack swims with Elizabeth, much more quickly. | |
| AT THE DOCK, | |
| Murtogg and Mullroy are there to help haul Elizabeth out of | |
| the water. | |
| Jack climbs up, exhausted. Elizabeth is on her back; Murtogg | |
| holds her arms above her head, pumping them. Mullroy puts his | |
| cheek to her nose and mouth. | |
| MULLROY | |
| Not breathing. | |
| Murtogg looks down; it seems hopeless. Jack steps up, drawing | |
| Murtogg's knife from its sheath. | |
| JACK | |
| Move. | |
| He pushes past Mullroy, kneels over Elizabeth, raises the | |
| knife -- Murtogg is shocked -- | |
| Jack slits the corset down the middle, yanks it away. | |
| Elizabeth remains still. And then -- she coughs up water and | |
| gasps, choking on her first full breath. Jack is relieved. | |
| MULLROY | |
| I never would have thought of that. | |
| JACK | |
| Clearly, you've never been to | |
| Singapore. | |
| Jack flips the knife and hands it hilt-first to Murtogg -- and | |
| that's when he spots -- | |
| The MEDALLION. Jack catches it up in his hand. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Where did you get this? | |
| Before Elizabeth can answer, the BLADE of a SWORD is at Jack's | |
| THROAT -- Norrington's new ceremonial sword, in fact, looking | |
| bright and sharp. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| On your feet. | |
| It looks bad -- Jack standing over Elizabeth, most of her | |
| clothes gone. He gets to his feet. The rest of Elizabeth's | |
| erstwhile rescuers reach the scene, including Swann. | |
| SWANN | |
| Elizabeth! Are you all right? | |
| He strips off his jacket, drapes it around her. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Yes -- yes, I'm fine -- Commodore | |
| Norrington, do you intend to kill | |
| my rescuer? | |
| Norrington looks at Jack. Jack nods as best he can with a blade | |
| beneath his chin. Norrington sheathes his sword, and extends | |
| his hand. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| I believe thanks are in order. | |
| Jack takes Norrington's hand gingerly. They shake -- | |
| -- and Norrington tightens his grip, yanks Jack's arm toward | |
| him, then tears back the sleeve of Jack's shirt -- | |
| -- exposing a BRAND on Jack's inner wrist: a large 'P.' | |
| NORRINGTON (CONT'D) | |
| Had a brush-up with the East India | |
| Trading Company, did you ... | |
| pirate? | |
| The others react in shock, but the sailors are well-trained -- | |
| in an instant, half a dozen pistols are aimed at Jack. He | |
| stands there, still holding the corset. | |
| NORRINGTON (CONT'D) | |
| Keep your guns on him, men. | |
| Gillette, fetch some irons. | |
| Norrington notices something else -- below the 'P' brand is a | |
| tattoo: a small bird in flight across water. | |
| NORRINGTON (CONT'D) | |
| Well, well... Jack Sparrow, isn't | |
| it? | |
| JACK | |
| Captain Jack Sparrow. If you | |
| please. | |
| Norrington looks out at the bay. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| I don't see your ship -- Captain. | |
| MURTOGG | |
| He said he'd come to commandeer | |
| one. | |
| MULLROY | |
| (to Murtogg) | |
| I told you he was telling the | |
| truth. | |
| (currying favor) | |
| These are his, sir. | |
| He holds out Jack's pistol and belt. Norrington takes the | |
| pistol, examines it, notes the powder horn on Jack's belt. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| (to Jack) | |
| Extra powder, but no additional | |
| shot. | |
| Jack shrugs. Norrington unhooks the compass from the belt, | |
| opens it. He frowns at the reading. Moves the compass this | |
| way and that, keeping it parallel to the ground. | |
| NORRINGTON (CONT'D) | |
| It doesn't bear true. | |
| Jack looks away, a bit embarrassed. Norrington returns the | |
| compass to the belt. Draws the sword half from the scabbard. | |
| NORRINGTON (CONT'D) | |
| I half-expected it to be made of | |
| wood. | |
| He slides it back into the scabbard, hands it to Mullroy. | |
| NORRINGTON (CONT'D) | |
| Taking stock: you've got a pistol | |
| with only one shot, a compass that | |
| doesn't point north ... and no | |
| ship. You are without a doubt the | |
| worst pirate I have ever heard of. | |
| JACK | |
| Ah, but you have heard of me. | |
| Gillette returns with shackles, approaches Jack. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Carefully, lieutenant. | |
| Elizabeth steps forward. Swann's jacket slips off her. She is | |
| unconcerned, but he is intent on putting it back on her. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Commodore, I must protest. Pirate | |
| or not, this man saved my life. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| One good deed is not enough to | |
| redeem a man of a lifetime of | |
| wickedness. | |
| Gillette snaps the manacles closed on Jack's wrists. | |
| JACK | |
| But it seems to be enough to | |
| condemn him. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| (smiles) | |
| Indeed. | |
| Now that Jack is safely chained, Norrington nods to his men. | |
| All but one stow their weapons, and two step forward -- | |
| JACK | |
| Finally. | |
| Lightning-quick, he snaps the corset around the hand and wrist | |
| of the man holding the pistol and yanks. The pistol sails into | |
| the water. Before anyone can react to that, Jack has the | |
| manacle chain wrapped around Elizabeth's throat. | |
| Pistols are drawn again, but now Elizabeth serves as a shield. | |
| Norrington raises a cautioning hand to his men. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| (backing away, toward | |
| land) | |
| Commodore Norrington ... my pistol | |
| and belt, please. | |
| Norrington hesitates, balls his fists in frustration. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Commodore! | |
| Mullroy hands the pistol and belt to Norrington. Norrington | |
| holds them out to Jack. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Elizabeth -- it is Elizabeth? | |
| Elizabeth is more angry than frightened. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Miss Swann. | |
| JACK | |
| Miss Swann, if you'll be so kind? | |
| She takes the belt and pistol from Norrington -- Jack's quicker | |
| than she is, and takes the pistol from her. He jerks her around | |
| so she is facing him, belly to belly. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Now, if you'll be very kind? | |
| She figures out what he wants: put the belt on him. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| (as she works) | |
| You are despicable. | |
| JACK | |
| I saved your life; now you've saved | |
| mine. We're square. | |
| Done. He turns her again, and then backs up until he bumps | |
| against the cargo gantry. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Gentlemen ... m'lady ... you will | |
| always remember this as the day you | |
| almost caught Captain Jack Sparrow. | |
| He shoves Elizabeth away, grabs a rope and pulls free a | |
| belaying pin -- a counterweight drops and Jack is lifted up to | |
| the middle of the gantry, where he grabs a second rope -- | |
| Pistols fire -- and miss. Jack swings out, out, out, away from | |
| and around the gantry. | |
| Norrington has held his shot. With careful aim, he tracks | |
| Jack's trajectory -- | |
| Jack drops from the rope even as Norrington FIRES. His shot | |
| tears the rope -- | |
| -- as Jack plummets past one of the gantry's guy lines, he | |
| snaps the length of the manacle chain over the line and grabs | |
| hold of the far loop -- slides down the line -- | |
| -- drops to the deck of a ship. He runs, leaping to another | |
| ship, then out of sight -- | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| On his heels! Gillette, bring a | |
| squad down from the fort! | |
| (to Elizabeth) | |
| Elizabeth, are you -- | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Yes, I'm all right, I'm fine! Go | |
| capture him. | |
| Norrington's taken aback by her ire, and wisely hurries away. | |
| Swann drapes his coat around Elizabeth. | |
| SWANN | |
| Here, dear ... you should wear | |
| this. | |
| Elizabeth shivers, finding suddenly that she is cold. Glances | |
| out at the bay -- | |
| -- where a THICK FOG moves across the top of the water. She | |
| takes the jacket. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Thank you, Father ... and let that | |
| be the last of your fashion advice, | |
| please. | |
| But she accepts his comforting embrace. | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - TOWN - ALLEY - DAY | |
| The fog creeps through, casting an eerie twilight pall. An | |
| armed search party moves along the street. They glance down an | |
| alley -- | |
| On the far side is another search party. The men nod to each | |
| other, continue on. | |
| A moment, and then Jack drops from his hiding place beneath the | |
| eaves of a building. He still wears the manacles. | |
| Across the street is a shop with barn doors, a pass-thru door | |
| set in the middle. Above is a sign with a black anvil. | |
| INT. BLACKSMITH'S FORGE - DAY | |
| Jack slips through the door, takes a look around: | |
| No windows. The forge is dark, lit by lanterns. Work-in- | |
| progress is scattered about: wagon wheels, wrought iron gates, | |
| pipes -- even a cannon with a crack in it. But every tool is in | |
| place; the workbench is tidy and neat. | |
| Jack is startled by a noise: MISTER BROWN, in a blacksmith's | |
| apron, snores in the corner, cradling a bottle. Jack gives him | |
| a hard poke. Another. Brown snorts, turns away. | |
| Satisfied, Jack sheathes his sword, takes a short-handled | |
| sledge from its place on the wall. Moves to the glowing coke | |
| furnace in the middle of the room. | |
| Slowly... he holds his right hand over the furnace, the chain | |
| down in the embers. The chain begins to GLOW. Jack sweats, | |
| grimaces at the pain -- | |
| Moving quickly, he wraps the chain around the nose of an anvil, | |
| brings the sledge down with a fast, hard stroke on the glowing | |
| links. One SHATTERS. Jack drops the sledge, plunges his | |
| manacled hand in a bucket of water. Steam billows. | |
| Jack pulls his hand out, flexes it. Blisters form beneath the | |
| manacle -- but his hands are free. | |
| The SOUND of the latch on the door -- Jack dives for cover. | |
| Will enters the forge, shuts the door behind him. Spots the | |
| drunken Mister Brown in the corner. | |
| WILL | |
| Right where I left you. | |
| Something catches his eye: an empty peg on the wall. The sledge | |
| lying beside the anvil. | |
| WILL (CONT'D) | |
| (under his breath) | |
| Not where I left you. | |
| He moves casually toward the sledge. The grabs for it -- but | |
| the flat of a sword blade slaps his hand. Will jumps back. | |
| Jack stands there, sword leveled at Will. He backs Will up, | |
| toward the door. Will glares at him. | |
| WILL (CONT'D) | |
| (voice low and tight) | |
| You're the one they're hunting. | |
| The *pirate*. | |
| Jack acknowledges it with the tip of his head ... then frowns, | |
| regards Will. | |
| JACK | |
| You look familiar ... Have I ever | |
| threatened you before? | |
| WILL | |
| I've made a point of avoiding | |
| familiarity with pirates. | |
| JACK | |
| Ah. Then it would be a shame to put | |
| a black mark on your record. So if | |
| you'll excuse me ... | |
| Beside the door is a grindstone, a sword resting in the honing | |
| guide. Before Jack can react, Will has it in hand. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Do you think this is wise, boy? | |
| Crossing blades with a pirate? | |
| WILL | |
| You threatened Miss Swann. | |
| JACK | |
| Only a little. | |
| In responce, Will assumes an en garde position. Jack appraises | |
| him, unhappy to see Will knows what he's doing. | |
| Jack attacks. The two men stand in one place, trading feints, | |
| thrusts and parries with lightning speed, almost impossible to | |
| follow. Will has no trouble matching Jack. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| You know what you're doing, I'll | |
| give you that ... Excellent form | |
| ... But how's your footwork? If I | |
| step here -- | |
| He takes a step around an imaginary circle. Will steps the | |
| other way, maintaining his relationship with Jack. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Very good! And if I step again, | |
| you step again ... | |
| (continuing to step | |
| around the circle) | |
| And so we circle, circle, like dogs | |
| we circle ... | |
| They are now exactly opposite their initial positions. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Ta! | |
| Jack turns and heads for the door, now directly behind him. | |
| Will registers with angry surprise -- and then with a vicious | |
| overhand motion, he throws his sword -- | |
| -- the sword buries itself into the door, just above the latch, | |
| barely missing Jack. Jack registers it, then pulls on the | |
| latch, but it won't move up -- the sword is in the way. | |
| Jack rattles the latch. Tugs on the sword a few times -- it is | |
| really stuck in there. Jack mouths a curse, but when he turns | |
| back to Will, he's smiling. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| That's a good trick. Except, once | |
| again, you are between me and the | |
| way out. | |
| (points his sword at | |
| the back door) | |
| And now you have no weapon. | |
| Eyes on Jack, Will simply picks up a new sword from an anvil. | |
| Jack slumps in dismay -- but then he leaps forward. | |
| Will and Jack duel. Their blades flash and ring. Suddenly, Jack | |
| swings the chain still manacled to his left hand at Will's | |
| head. Will ducks it, comes up wide-eyed. | |
| Then Jack's chain smashes across Will's sword, disarming him. | |
| Will quickly picks up another sword. Jack becomes aware that | |
| the entire room is filled with bladed weapons: swords, knives, | |
| boarding axes in various stages of completion. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Who makes all these? | |
| WILL | |
| I do. And I practice with them. | |
| At least three hours a day. | |
| JACK | |
| You need to find yourself a girl. | |
| (Will sets his jaw) | |
| Or maybe the reason you practice | |
| three hours a day is you've found | |
| one -- but can't get her? | |
| A direct hit -- and Will coils even more tightly with anger. | |
| WILL | |
| No. I practice three hours a day | |
| so that when I meet a pirate ... | |
| I can kill him. | |
| He explodes: kicks a rack, causing a sword to fall into his | |
| hand; uses his foot to bring his dropped sword into the air, | |
| catches it -- and attacks Jack, both blades flashing. | |
| Jack parries with sword and chain. Jack's chain wraps around | |
| Will's sword; Will twists the handle of his guard through a | |
| link, and stabs the sword up into the ceiling -- | |
| So Jack's manacled left arm is now suspended from the ceiling. | |
| Not good. He parries using one hand, twisting and dodging | |
| around the furnace -- | |
| Jack compresses the bellows, blowing a SHOWER OF SPARKS into | |
| Will's face. Jack grabs the chain, hoists himself up, kicks | |
| with his feet, knocking Will back. | |
| Jack uses his full weight, yanks the sword from the ceiling. | |
| Hurls a wooden mallet at Will, then a second, hitting Will on | |
| the wrist. Will drops his sword, falls down, gets up -- | |
| Jack's pistol is aimed directly between Will's eyes. | |
| Will steps back, directly in front of the back exit. Glares, | |
| rubs his wrist gingerly. | |
| WILL (CONT'D) | |
| You cheated. | |
| JACK | |
| (smiles; what did you | |
| expect?) | |
| Pirate. | |
| Jack steps forward. Will steps back, fully blocking the door. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Move away. | |
| WILL | |
| No. | |
| JACK | |
| Move! | |
| WILL | |
| No. I can not just step aside and | |
| let you escape. | |
| Jack cocks the pistol. Will stares back. The stand-off lasts | |
| a long moment. | |
| JACK | |
| You're lucky, boy -- this shot's | |
| not meant for you. | |
| Jack uncocks the pistol. Will is surprised, reassesses Jack -- | |
| Suddenly, Mister Brown SLAMS his bottle against Jack's skull. | |
| Jack crumples to the ground. | |
| The front and back doors smash open, and SAILORS fill the room. | |
| Norrington pushes forward, sees Jack on the ground. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Excellent work, Mister Brown. | |
| You've aided in the capture of a | |
| dangerous fugitive. | |
| BROWN | |
| Just doing my civic duty. | |
| Jack groans. Norrington stands over him, smiles. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| I believe you will always remember | |
| this as the day Captain Jack | |
| Sparrow almost escaped. | |
| Norrington's men haul Jack away. Will watches them go. Brown | |
| looks at his bottle -- broken. | |
| BROWN | |
| That ratter broke my bottle. | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - NIGHT | |
| The thick fog blankets the entire bay now, and the town. The | |
| only structure visible is Fort Charles, high on the bluff, like | |
| a tall ship sailing a sea of grey. | |
| Above the Fort is a clear black sky sprinkled with stars. A | |
| waxing moon shines, giving both Fort and fog an eerie glow. | |
| ANGLE - FORT CHARLES, | |
| just below the stone parapets of the fort, visible briefly deep | |
| in the fog, like a shark fin slicing through water: the TOPMAST | |
| of a ship, BLACK SAILS billowing. Flying from the mast is a | |
| flag with white Aztec skull. | |
| The Black Pearl has come to Port Royal. | |
| INT. GOVERNOR'S MANSION - ELIZABETH'S BEDROOM - NIGHT | |
| A maid removes a bed warmer from the fireplace, slides it | |
| between the sheets at the end of Elizabeth's bed. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Nice and toasty. Thank you, | |
| Estrella. | |
| The maid nods, exits. Elizabeth opens a book, begins reading, | |
| toying absently with the medallion chain around her neck. | |
| The lamp flame begins to diminish. Elizabeth tries to turn it | |
| up. No good. The flame goes out, and the room is black. | |
| INT. BLACKSMITH'S FORGE - NIGHT | |
| Will, shirtless, wearing a leather apron, heats an iron ingot | |
| at the furnace, hammers it flat -- he stops. | |
| His attention is drawn to the window. He opens the shutter and | |
| peers out -- nothing but fog. Almost without noticing, he | |
| reaches for a broading axe hanging on the wall. Takes it down; | |
| it has a satisfying weight in his hands. | |
| INT. CELL BLOCK - NIGHT | |
| CLOSE ON: A mutt of a dog, holding a ring of keys in his mouth. | |
| Three seedy-looking prisoners try to coax the dog to their cell | |
| door. One holds a loop of rope; another waggles a bone. The dog | |
| just sits and cocks his head. | |
| PRISONER | |
| Come here, boy ... Want a nice, | |
| juicy bone? | |
| In an adjoining cell, Jack lies on a pile of straw. | |
| JACK | |
| You can keep doing that forever, | |
| that dog's never going to move. | |
| PRISONER | |
| Excuse us if we ain't resigned | |
| ourselves to the gallows just yet. | |
| EXT. FORT CHARLES - PARAPETS - NIGHT | |
| A noose hangs from a gallows in the courtyard. Norrington and | |
| Swann walk along the far wall. | |
| SWANN | |
| Has my daughter given you an answer | |
| yet? | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| No. She hasn't. | |
| SWANN | |
| Well, she had a very taxing day... | |
| Ghastly weather tonight. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Bleak. Very bleak. | |
| >From the distance, there is a BOOM -- | |
| SWANN | |
| What was that? | |
| -- and then the WHISTLE of an incoming ball -- | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Cannon fire! | |
| He tackles Swann as the wall of the parapet EXPLODES -- | |
| INT. CELL BLOCK - NIGHT | |
| Jack sits up. There are more BOOMS -- | |
