Pirates 2, Dead Mans Chest. PRODUCTION NOTES
WALT DISNEY PICTURES
PRESENTS
A GORE VERBINSKI FILM
FOR INTENSE SEQUENCES OF ADVENTURE
VIOLENCE, INCLUDING FRIGHTENING IMAGES.
© Disney Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Pirates.movies.com
WALT DISNEY PICTURES
Presents
In Association with
JERRY BRUCKHEIMER FILMS
A
GORE VERBINSKI
Film
PIRATES OF THE
CARIBBEAN:
DEAD MAN’S CHEST
Directed by . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . GORE VERBINSKI
Written by . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . TED ELLIOTT
& TERRY ROSSIO
Based on Characters Created by . . . . . . TED ELLIOTT
& TERRY ROSSIO
and STUART BEATTIE
and JAY WOLPERT
Based on
Walt Disney’s
“PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN”
Produced by . . . . . . . . . . . . . JERRY BRUCKHEIMER
Executive Producers . . . . . . . . . . . . . MIKE STENSON
CHAD OMAN
BRUCE HENDRICKS
ERIC McLEOD
Director of
Photography. . . . . . . . . . . . . DARIUSZ WOLSKI, ASC
Production Designed by . . . . . . . . . RICK HEINRICHS
Edited by. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CRAIG WOOD
STEPHEN RIVKIN, A.C.E.
Costume Designer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . PENNY ROSE
Visual Effects Supervisor . . . . . . . . . . . JOHN KNOLL
Music by. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HANS ZIMMER
Music Supervisor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . BOB BADAMI
Casting by. . . . . . . . . . . . . . DENISE CHAMIAN, CSA
UK Casting by . . . . . . . . . . . PRISCILLA JOHN, CDG
Unit Production Managers . . . . . . . . . . ERIC McLEOD
DOUGLAS C. MERRIFIELD
First Assistant Directors. . . . . . . . . . . . . PETER KOHN
DAVID H. VENGHAUS, JR.
Second Assistant
Directors . . . . . . . . . . . . . DAVID H. VENGHAUS, JR.
JEFFREY OKABAYASHI
Associate Producer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . PAT SANDSTON
ILM Animation Supervisor . . . . . . . . . . HAL HICKEL
ILM Visual Effects Producers . . . . . . . NED GORMAN
JILL BROOKS
CAST
Jack Sparrow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . JOHNNY DEPP
Will Turner. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ORLANDO BLOOM
Elizabeth Swann. . . . . . . . . . . . . KEIRA KNIGHTLEY
Norrington . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . JACK DAVENPORT
Davy Jones. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . BILL NIGHY
Governor Weatherby Swann. . . . . JONATHAN PRYCE
Pintel. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . LEE ARENBERG
Ragetti . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . MACKENZIE CROOK
Gibbs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . KEVIN R. McNALLY
Cotton. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DAVID BAILIE
Bootstrap Bill . . . . . . . . . . . STELLAN SKARSGÅRD
Cutler Beckett. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . TOM HOLLANDER
Tia Dalma . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . NAOMIE HARRIS
Marty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . MARTIN KLEBBA
Mercer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DAVID SCHOFIELD
Captain Bellamy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ALEX NORTON
Scarlett . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . LAUREN MAHER
Short Sailor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . NEJ ADAMSON
Large Sailor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . JIMMY ROUSSOUNIS
Sunburned Sailor. . . . . . . . . . . MORAY TREADWELL
Leech . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SAN SHELLA
Fisherman (Montage) . . . . . . . JIM CODY WILLIAMS
Cannibal Warrior . . . . . . . . . . . MICHAEL MIRANDA
Frightened Sailor . . . . . . . . . . LUKE DE WOOLFSON
Very Old Man. . . . . . . . . . . . . DERRICK O’CONNOR
Skinny Man. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . GEORGES TRILLAT
Crippled Man . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ISRAEL ADURAMO
Irish Man . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . GERRY O’BRIEN
Maccus/Dutchman . . . . . . . . . . . . DERMOT KEANEY
Koleniko/Dutchman . . . . . . . . . . . . CLIVE ASHBORN
Shrimper (Montage) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ROBBIE GEE
Cannibal Boy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . NEIL PANLASIGUI
Sailor/Edinburgh. . . . . . . . . . . . MATTHEW BOWYER
Burser/Edinburgh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . MAX BAKER
Quartermaster/Edinburgh. . . . . . . . . . . STEVE SPEIRS
Wyvern . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . JOHN BOSWALL
Palafico/Dutchman. . . . . . . . . . . . . . WINSTON ELLIS
Jimmy Legs/
Dutchman . . . . . . . . . . . . CHRISTOPHER ADAMSON
Clacker/Dutchman. . . . . . . . . . . . . ANDY BECKWITH
Ogilvey/Dutchman . . . . . . . . . . JONATHAN LINSLEY
Shrimper’s Brother. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SYLVER
Chaplain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SIMON MEACOCK
Cannibal Women . . . . . . . . . . . . . NATSUKO OHAMA
JOSIE DAPAR
Giselle. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . VANESSA BRANCH
Edinburgh Cook. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DAVID STERNE
Scuttled Ship Helmsman . . . . . . . . . . . DAVID KEYES
Cannibal. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ANTHONY PATRICIO
Carruthers Guard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . BARRY McEVOY
CREDITS
1
CREDITS
Deckhand/Edinburgh . . . . . . . . . MICHAEL ENRIGHT
Sweepy . . . . . . . . HERNANDO “SWEEPY” MOLINA
Turkish Prisoners . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . JOHN MACKEY
SPIDER MADISON
BUD MATHIS
Turkish Guards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . MARCO KHAN
DAVID ZAHEDIAN
FAOUZI BRAHIMI
Torch Native. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . JONATHAN LIMBO
Native Bridge Guard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ALEX CONG
Ho-Kwan. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . HO-KWAN TSE
Headless. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . REGGIE LEE
Lejon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . LEJON O.STEWART
Parrot Voice . . . . . . . . . . . . . CHRISTOPHER S. CAPP
Stunt Coordinator . . . . GEORGE MARSHALL RUGE
Assistant Stunt
Coordinator. . . . . . . . . . . . . DANIEL W. BARRINGER
“Jack Sparrow” Stunt Double . . . TONY ANGELOTTI
“Will Turner” Stunt Doubles . . . . . . . ZACH HUDSON
MARK AARON WAGNER
“Elizabeth Swann” Stunt Double . . . . . . LISA HOYLE
“Norrington” Stunt Double/
Sword Master . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . THOMAS DUPONT
Lead Utility Stunt Double . . . . . . . . KIRK MAXWELL
Stunts
JIM STEPHAN RICHARD L. BLACKWELL
HUGH AODH O’BRIEN WEBSTER WHINERY
J. MARK DONALDSON JACK WEST
MARC SHAFFER TRAMPAS THOMPSON
TOM MORGA JEFF WOLFE
THEO KYPRI CRAIG SILVA
KOFI ELAM PAUL ELIOPOULOS
KURT LOTT JAY CAPUTO
MARK NORBY ROB MARS
JAYSON DUMENIGO YOSHIO IIZUKA
DAVID WALD CLAY FONTENOT
NORBERT PHILLIPS ANTHONY KRAMME
THOMAS ROSALES, JR. DEREK MEARS
MARK DEALESSANDRO MICKEY GIACOMAZZI
PHILIP TAN JIM PALMER
BRIAN J. WILLIAMS VICTOR QUINTERO
KIANTE ELAM PHIL CULOTTA
RUSSELL TOWERY GENE HARTLINE
JP ROMANO GREG ELAM
JOEY ANAYA KEITH CAMPBELL
JON VALERA JOHN ROBOTHAM
KOFI YIADOM SONJA JO McDANCER
STACY HOWELL KORI MURRAY
CARYN MOWER NOBY ARDEN
ANDREW STEHLIN AUGIE DAVIS
SALA BAKER ROBERT ALONZO
ROEL FAILMA AARON TONEY
XUYEN VALDIVIA JOHN DONOHUE
JOSEPH SOSTHAND DEAN GRIMES
GARY STEARNS ANDY DYLAN
DENNEY PIERCE ALEX CHANSKY
BRIAN BENNETT STEPHEN POPE
HENRY KINGI, JR. JEREMY FRY
DON LEE CHRISTOPHER LEPS
CASEY O’NEILL BRYCEN COUNTS
SAM HARGRAVE LINCOLN SIMONDS
DANE FARWELL BRIAN DUFFY
Jack’s Crew
Moises. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . FELIX CASTRO
Kursar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . MIKE HABERECHT
Matelot . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . RUDOLPH McCOLLUM
Tearlach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . GERARD REYES
Duncan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . M. SCOTT SHIELDS
Ladbroc . . . . . . . . . . . . . CHRIS “SULLY” SULLIVAN
Crimp. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CRAIG THOMSON
Quartetto . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . FRED TOFT
Creature Concepts by
CRASH McCREERY
Conceptual Consultant
JAMES WARD BYRKIT
Associate Costume Designer . . . . . . JOHN NORSTER
Production Supervisor . . . . . . . THOMAS C. HAYSLIP
Production Controller. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . JULIE JONES
Production Coordinators . . . . . . . . . . . ZOILA GOMEZ
ROBERT MAZARAKI
Assistant Production Coordinators. . . ANNIE SCHULTZ
CARRIE B. JONES
Travel Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . . . . VICKIE M. HSIEH
Second Second
Assistant Directors. . . . . . . . . . JEFFREY SCHWARTZ
STEVEN F. BEAUPRE
Script Supervisor. . . SHARRON REYNOLDS-ENRIQUEZ
Supervising Art Director . . . . . . . . . . . JOHN DEXTER
Art Directors . . . . . . . . . WILLIAM LADD SKINNER
BRUCE CRONE
WILLIAM HAWKINS
Assistant Art Directors . . . . . . . . . . . NICK NAVARRO
DOMENIC SILVESTRI
ROBERT WOODRUFF
ERIC SUNDAHL
DARRELL L. WIGHT
GARY DIAMOND
Set Decorator. . . . . . . . . . . . . . CHERYL A. CARASIK
2
Construction Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . GREG CALLAS
Set Designers
MARK HITCHLER CLINT WALLACE
MAYA SHIMOGUCHI WILLIAM TALIAFERRO
LAUREN POLIZZI LUIS G. HOYOS
A. TODD HOLLAND ROBERT FECHTMAN
RICHARD REYNOLDS
Props Set Designer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . BILLY HUNTER
Conceptual Artists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DAREK GOGOL
MATT CODD
TIM FLATTERY
Illustrators