| JACK | |
| I know those guns! | |
| He peers out through the bars of the window. The other | |
| prisoners crowd around their window as well. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| It's the Black Pearl. | |
| PRISONER | |
| (frightened) | |
| The Black Pearl? I've heard | |
| stories ... she's been preying on | |
| ships and settlements for near ten | |
| years ... and never leaves any | |
| survivors. | |
| JACK | |
| There are a lot of stories about | |
| the Black Pearl. | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - HARBOR - NIGHT | |
| The Black Pearl still cannot be seen -- but the fog lights up | |
| around her with each boom of her guns. She's firing on both | |
| sides now, hammering both the fort and the town. | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - TOWN - NIGHT | |
| Streets, buildings, docks and ships shatter and explode beneath | |
| the onslaught. Villagers panic, run for cover, dodge flying | |
| debris as best they can. If this is not hell on earth, then | |
| it's about to be -- | |
| -- long boats emerge out of the fog, carrying ARMED PIRATES. | |
| They swarm from the boats, striking down villagers | |
| indiscriminately and setting fires. | |
| INT. BLACKSMITH'S FORGE - NIGHT | |
| Will slips the boarding axe into his belt at the small of his | |
| back. He puts a dirk in his belt, then a second and a third. | |
| He picks up a second axe and a sword. | |
| Will slides back the doors of the forge -- | |
| A woman runs past, chased by a ONE-ARMED PIRATE wearing a | |
| yellow bandana. Will backhands the axe square into his chest, | |
| a deadly blow. Will heads out, up the street -- | |
| EXT. FORT CHARLES - PARAPETS - NIGHT | |
| The moon is obscured by smoke rising from the burning gallows | |
| and wooden roofs. Cannon fire continues to rain down, but the | |
| fort's own cannons return fire. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Governor! Barricade yourself in | |
| my office! | |
| (Swann hesitates) | |
| That's an order! | |
| Swann turns to go -- but finds himself face-to-face with a | |
| pirate -- KOEHLER, a handsome blond man with gold earrings. | |
| Beyond Koehler, more pirates come up over the far wall. | |
| Koehler grins and raises a cutlass -- | |
| -- Norrington's sword blocks Koehler's slash. | |
| NORRINGTON (CONT'D) | |
| They've flanked us! Men! Swords | |
| and pistols! | |
| The battle is joined -- | |
| INT. GOVERNOR'S MANSION - ELIZABETH'S BEDROOM - NIGHT | |
| Elizabeth looks out a window at the scene below: even through | |
| the fog, multiple fires are visible, and ships burn in the | |
| harbor. Shouts and cries of pain. Cannon fire ECHOES. | |
| She notices movement directly below her window: two SHADOWY | |
| FIGURES, approaching the house -- pirates. Elizabeth bolts | |
| from her room -- | |
| INT. SECOND FLOOR HALLWAY - NIGHT | |
| She reaches the railing overlooking the foyer, and cries out, | |
| just as the butler opens the door -- too late; there is a BOOM | |
| of a gun, and the butler crumples. | |
| Elizabeth ducks down in horror, peering through the balusters. | |
| The pirates scan the foyer, searching. The leader is PINTEL, | |
| a sallow-looking pirate with a bald head. | |
| Suddenly Pintel looks up, and locks eyes with Elizabeth. How | |
| could he know she was there? | |
| PINTEL | |
| Up there! | |
| The pirates rush for the stairs. Elizabeth scrabbles back into | |
| the nearest room -- | |
| INT. SITTING ROOM - NIGHT | |
| Elizabeth shuts the door, locks it, listens as the pirates | |
| pound up the stairs -- | |
| ESTRELLA | |
| Miss Elizabeth? | |
| Elizabeth jumps. Estrella is right behind her, terrified. They | |
| whisper: | |
| ESTRELLA (CONT'D) | |
| Are they come to kidnap you, miss? | |
| The daughter of a governor would be | |
| very valuable. | |
| Elizabeth realizes she's right. There is the SLAM of a body | |
| against the door. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Listen, Estrella -- they haven't | |
| seen you. Hide, and first chance, | |
| run for the fort. | |
| Estrella nods. Another SLAM at the door -- it gives a bit -- | |
| Elizabeth shoves Estrella into the corner, between a tall | |
| wardrobe and the wall. Dashes for the side door. | |
| When the door smashes inward, it slams into the wardrobe, and | |
| the maid cannot be seen. The pirates run in -- spot the open | |
| side door, and run for it -- | |
| INT. ELIZABETH'S BEDROOM - NIGHT | |
| Pintel is the first through, and gets the pan of the bed warmer | |
| in the face for his trouble -- he staggers back, holding his | |
| nose -- | |
| INT. SITTING ROOM - NIGHT | |
| Estrella breaks cover, runs for the hall, unnoticed. | |
| INT. ELIZABETH'S BEDROOM - NIGHT | |
| -- Elizabeth swings the bed warmer at the second pirate, but | |
| he catches it by the handle -- Elizabeth can't jerk it free, | |
| so she wrenches it over -- the pan lid swings down, BANGING | |
| the second pirate -- hot coals spill on his head, sizzling. | |
| Elizabeth dashes for the hallway stairs -- | |
| INT. SECOND FLOOR HALLWAY/FOYER - CONTINUOUS - NIGHT | |
| The pirates burst from the bedroom -- Pintel goes for the | |
| stairs, but the second pirate vaults over the handrail -- | |
| Estrella registers the butler's body, but continues out the | |
| still-open front door at a dead run. Elizabeth follows -- | |
| The second pirate lands between Elizabeth and the front door. | |
| His face is BURNED, his hair SMOLDERS -- he reaches -- | |
| Elizabeth pulls up short, runs the other way -- | |
| Pintel, on the stairs, grabs her by the hair -- Elizabeth | |
| doesn't slow -- she spins, grabs Pintel's arm with both hands | |
| and pulls him hard, belly-first, into the cap of the newel post | |
| -- he lets go of her hair -- Elizabeth keeps going -- | |
| INT. DINING ROOM - NIGHT | |
| Elizabeth slams the double doors shut, throws the bolts. The | |
| interior shutters are closed over the windows. Above the | |
| fireplace are two crossed swords. | |
| Elizabeth climbs on the firebox; she grabs one of the swords | |
| by the hilt and pulls -- but it won't come free. Both swords | |
| are securely attached to the wall. Damn! | |
| A SMASH from the doors -- the pirates are relentless -- | |
| On the table is a platter with fruit, cheese and bread. | |
| Elizabeth grabs the knife from the platter -- | |
| Like any bread knife, it has a round point. Elizabeth jabs it | |
| into her palm -- it's useless as a weapon. Double damn! | |
| The blade of a broading axe breaches the door -- the pirates | |
| will be through soon -- Elizabeth looks around -- | |
| INT. FIRST FLOOR HALLWAY - NIGHT | |
| The doors give way; the pirates charge through -- | |
| INT. DINING ROOM - CONTINUOUS - NIGHT | |
| Empty. Elizabeth nowhere to be seen. Pintel and Smoldering | |
| Pirate search, under the table, behind draperies. | |
| PINTEL | |
| We know you're here, poppet. Come | |
| out and we promise we won't hurt | |
| you. | |
| Smoldering Pirate gives him a look -- he wants to hurt her | |
| plenty. Pintel shakes his head: 'Don't worry, I'm lying.' | |
| PINTEL (CONT'D) | |
| We will find you, poppet ... You've | |
| got something of ours, and it calls | |
| to us! | |
| INT. DUMBWAITER - NIGHT | |
| Elizabeth hides in the dumbwaiter box, wrapped around the | |
| double pulley ropes that go through the center. | |
| PINTEL (O.S.) | |
| The gold calls to us! | |
| Elizabeth registers that -- she pulls out the medallion, rubs | |
| the gold with her thumb. This is their objective. Light spills | |
| into the box through gaps in the top as the door above is slide | |
| open -- Elizabeth looks up through the gaps -- | |
| Pintel leers down at her. | |
| PINTEL (CONT'D) | |
| Hello, poppet. | |
| Elizabeth works the ropes to lower the box. Pintel pulls the | |
| other way; he's stronger, and the box rises. Elizabeth tries to | |
| stop it -- wraps her left forearm through the rope and lets it | |
| jam against the top of the box. | |
| Elizabeth gasps at the pain, but the box stops. She saws at the | |
| rope with the bread knife. | |
| Smoldering Pirate helps pull the rope, crushing Elizabeth's | |
| forearm. Tears of pain on her face, she keeps sawing -- | |
| The rope parts, and the dumbwaiter box PLUMMETS -- | |
| INT. KITCHEN - NIGHT | |
| >From behind the door of the dumbwaiter comes a CRASH, and a | |
| cloud of dust. The door slides open, and Elizabeth clambers | |
| out. Her head is cut, she is streaked with dirt, and can barely | |
| stand. She leans over the table, trying to recover. | |
| The sound of the running FOOTSTEPS gets louder ... | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Please, no ... | |
| Elizabeth touches the chain of the medallion ... and a | |
| desperate idea occurs to her. | |
| The pirates burst through the doors. Elizabeth backs away, | |
| holds the bread knife to ward them off. They come around either | |
| side of the table, stalking her -- | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| (gasps it out) | |
| Par... Parlay! | |
| Pintel can't believe his ears. | |
| PINTEL | |
| What? | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Parlay! I invoke the right of | |
| parlay! According to the Code of | |
| the Brethern, set down by the | |
| pirates Morgan and Bartholomew, | |
| you must take me to your Captain! | |
| PINTEL | |
| I know the code. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| If an adversary demands parlay, you | |
| can do them no harm until the | |
| parlay is complete. | |
| PINTEL | |
| It would appear, so do you. | |
| SMOLDERING PIRATE | |
| To blazes with the code! | |
| He steps forward, dirk drawn -- Pintel stops him. | |
| PINTEL | |
| She wants to be taken to the | |
| Captain, and she'll go without a | |
| fuss. | |
| He looks to Elizabeth: 'right?' Elizabeth nods. | |
| PINTEL (CONT'D) | |
| We must honor the code. | |
| Smoldering Pirate concedes the point, sheaths his dirk. He | |
| grabs Elizabeth roughly by the arm -- | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - STREET - NIGHT | |
| Will races along, momentarily free of the pirates. He spots the | |
| Governor's Mansion in the distance. There are FIGURES moving | |
| away from it -- Elizabeth, forced by the two pirates. | |
| Will hurries forward -- | |
| Suddenly a PIRATE jumps out from the shadows, slashes; Will | |
| defends himself. The pirate has one arm and wears a yellow | |
| bandana. Will hesitates -- didn't he already kill this guy? | |
| The hesitation is just enough for another PIRATE, swinging a | |
| flaming torch, to SLAM Will in the head from behind. Will | |
| crumples. | |
| The pirate lights a second torch, hands it to One-arm; they | |
| hoot with delight and head off, setting fires as they go. | |
| On the ground, Will doesn't move. | |
| INT. FORT CHARLES - CELL BLOCK - NIGHT | |
| The wall of the cells EXPLODES inward. Jack pulls himself out | |
| from under the rubble. Moonlight spills in through the gaping | |
| hole created by the cannon ball. Beyond it: freedom. | |
| But it is centered on the other cell. The part of Jack's cell | |
| that is gone is too small for a man to slip through. | |
| PRISONER | |
| Praise be! | |
| He and the other two scramble through. | |
| PRISONER (CONT'D) | |
| (back to Jack) | |
| My sympathies, friend -- you've no | |
| manner of luck at all! | |
| The three descend the rocks beyond, disappearing from view. | |
| Jack is alone. Cannon fire continues, occasional hits shaking | |
| the fort. The dog cowers under a long bench, key ring still in | |
| his mouth. Jack sighs -- resigned, he picks up the bone from | |
| the other cell, and tries coax the dog forward. | |
| JACK | |
| It's all right, doggie ... come | |
| here, boy. Come here, Spot. | |
| Rover. Fido? | |
| To his surprise, the dog crawls out from under the bench. Jack | |
| continues to coax him closer. | |
| The key ring is nearly within Jack's reach -- suddenly, the | |
| dog's attention goes to the door into the cell block. He | |
| BRISTLES, GROWLS. He backs away from the door, whining. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| What's the matter, boy? | |
| The dog bolts, through the bars, into the cell, then out | |
| through the breached wall -- taking the keys with him. | |
| The door to the cell block bursts open. A pair of pirates step | |
| in: KOEHLER and TWIGG. | |
| TWIGG | |
| This isn't the armory. | |
| He turns to go, but Koehler has spotted Jack. | |
| KOEHLER | |
| (Dutch accent) | |
| Well, well ... Look what we have | |
| here, Twigg. It's Captain Sparrow. | |
| TWIGG | |
| Huh. Last time I saw you, you were | |
| all alone on a God-forsaken island, | |
| shrinking into the distance. I'd | |
| heard you'd gotten off, but I | |
| didn't believe it. | |
| KOEHLER | |
| Did you sprout little wings and fly | |
| away? | |
| TWIGG | |
| His fortunes aren't improved much. | |
| The two laugh. Jack doesn't. He steps forward, close to the | |
| bars. This puts him in a spill of moonlight. He is tight with | |
| fury. | |
| JACK | |
| Worry about your own fortunes. The | |
| lowest circle of hell is reserved | |
| for betrayers ... and mutineers. | |
| Koehler and Twigg don't like hearing that. Koehler lashes out, | |
| grabs Jack by the throat through the bars. Jack clutches the | |
| pirates wrist, looks down -- | |
| Where they enter the moonlight, Koehler's wrists and hands are | |
| skeletol. | |
| Jack's eyes go wide -- he is holding a skeleton arm. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| You are cursed. | |
| Koehler sneers, shoves Jack bakwards, hard. Now out of the | |
| moonlight, his hand is normal. Jack stares, realizing -- | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| The stories are true. | |
| Koehler ushers Twigg toward the door. Looks back. | |
| KOEHLER | |
| You know nothing of hell. | |
| And then they're gone. | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - NIGHT | |
| Amid the thunder of cannon fire, a longboat slips through the | |
| fog. Elizabeth sits in the prow. Columns of water from the | |
| cannon balls geyser up around the boat. | |
| The fog parts. Elizabeth looks up to see -- | |
| The Black Pearl, a tall galleon, its black sails looming high | |
| above her. At the bow is an ornately carved figurehead of a | |
| beautiful woman, arm held high, a small bird taking wing from | |
| her outstretched hand. | |
| The longboat makes for a pair of lines dangling from a winch. | |
| EXT. BLACK PEARL - MAIN DECK - NIGHT | |
| Lit by lanterns; no moon is visible beneath the fog. Smoke | |
| hangs heavy above the deck. | |
| Elizabeth's longboat is raised above the deck rail -- pirates | |
| spot her, and stare. One polite fellow steps forward to offer | |
| his hand. She takes it and steps down. She huddles, self- | |
| conscious in her nightgown and dressing robe. | |
| BOSUN | |
| I didn't know we was taking | |
| captives. | |
| PINTEL | |
| She's invoked the right of parlay | |
| ... with Captain Barbossa. | |
| ON THE POOP DECK -- an imposing FIGURE in silhouette stands by | |
| the wheel, too far away to have heard Pintel's words. But his | |
| head turns at the mention of his name. | |
| The silhouetted figure moves toward the stairs. A cloud of | |
| SMOKE obscures him -- and then, as if he skipped the stairs, he | |
| strides out of the SMOKE on the main deck -- | |
| This is BARBOSSA. Despite the bright colors of clothing, | |
| definitely not a man you'd want to meet in a dark alley -- or | |
| anywhere, for that matter. | |
| Elizabeth, more terrified than ever, cannot look away from his | |
| eyes. But she musters her courage -- | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| I am here to -- | |
| Bosun SLAPS her. | |
| BOSUN | |
| You'll speak when spoken to! | |
| His wrist is grabbed -- painfully -- by Barbossa. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| And you'll not lay a hand on those | |
| under the protection of parlay! | |
| BOSUN | |
| Aye, sir. | |
| Barbossa releases him. Turns to Elizabeth, smiles -- it shows | |
| both gold and silver teeth. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| My apologies, miss. As you were | |
| saying, before you were so rudely | |
| interrupted? | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Captain Barbossa ... I have come | |
| to negotiate the cessation of | |
| hostilities against Port Royal. | |
| Barbossa is both impressed and amused. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| There was a lot of long words in | |
| there, miss, and we're not but | |
| humble pirates. What is it you | |
| want? | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| I want you to leave. And never | |
| come back. | |
| Barbossa and the pirates laugh. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| I am disinclined to acquiesce to | |
| your request. | |
| (helpfully) | |
| Means 'No.' | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Very well. | |
| She quickly slips the medallion off, darts to the side of the | |
| rail, dangles it over the side of the ship. The pirates go | |
| quiet. | |
| ELIZABETH (CONT'D) | |
| I'll drop it! | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| My holds are bursting with swag. | |
| That bit of shine matters to me | |
| ... Why? | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Because it's what you're searching | |
| for. You've been searching for it | |
| for years. I recognize this ship. | |
| I saw it eight years ago, when we | |
| made the crossing from England. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| (interested) | |
| Did you, now? | |
| Elizabeth glares at him. She's getting nowhere. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Fine. I suppose if this is | |
| worthless, there's no reason to | |
| keep it. | |
| She flips the medallion up, off her finger -- | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| NO! | |
| She catches it by the chain, smiles at him triumphantly. | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| You have a name, missy? | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Elizabeth -- | |
| (stops herself from | |
| saying "Swann"; then) | |
| Turner. | |
| (embroidering) | |
| I'm a maid in the governor's | |
| household. | |
| (curtsies) | |
| Barbossa reacts to the name Turner: it confirms what he has | |
| suspected. The other pirates surreptitiously exchange glances | |
| and nods. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| You've got sand, for a maid. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| (curtsies again) | |
| Thank you, sir. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| And how does a maid come to own a | |
| trinket such as that? A family | |
| heirloom, perhaps? | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Of course. | |
| (offended) | |
| I didn't steal it, if that's what | |
| you mean. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| No, no, nothing like that. | |
| (comes to a decision) | |
| Very well. You hand that over, | |
| we'll put your town to our rudder | |
| and ne'er return. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Can I trust you? | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| It's you who invoked the parlay! | |
| Believe me, Miss, you'd best hand | |
| it over, now ... or these be the | |
| last friendly words you'll hear! | |
| Elizabeth hesitates, but she has no choice. She holds out the | |
| medallion. He grabs it, clutches it in his fist like hope. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Our bargain..? | |
| Barbossa grins devilishly -- but then nods to Bosun. | |
| BOSUN | |
| Still the guns, and stow 'em! | |
| Signal the men, set the flags, and | |
| make good to clear port! | |
| For the first time since the attack began, the BOOMING of the | |
| guns ceases. Elizabeth is surprised -- and relieved. The | |
| pirates hustle to follow orders. Barbossa turns away. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Wait! You must return me to shore! | |
| According to the rules of the Order | |
| of the Brethen -- | |
| Barbossa wheels on her. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| First. Your return to shore was | |
| not part of our negotiations nor | |
| our agreement, and so I 'must' do | |
| nothing. Secondly: you must be a | |
| pirate for the pirate's code to | |
| apply. And you're not. And | |
| thirdly ... the code is more what | |
| you'd call guidelines than actual | |
| rules. | |
| (grins gold and silver) | |
| Welcome aboard the Black Pearl, | |
| Miss Turner. | |
| Elizabeth stares in speechless terror -- | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - HARBOR - PRE-DAWN | |
| As the Black Pearl turns out to sea, Elizabeth is led back | |
| along the deck to the captain's cabin. | |
| The fog starts to dissipate, turning to light mist; through it, | |
| the Black Pearl makes for the scarlet glow of dawn. | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - STREET - PRE-DAWN | |
| Will comes to, still where he fell, gets to his feet. | |
| He takes in the devastation of Port Royal: the harbor is dotted | |
| with burning and sunken ships; buildings are razed and still | |
| smolder. The aftermath of hell on earth. | |
| Will turns, and runs for the Governor's Mansion. | |
| INT. GOVERNOR'S MANSION - MORNING | |
| Will races past the smashed doors, into the foyer. Calls out: | |
| WILL | |
| Miss Swann! Elizabeth! | |
| A terrible silence answers him. He spots an overturned chair, | |
| fallen bookshelf -- | |
| INT. FORT CHARLES - NORRINGTON'S OFFICE - MORNING | |
| Will bursts in, still armed with sword and boarding axe. | |
| WILL | |
| They've taken her! They've taken | |
| Elizabeth! | |
| A group stares at him: Swann, Norrington, and Gillette among | |
| others, gathered around a map. The map is so large it drapes | |
| over the Governor's desk, the far end supported by a chair. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| We're aware of the situation. | |
| WILL | |
| We have to hunt them down -- and | |
| save her! | |
| Swann's worry has made him short-tempered. | |
| SWANN | |
| Where do you suppose we start? If | |
| you have any information that | |
| concerns my daughter, then share | |
| it! If anyone does, tell me! | |
| (Will is silent) | |
| Leave, Mr. Turner. | |
| Murtogg has remembered something. He ventures it warily: | |
| MURTOGG | |
| That Jack Sparrow ... he talked | |
| about the Black Pearl. | |
| MULLROY | |
| Mentioned it, is more what he did. | |
| MURTOGG | |
| Still -- | |
| WILL | |
| We can ask him where it is -- maybe | |
| he can lead us to it! | |
| SWANN | |
| That pirate tried to kill my | |
| daughter. We could never trust a | |
| word he said! | |
| WILL | |
| We could strike a bargain -- | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| No. The pirates who invaded this | |
| fort left Sparrow locked in his | |
| cell. Ergo, he is not their ally, | |
| and therefore of no value. | |
| (through with Will) | |
| We will determine their most likely | |
| course, and launch a search mission | |
| that sails with the tide. | |
| Will slams the boarding axe into the desk, through the map. | |
| WILL | |
| That's not good enough! This is | |
| Elizabeth's life! | |
| Norrington is quick to react; he throws a strong arm across | |
| Will's back, and guides him roughly to the door. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Mr. Turner, this is not the time | |
| for rash actions. | |
| (low) | |
| Do not make the mistake of thinking | |
| you are the only man here who loves | |
| Elizabeth. | |
| (firm) | |
| Now, go home. | |
| He opens the door, and then turns away. Will watches him walk | |
| back to the desk. Will's face sets in resolve, and he leaves. | |
| INT. FORT CHARLES - JAIL CELLS - MORNING | |
| Jack strains, trying to budge one of the bars. Even with the | |
| damage from the cannon ball, it won't move. He hears the sound | |
| of the door latch -- | |
| The door opens, and Will slips in. Looks around. Jack lounges | |
| on the floor of his cell, apparently relaxed and unconcerned. | |
| Will marches straight up to the bars. | |
| WILL | |
| Are you familiar with that ship? | |
| The Black Pearl? | |
| JACK | |
| Somewhat. | |
| WILL | |
| Where does it make berth? | |
| JACK | |
| Surely you've heard the stories? | |
| The Black Pearl sails from the | |
| dreaded Isla de Mureta ... an | |
| island that cannot be found -- | |
| except by those who already know | |
| where it is. | |
| WILL | |
| The ship's real enough. So its | |
| anchorage must be a real place. | |
| Where is it? | |
| JACK | |
| Why ask me? | |
| WILL | |
| Because you're a pirate. | |
| JACK | |
| And you want to turn pirate | |
| yourself? | |
| WILL | |
| Never. | |
| (beat) | |
| They took Miss Swann. | |
| JACK | |
| (he was right) | |
| So it is that you found a girl. | |
| Well, if you're intending to brave | |
| all and hasten to her rescue and so | |
| win fair lady's heart, you'll have | |
| to do it alone. I see no profit in | |
| it for me. | |
| Will slams his fist against the bars in furstration. Jack is | |
| surprised at the outburst. Will thinks ... makes a decision. | |
| WILL | |
| I can get you out of here. | |
| JACK | |
| How? The key's run off. | |
| WILL | |
| (examines his cell) | |
| I helped build these cells. Those | |
| are hook-and-ring hinges. The | |
| proper application of strength, the | |
| door'll lift free. Just calls for | |
| the right lever and fulcrum ... | |
| Jack watches Will as he speaks, and it dawns on him -- Will is | |
| the spitting image of someone he's known in the past. | |
| JACK | |
| You're name is Turner. | |
| Will gives him a puzzled look. | |
| WILL | |
| Yes. Will Turner. | |
| Jack grins. | |
| JACK | |
| Will Turner... | |
| (he stands) | |
| I'll tell you what, Mr. Turner. | |
| I've changed my mind. You spring | |
| me from this cell, and on pain of | |
| death, I'll take you to the Black | |
| Pearl. | |
| (sticks out his hand) | |
| Do we have an accord? | |
| Will gives him a suspicious look. The deal seems too good. Jack | |
| keeps his hand out, still smiling. Will shakes it. | |
| WILL | |
| Agreed. | |
| JACK | |
| Agreed! | |
| Will looks around, figures out what he needs. He makes a chair | |
| his fulcrum, and levers the long bench under the door. Pushes | |
| down -- it's hard work -- but the cell door rises, and then | |
| falls forward, CRASHING down on the bench and chair. | |
| Jack is impressed. He steps out of the cell. | |
| WILL | |
| Someone will have heard that. | |
| Hurry. | |
| Will heads for the door. Jack searches the desk, cupboards. | |
| JACK | |
| Not without my effects. | |
| WILL | |
| We need to go! | |
| Jack finds his pistol, sword belt, and compass. Straps on the | |
| belt, checks the shot in his pistol. | |
| WILL (CONT'D) | |
| Why are brothering with that? | |
| JACK | |
| My business, Will. As for your | |
| business -- one question, or | |
| there's no use going. | |
| (joins Will at the | |
| door) | |
| This girl -- what does she mean to | |
| you? How far are you willing to go | |
| to save her? | |
| WILL | |
| (no hesitation) | |
| I'd die for her. | |
| JACK | |
| Good. | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - DOCKS - MORNING | |
| The Jolly Mon, four inches of water in the bottom, squats low | |
| in the water, heeled to one side, creeking on its lines. | |
| JACK (O.S.) | |
| Ah, now there's a lovely sight! | |
| Jack hops down into the boat. Prepares to make way. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| I knew the Harbormaster wouldn't | |
| report her. Honest men are slaves | |
| to their conscience, and there's no | |
| predicting 'em. But you can always | |
| trust a dishonest man to stay that | |
| way... | |
| Jack notices that Will is standing, frozen on the dock, staring | |
| at the boat in dismay. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Come aboard. | |
| WILL | |
| I haven't set foot off dry land | |
| since I was twelve, when the ship | |
| I was on exploded. | |
| (regards the boat) | |
| It's been a sound policy. | |
| JACK | |
| No worries there. She's far more | |
| likely to rot out from under us. | |
| Will steels himself, steps into the boat as if it's going to | |
| capsize with the slightest movement. Jack hoists the sail. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Besides, we are about to better our | |
| prospects considerably. | |
| He nods toward the H.M.S. Dauntless, looming in the harbor. | |
| Will whiteknuckles the gunwales. | |
| WILL | |
| We're going to steal a ship? That | |
| ship? | |
| JACK | |
| Commandeer. We're going to | |
| commandeer a ship. Nautical term. | |
| WILL | |
| It's still against the law. | |
| JACK | |
| So's breaking a man out of jail. | |
| Face it, Will: you may say you'll | |
| never be a pirate, but you're off | |
| to a rip-roaring start. | |
| (smiling) | |
| My advice -- smile and enjoy it. | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - MORNING | |
| The Jolly Mon bobs its way across the bay, dwarfed against the | |
| H.M.S. Dauntless. Will holds a stay line with iron fists. | |
| WILL | |
| This is either crazy, or brilliant. | |
| JACK | |
| Remarkable how often those two | |
| traits coincide. | |
| The Jolly Mon nears the rudder of the much larger ship -- | |
| EXT. H.M.S. DAUNTLESS - MAIN DECK - MORNING | |
| There's been a breakdown in discipline; about a dozen Navy | |
| sailors are gathered together on the main deck, playing dice. | |
| Murtogg and Mullroy among them. | |
| Suddenly, Jack and Will jump out, into the open -- brandishing | |
| pistols. | |
| JACK | |
| Everybody stay calm. We're taking | |
| over the ship! | |
| WILL | |
| (a beat) | |
| Aye! Avast! | |
| Jack gives him a look, shakes his hand: don't do that. | |
| The sailors all look at them -- and then burst out LAUGHING. | |
| They grin, shake their heads. Jack stands there, grinning with | |
| them -- but his gun is still level. The Lieutenant, GILLETTE, | |
| steps forward. | |
| GILLETTE | |
| You're serious about this. | |
| Jack moves his pistol across, points it at Gillette. | |
| JACK | |
| Dead serious. | |
| GILLETTE | |
| You understand this ship cannot be | |
| crewed by only two men. You'll | |
| never make it out of the bay. | |
| JACK | |
| We'll see about that. | |
| More guffaws from the crew. A couple sailors more forward, | |
| hands on swords -- Gillette holds up a hand. | |
| GILLETTE | |
| Sir, I'll not see any of my men | |
| killed or wounded in this foolish | |
| enterprise. | |
| JACK | |
| Fine by me. We brought you a nice | |
| little boat, so you can all get | |
| back to shore, safe and sound. | |
| GILLETTE | |
| (a curt nod) | |
| Agreed. You have the momentary | |
| advantage, sir. But I will see you | |
| smile from the yard arm, sir. | |
| JACK | |
| As likely as not. | |
| (calling) | |
| Will, short up the anchor, we've | |
| got ourselves a ship! | |
| EXT. DAUNTLESS - STERN - MORNING | |
| Sailors make their way down a rope ladder, crowd onto the Jolly | |
| Mon. Will pushes hard against the windlass, to no avail ... the | |
| anchor is too heavy for one man. Jack notices. | |
| JACK | |
| A little help? | |
| Gillette shrugs, gestures to Murtogg and Mullroy. The three men | |
| throw their weight into the windlass, and it turns. Jack's | |
| pistol is on them the whole time. | |
| MURTOGG | |
| I can't believe he's doing this. | |
| The windlass turns, bringing Mullroy into view. | |
| MULLROY | |
| You didn't believe he was telling | |
| the truth, either. | |
| The windless turns some more, and there's Gillette. | |
| GILLETTE | |
| (over his shoulder, | |
| to Will) | |
| Do you have any idea, boy, what | |
| you're doing? | |
| Another quarter turn -- | |
| WILL | |
| No. | |
| EXT. DAUNTLESS - FORECASTLE - DAY | |
| Jack and Will crank a capstan, raising the forward jib sail. It | |
| luffs and billows out. The huge ship inches forward slowly, | |
| pulled by just the one sail. Jack grins. | |
| JACK | |
| Lookee there, mate! We're | |
| underway! | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - DOCK - DAY | |
| Norrington moves along, concentrating on a manifest. Alongside | |
| him is Governor Swann, who glances over -- | |
| Sees the tiny Jolly Mon headed toward them, riding low in the | |
| water, overloaded with sailors. Beyond that, the Dauntless | |
| sails -- albeit slowly -- for open waters. | |
| SWANN | |
| Commodore -- | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| A moment. | |
| SWANN | |
| But -- | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Please. | |
| SWANN | |
| Dammit, man, it appears someone is | |
| stealing your ship! | |
| Norrington glances out at the bay. Sure enough, the Dauntless | |
| is on the move. Norrington takes a brass telescope from his | |
| belt, opens it, trains it on -- | |
| The main deck. He picks out Will -- | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Rash, Turner, too rash. | |
| -- then spots Jack, at the wheel. Lowers the telescope. | |
| NORRINGTON (CONT'D) | |
| That is, without a doubt, the worst | |
| pirate I have ever seen. | |
| EXT. H.M.S. DAUNTLESS - DAY | |
| Out in the open sea, Jack leans on the wheel, relaxed; not much | |
| sailing to do with a following wind. Will looks back -- | |
| WILL | |
| They're coming! | |
| He points: the sails of the Interceptor fill out, and the ship | |
| cuts through the water toward them -- | |
| EXT. H.M.S. INTERCEPTOR - DAY | |
| Norrington's smaller ship quickly comes alongside the | |
| slowmoving Dauntless. Its decks appear empty. Grappling hooks | |
| are thrown, and sailors draw the two ships together. | |
| Norrington's men swarm across. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Search every cabin, every hold, | |
| down to the bilges! | |
| PULL BACK, away from the Dauntless, and past the railing of the | |
| Interceptor, where a single SENTRY stands watch -- and we find | |
| a soaked Jack and Will as they climb up over the side of the | |
| smaller ship, unseen. | |
| Jack tackles the Sentry from behind, covers his mouth. | |
| JACK | |
| Can you swim? | |
| (the man struggles) | |
| Can. You. Swim? | |
| Jack removes his hand. | |
| SENTRY | |
| Of course, sir. Like a fish. I | |
| grew up summers living in Dover, | |
| with my uncle -- | |
| JACK | |
| Good. | |
| Jack lifts the man up, throws him overbroad. Quickly unties the | |
| ropes to the grappling hooks. Will cranks the capstan bars, | |
| raising the foresail -- | |
| EXT. H.M.S. DAUNTLESS - DAY | |
| Norrington emerges from a gangway -- and sees his other ship | |
| moving away. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Sailors! Back to the Interceptor! | |
| But the distance is already too great. One brave sailor tries | |
| to swing across on a rope, Errol-Flyn style, but falls short | |
| with a splash. | |
| Jack waves, and shouts across the distance -- | |
| JACK | |
| Thank you, Commodore, for getting | |
| our ship ready to make way! | |
| We'd've had a hard time of it by | |
| ourselves! | |
| Norrington seethes, but his order to Gillette is measured: | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Raise the sails. | |
| GILLETTE | |
| The wind is quarter from astern ... | |
| by the time we're underway, we'll | |
| never catch them. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| We need only to come about, to put | |
| them in range of the long nines. | |
| Gillette looks surprised at the order -- but relays it. | |
| GILLETTE | |
| Hands! Come about! Jackets off | |
| the cannons! | |
| (to Norrington) | |
| We are to fire on our own ship? | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Better to see it at the bottom | |
| of the sea than in the hands of a | |
| pirate. | |
| The STEERSMAN turns the wheel. The Dauntless' course does not | |
| change one whit. | |
| STEERSMAN | |
| Captain, there's a problem. | |
| The Steersman spins the wheel. It goes round and round, with no | |
| signs of slowing. | |
| STEERSMAN (CONT'D) | |
| He's disabled the rudder chain, | |
| sir. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| So it would seem. | |
| The Interceptor dwindles with distance. Gillette watches it go, | |
| with some degree of admiration. | |
| GILLETTE | |
| He's got to be the best pirate I've | |
| ever seen. | |
| Norrington reaches out, stops the spinning ship's wheel. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| So it would seem. | |
| The Interceptor makes for the horizon line. A SLOW DISSOLVE and | |
| with the time passage, the ship is gone; the sky turns a deep | |
| twilight blue -- | |
| EXT. CARIBBEAN SEA - EVENING | |
| -- with the fat white moon riding just above the horizon. | |
| Suddenly, the edge of a black sail cuts into the foreground, | |
| accompanied by the ROAR of the wind and the SNAP of canvas -- | |
| INT. BLACK PEARL - CAPTAIN'S CABIN - EVENING | |
| Elizabeth stalks the cabin. Pintel enters, carrying a black | |
| silk dress. | |
| PINTEL | |
| You'll be dining with the Captain, | |
| and he requests you wear this. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Tell the captain that I am | |
| disinclined to acquiesce to his | |
| request. | |
| PINTEL | |
| (happy) | |
| He said you say that! He also said | |
| if that be the case, you'll be | |
| dining with the crew, and you'll be | |
| naked. | |
| Angry, Elizabeth holds out her hand. Pintel's grin fades. | |
| PINTEL (CONT'D) | |
| (hands it over) | |
| Fine. | |
| He exits, pouting. Elizabeth examines the dress -- | |
| INT. BLACK PEARL - CAPTAIN'S CABIN - NIGHT | |
| Barbossa enters, followed by PIRATES carrying trays of food, | |
| wine, table setting, etc. Elizabeth stands at the small table | |
| in the dress -- lovely. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Maid or not, it fits you. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Dare I ask the fate of it previous | |
| owner? | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Now, none of that. Please dig in. | |
| The table is set. Elizabeth sits, cuts a tiny piece of meat, | |
| eats it daintily. | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| No need to stand on ceremony, and | |
| no call to impress anyone. You | |
| must be hungry. | |
| Elizabeth drops the pretense: she's starving, and begins to eat | |
| like it. Barbossa watches her intently. | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| Try the whine. | |
| Elizabeth does, a huge swig; she tears off a hunk of bread, | |
| devours it. | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| And the apples -- one of those | |
| next. | |
| She starts to bite into the apple -- stops. She is suddenly | |
| aware of Barbossa's gaze -- and that he is not eating. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| It's poisoned! | |
| She shoves her plate away -- and takes the opportunity to palm | |
| her knife. Barbossa LAUGHS. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Oh, there would be no sense in | |
| killing you, Miss Turner. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Then why aren't you eating? | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Would that I could. | |
| He produces the medallion, lets it dangle from his fingers. | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| Do you not know what this is, then? | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| It's a pirate medallion. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| It's a piece of the treasure of | |