MAURO BORRELLI JAMES CARSON
NATHAN SCHROEDER WIL MADOC REES
WARREN MANSER
Model Makers/Sculptors . . . . NAAMAN MARSHALL
DANIEL R. ENGLE
Model Maker. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . JASON MAHAKIAN
Graphic Designer . . . . . . . . . . . DIANNE CHADWICK
Art Department Administrator . . . CARLA S. NEMEC
Researcher . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . MAX DALY
2nd Art Department
Administrators . . . . SHARI KARSTENSEN-RATLIFF
KYRA L. KOWASIC
Production Accountant. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . JEFF DASH
First Assistant Accountants . . . . . . . . JOHN SEMEDIK
DAVID ATKINSON
Construction Accountant . . . . . LISA M. KITTREDGE
SPFX Accountant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . LESLIE COOGAN
Post Production Accountant . . . TANYA NIENHOUSE
Second Assistant Accountants. . . . . . KATHY DONNO
ERNST W. LAUREL
ANNA BELARO
JENNIFER LOBBAN
LISA IMHOFF
MATT DEMIER
DAX A. CUESTA
STEPHANIE SHELLEY
Payroll Accountant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DEBI WEST
SAG Payroll Accountant . . . . MICHAEL GOLDBERG
Assistant Payroll Accountants . . . . DEBRA BURGESS
CHRIS SAMPLE
Executive in Charge of
Production for JBF . . . . . . . . . . KRISTIEANNE REED
Post Production Supervisor . . . . TAMI R. GOLDMAN
Post Production Coordinators. . YVETTE GONZALEZ
HEIDI PSYK
VFX Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . CHRISTOPHER S. CAPP
First Assistant Avid Editor . . . . . . . SIMON MORGAN
Additional Film Editor . . . . . . . . . . LANCE PEREIRA
Assistant Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . KINDRA MARRA
ALAN Z. McCURDY
Apprentice Editor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . DYLAN M. QUIRT
Post Production Assistants. . . . . . . KNAR KITABJIAN
TRANEL BLAND
Location
Manager (U.S.) . . . . . . . . LAURA SODE-MATTESON
Location Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . VAL KIM
Assistant Location Manager . . . . . . . . . . . LINDA KAI
Camera Operators . . . . . . . . . . . . . MARTIN SCHAER
JOSH BLEIBTREU
Camera Operator/Steadicam. . . DAVID LUCKENBACH
First Assistant Camera . . . . . . . . . . TREVOR LOOMIS
JOHN ELLINGWOOD
NINO NEUBOECK
DONNY STEINBERG
Second Assistant Camera . . CHRISTOPHER J. GARCIA
RODNEY SANDOVAL
JAMES GOLDMAN
STEVEN CUEVA
JAY C. HAGER
Film Loader. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . GREG KURTZ
Camera Department Assistants . . . . . . . RYAN RAKEL
JOSEPH SUTERA
Aerial Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DAVID PARIS
Aerial Unit Director
of Photography . . . . . . . . . . DAVID B. NOWELL, ASC
Aerial First Assistant Camera . . . . . . ANDREW SYCH
Underwater Director
of Photography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . PETER ZUCCARINI
Underwater First Assistant Camera . . . PETER MANNO
ANDREW FISHER
SEAN GILBERT
Underwater Second
Assistant Camera . . . . . . . . . . ROBERT SETTLEMIRE
Libra Head Technician. . . . . . . . . . . . . JOHN BONNIN
Camera Technician . . . . . . . . . DARYL HAMBLETON
Costume Supervisor (Location) . . . KENNY CROUCH
Costume Supervisor (LA) . . . . JESSICA PAZDERNIK
Costume Coordinator (Location). . . LUCY BOWRING
Costume
Coordinator (LA) . . . . . . . RENEE LEVY HAZELTON
Costumers
SCOTT R. HANKINS MARK F. HOLMES
STACY M. HORN MARINA MARIT
CIARA McARDLE SUZY ROBERTSON
JAVIER ARRIETA BRYAN BIRGE
TESS INMAN JIMMY JAY
MATT JEROME NOEL D. LEONARD
PHILIP MATTHEWS ADAM ROACH
NIKI SPINA
CREDITS
3
CREDITS
Chief Buyer (UK). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ROS WARD
Assistant Buyer (UK) . . . . . . . . . GEORGINA WOODS
Buyer (LA). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ROSALIDA MEDINA
Chief Cutters. . . . . . . . . . . . . . CELEST CLEVELAND
LUCY DENNY
DOMINIC YOUNG
Tailors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . LEO ARELLANES
WILLIAM B. RODDEN
Seamstresses
ELAINE MANSOURI BARBARA OHREN
GLORIA BERRA GLORIA CASTRO
HASMIG KARAGIOSIAN SEDA TUFENKJIAN
Costume Propmaker . . . . . . . . . . . . DAVID BETHELL
Costume Leather Maker . . . . . . . . . KELVIN FEENEY
Workroom Coordinator. . . . . . . JULIE MURNAGHAN
Head Agers/Dyers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CLARE CARTER
STEVEN A. GELL
GILDARDO TOBON
Agers/Dyers
ADA AKAJI CHANDRA M. MOORE
TYRA YOULAND TONI KEHAULANI REED
JASON RAINEY MARIA J. SMITH-BYRD
SARAH MOORE CHARLOTTE HOBBS
Milliners. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . JOSEPH COLLINS
BETHAN LAND
ROBYN SIMMS
JILL TOMOMATSU
Costume Construction . . . . . . . . . . RICHARD De ATH
Assistants to the Costume Designers . . SOPHIA SPINK
GORDANA GOLUBOVIC
JORDANA FINEBERG
Make-Up Effects Created by
VE NEILL
CREATIVE MAKE-UP CONCEPTS
Make-Up Effects Supervisor . . . . . . . .JOEL HARLOW
Sculptors/Painters . . . . . . . . . . . .SCOTT STODDARD
RICHARD REDLEFSEN
Silicone Prosthetic Supervisor . . . .STEVE BUSCANO
Mold Shop Supervisor . . . . . . . . . . . . . .GIL LIBERTO
Mold Maker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .A.J. BEUNOT
Foam Latex Supervisor . . . . . . . . . .MARK VINIELLO
Mechanical Supervisor . . . . . . . .RUSSELL SHINKLE
Head Lab Technician . . . . . . . . . . .FRANK IPPOLITO
Lab Technicians
MIKE ROSS CHRIS GARNASS
PETE KELLEY ELIZABETH SILVERMAN
BETHANY GRUENENFELDER BRIANA DORNER
KERI KILGO LAURA HILL
Dental Prosthetics . . . . . . . . . . . . . .RICHARD SNELL
Facial Hair Pieces Created by . . . . . . . .JOHN BLAKE
Tattoos Designed by . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .KEN DIAZ
Make-Up Department Head . . . . . . . . . . . . .VE NEILL
Key Make-Up Artist . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JOEL HARLOW
Additional Make-Up Supervisor . . . . . . . . .KEN DIAZ
Make-Up Artists
RICHARD SNELL JOHN BLAKE
JANE GALLI RICHARD REDLEFSEN
Additional Make-Up Artists
LESLIE DEVLIN ROBIN BEAUCHESNE
ANNE MAREE HURLEY BRIAN PENIKAS
JOHN DAVID SNYDER NIKOLETTA SKARLATOS
GARRETT IMMEL HEATHER PLOTT
HEATHER KOONTZ KRISTIN RYALS
LESA NEILSON MARTHA CALLENDER
ELIZABETH HOEL DEAN JONES
CORINNA LIEBEL ROBERT D. MAVERICK
KEN NIEDERBAUMER STEPHEN PROUTY
KELCEY FRY JAMES ROHLAND
JAY WEJEBE ALEX PROCTOR
Make-Up Provided by . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .M·A·C
Special Effect Contact Lenses
by . . .PROFESSIONAL VISIONCARE ASSOCIATES
Contact Lens Coordinator . . . . . .CRISTINA P. CERET
Contact Lens Painter
& Technician . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .TYSON FOUNTAINE
Contact Lens Technician . . . . . . . . . . . . .LAURA HILL
Dental Special Effects for
Johnny Depp . . . . . . . . .DR. RICK GLASSMAN, DDS
Make-Up Production Assistant . . . . . .JED DORNOFF
Chief Hairstylist . . . . . . . . . . . . . .MARTIN SAMUEL
Key Hairstylist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .LUCIA MACE
Background Supervisor . . . . . . . . .GLORIA P. CASNY
4
Hairstylists Key Grip . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .J. MICHAEL POPOVICH
KIMI MESSINA COLLEEN LABAFF Best Boy Grip . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JOHN D. MILLER
NATASHA ALLEGRO HAZEL CATMULL Dolly Grips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .HECTOR GUTIERREZ
BARBARA CANTU CATHERINE CHILDERS EUGENE L. RIVERA
TAMMY KUSIAN ANN MARIE LUDDY Grips
NORMA LEE RANDA SQUILLACOTE RICHARD JONES JON JACOB FUNK
ANTHONY WILSON CAMMY LANGER RYAN PACHECO CHAD C. BARROW
RENEE DIPINTO AUDREY L. ANZURES STEVEN SERNA MICHAEL R. DUARTE
MICHAEL MOORE LYNDA K. WALKER TONY WIDMER
DIANNE PEPPER FRANCINE SHERMAINE Rigging Key Grip . . . . . . . . . . . . .JERRY SANDAGER
CYNTHIA ROMO MARIA VALDIVIA Best Boy Rigging Grip . . . .CHARLES “CHIP” HART
JULIA L. WALKER MIIA KOVERO Rigging Grips . . . . . . . . . . . .MICHAEL E. PACHECO
KARL WESSON PATRINA O’CONNOR CLAYTON FOWLER
LISA MARIE ROSENBERG ALPERT M.K. HINIKER
DAVID GONZALEZ
Hair Dept. Production Assistant . . . .MARY SAMUEL ALAN DOWNS
Technocrane Operators . . . . . . . .KENNY RIVENBARK
Unit Publicist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .MICHAEL SINGER CRAIG STRIANO
Still Photographer . . . . . . . . . . . .PETER MOUNTAIN BRIAN McPHERSON
Production Resources . . . . . . . . . . . .DAVID LEENER STEVE OLSEN
Research . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .VANESSA BENDETTI
Special Effects Coordinators . . . . . . . . .ALLEN HALL
Sound Mixer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .LEE ORLOFF, C.A.S. MICHAEL LANTIERI
Boom Operators . . . . . . . . .KNOX GRAHAM WHITE On-Set Foreman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .ANDREW WEDER
JEFFREY HUMPHREYS Shop Supervisors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .THOMAS PAHK
Cableman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .MIKE ANDERSON JAMES REEDY
Sound Technician for Mr. Depp . . . .KEENAN WYATT Shop Foreman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JIM ROBERTS
Rigging Foreman . . . . . . . . . . .DONALD R. ELLIOTT
Chief Lighting Technician . . . . . .RAFAEL SANCHEZ Gimbal Foreman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .MARK HAWKER
On-Set Foremen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .BOB WILLIAMS
Best Boy Electric . . . . . . . . . . . .JAREK GORCZYCKI CORY FAUCHER
SCOTT FISHER
Electricians Purchaser . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .RYAN FAUST
SCOTT SPRAGUE ALEXANDER J. CASTILLO
JERRY EUBANKS PATRICK R. HOESCHEN On-Set Technicians
LEE AUERBACH CHRIS WEIGAND JEFF OGG JEFF KHACHADOORIAN
CHRISTOPHER ELLIOTT HARRISON M. PALMER ANTE DUGANDZIC DOUG PASSARELLI
DAVID ELLIS ED O’BRIANEN LAWRENCE DECKER JEFF ELLIOTT
JOSEPH LIVOLSI TOM SEYMOUR
Dimmer Board Operator . . . . . . . .JEFFREY M. HALL FREDRICK APOLITO FRANKIE LUDICA JR.