| Isla de Muerta. | |
| Elizabeth gives an infinitesimal shrug, intrigued despite | |
| herself. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Ah, so you don't know as much as | |
| you pretend. Back when Cortes was | |
| cutting a great bloody swath | |
| through the New World, a high | |
| priest gave him all the gold they | |
| had, with one condition: that he | |
| spare the people's lives. Of | |
| course, Cortes being Cortes, he | |
| didn't. | |
| (nods) | |
| He'd've made a great pirate, that | |
| one. | |
| Barbossa stands, moves to a shelf. Puts a key to a medium-sized | |
| polished wooden box -- the Captain's chest. Opens it. | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| So the priest, with his dying | |
| breath, called on the power of the | |
| blood of his people, and put on the | |
| gold a curse. If anyone took so | |
| much as a single piece, as he was | |
| compelled by greed, by greed he | |
| would be consumed. | |
| Inside the chest are charts, some gold, a sextant -- and a few | |
| pages of a Mayan CODEX, pieces of tree bark inscribed with | |
| Mayan glyphs. Barbossa removes them carefully, sets them on the | |
| table. Pours over them. | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| Within a day of leaving port for | |
| Spain, the treasure ship carrying | |
| the gold ... something went wrong. | |
| The ship run aground, every man | |
| aboard dead, save one. He | |
| survived long enough to hide the | |
| gold ashore. | |
| (beat) | |
| Over time, the dark magic of the | |
| curse seeped into the place, making | |
| it a cursed island. An island of | |
| death. Isla de Muerta. | |
| He looks up. Elizabeth has been rapt, involved in the story -- | |
| but feigns a dismissive attitude. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| That's all very interesting, but I | |
| hardly believe in ghost stories | |
| anymore. | |
| Barbossa is angry. He stands, sweeps the food off the table. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| You idiot girl! It's no make- | |
| believe! My crew and I, we found | |
| the gold, and we did more than take | |
| one piece, we took it all. Rich | |
| men we were and we spent it and | |
| traded it and gave it away in | |
| exchange for drink and food and | |
| pleasant company. But we found | |
| out: the drink could not sate us, | |
| and the food turned to ashes in our | |
| mouths, and no amount of pleasant | |
| company could ease our torment. | |
| (regains his | |
| composure) | |
| We are cursed men, Miss Turner, | |
| condemned, to be forever consumed | |
| by our own greed. Gold calls to | |
| US, always, and we are driven, | |
| always, to find more, and add it | |
| to the treasure. | |
| Barbossa picks up the priceless Codex. Crushes them in his | |
| fist. | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| There is but one way to remove the | |
| curse. All of the scattered pieces | |
| of the treasure must be restored in | |
| full, and the blood repaid. | |
| (he throws the pages | |
| aside) | |
| We've recovered every piece -- save | |
| for this. | |
| (holds up the | |
| medallion) | |
| And as for the blood repaid ... | |
| that's what we have for you. | |
| (pleasant, finally | |
| getting to his | |
| point) | |
| And that's why there's no sense | |
| killing you. Yet. | |
| Elizabeth stares at him, horrified. Using the toe of his boot, | |
| Barbossa flips an apple up off the floor, catches it, extends | |
| it to Elizabeth. | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| Apple? | |
| Elizabeth slowly reaches for the apple -- and then comes up out | |
| of her chair, trying to run around Barbossa. They struggle | |
| briefly, and then suddenly he shoves her away -- | |
| Elizabeth's stolen KNIFE is buried in Barbossa's chest, to the | |
| hilt -- | |
| Barbossa is completely unaffected. He opens his shirt to get a | |
| better look at the knife, pulls it out with little effort. | |
| There is BLOOD on the blade, but none anywhere else. | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| I'm curious -- after killing me, | |
| what is it you were planning to do | |
| next? | |
| Elizabeth backs away, whirls and barrels out the door -- | |
| EXT. BLACK PEARL - MAIN DECK - NIGHT | |
| -- Elizabeth comes to a dead stop. She stares, her jaw working, | |
| trying to scream but unable to -- | |
| The pirate crew works at their stations, coiling lines, | |
| navigating the ship, swabbing decks -- but where the moonlight | |
| falls across their bodies, they are naught but SKELETONS. | |
| Elizabeth turns away from the sight -- | |
| Barbossa stands just inside the doorway, out of the moonlight. | |
| He grabs her roughly by the shoulders and jerks her back | |
| around -- Elizabeth shuts her eyes -- | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Look! | |
| (shakes her) | |
| LOOK! The moonlight shows us for | |
| what we really are! We are not | |
| among the living and so we cannot | |
| die -- | |
| He spins her back around to face him -- he leans forward, | |
| putting his face in the moonlight, turning it into a gleaming | |
| SKULL with gold and silver teeth -- | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| -- but neither are we dead! We | |
| have all the desires of the living, | |
| but cannot satisfy them! Ten years | |
| I have parched of thirst, and able | |
| to quench it! Ten years, I have | |
| been starving to death -- and | |
| haven't died! | |
| (raises his hand) | |
| And I have not felt anything for | |
| ten years ... Not the wind on my | |
| face, nor the spray of the sea ... | |
| (reaches toward | |
| Elizabeth) | |
| ... nor the flesh of a woman ... | |
| Elizabeth flicnhes away from the skeletal hand. It drops away | |
| -- he takes a bottle of wine from the opened case beside the | |
| cabin door, uncorks it with his teeth, raises it -- | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| You'd best start believing in ghost | |
| stories, Miss Turner. Because now | |
| you're in one. | |
| He tilts the bottle and drinks -- it runs over his jaw, through | |
| his rib cage, drenching his clothes. | |
| Elizabeth darts around him, back into the cabin, and shuts the | |
| door. Barbossa hurls the bottle away. | |
| INT. BLACK PEARL - CAPTAIN'S CABIN - NIGHT | |
| Elizabeth huddles in the far corner of the cabin, terrified. | |
| EXT. CARIBBEAN SEA - DAY | |
| The Interceptor cuts across the waves. Jack at the wheel; Will | |
| tightens a line, moves back astern. | |
| EXT. INTERCEPTOR - MAIN DECK - DAY | |
| Will sharpens his sword with a whetstone: shhhk -- shhhk ... | |
| JACK | |
| For a man whose made an industry of | |
| avoiding boats, you're a quick | |
| study. | |
| WILL | |
| I worked passage from England as a | |
| cabin boy. | |
| (an attempt at guile) | |
| After my mother passed, I came out | |
| here ... looking for my father. | |
| JACK | |
| Is that so? | |
| WILL | |
| My father. William Turner? | |
| Jack says nothing. Will has lost his patience for guile. | |
| WILL (CONT'D) | |
| I'm not a simpleton. At the jail | |
| -- it was only after you learned my | |
| name that you agreed to help me. | |
| (a smile) | |
| Since that's what I wanted, I | |
| didn't press the matter. But now-- | |
| (an accusation) | |
| You knew my father. | |
| Jack considers his relpy -- settles on 'truth'. | |
| JACK | |
| I knew him. Probably one of the | |
| few he knew him as William Turner. | |
| Most everyone just called him Bill, | |
| or 'Bootstrap' Bill. | |
| WILL | |
| 'Bootstrap?' | |
| JACK | |
| Good man. Good pirate. And clever | |
| -- I never met anyone with as | |
| clever a mind and hands as him. | |
| When you were puzzling out that | |
| cell door, it was like seeing his | |
| twin. | |
| WILL | |
| (angry) | |
| That's not true. | |
| JACK | |
| I swear, you look just like him. | |
| WILL | |
| It's not true my father was a | |
| pirate. | |
| JACK | |
| Figured you wouldn't want to hear | |
| it. | |
| WILL | |
| He was a merchant marine! He was a | |
| respectable man who obeyed the law, | |
| and followed the rules-- | |
| JACK | |
| (laughs) | |
| You think your father is the only | |
| man who ever lived the Glasgow | |
| life, telling folk one thing, and | |
| then going off to do another? | |
| There's quite a few who come here, | |
| hoping to amass enough swag to ease | |
| the burdens of respectable life. | |
| And they're all 'merchant marines.' | |
| WILL | |
| My father did not think of my | |
| mother -- his family -- as a | |
| burden. | |
| JACK | |
| Sure -- because he could always go | |
| pirating. | |
| WILL | |
| My father -- was not -- a pirate! | |
| Will's sword is out, levelled at Jack. Jack gives him a | |
| disbelieving look, sighs. | |
| JACK | |
| Put it away, Will. It's not worth | |
| getting beat again. | |
| WILL | |
| You didn't beat me. You ignored | |
| the rule of engagement. In a fair | |
| fight, I'd kill you. | |
| JACK | |
| Then that's not much incentive for | |
| me to fight fair, is it? | |
| He kicks a lever on a wench. The sail boom whips around and | |
| slams Will in the chest -- sweeping him off the ship. His sword | |
| clatters onto the deck. Will dangles above the water. | |
| Jack slips a loop of rope around the wheel to hold the course. | |
| Picks up the sword -- and pokes at Will with it. Will hand- | |
| over-hands away from the blade, to the end of the boom. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| As long as you're just hanging | |
| there, pay attention. Must, | |
| should, do, don't, shall, shall | |
| not -- those are just mere | |
| suggestions. There are only two | |
| absolute rules. | |
| (ticks them off on | |
| his fingers) | |
| What a man can do. And what a man | |
| can't do. | |
| Will looks away, not interested. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| For instance: you can accept that | |
| your father was a pirate and still | |
| a good man ... or you can't. Now | |
| me, I can sail this ship to Turga, | |
| by myself ... | |
| (Will looks alarmed) | |
| But I can't just let you drown. | |
| Jack swings the boom back in. Will drops to the deck. Jack | |
| holds the hilt of the sword out. Will takes it. Glares at Jack, | |
| considers what he'll do next. Jack watches him coolly. | |
| Will turns and strides to his spot on the deck, sits down, and | |
| resumes sharpening his sword: shhhk -- shhhk -- shhhk ... | |
| Jack breathes a silent sigh of relief. Notices his shaking -- | |
| he takes the wheel. | |
| WILL | |
| Tortuga? | |
| JACK | |
| Oh -- did I forget to mention that? | |
| EXT. TORTUGA - DAY | |
| A dank and dirty port, where the tides seem to have swept | |
| together the sum of the Caribbean -- pirates, privateers, | |
| prostitutes, theives, and drunkards. | |
| With its cantered, rotting docks, weatherbeaten buildings, | |
| and odd assortment of livestock running free -- a donkey, | |
| chickens, etc. -- it is far less civilized than Port Royal. | |
| Jack and Will move through the crowd. A REDHEADED woman turns | |
| her head -- she has noticed Jack. | |
| JACK | |
| We need a crew. We can manage the | |
| ship between islands, but the open | |
| sea, that's another matter -- | |
| Suddenly the Redhead SLAPS Jack, hard. Satisfied, she turns and | |
| strides off. Will ignores her. | |
| WILL | |
| Just do it quickly. | |
| JACK | |
| (rubbing his jaw) | |
| Don't worry. I've already got a | |
| Quartermaster -- there! | |
| Jack leads Will toward the pub: the Faithful Bride, the emblem | |
| over the door a politically incorrect painting of a smiling | |
| woman holding a bouquet in her chained-and-manacled hands. | |
| Jack pulls open the door; Will goes inside passing a pretty | |
| ASIAN woman coming out -- she sees Jack and immediately SLAPS | |
| him, cursing something in Chinese. Jack backs away -- | |
| INT. FAITHFUL BRIDE - DAY | |
| Jack closes the door on the woman, joins Will. They take in the | |
| place -- it is populated with slightly higher class of scum. | |
| Jack spots a BARTENDER, smiles, moves forward -- | |
| -- and is suddenly DECKED by a waitress. This is ANAMARIA, | |
| tall, strong, tough; she didn't spill a drink off her tray. | |
| ANAMARIA | |
| You stole my boat. | |
| JACK | |
| AnaMaria! Have you seen Gibbs? I | |
| need to put together -- | |
| She SLAPS him again. Will shakes his head, heads for the bar. | |
| Jack gets up. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Borrowed. Borrowed your boat. | |
| (off her look) | |
| Without permission. | |
| AnaMaria charges; Jack backs away, puts a table between them. | |
| She chases him around the table, still carrying the tray. | |
| ANAMARIA | |
| My dory. The Jolly Mon. Where is | |
| it? | |
| JACK | |
| Safe! At Port Royal. With the | |
| Royal Navy. | |
| ANAMARIA | |
| That boat is my livelihood! | |
| JACK | |
| You'll get it back. Or one better. | |
| ANAMARIA | |
| (a threat) | |
| I will. | |
| Away from them, a PATRON calls for his food. AnaMaria scowls | |
| at Jack, moves away -- comes back for one more SLAP! | |
| WILL | |
| Jack! Over here! | |
| AT THE BAR, Will has spoken to the Bartender. Jack arrives, | |
| rubbing his chin. | |
| WILL (CONT'D) | |
| He knows Gibbs. | |
| The Bartender nods 'yes.' Then nods 'out back.' Then produces | |
| a water bucket from behind the bar. | |
| Jack and Will exchange a look -- and Jack takes the bucket. | |
| EXT. FAITHFUL BRIDE - REAR - DAY | |
| A drunken man lays in the mud, having a friendly conversation | |
| with two pigs. He wears an old tattered Navy jacket. | |
| A sudden SPRAY OF WATER splashes across his face, revealing: | |
| this is JOSHAMEE GIBBS (the man who told pirate stories to | |
| Elizabeth when she was a child). He sputters and roars: | |
| GIBBS | |
| Curse you for breathing, you slack- | |
| jawed idiot. | |
| (recognizes Jack) | |
| Mother's love, Jack, you know | |
| better than to wake a man when he's | |
| sleeping. It's bad luck! | |
| JACK | |
| Well, fortunately, I know how to | |
| counter it. The man who did the | |
| waking buys the man who was | |
| sleeping a drink, and the man who | |
| was sleeping it drinks it while | |
| listening to a proposition. | |
| GIBBS | |
| Aye, that'll about do it. | |
| Jack helps Gibbs to his feet -- and then Gibbs is hit with a | |
| second wave of water. Will stands there with the bucket. | |
| GIBBS (CONT'D) | |
| Blast it, I'm already awake! | |
| WILL | |
| I know. That was for the smell. | |
| INT. FAITHFUL BRIDE - DAY | |
| Jack and Gibbs sit at a table in the shadows, a single candle | |
| illumining them, speaking in hushed voices. Will is away from | |
| them, at the door, hand on sword, keeping a look-out. | |
| A tankard is set down. Gibbs lifts it to take a swig -- | |
| JACK | |
| Just the one. | |
| Gibbs pauses. He takes a dainty sip. | |
| GIBBS | |
| Make it last, then. Now, what's | |
| the nature of this venture of | |
| yours? | |
| JACK | |
| First -- have you found me a crew? | |
| GIBBS | |
| Oh, there's a hard tale, Jack. | |
| Most of the decent pirates in town | |
| won't sail with you -- seem to | |
| think you're a jinx. | |
| JACK | |
| Now where, I wonder, would they | |
| have gotten that idea? | |
| Gibbs evades answering him by taking a long sip. Jack leans | |
| forward. Gibbs leans forward. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| I'm going after the Black Pearl. | |
| Gibbs straightens up like he's been hit. He stares. He reaches | |
| for the drink as if to down it -- but then sets it back down. | |
| He leans forward again. Jack has not moved. | |
| GIBBS | |
| Say again? | |
| JACK | |
| I'm going after the Black Pearl. | |
| I know where it's going to be, and | |
| I'm going to take it. | |
| GIBBS | |
| Jack, it's a fool's errand: You've | |
| heard the tales they tell about the | |
| Pearl. | |
| JACK | |
| Aye, and that's why I know where | |
| it's going to be, and that's why I | |
| know what Barbossa is up to. All I | |
| need is a crew. | |
| GIBBS | |
| (shakes his head) | |
| A fool's errand. | |
| JACK | |
| Not if the fool has something | |
| Barbossa wants. Something he | |
| needs. | |
| GIBBS | |
| And you've got that, have you? | |
| ANGLE ON: Jack, as he smiles enigmatically, and shifts his eyes | |
| -- behind him, Will, still on guard, glares a sailor away from | |
| the table. | |
| JACK | |
| Back there, guarding the door is | |
| the son of old Bootstrap Bill | |
| Turner. | |
| Gibbs' eyes widen over the edge of the tankard. Peers at Will. | |
| Then smiles, with more missing teeth than good ones. | |
| GIBBS | |
| Well, lookee there. I'll allow you | |
| may be onto something, Jack. | |
| (considers, nods) | |
| There's bound to be sailors on this | |
| rock crazy as you. I'll find some | |
| men. | |
| Gibbs downs the drink, SLAMS the tankard on the table. | |
| Will reacts to the sound, draws both sword and dagger, kicks | |
| over a table for cover, and whirls on anyone who moves. | |
| GIBBS | |
| Kid's a bit of a stick, isn't he? | |
| JACK | |
| That he is. | |
| EXT. TORTUGA - DOCK - LATER - DAY | |
| On the docks, a disheveled, motley and weather-beaten group | |
| of about a dozen swabs stand in a ragged line-up. | |
| GIBBS | |
| Feast your eyes, Cap'n. All of 'em | |
| good sea-faring men, faithful hands | |
| before the mast, every one worth | |
| their salt -- | |
| (sotto, making his | |
| point) | |
| -- and crazy, to boot. | |
| Jack holds up a hand -- enough. He moves down the line, Gibbs | |
| at his side. Then he notices AnaMaria in line, dressed like a | |
| man. He raises an eyebrow. | |
| ANAMARIA | |
| You owe me a boat. | |
| Jack nods, continues. One sailor is quite fat, another thin and | |
| sickly. Jack is not happy with his choices. | |
| He stops in front of COTTON, a short sailor with a large, | |
| colorful PARROT on his shoulder. Jack raises an eyebrow. | |
| GIBBS | |
| Cotton here is mute, sir. Poor | |
| devil had his tongue cut out -- | |
| Cotton opens his mouth to show this -- Jack grimaces. | |
| GIBBS (CONT'D) | |
| -- so he went and trained the | |
| parrot to do the talking for him, | |
| nobody knows how. Nobody knows the | |
| parrot's name, neither, so we just | |
| call it 'Cotton's parrot.' | |
| Jack decides to test this. | |
| JACK | |
| Mr. Cotton. Do you have the | |
| courage and fortitude to follow | |
| orders and stay true, in the face | |
| of danger, and almost certain | |
| death? | |
| Cotton lifts the parrot off his shoulder, raises it -- | |
| COTTON'S PARROT | |
| Wind in your SAILS! Wind in your | |
| SAILS! | |
| GIBBS | |
| Mostly, that seem to mean 'yes.' | |
| Cotton nods vigorously, lowers the parrot, and it goes silent. | |
| Jack shakes his head. Steps back. | |
| JACK | |
| That goes for the rest of you! | |
| Danger and near certain death. | |
| (turns away) | |
| For we are to sail for the Isla de | |
| Muerta, to rescue the daughter of | |
| Governor Swann. An equal share of | |
| the reward shall be-- | |
| Jack hears movement, looks back -- several potential crew | |
| members back away in fright; first one, then another, turn and | |
| run, followed by more. | |
| Soon just a half dozen are left, including Cotton (with parrot) | |
| -- and AnaMaria. | |
| WILL | |
| Shut up, before you lose them all! | |
| JACK | |
| These are the only ones worth | |
| having. | |
| (glances at the sky) | |
| And we're going to need them -- | |
| EXT. H.M.S. INTERCEPTOR - DAY | |
| A FLASH of lightening and the CRACK of thunder. The canvas of | |
| every sail is stretched taut. The ship rocks as it drops into | |
| the valley of huge swell, climbs up the other side. | |
| On board, the new crew members scurry about with their tasks, | |
| pulling lines and trimming sails. Excellent sailors, it takes | |