Rigging Chief Lighting Technician . .RODGER MEILINK JAY B. KING LOUIE LANTIERI
Rigging Best Boy DANIEL OSSELLO BOB SLATER
Electric . . . . . . . . . .MORTEN “MORTY” PETERSEN JIM ROLLINS LEO L. SOLIS
TRACY REEDY HARRY KING HURST II
Riggers LARRY ZELENAY
SEAN M. HIGGINS KEVIN “BK” BARRERA
ERIC SANDLIN ISMAEL “IZZY” GONZALEZ Gimbal Unit Technicians . . . . . .THOMAS PELTON II
KEVIN BLAUVELT MICHAEL WALSH CRAIG “TEX” BARNETT
CARSON MARINE DANA M. ARNOLD MARK KOIVU
MARC MARINO HENRY EDGAR OBRAINT III JORDON SNOWHOOK
RICK CRANK
Fixtures
SCOTT GRAVES GREG ETHEREDGE
GEORGE LOZANO FFILIP BOLTON
CHRISTOPHER PRAMPIN JAY GALBO
CREDITS
5
CREDITS
Rigging Shop Technicians Foley Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . .MATTHEW HARRISON
ROBERT ALIDON RUBEN GARCIA JAMES LIKOWSKI
JOE LOVE JOEL MITCHELL F. HUDSON MILLER, MPSE
RAYMOND HOFFMAN MATTHEW J. McDONNELL Assistant Sound Editors . . . . . . .DOUGLAS PARKER
CHRIS BAILEY PAUL DAMIEN MELISSA LYTLE
PETER DAMIEN PHILIP DIGLIO Foley by . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .DAN O’CONNELL
DARRYLL B. DODSON SHAUN GLENDENNING JOHN CUCCI
JACK JENNINGS BRIAN BARNHART Foley Mixers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JAMES ASHWILL
ROY GOODE JEFF MILLER RICHARD DUARTE
STEVE MOORE RICHARD PERRY ADR Mixer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .DOC KANE
CARLOS M. RODRIGUEZ JAMIE REEDY ADR Recordist . . . . . . . . .JEANNETTE BROWNING
CRAIG REEDY STEVEN SCOTT WHEATLEY ADR Voice Casting . . . . . . . . . . .BARBARA HARRIS
Additional Sound Mixer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JIM BOLT
Pre-Rigging Technicians Stage Recordists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .TIM GOMILLION
CHAD VAN BAALBERGEN JOEL P. BLANCHARD DENNIS ROGERS
ROBERT CABAN CHRIS CLINE MATT PATTERSON
MICHAEL E. DOYLE KEVIN HARRIS Stage Engineers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .BILL STEIN
KURT HARRIS PAUL PAVELKA
Special Effects Sound Services by
Office Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . .JASON COLUMBUS BUENA VISTA SOUND STUDIOS
Special Effects Production
Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JULIE HOOKER BAKER Mixing Services by
Special Effects Craft Service . . . . .MICHAEL DEKEN 20TH CENTURY FOX STUDIOS
AGUSTIN TORAL
OSCAR ORONA Additional Mixing Services by
SKYWALKER SOUND
Supervising Sound Editor/Designer
CHRISTOPHER BOYES Mix Technicians . . . . . . . .BRIAN D. MAGERKURTH
JUAN PERALTA
Supervising Sound Editor TONY SERENO
GEORGE WATTERS II JURGEN SCHARPF
Re-Recordists . . . . . . . . . . . . .RONALD G. ROUMAS
Sound Mixers NATHAN NANCE
PAUL MASSEY
CHRISTOPHER BOYES Property Masters . . . . . . . . . .KRISTOPHER E. PECK
JERRY MOSS
Sound Effects Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . .KEN FISCHER
ADDISON TEAGUE Assistant Property Masters . . . . .MICHAEL HANSEN
SHANNON MILLS RICK CHAVEZ
TIM NIELSEN Armourer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .CHUCK ROUSSEAU
BRENT BURGE Property Assistants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .BRAD GOOD
MELANIE GRAHAM MICHAEL D. GIANNESCHI
Supervising JULIE GILCHRIST
Dialogue Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .TERI E. DORMAN MIKE CUNNINGHAM
Dialogue Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .DAVID ARNOLD Property Painter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .NICK JOHN
GLORIA D’ALESSANDRO Prop Shop Foreman . . . . . . .THOMAS R. HOMSHER
ULRIKA AKANDER Prop Shop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .GREGORY BRYANT
Supervising ROBIN REILLY
ADR Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JESSICA GALLAVAN BRYSON H. GERARD
ADR Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .LISA J. LEVINE Property Dept. Coordinator . . .ZACHARY M. HEATH
JULIE FEINER Shipping Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . . . .MARK DAVIES
HOWELL GIBBENS Assistant Shipping
MICHELLE PAZER Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .“LJ” LAURENT JEAN
Assistant Sound Designer . . . . . . . . . . . . .DEE SELBY
Supervising Foley Editor . . . . . .VICTORIA MARTIN Leadman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .ERNEST M. SANCHEZ
6
On-Set Dressers . . . . . . . . . . . .CAROL ANN NAPIER
MARILYN MORGAN
Set Dressers
CHRISTOPHER CASEY CHRISTOPHER KENNEDY
DEAN LAKOFF STEVEN LIGHT-ORR
RYAN RITTMILLER CHARLIE MONTOYA
CHRIS PETERSON MICHAEL SEAN O’DONNELL
Drapery Foreman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .STEVEN BAER
Buyers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .WENDY WEAVER
KATHLEEN ROSEN
Gang Boss . . . . . . . . .CRAIG ALLEN ZIMMERMAN
Set Decorating Coordinator . . . . . . . .ROBIN MOORE
General Foremen . . . . . . . . .PETER “PACO” ALVAREZ
RICHARD HOFFENBERG
STEVE THAYER
Lead Welding Foreman . . . . . . . . .ARTHUR CLEVER
Location Foreman . . . . . . . . . . . .RICHARD MARTIN
Welding Foreman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .ERNIE ALVAREZ
Lead Paint Foreman . . . . . . . . .GIOVANNI FERRARA
Paint Foremen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .ADRIAN VALDES
MIKE VALDES
Toolman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .LEO “NOOSE” MOUNEU
Labor Foremen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .RAUL ROSARIO
GEOVANNI CAMPOS
Lead Plaster Foreman . . . . . . . . . . . . . .MICKY CRUZ
Lead Sculptor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JAMES MILLER
Lead Model Maker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JEFF HOUSE
Construction Foremen
RICHARD BIRCH PHIL COFFMAN
STEVEN FEGLEY JOHN FORWALTER
STEPHEN GINDORF TEDD KEITH
HENRY MENDOZA PETE OLEXIEWICZ
JAMES ONDREJKO MICHAEL O’NEAL
KENNETH RICE DENNIS RICHARDSON
BERT RODRIGUEZ DAVE ROZO
DALE SNYDER STEVE SOLA
THOMAS A. WHITE
Propmakers
LEN BORGGREBE JOHN BRYANT
JOHN BULLARD ROBERT COYLE
GREG ELIOT JEFF GOLDBERG
STEVEN KALLAS DAVID KEIR
JUSTIN LAPRESLE CALVIN MANGUM
ED MIRASSOU CHRIS PEREZ
JAMES REYNOLDS PAUL ROBERTS
BRUCE SARTORIUS SHAWN STEPHENSON
TOMMY STURGEON JIM THOLEN SR.
ROBBIE WATTS DAVID WHITTAKER
Welders
GABRIEL BENAVIDEZ JEFFERY BERRINGTON
CLINT FEGLEY DAVID BOUCHER
SAMUEL DEAN GREG DIGGINS
RICK FIGALAN TERRY HAMBELTON
DARREN McCORMICK RON PEAKE
Stand-By Painter . . . . . . . . . . . . . .A.J. LEONARDI JR.
Painters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JOHN BUGARCIC
ANDREW CARTER
FRANCESCO “FRANCO” FERRARA
DANA ROSEN
GEORGE STUART
Model Makers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JEFFERY COBOS
RALPH COBOS
ARTURO GUZMAN
LUIS RODRIGUEZ
Sculptors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .TRAVIS CRAVEN
YANN DENOUAL
KEVIN MARKS
STEVE PINNEY
CHRIS TOWLE
Plasterers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JASON SOLES
JACK WORDEN
Greensmen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .CRAIG AYERS
FRANK CAPPIELLO
RENEE VAN DEN BERGHE
MIKE NEEDHAM
CLYDE “LOA” WONG
Laborers
ROB ALVAREZ ALAN F. CAUTHRON
JOE GARCIA EDWARD “ALEX” GIRON
ARMANDO GONZALEZ JOSE OLIVA
JOHN POKIPALA CARLOS SCALLY
TOMMY SCRIBNER MAX SOTO
JESSE VERETTE
Video Engineer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .DAVE DEEVER
Marine Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .DAN MALONE
Marine Foreman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .BRUCE A. ROSS
Picture Boat Coordinator . . . . . . . .J. WILFRID WHITE
Marine Office Coordinator . . . . . . .CARRIE ROSLAN
Asst. Marine Office
Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . . . .KRISTEN McLAUGHLIN
Water Safety . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .MIKE BRADY
TIM CALVER
JAMES MITCHELLE CLYDE
KRIS A. JEFFREY
Boat Captains
DANIEL C. BAILEY JAKE T. HICKS
JOHN MILLER DAVID PEARSALL
O.B. PETTIT DANIEL V. TREFTS
ROBERT WONG STEVE WROE
CREDITS
7
CREDITS
Dock Master . . . .DOUGLAS “KINO” VALENZUELA
Marine Technicians . . . . . . . . . . . . . .MIKE BRIDGER
DOUGLAS P. SILVERSTEIN
CURT SIVERTS
Sailmaster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .IAN McINTYRE
Assistant Sailmaster . . . . . .CHARLES HAMBLETON
Black Pearl Captain . . . . . . . . . .MICHAEL WATKINS
Black Pearl First Mate . . . . .LANCE M. BROZOZOG
Black Pearl Technician . . . . . .GLENN “KIWI” HALL
Black Pearl Crew . . . . . . . . . . . . .LISA L. BURNSIDE
JIM BARRY
Master Ship Technician . . . .COURTNEY ANDERSEN
Ship Technicians
PETER MARSHALL JENNIFER REILLY
PRAIRIE PIPES JAMES L. BRINK
LEAH KEFGEN SHANNON SMITH
DVD/EPK Field Producers . . . . . . . . . . . .JACK KNEY
STEPHEN MORRISON
Catering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .HATTRICK CATERING
Key Craft Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .TED YONENAKA
Craft Service Assistant . . . . . . . . . . .LEA ANDERSON
Executive Assistant to Mr. Bruckheimer . .JILL WEISS
Assistants to Mr. Bruckheimer . . .JOHN CAMPBELL
DAN CAMINS
CHRISTINA NORTHRUP
STEPHANIE DECOURCEY
Assistant to Mr. Verbinski . . . . .LINDSAY GREITZER
Assistant to Mr. Elliott
& Mr. Rossio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .SUSAN LEE SMITH
Assistant to Mr. Stenson . . . . . . . . . . . . .PAUL LYONS
Assistant to Mr. Oman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .SARAH LIN
Assistant to Mr. Hendricks . . . . .KARITA BURBANK
Assistant to Mr. McLeod . . . . . . .DANA KRUPINSKI
Assistant to Ms. Reed . . . . . . . . . . .ROBBIE SALTER
Assistant to Mr. Merrifield . . . . .LAURA SCHWARTZ
Executive Assistant
to Mr. Depp . . . . . . . . . . . . .CHRISTI DEMBROWSKI
Assistant to Mr. Depp . . . . . . . .STEPHEN DEUTERS
Assistant to Mr. Bloom . . . . . . .MICHAEL LAGNESE
Assistant to Ms. Knightley . . . . . . .DEREK DIBIAGIO
Assistant to Mr. Rush . . . . . . . . .STEPHEN J. YOUNG
Mr. Depp’s Stand-In . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .SCOTT SENER
Mr. Bloom’s Security . . . . . . . . . . . .GUY FRIEDMAN
Mr. Bloom’s Trainer . . . . . . . . .ANTONIO DI CECCO
Dialogue Coach . . . . . . . . . . . .BARBARA BERKERY
Dialect Coaches . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .CARLA MEYER
PETER LADEFOGED
Casting Associate . . . . . . . . . . .SCOUT MASTERSON
Casting Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .ANGELA DEMO
Production Secretaries . . . . . . . . . .OSCAR J. FLORES
MICHAEL LACORTE
Set Staff Assistants
MARIKE ZOE JAINCHILL KEVIN BERLANDI
TASHA PROTHRO FRANCINE DICHIARA
BRANDY D. POLLARD
Production Assistants
MARY SMITH PATRICK WYMORE
PETER JABLONSKI PEDRO CHAVEZ
ALLISON MEADOWS PARKER PHILLIPS
KRISTOPHER GIFFORD SARAH CONTANT
LINDSEY GARY JEREMY WORTZMAN
MEGAN ROMERO JOANNA CALLAS
BECKS WELCH JESSICA C. DIMARTINO
Film Runners . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .CHRISTY BUSBY
MATTHEW HAGGERTY
Studio Teacher . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .LAURA GARY
Assistant Script Supervisor . . .STACIE LIVINGSTON
Technical Advisor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .PETER TWIST
Transportation Coordinator . . . . . . . .DAVE ROBLING
Transportation Captain . . . . . . . . .JEFF WOODWARD
LA Captain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .FRANK ROUGHAN
Transportation
Administrator . . . . . . . . . . . .THOMAS R. SWEENEY
Mr. Depp’s Drivers . . . . . . . . . . . . .BUCK HOLLAND
TERRY REECE
Drivers/Operators
GLEN MARYGOLD MICHAEL ALLEGRO
THOMAS BARR O’DONNELL WILL DREHER
TOM PROVENZANO BRUCE ROZENBERG
CLINT COYLE ROBERT ENRIQUEZ
THOMAS M. MAWYER CURTIS RANDOLL
NEIL SCOGNAMIGLIO MAXIM APERIAN
VAUGHN BLADEN STEVE BURING
SCOTT FAIR GARY GRAY
MARK HOLMES JIMMY JONES
SCOTT A. KENNEDY MICHAEL W. McCLURE
DENNIS V. McKEEHAN LEO MOUNEU
TONY MOURADIAN DAVID MOIR
ALAN L. MYERS JAMES PERRY
SANDRA POWELL RICK PURDY
BILL M. PULUTI BRETT ROUND
MARVIN LAROY SANDERS PETER SCHWIETZER
ROBERT R. SEGLETES MIKE SHAW
JAMES SHERWOOD GORDON A. SPENCER
MICHAEL A. STEVENS MICHAEL P. SULLIVAN
STEVE SURABIAN JOHN E. THOMAS
JORGE VASQUEZ LAUNI VARBEL
JOHN R. WOODWARD ROGER YOUDS
PAUL JOHN YOUDS
8
Extras Casting . . . . . . . . . . . .SANDE ALESSI, C.S.A.
KRISTAN BERONA
JENNIFER ALESSI
Extras Casting Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . . .J.R. KEHOE
Animal Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .BOONE NARR
Head Trainer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .MARK HARDEN
Trainers
JOE SUFFREDINI URSULA BRAUNER
PHIL SMITH PATRICIA PEEBLES
MARK JACKSON MICHAEL BOYLE
DENNIS GRISCO CODY SMITH
APRYL CROSBY
First Aid . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JONAS C. MATZ
DAVID O’DELL
ROBERT ALLEN
Supervising Music Editor . . . . . . . . .MELISSA MUIK
Music Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JULIE PEARCE
Assistant Music Editor . . . . . .KATIE GREATHOUSE
Additional Music by
LORNE BALFE TOM GIRE
NICK GLENNIE-SMITH HENRY JACKMAN
TREVOR MORRIS JOHN SPONSLER
GEOFF ZANELLI
Featured Musician . . . . . . . . . . . .MARTIN TILLMAN
— cello
Supervising Orchestrator . . . . . . . . .BRUCE FOWLER
Orchestrations by
WALT FOWLER RICK GIOVINAZZO
KEN KUGLER SUZETTE MORIARTY
Music Preparation . . . . . . . . . . . . . .BOOKER WHITE
WALT DISNEY MUSIC LIBRARY
Score Recorded & Mixed by . . . .ALAN MEYERSON
Additional Recording by . . . . . . .SLAMM ANDREWS
JEFF BIGGERS
AL CLAY
On-Camera/Pre-Record
Musicians . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .CRAIG EASTMAN
JAMES S. LEVINE
MICHAEL LEVINE
FRANK MAROCCO
Orchestra Conducted by . . . . . . . . . .PETE ANTHONY
Orchestra
Contractors . . . . . . . . . . . . . .SANDY DE CRESCENT
PETER ROTTER
Ambient Music Design . . . . . . . . . . . . .MEL WESSON
Technical Music Assistants . .THOMAS BRODERICK
LARRY MAH
PETER OSO SNELL
GREG VINES
MATT WARD
Score Recorded
at . . . . . . . . .SONY SCORING STAGE, Los Angeles, CA
Scoring Stage Crew . . . . . . . . . . .ADAM MICHALAK
GREG LOSKORN
MARK ESHELMAN
BRYAN CLEMENTS
Music Production Services . . . . . . .STEVEN KOFSKY
Music Mixed
at . . . . . . . . . .REMOTE CONTROL PRODUCTIONS
Studio Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . .CZARINA RUSSELL
Featured Vocalist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .DELORES CLAY
Choir Master . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JENNY O’GRADY
Choirs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .METRO VOICES
THE CHOIR OF THE KING’S CONSORT
Choir Conducted by . . . . . . . . . . . . . .ALISTER KING
Choir Contractor . . . . . . . . . . . . .ISOBEL GRIFFITHS
Choir Recorded by . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .GEOFF FOSTER
Choir Recorded at . . . . .AIR LYNDHURST STUDIOS
ABBEY ROAD STUDIOS
Production Coordinator
for Mr. Zimmer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .ANDREW ZACK
Main Titles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .METHOD
End Titles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .SCARLET LETTERS
Negative
Cutter . . . . . . . . .BUENA VISTA NEGATIVE CUTTING
Color Timer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .KURT SMITH
Digital Intermediate Provided by . . . . . . .COMPANY 3
Executive Producer/Colorist . .STEFAN SONNENFELD
On-Line Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .DYLAN CARTER
Digital Intermediate Producers . . . . . . .ERIK ROGERS
DES CAREY
Producer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .MISSY PAPAGEORGE
Dailies Colorist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .MARK OSBORNE
Dailies Assistant Colorist . . . . . . . .ADRIAN DELUDE
Digital Intermediate Assistant . . . . . . . .DAN GOSLEE
Digital Intermediate Technologist . . . .MIKE CHAIDO
Original Negative Preparation
for DI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .US COMPUTAMATCH INC.