| everything they have to keep the ship afloat. | |
| AnaMaria is at the helm. Gibbs staggers along the deck. | |
| GIBBS | |
| That fool will have us lose the | |
| canvas, and the masts besides! | |
| On Jack, a ROARING wind blowing back his hair, eyes intent on | |
| their course. Gibbs climbs the tilted deck toward him. | |
| GIBBS (CONT'D) | |
| We'd best drop canvas, sir! | |
| JACK | |
| She can hold a bit longer. | |
| The wind picks up, howling. Jack smiles. | |
| GIBBS | |
| (shouts) | |
| What's in your head to put you in | |
| such a fine mood? | |
| JACK | |
| (shouts) | |
| We're catching up! | |
| Jack turns back to the sea, enjoying himself. Gibbs stares at | |
| him like he's a crazy man. | |
| INT. BLACK PEARL - CAPTAIN'S CABIN - DAY | |
| The sound of RAIN pounds down on the deck above -- then | |
| suddenly stops. Elizabeth moves to the stern windows, looks | |
| out at the rolling sea below -- no escape there. | |
| She hears the sound of a VOICE calling, gazes up, wondering -- | |
| EXT. BLACK PEARL - CROW'S NEST - DAY | |
| High on the main mast, Twigg cups his hands to his face, calls | |
| down: | |
| TWIGG | |
| Isla de Muerta! Isla de Muerta, | |
| off the port bow! | |
| ON DECK, Barbossa moves to the rail. The storm clouds are | |
| breaking up. On the horizon is a dark, omnious shape: ISLA DE | |
| MUERTA. Mostly sheer unfriendly cliffs that shoot straight into | |
| the water. It is surrounded by a slate grey sea. | |
| Barbossa grasps the rail with both hands, his expression a | |
| mixture of loathing and fear. Jacoby approaches, hesitant. | |
| JACOBY | |
| Orders, Captain? | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Bring her in, not too close. I | |
| won't brave the reef, not until | |
| high tide. We lay anchor before | |
| dark. | |
| Jacoby nods, backs away. Barbossa continues to stare -- | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| ... that is, if it first doesn't | |
| sink back down to hell from where | |
| it came. | |
| EXT. CARIBBEAN SEA - DAY | |
| The Interceptor, on open waters, glorious, her white sails set | |
| wing-to-wing. | |
| EXT. H.M.S. INTERCEPTOR - DAY | |
| CLOSE ON: Jack's compass, cradled in both hands. Jack leans | |
| over and studies it -- almost like he's praying. | |
| ON THE COMPASS -- the face shows old-fashioned rose petal style | |
| direction markers below a quivering indicator that settles on | |
| -- southeast. | |
| JACK | |
| Bear three points starboard. | |
| AnaMaria turns the wheel, adjusting course. The ship leans into | |
| the new direction. Jack looks down -- | |
| ON THE COMPASS -- where the indicator spins, reverses, settles | |
| on -- northeast. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Six points port! | |
| AnaMaria frowns, but follows the order, turns the wheel back, | |
| and the ship responds. | |
| Will works on deck, coiling a rope -- but he watches Jack and | |
| AnaMaria, clearly not happy. Gibbs hobbles up. | |
| GIBBS | |
| Left-handed ropes are coiled | |
| against the sun, or it's bad luck! | |
| (twirls a finger) | |
| Anty-clockwise. | |
| Gibbs takes over the task. The ship shifts course again. Will | |
| has had enough. | |
| WILL | |
| How do we expect to find an island | |
| no one can find -- with a compass | |
| that doesn't work? | |
| GIBBS | |
| Now, lad, just because it don't | |
| point north don't mean it don't | |
| work. | |
| (voice low) | |
| That compass gives bearings to the | |
| Isla de Muerta, wherever it may | |
| lay. | |
| WILL | |
| Really? | |
| (moves closer) | |
| So ... what's the story on the | |
| pistol? | |
| Gibbs settles in, happy to have a willing listener. | |
| GIBBS | |
| I'll tell lee. Now, Jack Sparrow | |
| has an honest streak in him, and | |
| that's where the whole problem | |
| starts. This was when he was | |
| Captain of the Black Pearl -- | |
| WILL | |
| What? He never told me that. | |
| GIBBS | |
| Ah -- he's learned, then. Plays | |
| things more close to the vest. | |
| See, Jack was a cartographer, back | |
| in Old England. Somehow he came by | |
| the money to commission the Pearl. | |
| Hired himself a crew, promised each | |
| man an equal share. | |
| (lowers his voice) | |
| So, they're forty days out, and the | |
| First Mate says, everything's an | |
| equal share, that should mean the | |
| location of the island, too. So | |
| Jack gave up the bearings. | |
| (shakes his head) | |
| That night, there was a mutiny. | |
| Gibbs' voice is a whisper, now, so Will has to lean closer. | |
| GIBBS (CONT'D) | |
| Jack gave hisself up for the sake | |
| of his loyal crew. He was marooned | |
| on an island, left there to die. | |
| WILL | |
| How did he get off the island? | |
| JACK | |
| (loud) | |
| I didn't! | |
| Will and Gibbs jump. Jack is right there beside them. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| My body's still there, rotting | |
| away, and I am but a ghost! | |
| Will and Gibbs aren't sure what to make of that. Jack laughs. | |
| GIBBS | |
| How did you get off the island? | |
| JACK | |
| Ah, that's a dark and unpleasant | |
| tale, best left untold. | |
| He starts off. | |
| WILL | |
| Wait -- what about the pistol? | |
| JACK | |
| The pistol. When a pirate is | |
| marooned, Will, he's given a pistol | |
| with a single shot. No good for | |
| hunting, or surviving, really. But | |
| after three weeks of starvation and | |
| thrist -- the option of that pistol | |
| begins to look good. | |
| Jack lets this sink in. He pulls out the pistol, raises it. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| But I survived. And I still have | |
| that single shot. It's meant for | |
| one man. My mutinous first mate-- | |
| WILL | |
| Barbossa. | |
| Jack shoots a glance at Will -- nods, and moves away. | |
| EXT. ISLA DE MUERTA - CAVE ENTRANCE - EVENING | |
| On Barbossa, face upturned. No expression in his eyes. | |
| Around him a group of pirates, Elizabeth among them, stand as | |
| still as stones, in front of a dark cave opening. Their faces | |
| look upward, their total lack of movement disconcerting. | |
| Above the cave, on a hillock, the pirate Koehler gazes out | |
| toward the horizon. Slowly he TRANSFORMS, head-to-toe, from | |
| pirate to SKELETON -- | |
| The MOON has climbed free of the storm clouds, rising large and | |
| full on the horizon. The skeleton turns -- | |
| KOEHLER | |
| Moonrise, Captain! First night of | |
| full. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Hah! | |
| (to the pirates) | |
| Be mindful of pits and crevasses. | |
| Stay together. | |
| He takes a torch. Moves into the cave. The pirates follow. | |
| INT. ISLA DE MUERTA - CAVES - NIGHT | |
| The group keeps together under the firelight. The path leads | |
| between boulders on a slope downhill. From the echoes and | |
| shadows, it's clear the cave system must be huge. | |
| Elizabeth glances over -- the torches illumine caverns off to | |
| the side -- and just the edge of a mound of coins. Clearly | |
| there is more, but the rest is lost in darkness. | |
| Twigg, gazing upward in wonder, moves a few feet away from the | |
| group. Barbossa grabs him as he nears a chasm. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Careful, mate. Fall down there, | |
| you'd die and miss Judgement Day -- | |
| for not even the Lord himself'll | |
| come look for you here. | |
| Barbossa lets go, and moves on, descending down, twisting and | |
| turning, but always down -- | |
| EXT. H.M.S. INTERCEPTOR - NIGHT | |
| Cotton pulls a sail line, looks out -- sees something. He lifts | |
| the parrot off his shoulder, strokes it along the back. | |
| COTTON'S PARROT | |
| Land HO! Land HO! LAND ho! LAND | |
| ho! | |
| Indeed, the faint outline of Isla de Muerta is in the distance | |
| on the port side. Will stands, excited, jumps onto the rigging | |
| for a better look. | |
| But AnaMaria, at the helm, stares at Cotton, and the parrot. | |
| ANAMARIA | |
| How does he do that? | |
| JACK | |
| They'll be anchored on the lee | |
| side. Haul your wind, and keep to | |
| the weather of the island -- | |
| INT. ISLA DE MUERTA - CAVES - NIGHT | |
| Flickering torchlight. Pirates stoop low to enter a cavern -- | |
| -- and revealed is the spectacular treasure of Isla de Muerta: | |
| overflowing chests of coins, gold and silver ingots, jewelry, | |
| objects d'art, jade and ivory, brightly colored silks, | |
| furniture, jewels and pearls; mirrors and swords -- anything | |
| and everything of value that might be carried by ship, is here. | |
| The pirates move through, Elizabeth can't help but gaze in | |
| wonder. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| The curse drove you to gather this? | |
| BARBOSSA (O.S.) | |
| Aye. And not a bit of it any use | |
| to us, only hoarded. But it will | |
| drive us no longer. | |
| Elizabeth pauses, staring at herself in a jewel-encrusted | |
| mirror -- and then is pushed along by the pirates. | |
| EXT. ISLA DE MUERTA - LAGOON - NIGHT | |
| The Interceptor lies at anchor in the distance. Closer, Jack | |
| and Will row away from the large vessel in a small longboat, | |
| toward the rocky shore. | |
| The RUSH of a waterfall grows louder. Will looks: ahead of them | |
| is a black CAVE MOUTH, right at water level. | |
| WILL | |
| What's that? | |
| JACK | |
| Depends. | |
| WILL | |
| On what? | |
| JACK | |
| On whether the stories are all | |
| true. If they are, that's a | |
| waterfall that spills over at high | |
| tide, with a short drop to an | |
| underground lagoon. If not -- | |
| By now, the moving water tugs on the longboat, and they are | |
| sucked in -- | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| -- well, too late. | |
| The boat rushes forward, plunges into darkness -- | |
| INT. CAVES - UNDERWATER LAGOON - NIGHT | |
| -- the longboat takes a harrowing drop over a short waterfall | |
| ... but then lands safely in a gorgeous underwater lagoon, | |
| floats lazily toward a sandy shore. | |
| JACK | |
| Chalk one up for the stories. | |
| Will leaps out into the water, pulls the boat ashore -- | |
| INT. CAVES - BED CAVERN - NIGHT | |
| The pirate group reaches the end of a small chamber of mostly | |
| jewels and pearls piled around a large bed -- | |
| INT. CAVES - MAIN CAVERN - NIGHT | |
| -- and then emerge into the largest cavern of all, also crammed | |
| with treasure, including several mountains of gold coins that | |
| reach the ceiling. Treasure everywhere -- | |
| Except for one spot in the center. A hole in the ceiling lets | |
| in a column of moonlight, which illumines: | |
| A stone chest, lid pushed back, decorated with carved Aztec | |
| glyphs, filled with gold coins identical to Will's medallion. | |
| A sharp stone knife lies on top. | |
| In front of it, buried in the sand is a skeleton -- and this | |
| one doesn't look like it's going to move ever again, judging by | |
| the sword in its back. A crab scurries away from it as the | |
| group approaches. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Here we stand before the cursed | |
| treasure of Cortez himself. Won by | |
| blood, it demands blood in return. | |
| All eyes turn -- onto Elizabeth. Pintel takes the stone knife | |
| from the chest, approaches her. Elizabeth shrinks back, but is | |
| held by two other pirates. | |
| Pintel grins. Grabs her by the wrist. She turns her head away, | |
| shuts her eyes. | |
| Pintel raises the knife ... | |
| ... and then very carefully, daintily, uses just the sharp tip | |
| of the knife to juck prick! Elizabeth's finger. | |
| One tiny red drop of blood appears, and drips down onto the | |
| medallion. | |
| Elizabeth opens her eyes, surprised. | |
| PINTEL | |
| What did you expect? We're all | |
| gentlemen here, right and proper. | |
| The pirates laugh. Barbossa takes the medallion, grins at | |
| Elizabeth. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| You know the first thing I'm going | |
| to do after the curse is lifted? | |
| (grins) | |
| Eat a whole bushel of apples. | |
| Barbossa approaches the chest, shining in the beam of | |
| moonlight. | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| What was begun by blood, let blood | |
| now end! | |
| He tosses the gold medallion onto the others. | |
| The pirates tense, waiting, expectant. A long beat. They all | |
| look at each other, look at themselves. Nothing happens. | |
| KOEHLER | |
| Did it work? | |
| DEADEYE | |
| I don't feel no different. | |
| JACOBY | |
| How can we tell? | |
| Barbossa frowns, draws his pistol, and SHOOTS the pirate next | |
| to him -- Jacoby -- square in the chest. Jacoby reacts in | |
| shock, grabs his chest ... but doesn't die. | |
| KOEHLER | |
| You're not dead. | |
| JACOBY | |
| No. | |
| (realizes) | |
| He shot me! | |
| TWIGG | |
| It didn't work! The curse is still | |
| upon us! | |
| Barbossa searches his mind for an answer ... turns to | |
| Elizabeth. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| You. Maid. Your father. What was | |
| his name?! | |
| (grabs her roughly) | |
| Was your father William Turner?! | |
| Elizabeth takes time to smile before answering: | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| No. | |
| The pirates cry out in alarm. Barbossa gathers himself, getting | |
| his rage under steely control. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Where's his child? The child that | |
| sailed from England eight years | |
| ago, the child who is the real | |
| owner of that medallion, the child | |
| in whose veins flows the blood of | |
| William Turner?! Where? | |
| Barbossa SLAPS her hard across the face, sending her sprawling. | |
| JACOBY | |
| (to Pintel) | |
| You brought us the wrong person! | |
| PINTEL | |
| She had the medallion! She's the | |
| right age. She said her name was | |
| Turner! | |
| TWIGG | |
| (to Barbossa) | |
| You brought us here for nothing? | |
| Barbossa whirls on him -- | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| If you have sailed with Morgan for | |
| ten years like I have, you'd know | |
| not to question me! | |
| Elizabeth sits up, watching the pirates argue, for a moment | |
| unnoticed. Suddenly, a scabbard comes down, right above her. | |
| Startled, Elizabeth looks up -- | |
| -- Will is at the top of a mound of coins, reaching down with | |
| his scabbard for her to grab onto. | |
| Elizabeth quickly leans forward, takes the bloodied medallion | |
| from the pile. Reaches back, grabs the scabbard. Will pulls her | |
| up -- | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| If any coward here dare challenge | |
| me, let him speak! Any more talk, | |
| I'll chain ye to a cannon and send | |
| ye to the watery depths! | |
| A sound catches his attention -- coins falling. He looks up, | |
| sees Will and Elizabeth at the top of the treasure stack. | |
| ATOP THE STACK, Will grabs a large shield, flings them forward | |
| -- the two ride down the mountain of coins on the far side, | |
| slide through a small opening -- | |
| INT. ISLA DE MUERTA - SMALL CAVERN - NIGHT | |
| Behind them, loose coins from their slide come down in an | |
| avalanche, sealing the entrance. | |
| Elizabeth jumps up, silver platter in hand, ready to swing -- | |
| Jack catches her before she can do any damage. They recognize | |
| each other. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| You?! | |
| JACK | |
| Me! | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| You're in league with Barbossa! | |
| JACK | |
| No, I'm -- rescuing you. | |
| Elizabeth can't comprehend that one. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| You?! | |
| Will gains his footing in the rubble. | |
| WILL | |
| Miss Swann! We're here to rescue | |
| you! | |
| (sounds of pursuit, | |
| approaching) | |
| It's going badly! | |
| JACK | |
| This way! | |
| They race off, toward a bit of moonlight -- | |
| INT. ISLA DE MUERTA - NIGHT | |
| The three climb up a dark crevasse that leads out onto the | |
| island. Will takes Elizabeth's hand, helps her. | |
| WILL | |
| I'm glad we got here in time. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Truthfully -- you were a bit late. | |
| JACK | |
| The trick isn't getting here, it's | |
| getting away. | |
| As if on cue, they hear the yells of pirates, coming closer. | |
| They take off -- | |
| EXT. ISLA DE MUERTA - CLEARING - NIGHT | |
| The three race through the rocks, the sounds of pursuit close | |
| behind. Suddenly Jack stops. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Come on! | |
| JACK | |
| No. This won't work. | |
| (a quick decision) | |
| I'll stay behind, and fight them. | |
| You go on. | |
| Will and Elizabeth stare at him. | |
| WILL | |
| No. | |
| JACK | |
| I'll lead them away. | |
| The sounds are closer. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Go to the opposite end of the | |
| island, and signal the ship. I'll | |
| keep 'em busy. | |
| WILL | |
| Are you sure? Jack -- this is not | |
| something you have to do. | |
| JACK | |
| I'm sure. When you've led the kind | |
| of life that I have, there are | |
| debts that must be paid. Maybe I | |
| can balance the scales a little. | |
| Will nods, hesitates ... gives Jack his sword -- now Jack has | |
| two, one for each hand. Elizabeth gives him a quick kiss. | |
| Will and Elizabeth race away, and are gone. | |
| Jack watches them a moment, turns to face the pirates. He | |
| sticks the two swords in the ground, crossed. Leans casually | |
| against a rock. | |
| A group of pirates round a corner, cutlasses drawn, ready to | |
| fight -- but Jack raises his hand. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| I invoke the right of parlay, | |
| according to the Code of the | |
| Brethren, set down down by the | |
| pirates Morgan and Bartholomew... | |
| EXT. ISLA DE MUERTA - NIGHT | |
| Jack stands before Barbossa, surrounded by pirates. Jack has a | |
| wide smile on his face -- and Barbossa doesn't like it. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| I'm inclined to kill you now, Jack | |
| Sparrow, without so much as a word, | |
| if you don't lose that grin from | |
| you're face. | |
| Jack's smile remains. Barbossa puts a hand on his cutlass -- | |
| JACK | |
| The woman's blood didn't work, did | |
| it? | |
| Barbossa hesitates. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| I know whose blood you need, to end | |
| the curse. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Say the name, or I slit your | |
| throat. | |
| JACK | |
| No you won't. | |
| Barbossa nods. Pintel steps forward, puts a blade to Jack's | |
| throat. Jack's smile widen. | |
| PINTEL | |
| Now? | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| (nods) | |
| Now. | |
| (Pintel grins) | |
| No, don't kill him. | |
| Surprised, Pintel lowers his cutlass. Jack's expression hasn't | |
| changed. | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| Allow me the humor of listening to | |
| your terms. | |
| JACK | |
| Simple. I have something you won't | |
| more than anything. The way to | |
| free you from the curse of the | |
| treasure. You have something I | |
| want -- more than anything. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| The Pearl? | |
| (laughs) | |
| Oh, that's fine. And just how do | |
| you expect this to work? | |
| JACK | |
| You give me the Pearl. Then I tell | |
| you who you need. | |
| Barbossa stares at him, incredulous. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| That's your offer? You, sailing | |
| away nice and pretty with the Black | |
| Pearl, and all I have is a name? | |
| JACK | |
| That's right. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| I'm supposed to ... trust you? | |
| The pirates laugh. | |
| JACK | |
| I'm a man of my word. | |
| The pirates laugh louder. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| You see, I've got this honest | |
| streak in me -- in its own way, a | |
| sort of curse. Oh, and there's the | |
| fact that you have no choice. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| I'll torture it out of you. | |
| JACK | |
| You left me on a desert island -- | |
| what worse can you do? | |
| Jack is still smiling, intentionally smug now. Barbossa sees | |
| his options dwindling, begins to pace. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Blast you! I'll throw you in | |
| prison. | |
| JACK | |
| Wait as long as you like. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| You're setting me up for a double | |
| cross, you with the ship, and me | |
| with nothing more than your word! | |
| JACK | |
| Let's say I tell you the wrong | |
| person. What would you do? | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Track you down and -- | |
| He sees where Jack is headed. | |
| JACK | |
| And if I tell you the truth, you | |
| become, and you won't come near me | |
| because you know I'd kill you. | |
| Barbossa hesitates. The pirates are amazed at how the tide has | |
| turned; Barbossa has gone past considering the idea, and might | |
| even do it. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Jack, I don't trust you, and that's | |
| a fact. Never trust a smiling man, | |
| you can lay to that. | |
| JACK | |
| See, that's where we're different. | |
| I trust you ... to do what it takes | |
| to get what you want. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| You're playing this as close to the | |
| edge as any man, I'll give you | |
| that. | |
| (decides, smiles) | |
| We might just have to sign | |
| articles, you and I. Jack, you're | |
| a pirate at heart, that's certain. | |
| Jack nods. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Pintel ... set sail. If this fool | |
| plan is to work, we'll need the | |
| medallion, and that means catching | |
| the ship which brought 'em here. | |
| Jack is completely caught off guard. For the first time, his | |
| smile fades. | |
| JACK | |
| What -- you don't have the | |
| medallion? | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| That fool woman took it. You be | |
| careful around her, Jack -- she's | |
| pretty enough, she'll steal your | |
| heart -- but pure evil inside. | |
| JACK | |
| I'll watch my back. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Bosun! Set up Mr. Sparrow's | |
| quarters, nice and fine ... in the | |
| brig. | |
| (to Jack, a smile) | |
| Meaning no disrespect, of course. | |
| Jack nods, and is taken away. Barbossa stares after him, not | |
| hiding his mistrust. | |
| EXT. INTERCEPTOR - DAY | |
| At full sail, headed out to sea. Gibbs glances at Elizabeth and | |
| Will, talking alone on the forecastle -- shakes his head. | |
| GIBBS | |
| Two women on board? A man don't | |
| have to be superstitious to know | |
| that's trouble. | |
| Elizabeth holds the medallion, and finishes her tale: | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| ... you were in danger ... so I | |
| took the medallion. And I've kept | |
| it ever since. They thought I was | |
| you, that they needed my blood. | |
| And it didn't work. | |
| She hands him the medallion. | |
| WILL | |
| Why would my father send this to | |
| me? | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| To keep it away from them? No | |
| pirate would sail to London, for | |
| fear of Execution Dock. | |
| WILL | |
| If I had known -- | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| (anticipating him) | |
| -- then we never would have met. | |
| Will nods. They hold each other's gaze a moment. Will turns | |
| away first, leans on the rail. Looks out to sea, back the | |
| direction they came. | |
| WILL | |
| I can't believe he would make such | |
| a sacrifice for us. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| I guess you can never truly know | |
| someone else's heart. | |
| Will glances at her, and nods. | |
| AT THE HELM, Gibbs peers forward, scanning the horizon. There | |
| is a tiny island in front of them. | |
| GIBBS | |
| Shift your heading, steer clear of | |
| that island. Fifteen degrees | |
| starboard. | |
| On the aft deck, Cotton concentrates on his work, securing a | |
| halyard. Suddenly Cotton's parrot flaps its wings, takes off, | |
| lands on the starboard bulwark, squawking -- | |
| COTTON'S PARROT | |
| Dead men tell NO tales! Dead men | |
| tell NO tales! Dead men tell NO | |
| tales! | |
| Cotton looks up -- on the horizon, following: black sails. | |
| Gibbs and AnaMaria appear, and see the ship. | |
| ANAMARIA | |
| Can we outrun them? | |
| GIBBS | |
| Not a chance. Make for the reef. | |
| EXT. CARIBBEAN OCEAN - DAY | |
| Miles of blue water. The Interceptor tacks, leaving a long | |
| white wake. The Black Pearl matches it -- gaining. | |
| EXT. BLACK PEARL - DAY | |
| Barbossa and Pintel eye the Interceptor, two hounds chasing | |
| the fox. | |
| PINTEL | |
| What's he doing? Is her going to | |
| run her aground? | |
| EXT. INTERCEPTOR - DAY | |
| The Black Pearl is now close behind the Interceptor -- and the | |
| Interceptor is headed for the island. | |
| GIBBS | |
| Drop the forward anchor! | |
| A SAILOR at the stern of the ship pulls a release, and the | |
| ship's anchor races down into the water, the metal chain | |
| jumping and twisting on deck. | |
| The chain stops, and the Sailor locks it -- | |
| EXT. CARIBBEAN SEA - DAY | |
| With its forward momentum and the anchor down, the Interceptor | |
| makes to turn quickly, pivoting around the anchor. | |
| EXT. BLACK PEARL - DAY | |
| Barbossa and Pintel watch as the huge ship brings its cannons | |
| to bear right in front of them. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| All hands! Prepare to come about! | |
| But for now, the Interceptor has the advantage, and takes it: | |
| its cannons boom, and cannonballs rain down. | |
| INT. BLACK PEARL - BRIG - DAY | |
| Jack sees what he can out the porthole. In the cell with him is | |
| Twigg, acting as a guard. | |
| JACK | |
| Don't hit my ship! I mean, kill | |
| the lying scoundrel -- | |
| (to Twigg) | |
| I'm a little conflicted, here. | |
| Twigg just stares. | |
| EXT. INTERCEPTOR - DAY | |
| Elizabeth watches as the Black Pearl comes about -- and then | |
| there is the low, loud RUMBLE of two dozen cannons firing as | |
| one. The Interceptor is hit. A barrage of shots follow; most | |
| find their mark. | |
| Sailors dive for cover, leaving their cannons; clearly they | |
| are overmatched. | |
| EXT. BLACK PEARL - PORT SIDE - DAY | |
| Barbossa laughs. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Strike your colors, you bloody | |
| cockroaches! | |
| EXT. INTERCEPTOR - DAY | |
| Another round of fire; Barbossa shows no mercy. | |
| ANAMARIA | |
| Looks like they mean to send us | |
| under. | |
| GIBBS | |
| There -- she's raised the Jolly | |
| Roger, upside down. | |
| AnaMaria, Gibbs, Cotton, even Elizabeth -- all know what this | |
| means. Will doesn't. He looks to Gibbs for an explanation: | |
| GIBBS (CONT'D) | |
| It's a signal. If we resist, it | |
| won't just be death. There'll be | |
| torture as well. | |
| WILL | |
| We're not going to just surrender! | |
| GIBBS | |
| That we are. | |
| The Black Pearl fires again, a double-ball shot with a chain | |
| connecting the two. It hits the main mast dead on! A CRACKING, | |
| SPLINTING sound as it breaks, falls to the deck. | |
| Barbossa moves his ship alongside, preparing to board. | |
| WILL | |
| We can at least fight -- we might | |
| be able to kill a few-- | |
| GIBBS | |
| Will -- it'll go worse for us -- | |
| for Elizabeth, especially -- if we | |
| fight. | |
| Will stares -- and nods. But his expression is still defiant. | |
| The deck slants; the ship is sinking. Pirates swarm across on | |
| ropes, and take control of the Interceptor. | |
| EXT. BLACK PEARL - MAIN DECK - DAY | |
| The top masts of the H.M.S. Interceptor sink into the smooth | |
| crystal waters of the Caribbean -- | |
| -- as Will and Elizabeth, held by pirates, are brought before | |
| Barbossa -- and see that Jack stands beside him, manacled. | |
| Gibbs, AnaMaria and Cotton and the other crewmembers huddle | |
| together. | |
| Barbossa's wrath falls on Elizabeth. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Welcome back, Miss. Last time on | |
| board, you played me right clever, | |
| make pretending and all. I hope | |
| your stay this time is more | |
| pleasant. Boys, show her some | |
| hospitality! | |
| He shoves her into a group of pirates; they yell their | |
| approval. She is pushed from one to another. | |
| This goads Will to action. He head-butts the pirate behind him, | |
| grabs a pistol, waves it at the pirates. | |
| WILL | |
| She goes free! | |
| Will leaps onto the ship's rail. He steadies himself with a | |
| hand on the rigging. Points the pistol at Barbossa. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| What's in your head, boy? | |
| WILL | |
| She. Goes. Free. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| You've got one shot -- and we can't | |
| die. | |
| WILL | |
| You can't. I can. | |
| He leans out over the ocean. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| No! | |
| Jack pushes forward. | |
| JACK | |
| Will -- don't do anything stupid! | |
| Don't say anything stupid -- | |
| WILL | |
| My name is Will Turner, the son of | |
| Bootstrap Bill Turner. His blood | |
| runs in my veins. | |
| (raises the gun to his | |
| head) | |
| You need my blood. And on my word | |
| I will pull this trigger, and sink | |
| all the way down to Davy Jones' | |
| Locker! | |
| Pintel squints at Will; the pirates murmur surprise. | |
| TWIGG | |
| It's true -- he's the spittin' | |
| image of Old Bootstrap. Even talks | |
| the same! | |
| Jack drops his head. Barbossa grins at him. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Looks like your back to having | |
| nothing to offer. | |
| PINTEL | |
| And he's got Old Bill's courage. | |
| A curse on him, and you! | |
| Barbossa steps forward. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Enough of that! | |
| (to Will) | |
| Name your terms. | |
| WILL | |
| Elizabeth goes free! | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| We got that part. Anything else? | |
| WILL | |
| And Jack. And the crew. Free and | |
| unharmed. If you agree ... then | |
| ... I will remain with you. | |
| Barbossa considers; his crew waits. Finally -- | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Agreed. You have my word, as a | |
| gentleman of fortune -- | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Will -- you can't trust him. | |
| WILL | |
| You must swear by the Holy Bible. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Eh? You have my word, then -- on | |
| the Good Book, I do swear, and the | |
| Lord spare my worthless soul. | |
| Barbossa crosses himself, as do many of his men. | |
| Will lowers his gun ... steps downs -- the pirates surround | |
| him. They snatch away the pistol. | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| Boatswain! Take your captives | |
| belowdecks. Chain them in the | |
| galley, and teach 'em how to row. | |
| Gibbs, AnaMaria, Cotton and the rest are led away under guard. | |
| Barbossa looks out to sea, toward the islet. | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| Hah. Look there. That's the very | |
| same island we made Jack governor | |
| of on our last trip. | |
| (nods) | |
| When you sail the open sea as long | |
| as I, you learn to trust the signs | |
| fate sends your way. | |
| GIBBS | |
| (dejected) | |
| Amen to that ... | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Jack, Elizabeth ... I'm a man of | |
| my word and you're to be set free, | |
| right quick. | |
| (loudly) | |
| Men, break out the plank! | |
| A CHEER goes up from the pirates. Will realizes what Barbossa | |
| intends to do, struggles with captors. | |
| WILL | |
| No! You gave your word! | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Quite, boy, or you'll lose your | |
| tongue. Those as know me know I | |
| wouldn't cross my word, and bring | |
| down bad luck on the ship. | |
| (nods) | |
| I agreed to set them free. I | |
| didn't when ... nor where. | |
| EXT. CARIBBEAN SEA - DAY | |
| The Black Pearl lies at anchor, closer now to the islet. | |
| EXT. BLACK PEARL - MAIN DECK - DAY | |
| Jack, wrists still bound, stands in the classic 'walking the | |
| plank' pose. Elizabeth is next in line. Pirates crowd the | |
| ship's rail to watch. | |
| JACK | |
| It's pure evil to make a Captain | |
| walk the plank of his own ship, | |
| twice in one lifetime. No good can | |
| come of it. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Now, Jack. That reef is less than | |
| a league distant. It's a square | |
| deal all around, and you can't hope | |
| for better. | |
| JACK | |
| Someone needs to cut these bonds, | |
| then. | |
| Barbossa smiles, shows a pistol. Points it at Jack. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| You'd best take a swim, Jack. | |
| JACK | |
| The last time you do this, you left | |
| me a pistol, with one shot. | |
| The pirates mutter agreement. | |
| PINTEL | |
| That's proper, sir, according to | |
| the code. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| By the powers, you're right! | |
| (turns around) | |
| Where's Jack's pistol? Who's got | |
| it? Bring it forward! | |
| JACK | |
| A gentleman might give us two | |
| pistols, seeing as there are two | |
| of us, this time. | |
| A pirate hands Jack's pistol to Barbossa. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Tell you what. I'll give you one | |
| pistol, and let you be the | |
| gentleman, and shoot the lady, and | |
| starve to death yourself! | |
| (grins) | |
| That is, presuming you're not both | |
| drownded. | |
| The pirates laugh. Barbossa tosses Jack the pistol -- but over | |
| his head, and down into the water with a splash. | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| So how did you get off that island, | |
| anyway? | |
| JACK | |
| You can go to your grave not | |
| knowing. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| That's fair. | |
| Jack glares at Barbossa. Then he's prodded with a cutlass, | |
| takes a step out. Reaches the end of the plank -- steps off. | |
| Jack plunges down into the water. Appears on the surface, | |
| floundering, struggles to stay afloat. Will and Elizabeth | |
| exchange helpless looks; there is nothing they can do. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| The lady's next. But first, I'll | |
| be wanting that dress back, if you | |
| please. | |
| Elizabeth hesitates ... then strips it off, leaving her in a | |
| silk slip. She throws it at him. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Here -- it will go well with your | |
| blackheart! | |
| Barbossa indicates the plank. | |
| ELIZABETH (CONT'D) | |
| I will not walk into the ocean. | |
| You'll have to throw me in! | |
| Barbossa raises an eyebrow, grins, nods. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Have at her, lads! | |
| The pirates rush to comply. Lift her up, toss her over the rail | |
| -- with a scream she falls -- | |
| EXT. CARIBBEAN SEA - UNDERWATER - DAY | |
| We follow Elizabeth amid foam and bubbles as she PLUNGES down | |
| through the water. Blue and clear, with streaks of sunlight | |
| cutting down; bright coral and tropical fish, and a lovely | |
| young woman in a silk dress ... if it weren't for the mortal | |
| danger, the scene could be described as gorgeous. | |
| Elizabeth spots Jack, below her now, sinking, struggling. She | |
| swims down ... unties his bonds. | |
| Elizabeth starts for the surface. Inexplicably, Jack swims the | |
| other way, further down into the depths. | |
| EXT. CARIBBEAN SEA - DAY | |
| Elizabeth breaks the surface, looks around. And then, finally | |
| Jack appears, sucking in air. He shows what he went after: his | |
| pistol. He tucks it into his shirt. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| You went back for that? We need to | |
| head for the reef! | |
| She starts swimming. Jack hesitates. The Black Pearl is already | |
| underway; he stares at it. | |
| JACK | |
| That's the second time I've had to | |
| watch that man sail away with my | |
| ship. | |
| He turns away, and swims after Elizabeth. | |
| EXT. ISLET - BEACH - DAY | |
| CLOSE ON: The surf line. Elizabeth's feet leave prints in the | |
| sand ... and then meet up with matching footprints she made | |
| earlier, going in the same direction. She has walked all the | |
| way around the island. | |
| JACK (O.S.) | |
| Not all that big, is it? | |
| Jack lays on the beach. He has dismantled his pistol; the parts, | |
| ball and powder dry on his scarf. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Has it changed since the last time | |
| you were here? | |
| JACK | |
| The trees are taller. | |
| Jack checks to see if the pistol parts are dry; they are. He | |
| sets about re-assembling and loading his pistol. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| I hope you have no intention of | |
| using that. | |
| Jack has finished putting his pistol back together. He shoves | |
| it in his belt, walks off. | |
| JACK | |
| Not yet. Ask me again in a few | |
| weeks. | |
| Elizabeth can't believe it. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Captain Sparrow! We have to get | |
| off this island -- immediately! | |
| JACK | |
| Don't be thinking I'm not already | |
| working on it. | |
| He climbs up toward a clump of palm trees. Digs for something | |
| beneath the sand. He finds it: a large iron ring. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| What is that? Is there a boat | |
| under there? | |
| Jack heaves the trap door up and over, revealing a pit. Inside | |
| are barrels and bottles of rum ... all covered with dust and | |
| cobwebs, long abandoned. Jack's face falls. | |
| ELIZABETH (CONT'D) | |
| What? What's wrong? How will this | |
| help us get off the island? | |
| JACK | |
| It won't. It won't, and so we | |
| won't. | |
| He jumps down into the pit, cracks open a bottle of rum, takes | |
| a swig. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| But ... you did it before! Last | |
| time -- | |
| JACK | |
| Last time, I was here a grand total | |
| of three days. Last time, the | |
| rumrunners who used this island as | |
| a cache came by, and I bartered | |
| passage off. But from the looks of | |
| this, they've been out of business, | |
| and so that won't be happening | |
| again. | |
| (takes another swig) | |
| We probably have your friend | |
| Norrington to thank for that. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| So that's it? That's the secret | |
| grand adventure of the infamous | |
| Jack Sparrow? You spent three days | |
| on the beach drinking rum? | |
| JACK | |
| Welcome to the Caribbean, love. | |
| He gathers up a few bottles, heads for the beach. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| You should look at our contretemps | |
| this way: we've got shade trees, | |
| thank the Lord. We've got some | |
| food on the trees, thank the Lord | |
| again. And we've got rum, praise | |
| the Lord. We can stay alive a | |
| month, maybe more. Keep a weather | |
| eye open for passing ships, and our | |
| chances are fair. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| A month? Will doesn't have a | |
| month! We've got to do something | |
| to help him! | |
| JACK | |
| You're right. | |
| (hoists the bottle) | |
| Here's luck to you, Will Turner. | |
| He drinks -- and difiantly returns Elizabeth's angry gaze. But | |