Special Visual Effects and Animation by
INDUSTRIAL LIGHT & MAGIC
a Lucasfilm Ltd. Company
San Francisco, California
Digital Production Supervisor . . . . . . . .DAVID MENY
Compositing Supervisor . . . .EDDIE PASQUARELLO
TD Supervisor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .PATRICK MYERS
CREDITS
9
CREDITS
Creature Development
Supervisor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JAMES TOOLEY
Digital Model Supervisors . . . . .GEOFF CAMPBELL
BRUCE HOLCOMB
STEVE WALTON
Additional Visual Effects Supervisors . .BILL GEORGE
ROGER GUYETT
Visual Effects Art Director . . . . . .AARON McBRIDE
Visual Effects Associate Producer . . . .LORI ARNOLD
Associate Animation Supervisor . . . . . . . .MARC CHU
Sequence Supervisors
THOMAS FEJES NEIL HERZINGER
JEFF SUTHERLAND CHAD TAYLOR
SUSUMU YUKUHIRO JASON SNELL
JACK MONGOVAN MARIO CAPELLARI
IAN CHRISTIE MICHAEL HALSTED
SHAWN HILLIER POLLY ING
KATRIN KLAIBER FRANCOIS LAMBERT
KIMBERLY LASHBROOK ROBERT MARINIC
TOM MARTINEK TORY MERCER
GREG SALTER DOUG SMYTHE
DAMIAN STEEL JEFF WOZNIAK
Animators
STEVE NICHOLS JAMY WHELESS
PETER DAULTON ISMAIL ACAR
GEORGE ALECO-SIMA CHARLES ALLENECK
SCOTT BENZA MICHAEL BERENSTEIN
SAMATI BOONCHITSITSAK DERRICK CARLIN
MICKAEL COEDEL SEAN CURRAN
JENN EMBERLY C. MICHAEL EASTON
CAMERON FOLDS LESLIE FULTON
TIMOTHY HEATH GEOFF HEMPHILL
KEITH JOHNSON PAUL KAVANAGH
MAIA KAYSER PETER KELLY
RONNIE KIM MAKOTO KOYAMA
PATRICIA KRAUSE SCOTT KRAVITZ
NADINE LAVOIE JONATHAN LYONS
KEVIN MARTEL THAI NGUYEN
RICK O’CONNOR JAKUB PISTECKY
MARK POWERS ELLIOT ROBERTS
TOM ROTH DAVID SHIRK
ANDREW SCHNEIDER DAVID SIDLEY
GREG TOWNER DELIO TRAMONTOZZI
CHI CHUNG TSE TIM WADDY
CHRIS WALSH HUCK WIRTZ
ANDY WONG STEPHEN WONG
SYLVIA WONG ROLAND YEPEZ
JOHN ZDANKIEWICZ
Digital Artists
MIMI ABERS JON ALEXANDER
JOEL ARON OKAN ATAMAN
TRANG BACH LANCE BAETKEY
AL BAILEY KEN BAILEY
KATHARINE BAIRD MICHAEL BALOG
MISTY BARBOUR CASEY BASICHIS
MICHAEL BAUER KATHLEEN BEELER
JEFFREY BENEDICT DUNCAN BLACKMAN
MATTHEW BLACKWELL STELLA BOGH
ARON BONAR TIMOTHY BRAKENSIEK
SAM BREACH TRIPP BROWN
JASON BROWN T.J. BURKE
MICHAELA CALANCHINI CARTER COLIN CAMPBELL
MARSHALL CANDLAND TAMI CARTER
MARK CASEY JOE CEBALLOS
LANNY CERMAK PETER CHESLOFF
TERRY CHOSTNER PAUL CHURCHILL
BRIAN CLARK ZACHARY COLE
TIM COLEMAN JAY COOPER
MICHAEL CORDOVA MARTIN COVEN
KEVIN COYLE CASEY DAME
MICHELLE DEAN PETER DEMAREST
KARIN DERLICH DAVID DEUBER
NATASHA DEVAUD RICHARD DUCKER
LEANDRO ESTEBECORENA DAN FEINSTEIN
BRIAN FLYNN CHRISTIAN FOUCHER
AIDAN FRASER ALEC FREDERICKS
DAVID FUHRER WILLI GEIGER
HOWARD GERSH MAURIZIO GIGLIOLI
GREG GILMORE JEREMY GOLDMAN
SUSAN GOLDSMITH MARIA GOODALE
DAVID GOTTLIEB BRYANT GRIFFIN
CAMERON GRIFFIN BRANKO GRUJCIC
TYLER HAM CRAIG HAMMACK
TREVOR HAZEL DAVID HIRSCHFIELD
ADAM HOWARD JEN HOWARD
PAUL HUSTON CYRUS JAM
MICHAEL JAMIESON SARAHJANE JAVELO
SCOTT JONES GREG KILLMASTER
WOONAM KIM DREW KLAUSNER
ED KRAMER ERIK KRUMREY
JEROEN LAPRE KELVIN LAU
KERRY LEE SUNNY LEE
SEUNG HUN LEE JOHN LEVIN
JOSHUA LIVINGSTON LUKE LONGIN
ANDREA MAIOLO GREG MALONEY
DAVID MARSH KEVIN MAY
VICKY McCANN WILL McCOY
REGAN McGEE JENNIFER McKNEW
JOSEPH METTEN LAUREN MORIMOTO
DAVID MORRIS KATIE MORRIS
MICHELLE MOTTA MELISSA MULLIN
MYLES MURPHY KEN NIELSEN
TIMOTHY NAYLOR JENNIFER NONA
BRETT NORTHCUTT KAORI OGINO
MAGGIE OH MASAYORI OKA
HIROMI ONO KHATSHO ORFALI
KEVIN PAGE SCOTT PARRISH
BENOIT PELCHAT BRUCE POWELL
JANET QUEN SCOTT PRIOR
10
TRACEY ROBERTS ELSA RODRIGUEZ
ALAN ROSENFELD ANDREW RUSSELL
JUAN-LUIS SANCHEZ MIKE SANDERS
STEVE SAUERS FREDERIC SCHMIDT
RENE SEGURA JERRY SELLS
ANTHONY SHAFER JOHN SIGURDSON
JASON SMITH SCOTT SMITH
JAMES SOUKUP SAM STEWART
CHRIS STOSKI DAVID SULLIVAN
HENRI TAN MASAHIKO TANI
STEPHANIE TAUBERT RENITA TAYLOR
MEGHAN THORNTON ALEX TROPIEC
KATE TURNER BRUCE VECCHITTO
ERIC VOEGELS JOHN WALKER
DAVID WASHBURN PATRICK WASS
TALMAGE WATSON GREGORY WEINER
ERIN WEST JOHN WHISNANT
JEFF WHITE DOUG WRIGHT
SIMON WICKER BARRY WILLIAMS
KEVIN WOOLEY KEIJI YAMAGUCHI
DANIEL ZIZMOR
Digital Models
LEIGH BARBIER SCOTT BONNENFANT
SIMON CHEUNG CATHERINE CRAIG
GUS DIZON DAVID FOGLER
JOHN GOODSON FRANK GRAVATT
JACK HAYE REBECCA HESKES
JUNG-SEUNG HONG LANA LAN
JEAN-CLAUDE LANGER LENNY LEE
SCOTT MAY TERRY MOLATORE
MARTIN MURPHY GIOVANNI NAKPIL
RUSSELL PAUL SUSAN ROSS
MARK SIEGEL KIM SMITH
JOSEPH SUEN LARRY TAN
HOWIE WEED SUNNY LI-HSIEN WEI
RON WOODALL
Visual Effects Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . .GREG HYMAN
Lead Location Data Capture . . . . . .MARLA NEWALL
Visual Effects Coordinators
AMBER KIRSCH PAULA NEDERMAN
DAVID GRAY JULIE CREIGHTON
AMY SPANNER BRIAN BARLETTANI
Model & Miniatures Unit Supervisors
CARL MILLER PAT SWEENEY
CHARLIE BAILEY MARK ANDERSON
GEOFF HERON
Model & Miniature Unit
CARL ASSMUS CAROL BAUMAN
GREG BEAUMONTE DON BIES
LANCE BRACKETT MARTY BRENNEIS
THOMAS CLOUTIER BRYAN DEWE
ROBERT EDWARDS JON FOREMAN
JOE FULMER STEVE GAWLEY
NELSON HALL PEGGY HRASTAR
DAVID JANSSEN ROD JANUSCH
RICHARD MILLER WENDY MORTON
DAVID MURPHY BUCK O’HARE
MICHAEL OLAGUE LORNE PETERSON
CHUCK RAY DENNIS ROGERS
MITCH ROMANAUSKI
Research and Development
TOMMY BURNETTE BRICE CRISWELL
DON HATCH JULIAN HODGSON
ZORAN KACIC-ALESIC CARY PHILLIPS
NICO POPRAVKA PHILIP SCHNEIDER
STEVE SULLIVAN ALAN TROMBLA
Production & Technical Support
COURTNEY WARD MELISSA DE SANTIS
SUSAN MACKE SEBASTIAN FELDMAN
LOUISE HELENIUS JAMES MILTON
NICK PROVENZANO RYAN SMITH
DANIEL CAVEY SHANE O’CONNOR
ILM Senior Staff . . . . . . . . . . . .LYNWEN BRENNAN
CHRISSIE ENGLAND
MARK MILLER
CLIFF PLUMER
Additional Visual Effects
Visual Effects Supervisor . . . . . . .CHARLES GIBSON
ASYLUM
Senior Visual Effects
Supervisor . . . . . . . . . . . . . .NATHAN McGUINNESS
Compositing Supervisors . . . . . . .JOHN FRAGOMENI
PHIL BRENNAN
Visual Effects Producer . . . . . . .KIMBERLY COVATE
Visual Effects Coordinator . . . . . . . . .FRANK SPIZIRI
Compositors . . . . . . . . . . .ANDY RAFAEL BARRIOS
STEVE MUANGMAN
HILARY SPERLING
ANDREW MUMFORD
JOHN STEWART
Rotoscope/Paint Supervisor . . . . . . . .ELISSA BELLO
Rotoscope/Paint Artists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JAMES LEE
ERIC EVANS
CG Supervisor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .SEAN FADEN
Lighting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .AARON VEST
CREDITS
11
CREDITS
Matte Painting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .TIMOTHY CLARK
THE ORPHANAGE INC.
Visual Effects Supervisor . . . . . . . . .RYAN TUDHOPE
Visual Effects Producer . . . . . . . . . . .PAUL HETTLER
Digital Production Manager . . .LESLIE VALENTINO
Computer Graphics Supervisor . . . . .KIRK McINROY
Digital Artist . . . . . . . . . . .DANIELA CALAFATELLO
Compositor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .ALEX PRICHARD
The Creative and Technical Team at
METHOD
CIS HOLLYWOOD
Visual Effects Supervisor . . . . . . . . . .BRYAN HIROTA
Visual Effects Producer . . . . . . . . . . . . .LISA MAHER
Visual Effects
Production Manager . . . . . . . . . . .JULIA GAUDETTE
Digital Compositing
Supervisor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .PATRICK KAVANAUGH
Color and Lighting Supervisor . . . . . . . .DIANA MIAO
Compositors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .TOM DAWS
MATHIAS FRODIN
DAVID REY
MATT WILSON
CG Animator . . . . . . . . . . . . . .GARY ABRAHAMIAN
PACIFIC TITLE AND ART STUDIO
Visual Effects Supervisor . . . . . . . .DAVID SOSALLA
ExecutiveProducer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JOE GARERI
Digital Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . . . .JAMES D. TITTLE
Inferno Compositors . . . . . . . . . . .BRIAN HANABLE
CESAR ROMERO
Digital Compositors . . . . . . . . . . . .OZZIE CARMONA
JIM O’HAGAN
PATRICK KEENAN
TOM LAMB
ROBERT MONTGOMERY
Previsualization by
PROOF, INC.