| then turns away, sits down. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Don't be thinking I'm happy about | |
| this, Elizabeth. But I see no use | |
| in wailing and gnashing my teeth | |
| over that which I can do nothing | |
| about. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Not when you can drink instead, at | |
| least. | |
| Jack tosses her a bottle. | |
| JACK | |
| Try it. It goes down rough, but it | |
| goes down -- and the second swig | |
| goes down easier. | |
| Elizabeth considers. Comes to a decision. She unseals the | |
| bottle, takes a swig. They sit in silence for a bit. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| And you will call me Miss Swann. | |
| Jack toasts her: you got it. Elizabeth studies her bottle ... | |
| gives Jack a sidelong glance. Back to her bottle ... | |
| ELIZABETH (CONT'D) | |
| (under her breath) | |
| Drink up me hearties, yo ho ... | |
| JACK | |
| What? What was that? | |
| (Elizabeth smiles) | |
| Something funny, Miss Swann? | |
| Share, please. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Nothing ... it's nothing. Just ... | |
| I'm reminded of a song I learned as | |
| a child. A song about pirates. | |
| JACK | |
| I know a lot of songs about | |
| pirates, but none I'd teach a | |
| child. Let's hear it. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Oh, no ... it's silly. Back in | |
| England we didn't know a thing | |
| about pirates, really. They seemed | |
| so romantic and daring -- | |
| Jack likes the way that sounds. | |
| ELIZABETH (CONT'D) | |
| (looks at him) | |
| That was before I met one, of | |
| course. | |
| JACK | |
| Now I must hear this song. An | |
| authentic pirate song. Have at it. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Well, perhaps ... with a bit more | |
| to drink, I might ... | |
| JACK | |
| More to drink! | |
| He gathers two more bottles, tosses one to her. She drops her | |
| half-finished bottle to catch it. Opens it, takes a sip. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Well? | |
| Elizabeth clears her throat, begins to sing self-consciously, | |
| becoming stronger as she goes on. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| We pillage, we plunder, we rifle, | |
| we loot, Drink up me hearties, yo | |
| ho. | |
| She gestures for him to drink. He does. | |
| ELIZABETH (CONT'D) | |
| We kidnap and ravage and we don't | |
| give a hoot, Drink up me hearties, | |
| yo ho -- | |
| EXT. ISLET - BEACH - LATER - NIGHT | |
| The middle of the night. A fire BLAZES. Jack and Elizabeth are | |
| roaring drunk, arm in arm, singing the song all the way up to | |
| the stars -- | |
| JACK/ELIZABETH | |
| Yo ho, yo ho, a pirate's life for | |
| me! Yo ho, yo ho, a pirate's life | |
| for me! | |
| JACK | |
| I LOVE this song! | |
| (sings) | |
| Yo ho, yo ho, a pirate's life for | |
| me! We're beggars and blighters, | |
| ne'er do well cads, Drink up me | |
| hearties, yo ho! | |
| (gives it a touch of | |
| Irish ballad) | |
| Aye but we're loved by out mums | |
| and our dads. Drink up me | |
| hearties, yo ho! | |
| They hoist their bottles, but only Jack drinks. He drains the | |
| bottle, then tosses it away. | |
| JACK | |
| When I get the Black Pearl back, | |
| I'm going to teach it to the whole | |
| crew, and we'll sing it all the | |
| time! | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| You'll be positively the most | |
| fearsome pirates to sail the | |
| Spanish Main. | |
| Elizabeth salutes the idea with her bottle. Jack doesn't have | |
| a bottle to salute back. She hands him hers. He drinks, then | |
| settles shakily to the ground. Elizabeth sits beside him. | |
| JACK | |
| Not just the Spanish Main. The | |
| whole ocean ... the whole world. | |
| Wherever we want to go, we go. | |
| That's what a ship is, you know. | |
| Not just a keel and a hull and a | |
| deck and sails. That's what a ship | |
| needs ... but what a ship is -- | |
| what the Black Pearl really is ... | |
| is freedom. | |
| Elizabeth lays her head on his shoulder. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Jack, it must be so terrible for | |
| you, to be trapped here on this | |
| island, all over again. | |
| JACK | |
| Ah, well ... the company is better | |
| than last time. And the scenery | |
| has definitely improved. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| (coy) | |
| Mr. Sparrow! I'm not sure I've had | |
| enough rum to allow that kind of | |
| talk. | |
| JACK | |
| We've got a few bottles left ... | |
| and we've yet to tap the kegs. | |
| Elizabeth shrugs with a sleight -- but promising -- smile. She | |
| picks up the empty bottle from the ground, holds it up. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| To freedom. | |
| JACK | |
| To the Black Pearl. | |
| They tap the bottles together. Elizabeth feigns a drink as he | |
| chugs. He taps his bottle against hers again. She laughs, | |
| feigns another drink -- | |
| EXT. ISLET - BEACH - MORNING | |
| CLOSE ON -- JACK'S FACE, dead asleep, lying in the sunlight. | |
| His nose twitches. A bit of SMOKE drifts by. His nose twitches | |
| again. His eyes open. | |
| Jack GROANS and sits up. He rubs his head, looks over -- | |
| -- all of the foliage in the middle of the island is ON FIRE. | |
| Smoke rises high up into the clear blue sky. | |
| Jack leaps to his feet. He sees Elizabeth, as she pours out the | |
| last of the rum, dowsing a scrub brush at the base of a palm | |
| tree. It goes up in FLAMES. She rolls the barrel forward -- it | |
| starts to BURN merrily. | |
| Jack can't believe his eyes. | |
| JACK | |
| What are you doing? You've burned | |
| our food, the shade -- the rum! | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Yes, the rum is gone. | |
| She wipes her hands together. One of the rum barrels in the | |
| fire EXPLODES. | |
| JACK | |
| Why? | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| One, because it is a vile drink | |
| that turns even the most | |
| respectable men into scoundrels. | |
| Two -- | |
| She points to the sky. | |
| ELIZABETH (CONT'D) | |
| That signal is over a thousand feet | |
| high, which means it can be seen | |
| for two hundred leagues in every | |
| direction. The entire Royal Navy | |
| is out to sea looking for me -- do | |
| you think there is even a chance | |
| they could miss it? | |
| JACK | |
| You -- you burned up the island, | |
| for a one-time chance at being | |
| spotted? | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Exactly. | |
| Elizabeth turns toward the sea. | |
| ELIZABETH (CONT'D) | |
| Just you wait, Captain. In an | |
| hour, maybe two, keep a 'weather | |
| eye open' and you'll be seeing | |
| white sails on that horizon! | |
| She sits down, determined. Shields her eyes, scans the water, | |
| waiting, searching. Jack is speechless. He throws up his hands, | |
| stalks up the sand dune, just to get away from her. | |
| EXT. ISLET - LEEWARD SHORE - DAY | |
| At the crest of the dune, Jack stops -- and stares, incredulous. | |
| We come around to see what he is looking at -- | |
| Past Jack, anchored on the other side of the island, white | |
| sails glorious against the turquoise waters, is the H.M.S. | |
| Dauntless. A longboat is already being rowed toward them. | |
| Jack shakes his head. | |
| JACK | |
| They'll be no living with her after | |
| this. | |
| EXT. H.M.S. DAUNTLESS - MAIN DECK - DAY | |
| Norrington gives Elizabeth a hand disembarking from the raised | |
| longboat. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Elizabeth, I'm relieved you're | |
| safe. | |
| (re: Jack) | |
| Clap him in irons. And behind his | |
| back this time. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Commodore, you can't do that! | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| You're speaking up for him again? | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| He can locate Isla de Muerta -- but | |
| I doubt he'll be willing to help us | |
| from the brig. | |
| JACK | |
| (she's right) | |
| We had time to get to know each | |
| other. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| We are bound for Port Royal, not | |
| Isla de Muerta. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| No. The pirates have taken Will -- | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Your father is frantic with worry. | |
| Our mission was to rescue you and | |
| return home. That is what we shall | |
| do. Mr. Turner's fate is | |
| regrettable. But so was his | |
| decision to engage in piracy. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Commodore, please! | |
| JACK | |
| Norrington, think about it ... the | |
| Black Pearl, its captain and crew | |
| ... the last pirate threat in the | |
| Caribbean. How can you pass that | |
| up? | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| By remembering that I serve others, | |
| not only myself. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Commodore, I beg you -- please do | |
| this ... for me. As a wedding | |
| gift. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| I am to understand that you will | |
| accept my marriage proposal on the | |
| condition I rescue Mr. Turner? | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Not as a condition -- a request. | |
| Norrington considers. To Gillette: | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Free Mister Sparrow, and prepare to | |
| come about. He'll give you our | |
| heading. | |
| Gillette unlocks Jack's manacles. Jack raises an eyebrow. | |
| JACK | |
| Congratulations, sir. | |
| Crew men lead Jack toward the bridge. Sailors go about their | |
| tasks, and the ship begins its slow turn. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Elizabeth, I hereby withdraw my | |
| proposal. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| What? | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| I know where your heart truly lies. | |
| Elizabeth looks at Norringtom, seeing him in a new light. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| And now I know ... where yours | |
| does, as well. | |
| They gaze at each other a moment. Norrington looks away. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| You may seclude yourself in my | |
| cabin. I'm afraid we do not have | |
| any ladies' clothing aboard. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Then I can wear men's clothing. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| That would hardly be proper. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Well, I am not going to stay hidden | |
| in some cabin, or I suppose it's | |
| going to be heaving bosoms and bare | |
| for the remainder of the voyage! | |
| Norrington is exasperated, but then can't help but grin -- this | |
| is exactly why he loves her. She grins back at him -- she's not | |
| going to change. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Murtogg, take our guest below, and | |
| find her some trousers, and a | |
| shirt. | |
| Elizabeth smiles, allows herself to be escorted away. | |
| Norrington watches her go ... then turns his gaze to the sea. | |
| INT. THE BLACK PEARL - BRIG - DAY | |
| Pintel enters the cell. It appears empty -- but that's because | |
| Will is hanging from the rafters, trying to shove up the | |
| ceiling planks with his legs. | |
| PINTEL | |
| That ain't going to work. That's | |
| the gun deck above yea. | |
| Will drops lightly to the deck. Suddenly: | |
| WILL | |
| What happened to William Turner? | |
| PINTEL | |
| Ah, William Turner. Stupid | |
| blighter. He threw in with us | |
| after we relieved Jack Sparrow of | |
| his captaincy, but turned out, it | |
| never sat well with him -- | |
| particularly after we found Cortes' | |
| treasure, and its peculiar | |
| condition. He thought we deserved | |
| to be cursed, for leaving ol' Jack | |
| to the fate we did. That's why he | |
| sent off a piece of the treaure -- | |
| to you, as it were: so it would | |
| never be recovered, and so cursed | |
| we remain. | |
| WILL | |
| And then he ran. And he's hiding | |
| out someplace where you haven't | |
| been able to find him. | |
| PINTEL | |
| That's a nice thought, to be sure, | |
| and I wager your da wishes he'd | |
| thought it hisself. But, no. See, | |
| what he'd done, didn't sit too well | |
| with Captain Barbossa ... so he | |
| chained a cannon to his legs and | |
| dumped him over. | |
| Will reacts with shock at the account of his father's fate. | |
| PINTEL | |
| Yep, last I saw of Bootstrap Bill, | |
| was his face looking up, as he | |
| sank down to the crushing black | |
| oblivion of Davy Jones' locker. | |
| (sighs) | |
| It was only after, we found out we | |
| needed his blood to solve the | |
| curse. That's what you call | |
| ironic. | |
| Barbossa appears behind Pintel, flanked by several others | |
| pirates. He regards Will for a moment, then: | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Bring him. | |
| EXT. H.M.S. DAUNTLESS - MAIN DECK - EVENING | |
| Jack goes to the rail and waits, pretending to look out at the | |
| sea. Elizabeth, dressed in sailor's clothes to excellent | |
| effect, joins him. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| You didn't tell Commodore | |
| Norrington everything. | |
| JACK | |
| Nor did you, I noticed. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| He might delay the rescue ... and | |
| that would be too late. | |
| JACK | |
| Exactly. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| These men will be facing an enemy | |
| that seemingly cannot be killed. | |
| JACK | |
| I have a plan. If it succeeds, | |
| then any battle will be decidedly | |
| brief ... and one-sided. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| What's your plan? | |
| LOOKOUT (O.S.) | |
| LAND HO! | |
| Isla de Muerta lay dark and menacing on the horizon. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Elizabeth -- below decks. I will | |
| not compromise your safety. | |
| She starts to speak; he turns away. | |
| NORRINGTON (CONT'D) | |
| Lieutenant, escort Elizabeth to my | |
| quarters, and make sure she stays | |
| there. | |
| Norrington gazes through his spyglass, at the island. Jack | |
| watches with some amusement as Elizabeth is escorted away. | |
| NORRINGTON (CONT'D) | |
| I don't like the situation, Mister | |
| Sparrow. The island is riddled | |
| with caves. I will not put my men | |
| at a disadvantage. | |
| JACK | |
| Funny, I was thinking along those | |
| lines. How about you let me go in | |
| alone, and while you're setting up | |
| an ambush, I'll trick the pirates | |
| out to you. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| You would do that? | |
| JACK | |
| They left me stranded. Twice. | |
| What have you got to lose? | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| (looks at him) | |
| Nothing I wouldn't be please to be | |
| rid of. | |
| JACK | |
| (smiles) | |
| I knew you'd listen to reason! | |
| EXT. ISLA DE MUERTA - CAVE ENTRANCE - EVENING | |
| Torches are lit. Barbossa leads Will, guarded by Pintel and a | |
| band of pirates, into the caves. | |
| INT. H.M.S. DAUNTLESS - MAIN DECK - NIGHT | |
| A longboat is prepared to be lowered over the side. Jack wraps | |
| his pistol securely in an oilskin pouch. | |
| JACK | |
| That chart I drew up'll get you | |
| past the reefs. If you're | |
| steersman's good enough, that is. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| I'll be at the wheel myself. | |
| JACK | |
| I'll slip in, talk them into to | |
| come out, and you'll be free to | |
| blow holy high heaven the whole lot | |
| of them. | |
| The crewmen release the lines, and the boat drops -- | |
| INT. ISLA DE MUERTA - CAVES - NIGHT | |
| The pirate group moves deeper into the caves. Will moves along | |
| unwillingly. | |
| PINTEL | |
| No reason to fret. It's just a | |
| prick of the finger and a few drops | |
| of blood. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Turner blood doesn't flow pure in | |
| his veins. | |
| (grins) | |
| Best play it safe, and spill it | |
| all. | |
| PINTEL | |
| I guess there is a reason to fret. | |
| EXT. ISLA DE MUERTA - NIGHT | |
| The Dauntless drifts into the lagoon. Norrington and his men | |
| prepare to go ashore. | |
| INT. ISLA DE MUERTA - CAVES - NIGHT | |
| Lit by torchlight. Will notices: a crack runs between the floor | |
| and the wall of the cave, widening into a ravine. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Careful, now. You could fall in | |
| and still be wonder'n when you'll | |
| hit dirt. | |
| Will makes a decision. He intentionally stumbles. Pintel shoves | |
| him forwad -- Will continues forward, grabs the pirate in front | |
| of him, swings him into the wall of the cave. Catches the | |
| pirate's torch, and uses it to ward off the others. | |
| WILL | |
| You deserve to be cursed -- and | |
| remain cursed! | |
| He steps to one side -- and drops into the ravine. The wall of | |
| the ravine becomes a loose gravel slope; Will hits it, and | |
| tumbles down, disappeats into black. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Blast him! A pox on him, and his | |
| father, and the whole damnable | |
| line! Fan out! Find him! | |
| INT. DAUNTLESS - CAPTAIN'S QUARTERS - NIGHT | |
| Elizabeth looks out the Captain's small porthole -- sees boats | |
| laden with Navy men headed for shore. | |
| She turns away from the porthole, wishing there was something | |
| she could do. Suddenly there is a flutter at the window -- | |
| Cotton's parrot is there. | |
| COTTON'S PARROT | |
| Drink UP me hearties yo ho! Drink | |
| UP me hearties yo ho! | |
| The bird flutters off; Elizabeth races to the porthole, and | |
| then to the stern window to see it fly away. | |
| She looks down -- and there, fastened to the stern of the ship, | |
| is a small rowboat. | |
| INT. ISLA DE MUERTA - CAVES - NIGHT | |
| Will races forward, turning this way and that. He sees a light | |
| ahead, heads for it, turns a corner -- | |
| -- and runs straight into Jack. | |
| JACK | |
| Do you have any idea where you're | |
| going? | |
| WILL | |
| Jack! | |
| JACK | |
| Don't talk. These caves magnify | |
| sound. Just follow me. | |
| EXT. ISLA DE MUERTA - THE BEACH - NIGHT | |
| Norrington and men land on the beach, and spread out. They | |
| silently take up positions around the main cave entrance. | |
| INT. CAVES - NIGHT | |
| Jack leads Will out of a narrow passage -- and stops, staring. | |
| Will is a few steps behind. | |
| WILL | |
| Are you certain this is the right | |
| way? | |
| JACK | |
| It's the right way. | |
| Will joins him -- and sees what Jack is staring at: | |
| Treasure piled on treasure, sparkling, glowing, seemingly | |
| endless. At the center is the moonlit clearing, and the stone | |
| Aztec chest. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Thank you, Jack Sparrow. | |
| They jump -- Barbossa is standing right behind them, flanked by | |
| his men. The trio whirl to run -- more pirates emerge from | |
| hiding. Nearly the entire crew of the Black Pearl is there. | |
| The pirates grab Will and Jack. Will struggles, but Jack does | |
| not fight at all. | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| You couldn't have led him back more | |
| directly if you knew exactly where | |
| you were going. | |
| He laughs, and moves toward the stone chest. The pirates | |
| follow, dragging Will and Jack with them. | |
| WILL | |
| You did know where you were going! | |
| You did lead us directly to them! | |
| (Jack's silence | |
| confirms it) | |
| Why? | |
| Jack looks away -- as Will is manhandled toward the chest. | |
| Barbossa steps up to him (becoming skeletal in the moonlight) | |