Previs Supervisor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .RICH LEE
Previs Artists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .SCOTT MEADOWS
MARC CHU
PEI PEI YUAN
ROBIN ROEPSTORFF
MICHAEL MAKER
CARIBBEAN UNIT
Additional 2nd Assistant
Director—Bahamas . . . . . . . . . . . . .CLARK CREDLE
Second Assistant
Director—Dominica . . . . . . . . . . . . .GEOFF DIBBEN
Make-Up Lab Technicians . . . . . .STEVE BUSCAINO
CHRIS GARNAAS
FRANK IPPOLITO
MIKE ROSS
Make-Up Artists
TYM BUACHARERN MARTHA CALLENDER
LEO COREY CASTELLANO FIONAGH CUSH-KEPLAR
GABRIEL DE CUNTO KRIS EVANS
GARRETT IMMEL HEATHER KOONTZ-EATON
HEATHER PLOTT ALEX PROCTOR
JILL ROCKOW MICHELLE VITTONE-McNEIL
Tattoo Illustrator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .KENTRO YAHO
Tattoo Make-Up Artist . . . . . . . . . . .RICK STRATTON
Hairstylists
LAUREL VAN DAYKE LINDA DE ANDREA
LANA HEYING CAMILLE FRIEND
YVETTE PEREZ GIANNA SPARACINO
PINKY CUNNINGHAM TERESSA HILL
ROBIN MAGINSKY DAY
Hair P.A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .MAXINE GIBSON
Prop Assistants . . . . . . . . . . . . . .MORRIS WILLIAMS
NATE HENFIELD
Set Dressing Assistant . . . . . .A. BROOKE BRUNSON
Assistant Production
Coordinators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .KELLY DETAMPLE
BARRETT LEIGH
KATHLEEN SWITZER
Production Secretaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .GAIL WOON
RACHEL JENNER-YOUNG
ROHAN COOKE
VALINA ETIENNE
MARVA BROWN
Production Assistants
SIOBHAN C. ANTONI JAMES McKAY
MEGAN CALLENDER DARRY WARRINGTON
ANDREA ANSELM SHAUN REID
SEAN TOUSSANINT MARY SAMBA BRUNEY
CURTICE ST. JOHN MAYFIELD JOSEPH
MICHEL RODGERS ROHAN TONEY
LUCIANN WILSON
Production Interns . . . . . . .DOMINQUE LOCKHART
VIDYA BARTLETT
HARVEYANN NEWBOLD
12
Shipping Coordinators . . . .LEROY V. CHARLES “WADIX”
TELLY ONU
AMIE BOWE
Co-Shipping Coordinator . . . . . . . .MARVA BROWNE
Broker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JASON MORANCIE
Shipping Assistants . . . . . . . . . . .TAMEE FERGUSON
RYAN CARROLL
Extras Casting . . . . . . . . . . . .THOMAS GUSTAFSON
KATE BURGESS
Extras Casting Assistants . . . . . . .BRADLEY GRANT
JENNIFER M. MERRIMAN
SAMANTHA WILLIAMS
GARY YOUNG
Casting Assistants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .VAL CUFFY
IRVINCE AUGUISTE
Location Managers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .ROBIN HIGGS
STEVE HART
ALAN TOUSSAINT
Assistant Location
Managers . . . . . . . . . .MARTINA LOUISE CARROLL
PAUL TOULON
RICHARD ROBERTS
Location Assistants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JOHN SMART
RICO BAILEY
DAVID COTE
JANET MAYCOCK
CASSIUS CRUICKSHANK
BAIN GOLSON
Location Runner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .RONALD BRUNO
Marine Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .ED NYERICK
Assistant Marine Coordinators . . . . . . . .RICK HICKS
J.P. GENASI
Marine Logistics Coordinator . .MICHAEL DOUGLAS
DiveSafety Officer . . . . . . . . . . . . . .BRIAN KAKUK
Water Safety Coordinator . . . . . . . . . . .ALEX KRIMM
Water Safety . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .NEIL ANDREA
CHUCK HOSACK
DURK TYNDALL
DAN WEBB
LARRY RIPPENDROEGER
Boat Captains
CARLOS “CUAKS” APEY M. EUGENE FLIPSE III
GARY LOWE MARTY McNARY
LAWRENCE OTT JAY ALBURY
CHRIS McGEOUG KEVIN MULRINE
SIMON WORLEY GLEN YRIGOYEN
CHRIS PAPAJOHN BRAD THOMPSON
MARK ALBURY WILLIAM BRAITHWAITE
ROBERT CORDES JUSTIN GAPE
BRANDFORD JONES ADAM LONG
RON PAGLIARO DAVID ROSE
PETER ROSE MICHAEL BRACKIN
WILLIAM DEBREO EDGAR COREA
TRAVIS COREA BRIAN CRUICKSHANK
VERBIN SUTHERLAND ROGGER THOMAS
REYNOLD WILLIAMS
Sail Handlers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .PETER BAILEY
LOUIE S. LAMBIE
MERELITA REVEL
Local Technician . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JAMES HUGHES
Technicians . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .CHARLES GRANT
DENNIS “FACEMAN” GURLEY
Shipwrights . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .CHUCK HANDY
MARK McLELLAN
Location Accountants . . . . . . . . . .ROBERT GEORGE
SHAUNA KROEN
JAMES BREITHAUPT
First Assistant Accountants . .PHAEDRA CHARLTON
SANDY YEARY
MICHELLE RAMEZ
HOPE WHITE
Second Assistant Accountants
KRISTIN KRUGER COLEEN “COCO” AIELLO
MICHELLE WRIGHT LORRAINE PROCTOR
ESTER SKANELL
Construction Accountant . . . . . . . . . . . .ANIL PATADE
Payroll Accountants . . . . . . . . . . . .JUDITH WALDER
RICK J. ROESCH
Accounting Clerks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .ERICA CURRY
ERICKA McINTOSH
SILE PINARD-BYRNE
MARK BILAS
Transportation Captains . . . . . . . . . . .RON KUNECKE
TONY LOGUZZO
JIM ALFONSO
LIONEL HOWARD
Local Captains . . . . . . . . . . .GREGORY AUGUSTINE
RONALD CHARLES
Office Administrator . . . . . . . . .JENNER ROBINSON
Transportation Secretaries . . . . .JACQUELINE DAVIS
CHRISTON AZZILLE
MAHALA ANDRE
Craft Service Assistant . . . . . . .RENDAL MUNNINGS
Housing Coordinators . . . . . . . . . . . . .BASHIE ALLIE
LISA ALLEN
Housing Assistants . . . . . . . . . . . .ALLYSON GIRAUD
LAURA HADAWAY
Sound Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .SAM GRAY
SECOND UNIT
Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .CHARLES GIBSON
First Assistant Director . . . . . . . . .PHILIP HARDAGE
Second Second Assistant Director . . .ERIC GLASSER
Director of Photography . . . . .PATRICK LOUNGWAY
First Assistant Camera . . .STEPHEN BUCKINGHAM
JOHN GAZDIK
Second Assistant Camera . . . . . .MATTHEW C. BLEA
LORNA LESLIE
CREDITS
13
CREDITS
Libra Head Techs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .LANCE MAYER
TIM DEAN
AARON YORK
Grips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .GARY SCHWAB
EVAN NELSON
SCOTT A. FEBBO
Gaffers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JEFF HALL
BRIAN TILDEN
Aerial Platform Technician . . . . . . .RICHARD JONES
Electrician . . . . . . . . . . . . .STEVE “ZIGGY” ZIGLER
Property Master . . . . . . . . . .JAMES “STITCH” CRISP
Script Supervisor . . . . . . . . . .SAMANTHA KIRKEBY
Video Assist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .DAVE SCHMALZ
MIKE LEWIS
Set Production Assistants . . . . .INDIA SALVY GUIDE
DENNIS BRITTON, JR.
SECOND UNIT/DOMINICA
Director . . . . . . . . . . . .GEORGE MARSHALL RUGE
First Assistant Director . .GARY ROMOLO FIORELLI
Second Assistant Director . . . . . . . . .GEOFF DIBBEN
Director of Photography . . . . . . . .JOSH BLEIBTREU
Camera Operator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .IAN FOX
1st Assistant Camera . . . . . . . . .DONNY STEINBERG
DAN TEAZE
2nd Assistant Camera . . . . . . . . . . . .STEVEN CUEVA
ROBERT SETTLEMIRE
Key Grip . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .ANDY BERTELSON
Best Boy Grip . . . . . . . . . . .LAWRENCE ESCOBEDO
Props Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . .BRYAN D. GAROFALO
Video Assist . . . . . . . . .M. SCOTT BLYNDER, C.A.S.
Stand-By Painter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JIMMY DIGGS
Production Assistants . . . . . . . . . . . . .BECKS WELCH
DIONE WOOD
Stunt Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JESSICA HART
Special Thanks to
JONATHAN PALMER
IRVINCE AUGUSISTE
KEVIN MONROE
DOUG CARTER
VICKI GABOR
HARRY HUMPHRIES
NICHOLAS L. TETA
HARRY MARGARY PUBLISHERS
© CORBIS
BRIAN CURY, EarthCam, Inc.
MUSIC
“Two Hornpipes”
Written by Skip Henderson
Soundtrack Available on
PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN:
DEAD MAN’S CHEST
Available on
ALL VIDEO GAME HANDHELD PLATFORMS
AMERICAN HUMANE ASSOCIATION
MONITORED THE ANIMAL ACTION.
NO ANIMAL WAS HARMED IN THE MAKING
OF THIS FILM. (AHA 01082)
FILMED ON LOCATION IN THE BAHAMAS
THIS FILM WAS SUPPORTED BY AN
INCENTIVE PROVIDED BY
THE GOVERNMENT OF THE BAHAMAS
ALSO FILMED ON LOCATION IN THE
COUNTRIES OF
ST. VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES
and DOMINICA
GFCI Shock Protection by
BENDER
Production Equipment Provided by
LEONETTI COMPANY
Camera Support Provided by
J.L. FISHER, INC.
Camera Cranes and Dollies by
CHAPMAN/LEONARD STUDIO EQUIPMENT
Filmed with PANAVISION®
Cameras and Lenses
Prints by
TECHNICOLOR®
14
MPAA #42793
Copyright ©2006 DISNEY ENTERPRISES, INC.
All Rights Reserved
This motion picture was created by
Second Mate Productions, Inc. for purposes of
copyright law in the United Kingdom.
JERRY BRUCKHEIMER FILMS™, JERRY
BRUCKHEIMER FILMS Tree Logo™ and JERRY
BRUCKHEIMER FILMS Moving Image Design® are all trademarks. All rights reserved. Unauthorized use is prohibited.
Distributed by
BUENA VISTA PICTURES DISTRIBUTION
FOR INTENSE SEQUENCES OF ADVENTURE VIOLENCE, INCLUDING FRIGHTENING IMAGES.
CREDITS
15
PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN:
DEAD MAN’S CHEST
PRODUCTION INFORMATION
Captain Jack is back…and so are Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann, joined by a roistering shipload of characters both new and familiar, in PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S CHEST— the epic second installment in the Pirates of the Caribbean saga. Once again we have JOHNNY DEPP starring in his Academy Award®-nominated role,
ORLANDO BLOOM and 2005 Best Actress Oscar® nominee KEIRA KNIGHTLEY.
Produced by JERRY BRUCKHEIMER and directed by GORE VERBINSKI, Captain Jack sets sail on this all-new adventure. In this swashbuckling and spectacular follow-up to the blockbuster 2003 film, the decidedly eccentric Captain Jack Sparrow is caught up in another tangled web of supernatural intrigue. Although the curse of the Black Pearl has been lifted, an even more terrifying threat looms over its captain and scurvy crew: it turns out that Jack owes a blood debt to the legendary Davy Jones (BILL NIGHY), Ruler of the Ocean Depths, who captains the ghostly Flying Dutchman, which no other ship can match in speed and stealth. Unless the ever-crafty Jack figures a cunning way out of this Faustian pact, he will be cursed to an afterlife of eternal servitude and damnation in the service of Jones. This startling development interrupts the wedding plans of Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann, who once again find themselves thrust into Jack’s misadventures, leading to escalating confrontations with sea monsters, very unfriendly islanders, flamboyant soothsayer
Tia Dalma (NAOMIE HARRIS) and even the mysterious appearance of Will’s long-lost father, Bootstrap Bill (STELLAN SKARSGÅRD).
Meanwhile, ruthless pirate hunter Lord Cutler Beckett (TOM HOLLANDER) of the East India Trading Company sets his sights on retrieving the fabled “Dead Man’s Chest.” According to legend, whoever possesses the Dead Man’s Chest gains control of Davy Jones, and Beckett intends to use this awesome power to destroy every last Pirate of the Caribbean once and for all. For times are changing on the high seas, with businessmen and bureaucrats becoming the true pirates…and freewheeling, fun-loving buccaneers like Jack and his crew threatened with extinction.
PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S CHEST is a fantastical epic adventure which, like its successful predecessor, will take audiences on the ride of their lives. The writers are TED ELLIOTT and TERRY ROSSIO, co-writers of the first film, who also have such hits on their resume as Aladdin”and “Shrek.” The film’s executive producers are MIKE STENSON, CHAD OMAN, BRUCE HENDRICKS and ERIC MCLEOD.
With his Academy Award®- and Golden Globe®-nominated and Screen Actors Guild Award®-winning portrayal of Captain Jack Sparrow, Johnny Depp instantaneously created an authentic motion picture icon embraced by the entire world. Depp is one of the world’s most popular and acclaimed actors, with a hugely versatile range of performances marking his outstanding career. He has received Academy Award® and Golden Globe® nominations for both “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl” and 2004’s “Finding Neverland,” in which he portrayed “Peter Pan” writer J.M. Barrie. Depp’s extraordinary range of credits since the late 1980s have included “Cry-Baby,” “What’s Eating Gilbert Grape?,” “Ed Wood,” “Benny & Joon,” “Edward Scissorhands,” “Don Juan DeMarco,” “Donnie Brasco,” “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas,” “Sleepy Hollow,” “Chocolat,” “Blow,” “Once Upon a Time in Mexico,” “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” and “Tim Burton’s Corpse Bride.”
Orlando Bloom became a major international star with his portrayal of Legolas in Peter Jackson’s award-winning “The Lord of the Rings” trilogy. Since then, the increasingly popular actor has starred in Jerry Bruckheimer’s production of “Black Hawk Down,” directed by Ridley Scott, Wolfgang Petersen’s “Troy,” Scott’s “Kingdom of Heaven” and Cameron Crowe’s “Elizabethtown.”
Keira Knightley is the recipient of 2005 Academy Award® and Golden Globe® nominations as Best Actress for her starring role as Elizabeth Bennet in “Pride & Prejudice.” She was first brought to the attention of international audiences in the sleeper hit “Bend It Like Beckham.” In addition to “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl,” she has also starred in “Love, Actually,” Jerry Bruckheimer’s production of “King Arthur,” “The Jacket” and “Domino.”
With only five features to his credit thus far, Gore Verbinski’s highly acclaimed films have totaled more than $1 billion worldwide. His films have included the immensely successful “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl,” the chilling horror film “The Ring” and the recent ragicomic character study “The Weather Man.”
Jerry Bruckheimer is one of the most successful producers in the history of both motion pictures and television. First in partnership with Don Simpson, and then as the chief of Jerry Bruckheimer Films, he has produced an unprecedented string of worldwide smashes, hugely impacting not only the industry, but popular culture as well. Bruckheimer’s films have included “American Gigolo,” “Flashdance,” “Days of Thunder,” “Bad Boys,” “Dangerous Minds,” “Crimson Tide,” “The Rock,” “Con Air,” “Armageddon,” “Enemy of the State,” “Gone in 60 Seconds,” “Coyote Ugly,” “Remember the Titans,” “Pearl Harbor,” “Black Hawk Down,” “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl,” “Bad Boys II,” “Veronica Guerin,” “King Arthur,” “National Treasure” and “Glory Road.”
In the 2005-6 season, Jerry Bruckheimer had nine series on network television, a feat unprecedented in nearly 60 years of television history. JBTV’s series have included “C.S.I.: Crime Scene Investigation” and its spinoffs, “C.S.I.: Miami” and “C.S.I.: NY”; “Without a Trace”; “Cold Case”; and “The Amazing Race.”
Jerry Bruckheimer Films and Television have been honored with 35 Academy Award® nominations,
five Oscars®, eight Grammy® award nominations, five Grammys®, 23 Golden Globe® nominations, four
Golden Globes®, 43 Emmy® award nominations, seven Emmy® awards, 16 People’s Choice nominations,
six People’s Choice Awards and numerous MTV Awards, including one for Best Picture of the Decade.
Along with Depp, Bloom and Knightley, cast members returning to PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN:
DEAD MAN’S CHEST include JACK DAVENPORT as disgraced British Commodore James
Norrington; JONATHAN PRYCE as Elizabeth’s aristocratic father, Governor Weatherby Swann; KEVIN
R. McNALLY as often-soused sailor Joshamee Gibbs; LEE ARENBERG and MACKENZIE CROOK as
eternally bickering and philosophizing piratical best mates Pintel and Ragetti; DAVID BAILIE as the
silent Cotton, whose parrot does all the talking; and MARTIN KLEBBA as the diminutive but tough
18
Marty, unafraid to go up against
adversaries three times his size.
They’re joined by a group of
distinguished international stars in other
major roles, including BILL NIGHY
(“Love, Actually,” “The Hitchhiker’s Guide
to the Galaxy”) as Davy Jones, daunting
Lord of the Deep; STELLAN
SKARSGÅRD (“King Arthur,” “Good
Will Hunting”) as Bootstrap Bill Turner,
Will’s long-lost father; NAOMIE HARRIS
(“28 Days Later,” “Miami Vice”) as Tia
Dalma; TOM HOLLANDER (“The
Libertine,” “Pride & Prejudice”) as Lord Cutler Beckett, who, as head of the East India Trading Company,
seeks to forever destroy the age of the pirates; and DAVID SCHOFIELD (“The Last of the Mohicans,”
“Gladiator”) as Mercer, Beckett’s ruthless enforcer.
A large contingent of the award-winning “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl”
creative team reunites for DEAD MAN’S CHEST, including director of photography DARIUSZ
WOLSKI (“The Mexican,” “Dark City,” “The Crow”); costume designer PENNY ROSE (“The Weather
Man,” “King Arthur,” “Evita”); film editors CRAIG WOOD (“The Ring,” “The Mexican” and “Mouse
Hunt”) and STEPHEN RIVKIN (“Ali,” “The Hurricane”); visual effects supervisor JOHN KNOLL (who
received an Oscar® nomination for his work on the first film); stunt coordinator GEORGE MARSHALL
RUGE (“The Lord of the Rings” trilogy); and three-time Academy Award®-winning key makeup artist VE
NEILL (“Ed Wood,” “Mrs. Doubtfire,” “Beetlejuice”) and key hairstylist MARTIN SAMUEL (“Evita,”
“Little Buddha”), both of whom shared an Academy Award® nomination for their work on “Pirates of the
Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl.” Oscar®-winning composer HANS ZIMMER, who produced the
score for the first film, has written the music for PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S
CHEST. Zimmer also scored Gore Verbinski’s “The Ring” and “The Weather Man” and has written music
for several of Jerry Bruckheimer’s previous productions, including “Days of Thunder,” “Pearl Harbor” and
“Black Hawk Down.”
Joining this world-class team on the new
film are a number of other celebrated Academy
Award® winners and nominees, including
production designer RICK HEINRICHS, who
garnered an Oscar® for “Sleepy Hollow” and
was a 2004 nominee for “Lemony Snicket’s A
Series of Unfortunate Events”; supervising art
director JOHN DEXTER, also nominated for
his work on “Lemony Snicket”; set decorator
CHERYL CARASIK, who has been nominated
for four Academy Awards® (including “Lemony
Snicket” and “Men in Black”); visual effects
supervisor BILL GEORGE (Oscar® winner for “Innerspace” and nominee for “Harry Potter and the
Prisoner of Azkaban”); and special effects coordinators ALLEN HALL (Academy Award® winner for
“Forrest Gump” and double nominee for both “Backdraft” and “Mighty Joe Young”) and MICHAEL
LANTIERI (winner for “Jurassic Park” and nominee for “Back to the Future Part II,” “Hook,” “The Lost
World: Jurassic Park” and “Artificial Intelligence: AI”).
PRODUCTION INFORMATION
19
ABOUT THE PRODUCTION
ABOUT THE PRODUCTION
In art, as in life, history has a strange way of turning full circle. The first on-screen image ever to
appear in an all-live-action Walt Disney Studio feature was none other than a closeup of the skull-andcrossbones Jolly Roger flag in the classic 1950 version of Robert Louis Stevenson’s “Treasure Island.”
Some 53 years later, it took the very same studio’s “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black
Pearl” to spectacularly reinvent and reinvigorate a moribund genre which once again is delighting
millions. From childhood classics like Treasure Island and Howard Pyle’s Book of Pirates, to such classic
films as “The Black Pirate,” “The Buccaneer” and “The Crimson Pirate,” the swashbuckling tales of high-
seas derring-do, both nefarious and noble, were seemingly neverending.
Alas, as far as filmmakers were concerned, pirates were forgotten as subjects worthy of contemporary
moviemaking. It took Jerry Bruckheimer, Gore Verbinski and a brilliant company of actors and behind-
the-scenes artists to breathe new life into the Jolly Roger’s sails, inspired by the great Disney Theme Parks
attraction which has enchanted generations since its 1967 debut at Disneyland in Anaheim. The Pirates of
the Caribbean attraction, which utilized the then-brand-new technology of audio-animatronics which Walt
Disney and his Imagineers magnificently developed, soon became a major part of pop culture, with its
cheery refrains of “Yo ho yo ho, a pirate’s life for me” (and the less cheery warning that “Dead men tell
no tales”) sung and quoted by millions.
Using the ride as a springboard, with clever references to the attraction’s content sprinkled throughout,
“Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl” was a smash hit everywhere it played, amassing
a domestic U.S. gross of $305,413,918 and, including its record-breaking overseas engagements, a
worldwide total of $653,913,918. The film also received five Academy Award® nominations, including
Best Actor for Johnny Depp. Like the ride itself, “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl”
appealed to the little bit of pirate that lives within us all, the desire for freedom, adventure and not a small
amount of mischief. While paying affectionate homage to the cinematic adventures which preceded it,
“Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl” sailed into entirely new territory, breaking with
tradition by linking its high-seas tale with lashings of irreverent humor, as typified by Johnny Depp’s
original and brilliantly inspired creation of Captain Jack Sparrow…a pirate the likes of which audiences
had never seen before.
That success was never a sure thing, Bruckheimer now admits. “There were limited expectations for
the first ‘Pirates.’ Lots of people thought we were making a Disney ride movie for toddlers, and what’s
more, the pirate genre had been dead for 40 years, and every attempt to revive it had bombed miserably.
But then ‘The Curse of the Black Pearl’ was
released and caught everybody by surprise,
which is the best way to do it. The artistry
that Gore and the writers brought to it, and
the performances by Johnny, Orlando, Keira
and Geoffrey, just captured everybody’s
imagination and it became a huge success
internationally.