| and puts the medallion around Will's neck. | |
| He picks up the stone knife. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| What was begun by blood, let blood | |
| now end! | |
| He raises the knife to Will's throat -- | |
| JACK | |
| You don't want to be doing that. | |
| Barbossa pretends to think about his words. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| No, I really think I do. | |
| JACK | |
| (shrugs) | |
| All right then. | |
| That makes Barbossa pause. He steps out of the moonlight. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Why don't I want to do this? | |
| JACK | |
| Because, right about now, the | |
| H.M.S. Dauntless is lying in wait | |
| in the harbor. | |
| WILL | |
| Jack! | |
| JACK | |
| -- and its guns and crew will cut | |
| you and your men to pieces the | |
| moment you step outside these | |
| caves. | |
| A buzz of apprehension sweeps through the pirates. | |
| PINTEL | |
| Do you believe him? | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| No. | |
| (indicates Will) | |
| But him I believe. He us genuinely | |
| angry. | |
| JACK | |
| You've no hope of surviving | |
| Norrington's attack ... that is, | |
| if you're mortal. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| What're you suggesting? | |
| Jack shakes off the hands holding him, strolls toward Barbossa, | |
| Will, and the chest of coins. | |
| JACK | |
| Simple. Don't kill the boy yet. | |
| Wait for a more opportune moment. | |
| Will glares, listening to every word he says. Jack scoops up a | |
| handful of coins from the chest. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| (drops the coins one- | |
| by-one back into the | |
| chest) | |
| Like after you've killed ... Every | |
| ... Last ... One ... of | |
| Norrington's men. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| I can't help wondering, Jack, why | |
| you're being so helpful and all? | |
| Last time you did that, it didn't | |
| end well for you. | |
| JACK | |
| The situation has changed. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| That so? | |
| JACK | |
| Aye. See, after you're done with | |
| the Royal Navy, you'll have a bit | |
| of a problem: the H.M.S. Dauntless. | |
| There you'll be, with two lovely | |
| ships on your hands, and what to | |
| do? Of course you'll decide you | |
| deserve the bigger one, and who's | |
| to argue? The Dauntless a first- | |
| rate ship-of-line, and with it, you | |
| can rule the seas. | |
| (beat) | |
| But if you're Captain of the | |
| Dauntless, who's left for the Black | |
| Pearl? | |
| Jack smiles and spreads his hands: me. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| I sail for you as part of your | |
| fleet, I give you fifteen percent | |
| of my plunder, and you get to | |
| introduce yourself at tea parties | |
| and brothels as 'Commodore | |
| Barbossa.' | |
| (sticks out his hand) | |
| Do we have an accord? | |
| Barbossa licks his lips. It's tempting ... | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Now, you can take care of the | |
| Dauntless, right? | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Men! Are you up for it? | |
| The pirates yell to the affirmative. | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| Mr. Pintel, select five men to stay | |
| here. Take the rest of the men out | |
| ... not through the caves. | |
| Jack's expression falters; this he hadn't planned for. | |
| JACK | |
| There's ... another exit? | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Aye, for us there is. | |
| EXT. LAGOON - UNDERWATER - NIGHT | |
| Moonlight shines down into the shallow waters, brightening | |
| coral, sparkling over the rippled sand floor. | |
| Suddenly all the fish SCATTER. Briefly, the waters are empty. | |
| And then FIGURES appear in the distance, seeming to waver in | |
| the shifting current. They scuffle forward, kicking up clouds | |
| of sand -- | |
| The figures resolve into the skeleton PIRATES, moving silently | |
| across the lagoon floor, swords glinting. The tatters of their | |
| clothing drift in the water. Their skull heads are fixed in an | |
| endless grin. | |
| The LEAD PIRATE glides forward -- | |
| And stops next to a huge iron ANCHOR -- twice his height, even | |
| buried halfway into the sand. A heavy CHAIN with barrel-sized | |
| links climbs up toward the surface -- | |
| A SHADOW falls across the Lead Pirate -- he TRANSFORMS, and we | |
| see that it is Pintel. He looks up -- | |
| Above, the heavy chain leads to the giant bottom hull of the | |
| H.M.S. Dauntless, silhouetted by moonlight. | |
| The huge shift drifts, again spilling moonlight below -- | |
| And the pirates gathered around the anchor are once again | |
| SKELETONS, staring with upturned faces. The Pintel-skeleton | |
| puts a knife between his teeth, starts to crawl up the iron | |
| rings. | |
| Other pirates crowd forward, and soon the anchor-chain is | |
| clustered with skeletons -- | |
| EXT. LAGOON - NIGHT | |
| Elizabeth has the small boat out, and rows away from the | |
| Dauntless, looking ahead over her shoulder. Cotton's parrot is | |
| nowhere to be seen. | |
| In the distance, Pintel breaks the surface near the Dauntless, | |
| intent on climbing the anchor; he looks over -- | |
| Just as Elizabeth rounds the point, and rocks obscure the small | |
| longboat from view. | |
| More skeleton-pirates appear, and Pintel continues his climb. | |
| EXT. LAGOON - DAUNTLESS - NIGHT | |
| Two SAILORS, alert and vigilant, stare out toward shore. The | |
| island reveals nothing but blackness. | |
| There is a scurrying sound -- bones scraping against wood -- | |
| and the sailors JUMP. They listen, intently -- nothing. | |
| TALL SAILOR | |
| Ship rats. Big ones. | |
| SHORT SAILOR | |
| (nods) | |
| Hate those things. | |
| They turn back toward the island, continue their vigil. A long | |
| pause. | |
| SHORT SAILOR (CONT'D) | |
| Taste all right, though. | |
| TALL SAILOR | |
| That they do. | |
| >From behind, the two sailors at the rail are well-lit by a | |
| lantern. Suddenly shadows appear, skeletons, climbing up the | |
| sailor's backs. MOVE CLOSER and then the skeletons appear, | |
| reaching -- the two sailors are grabbed from behind -- | |
| EXT. DAUNTLESS - SIDE - NIGHT | |
| Two bodies are tossed out over the rail, hit the water with a | |
| splash. | |
| EXT. DAUNTLESS - SIDE - NIGHT | |
| Pintel looks down into the water, satisfied. Puts away his | |
| knife. Notices, pulls out a long piece of seaweed from his rib | |
| cage. Tosses it. Turns to the others. | |
| PINTEL | |
| Be quick, now. Train the starboard | |
| guns on the beach, and set your | |
| aim. Wait for my signal, we don't | |
| want to spook them. | |
| The pirates hurry to comply -- | |
| EXT. LAGOON - BLACK PEARL - NIGHT | |
| Elizabeth rounds the point further, and sees: the Black Pearl, | |
| anchored in the neighboring cove. A fleck of color -- Cotton's | |
| parrot, as it darts through a porthole. | |
| Elizabeth slows her efforts, silently approaching the ship. | |
| EXT. BLACK PEARL - MAIN DECK - NIGHT | |
| Four PIRATES -- who really ought to be keeping watch -- instead | |
| have gathered wine bottles and rum casts into a pile, along | |
| apples, biscuits -- all the food on the ship. | |
| They act out a mock-feast, in anticipation of the curse being | |
| lifted. A SKINNY skeleton offers two bottles to a BIG BONES | |
| skeleton. | |
| SKINNY | |
| Which would you prefer first, good | |
| sir -- rum, or wine? | |
| BIG-BONES | |
| I believe I'll have a spot o' rum, | |
| if you don't mind, and thank'ee | |
| kind sir! | |
| They burst out laughing -- a hideous sound that wheezes through | |
| their bones. | |
| Behind them, unnoticed, Elizabeth peeks catiously around a | |
| corner. She picks her moment and sneaks past quickly, down a | |
| gangway, disappearing into the darkness of the ship. | |
| EXT. ISLA DE MUERTA - BEACH - NIGHT | |
| Gillette crouches, running low behind a line of rocks. He | |
| reports to Norrington: | |
| GILLETTE | |
| All the men in place, sir. Ready | |
| to fire. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Wait for my order -- what the | |
| blazes is that? | |
| It's the sound of cannon fire -- coming from the Dauntless. | |
| Cannonballs hit the shore; men cry out in anguish. | |
| NORRINGTON (CONT'D) | |
| Men! Take cover! | |
| The sailors scramble to find refuge -- | |
| INT. ISLA DE MUERTA - MAIN CAVERN - NIGHT | |
| Will, guarded by pirates, glares at Jack. | |
| WILL | |
| You've been planning this from the | |
| beginning. Since you learned my | |
| name. | |
| Jack takes the opportunity to move toward him. | |
| JACK | |
| Oh, please -- did I really seem | |
| that clever? | |
| Before Will can answer, Jack smoothly slips the sword from a | |
| Pirate's scabbard -- tosses it to Will, who catches it despite | |
| his sursprise. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| Use it well. | |
| He draws his own sword -- and clobbers the Pirate. Barbossa and | |
| the other pirates stare in shock -- | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Confound it, Jack -- I was actually | |
| beginning to like you! | |
| Swords are drawn, and the Pirates attack. | |
| Jack and Will take on multiple opponents, each with his own | |
| style: Will parries, glissades and dissarms with lightening | |
| fast and perfect form, while Jack uses his blade, fists, | |
| acrobatics and anything within reach to survive. | |
| EXT. ISLA DE MUERTA - BEACH - NIGHT | |
| The sailors charge. The moon emerges from behind a cloud -- | |
| Suddenly an army of SKELETON PIRATES rise up from the sea, and | |
| charge the stunned sailors -- several men are struck down -- | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| Steady, men! Remember -- we're the | |
| Navy! | |
| The sailors recover their nerve, and engage the enemy. It's a | |
| full on battle, Royal Navy against Skeleton Pirates -- | |
| The Navy men are driven back, surrounded -- | |
| Suddenly there is a massive BOOM of cannon fire. Norrington, in | |
| the midst of of a swordfight, tries to see -- | |
| NORRINGTON (CONT'D) | |
| What is happening out there? | |
| EXT. LAGOON - NIGHT | |
| It's the Black Pearl, manned by Gibbs, AnaMaria and Cotton, and | |
| captained by Elizabeth, coming around the point, cannons | |
| blazing -- | |
| EXT. ISLA DE MUERTA - BEACH - NIGHT | |
| Gillette sees the Black Pearl firing on the Dauntless. | |
| GILLETTE | |
| They're on our side! Take heart, | |
| men! | |
| The Royal Navy stand their ground and fight -- | |
| INT. CAVE - MAIN CAVERN - NIGHT | |
| Only two pirates left: Barbossa and Jacoby. Jacoby rounds on | |
| Will; Barbossa faces off against Jack. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Just so you know, Jack -- I don't | |
| think you're that clever. I think | |
| you're a fool. A mortal fool. | |
| JACK | |
| Remarkable how often those two | |
| traits coincide. | |
| Jack drives him back, making Barbossa laugh. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| You can't beat me, Jack. | |
| To prove his point, he drops his own sword -- and catches | |
| Jack's sword with both hands. Jack can't free it. Barbossa | |
| twists the sword from Jack's grip, reverses it -- | |
| -- AND DRIVES THE SWORD INTO JACK'S CHEST. | |
| Will battling Jacoby, sees it -- he smashes Jacoby in the jaw, | |
| crumpling him. | |
| WILL | |
| Jack! | |
| Jack stares down at the sword jutting from his chest. He takes | |
| a few steps backward, toward the Aztec gold -- when he steps | |
| into the moonlight, JACK BECOMES SKELETAL. | |
| JACK | |
| Well, isn't that interesting. | |
| Skeleton Jack pulls the sword from his chest. He pulls | |
| something from his pocket: one of the Aztec coins. | |
| JACK (CONT'D) | |
| They're so pretty, I just couldn't | |
| resist stealing one. It's a curse, | |
| I guess. | |
| Barbossa grabs up his sword, and rushes Jack. Both men are | |
| in moonlight now, two skeletons in pitched battle. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| So what now, Jack Sparrow? Are we | |
| to be two immortals, locked in epic | |
| battle until the trumpets of | |
| Judgement Day? | |
| JACK | |
| Or you could surrender. | |
| He shoves Barbossa back, out of the moonlight. Barbossa stalks | |
| the room, his attention focused on Jack. | |
| BARBOSSA | |
| Or I could chain you to a | |
| cannonball and drop you in the | |
| deepest part of the ocean, where | |
| you can contemplate your folly | |
| forever. | |
| Barbossa charges -- | |
| A SHOT RINGS OUT -- | |
| Jack stands out of the moonlight, flesh and blood again, | |
| holding his smoking pistol, still aimed at Barbossa. | |
| BARBOSSA (CONT'D) | |
| Hah. Ten years you carried that | |
| pistol, and you end up wasting your | |
| shot. | |
| WILL | |
| He didn't waste it. | |
| Will stands over the Aztec chest, holding a bloody sword, his | |
| left hand in a fist. He opens the fist -- | |
| -- the medallion, blood covering it, drops from his hand, | |
| revealing the cut in his palm. | |
| Barbossa stares, then looks down at his chest. Blood blossoms | |
| on his shirt around the bullet hole. It spreads quickly. | |
| Barbossa clutches his chest, his face registering pain for the | |
| first time in years. Barbossa falls heavily to the ground, | |
| dead. | |
| Jack blows the smoke from the barrel of his pistol ... tosses | |
| it away. | |
| EXT. ISLA DE MUERTA - BEACH - NIGHT | |
| Murtogg FIRES a pistol at a pirate. The pirate is hit, screams | |
| in pain, and crumples to the ground. Mullroy runs through | |
| another pirate with a sword. | |
| The pirates react to the sight, and quickly realize their | |
| peril. They set their weapons down in surrender. | |
| EXT. ISLA DE MUERTA - LAGOON - NIGHT | |
| The Black Pearl comes alongside the Dauntless, and Jack's crew | |
| swarm across, overwhelming the pirates. | |
| The sailors on the beach see it, and CHEER. | |
| INT. ISLA DE MUERTA - CAVE - MAIN CAVERN - NIGHT | |
| Will wraps a cloth around his palm; Jack joins him near the | |
| chest. | |
| WILL | |
| Well, you're the worst pirate I've | |
| ever heard of. | |
| (smiles) | |
| You're a man who can be trusted, | |
| who can be counted on, and who | |
| can't betray his friends. What | |
| kind of pirate is that? | |
| JACK | |
| (admits it) | |
| The worst. | |
| (beat) | |
| On the other hand, maybe I'm a man | |
| who can't pass up a chance for | |
| revenge against the black-hearted | |
| bastard who stole my ship and left | |
| me to die in the middle of the | |
| ocean -- twice! -- and who knows | |
| how to get what he wants. Now | |
| that's a great pirate. | |
| Jack cuts his palm, grips the coin he stole above the chest ... | |
| and then hesitates. | |
| Will looks at him ... | |
| Jack releases the coin. It lands in the chest beside the other | |
| bloody coin. | |
| Suddenly, the lid of the chest, all on its own, SLAMS SHUT. | |
| Elizabeth stares at it. | |
| WILL | |
| Let's get out of here. | |
| EXT. ISLA DE MUERTA - BEACH - NIGHT - LATER | |
| Jack, Will and Norrington gather together on the beach. | |
| Elizabeth calls out: | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| You're all right! | |
| The three men turn as one. An awkward moment -- which of them | |
| does she mean? | |
| Elizabeth races across the sand, toward them -- and straight to | |
| Will. She throws her arms around his neck in a hug. | |
| WILL | |
| Miss Swann -- are you wearing | |
| trousers? And how did you get off | |
| the island? | |
| Elizabeth can't believe that's what he noticed. Indignant, she | |
| steps away from him. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| Yes, I am wearing trousers. And as | |
| for how we got off the island -- | |
| ah, that's a grand adventure, but | |
| now is not the time to talk about | |
| it. | |
| She reaches a hand behind his neck, decisively kisses him. | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| There. And don't you dare tell me | |
| that wasn't a proper kiss! | |
| WILL | |
| Elizabeth, I think it doesn't | |
| matter that we are of a different | |
| class -- | |
| ELIZABETH | |
| It doesn't! | |
| WILL | |
| -- but that was not a proper kiss. | |
| Pure consternation on Elizabeth's face -- | |
| WILL (CONT'D) | |
| This is a proper kiss. | |
| Will sweeps her in his arms, leans her back, and kisses her | |
| long and well -- | |
| Jack puts a hand on Norrington's shoulder. | |
| JACK | |
| Tough luck. I was rooting for you. | |
| EXT. PORT ROYAL - FORT CHARLES - DAY | |
| Close on: Will's face, stoic, staring forward. He stands | |
| straight and unmoving. Around him are members of the Royal | |
| Navy, standing before for a group of witnesses from town. | |
| It is the courtyard on top of Fort Charles. A trial is underway | |
| -- with Will as the defendant. | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| ... and though I do say so with | |
| regret, the law is clear. The | |
| penalty for piracy is death by | |
| hanging. | |
| In the crowd, Elizabeth squeezes the hand of her father, Swann. | |
| She lets go as Swann stands. | |
| SWANN | |
| By your leave, I wish to speak on | |
| behalf of the boy. | |
| (a glance at Elizabeth) | |
| It is clear that these deeds were | |
| performed out of a sincere desire | |
| to do good, at great personal risk. | |
| It seems to me, that in rare | |
| occasion where the right course is | |
| committing an act of piracy, then | |
| an act of piracy is the right | |
| course! | |
| (cheers of approval) | |
| So in my capacity as Governor, I | |
| intend to grant a pardon to -- | |
| GILLETTE | |
| Sir! | |
| All eyes turn. Gillette stands at the top of a stairway. | |
| GILLETTE (CONT'D) | |
| Jack and his crew have escaped! | |
| (gasps from the crowd) | |
| There was no damage to the cell ... | |
| they must have been set free. | |
| Will and Elizabeth exchange looks. You? Not me, you? No, not me | |
| either! Swann notices something on the parapet, points -- | |
| SWANN | |
| The Black Pearl! | |
| People rush to the parapet. Sure enough, below in the bay are | |
| the distinctive black sails of the Pearl. The ship cuts through | |
| the waters very close to the point -- | |
| -- where the gallows of the pirates are. Suddenly Jack appears, | |
| on the point; he swings off the one empty gallows, across and | |
| down onto the ship's rigging as it passes. | |
| GILLETTE | |
| Sir! Shall I break out the | |
| cannons? | |
| NORRINGTON | |
| I don't think that will be | |
| necessary. | |
| Norrington raises his hand ... twirls a key on his finger. | |
| NORRINGTON (CONT'D) | |
| A day's head start. That's all he | |
| gets. | |
| Will, Elizabeth and Swann look out toward the ocean -- | |
| EXT. BLACK PEARL - STERN DECK - DAY | |
| Jack monkeys down the rigging. AnaMaria is at the wheel. | |
| ANAMARIA | |
| Capatin Sparrow -- the Black Pearl | |
| is yours! | |
| Jack runs a hand lovingly along the rail, then takes the wheel. | |
| It feels good -- right -- in his hands. He enjoys it, and then | |
| shifts to 'Captain' mode. | |
| JACK | |
| AnaMaria, trim the mainsail! | |
| ANAMARIA | |
| Aye, aye, sir! | |
| JACK | |
| Mr. Gibbs, organize a cleaning | |
| detail -- you and Cotton. I want | |
| every inch of the Pearl spic-and- | |
| span and ship-shape! | |
| Gibbs actually stomps the deck, executes a salute. | |
| Jack stands at the wheel: he's got his ship back, and all is | |
| right with the world. He begins to unconsciously hum: "Yo, ho, | |
| yo, ho, a pirate's life for me ..." | |
| He realizes what he's doing and smiles, the orchestra takes | |
| over as the Black Pearl sails for uncharted waters ... and we | |
| FADE UP large words in script: | |
| THE END | |
| FADE OUT and CREDITS ROLL | |