“Everything that we set up in the first
movie gets pushed forward in the second,”
Bruckheimer continues, “and of course we
have the same creative team. Gore is such a
brilliant director, with a wonderful sense of
humor and a great visual sense. Often, strongly visual directors aren’t great storytellers because they focus
so much on the physical look of the movie. But Gore has both the visual acumen and the understanding
of storytelling and characterization.
“Johnny, Orlando and Keira are all back for the ride,” adds Bruckheimer, “plus some wonderful and
interesting new faces. The Black Pearl will, of course, be back, along with a new mystery ship, the Flying
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Dutchman, which is crewed by a very exciting and unusual group of sailors under the command of
Davy Jones.
“It all comes down to the imagination of the director, writers and the hundreds of people working on
the movie,” says the producer. “Everybody’s excited about making an enormous piece of entertainment
that audiences will love.”
“Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl” not only revived the genre, but kicked off a
groundswell of fascination for all things piratical which resulted in everything from a spate of new books
about the seafaring scalawags, to a boom in pirates-themed children’s (and adult’s) parties, to pirate dinner
shows, not to mention “I (Heart) Jack Sparrow” stickers plastered onto schoolgirls’ binders all over the world.
Clearly, there was a worldwide mandate for more “Pirates,” and Jerry Bruckheimer and Gore
Verbinski, along with Walt Disney Pictures, decided that just one sequel would not be enough. It made
practical sense, economically, to film two follow-ups simultaneously, taking full advantage of locations,
sets and availability of its increasingly in-demand stars. It also made sense creatively, because with the
characters so well established in the first film, taking them on further voyages was an exciting prospect.
“We were hoping for the success of ‘The Curse of the Black Pearl’ so that we could make more ‘Pirates’
movies,” notes Bruckheimer, “and when you see the second and third films you’ll see that everything
relates back to what started everything off in the first. It’s a true trilogy.”
“You really need to have some substance behind it,” confirms executive producer Mike Stenson. “You
need to not only deliver the entertainment value, the roller-coaster ride and the laughs, but if you’re going
to ask people to stay around for three movies, you have to feel like there’s something thematically
significant that you’re going to explore.”
Says screenwriter Terry Rossio, “Whereas in the first film, the theme park attraction was a wellspring
for ideas, for the second and third films we actually went back to the first movie.” Adds Rossio’s writing
partner Ted Elliott, “There was a richness to the characters that we felt we could explore, but you don’t
want to just go through the same paces with the characters. You don’t want to see them doing the same
thing. One of the things we liked about the characters in the first film was that there’s a certain moral
ambiguity to them, and we wanted to explore that…we wanted to put Jack Sparrow into a situation where
he has to do something that, in fact, puts
his goals in opposition to Will and
Elizabeth’s goals. It was all about
expanding the characters and taking them
in a further direction.”
“Similarly,” Rossio continues, “much of
the basis of the first movie was the
romantic story between Will and
Elizabeth, and we knew we wanted to get
into more of a mature examination of the
relationship between the two of them.
What happens to Will and Elizabeth after
that wildly romantic final kiss with the
beautiful sunset at the end of ‘The Curse of the Black Pearl’?”
DEAD MAN’S CHEST also dips deeply into the treasure trove of pirate and seagoing lore and
mythology, from Davy Jones, he of the famous “locker,” to the legendary Kraken, a sea monster fabled
since the 12th century. “You think of the sea,” says Elliott, “and there are a lot of supernatural stories
you’ve heard. But nobody had actually done those stories as part of a larger pirate movie or swashbuckler,
so there was a wealth of legends to draw from. We touched on some of those in the first movie: there’s a
line of dialogue in which Will talks about sending himself down to Davy Jones’ Locker. So, in DEAD
MAN’S CHEST, we decided to explore who Davy Jones is, and then we brought in another well-known
legend of the seas, the Flying Dutchman, and combined them together.”
Elliott and Rossio also cleverly utilized one of history’s greatest economic and political powers—the
ABOUT THE PRODUCTION
21
East India Trading Company—as a pivotal entity in the plot of DEAD MAN’S CHEST. Like much else
in the “Pirates” movies, historical reality is used as a springboard for fun and fantasy. The real British East
India Company was a tool of imperialist domination, economically and politically, from 1600 to its
dissolution in 1858, essentially ruling India and spreading its tentacles as far as the Persian Gulf,
ABOUT THE PRODUCTION
Southeast Asia and East Asia. Even the most
generous contemporary histories describe the
East India Company’s activities as
extraordinarily greedy and inhumane. “What
we like about pirates,” states Elliott, “is that
they represent freedom. And the East India
Company, as a giant multi-national
corporation, represents the end of individual
freedom. They’re defining the world as they
want it to be, and there will be a lot of people
they’re going to leave out. The more dominance
they have, the less room there is for people like
Captain Jack Sparrow.”
And Captain Jack Sparrow, it can be said with some degree of authority, is the only truly iconic screen
character to have yet come out of this new millennium. A wholly original and thrillingly eccentric creation
conjured up by a famous shape-shifter named Johnny Depp, this ducking, weaving, highly superstitious
pirate captain of equally dubious morality and personal hygiene became the screen anti-hero for a new
century. With his long dreadlocks and braided beard adorned with a wild assortment of beads and baubles,
various and sundry amulets hanging from his attire, and teeth studded with gold and silver, Captain Jack
Sparrow, like the film itself, appealed to audiences that ran the gamut in age, gender and nationality.
Depp’s performance as Jack Sparrow was recently named one of the 100 greatest performances of all time
in the May 2006 edition of Premiere magazine, which, tellingly, featured the good Captain’s visage on the
cover more prominently than anyone else’s (Depp made the list a second time, for the title role of “Edward
Scissorhands”).
“If you ask most people what they loved most about the first movie,” says Mike Stenson, “it’s usually
this completely iconoclastic Jack Sparrow character. In a 500-channel universe, where you have so many
different opportunities to be entertained in so many ways, you have to give the audience something that’s
unique and different. That’s exactly what Johnny did with Captain Jack Sparrow in ‘The Curse of the
Black Pearl.’ He created this character and had absolutely committed to it, and both Jerry and Gore had
to tell the powers that be to trust them on it after they saw the first dailies. At the end of the day, Johnny
took a risk, and Jerry and Gore backed him 100 percent.”
“Johnny is one of our greatest actors,” says Bruckheimer. “He invented Jack Sparrow in the first
movie, and he’s not somebody who wants to rest on his laurels for the second and third. He takes a
character to even newer heights. None of us would be back if Johnny had not wanted to play this character
again. He loved making the first movie, and audiences loved him right back.”
As for Depp, the actor claims that “It is beyond me how such a character has sort of taken root in some
people’s hearts. It’s still shocking to me. I was handed this opportunity to make something of this
character, and I had pretty solid ideas about who he was and what he should be like. There were a number
of people who thought I was nuts. But I was committed to the guy, and I think that’s what happened to me
in terms of finding the character.
“What I set out to do,” continues Depp, “was to try and make Captain Jack appeal to little kids as well
as the most hardened adult intellectuals.”
Notes Terry Rossio, “One of the archetypes that is really underused in American cinema is the trickster
character. Most American movies tend to celebrate the warrior who does the right thing at the right time.
But the fun thing about Jack, who is definitely a trickster, is that he’s not particularly good at avoiding
getting caught. He will get caught…you just can’t hold on to him for very long. Jack knows that if he can
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just bide his time, eventually the world will come over to his side, and that gives him this sort of supreme
confidence that he can handle just about any situation.”
“The other fun thing about the trickster character,” continues Ted Elliott, “is that he basically is just
out to have his own good time. He’s following his own self-interests. The things he does will affect other
people—the mortals, if you will—and sometimes it will be to good benefit, and sometimes it will be to
their detriment. So that goes back to the whole question posed in the first movie: is Jack Sparrow a good
guy or is he a bad guy? Is he a pirate hero or pirate villain? Well, it really kind of depends on the
perspective you have.”
With “The Curse of the Black Pearl” having been crucial in launching both actors to major
international stardom, Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley were enthusiastic to return alongside Depp as,
respectively, young lovers Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann. (The fourth member of the original quartet,
Geoffrey Rush, is not in the second film, his character of Captain Barbossa having been dispatched to the
underworld by Jack Sparrow at the climax of the first film.) Jerry Bruckheimer, who has a knack for
discovering young talent before the rest of the world catches on, secured Bloom as a young U.S. Ranger
in “Black Hawk Down” before the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy was released and cast Knightley in the first
“Pirates” film when she was only 17 years old and “Bend It Like Beckham”—which was her
breakthrough movie in the international arena—had not yet been released. “We could see that Keira was
an extraordinary actress when we cast her in ‘The Curse of the Black Pearl,’ Bruckheimer recalls. “She’s
not afraid of anything. In the two years
between the shooting of the first film and
the start of the second, her skills had
heightened with the work that she did and
the experience she gained.” (This experience,
incidentally, included her performance of
Guinevere in Bruckheimer’s production of
“King Arthur.”)
“As for Orlando,” continues the
producer, “he also did an enormous amount
of hard work between the first and second
‘Pirates,’ working with some wonderful
directors, like Ridley Scott and Cameron
Crowe. Orlando started out as a really terrific screen actor and has only gotten better with time.”
At the hands of screenwriters Elliott and Rossio, Will and Elizabeth were to undergo considerable
development in the story of DEAD MAN’S CHEST.
Says Bloom, “I wanted Will to be less of the kind of earnest, upright young guy of the first movie and,
this time, to see his darker shades. Will’s real journey throughout the second movie is his concern for his
father, Bootstrap Bill, who is an important element of the first film without actually being seen. Will
needs to rescue his father from the fate that he’s been destined to live on the Flying Dutchman with Davy
Jones and his frightening crew. So Will’s objective is to reconnect with his father and, at the same time,
somehow maintain his relationship with Elizabeth. Each of the main characters in DEAD MAN’S CHEST
have their own objectives, which are to some extent in conflict with each other’s. There’s a real sense of
young lovers’ tension between Will and Elizabeth.”
Keira Knightley, like much of the rest of the world, had been happily surprised by the massive success
of the first film. “We were doing a movie based on a Disney theme-park ride in a genre that hadn’t been
successful in something like 50 years,” she recalls. “But we had Gore Verbinski, whose vision is quite
extraordinary, and Johnny Depp, whose portrayal of Jack Sparrow kind of brought the film into a whole
new phenomenal world.
“What’s nice about this movie,” adds Knightley, “is that the characters have evolved. When we first
meet Elizabeth at the beginning of the story, she’s on the brink of getting married to Will, which falls to
pieces because a character named Lord Cutler Beckett comes into the equation, and he wants to annihilate
ABOUT THE PRODUCTION
23
ABOUT THE PRODUCTION
piracy from the world. He’s determined to arrest Will for being a pirate and Elizabeth for aiding in the
escape of Captain Jack Sparrow. Elizabeth becomes a woman on a mission, and there are some quite nice
undertones to her relationship with Will, as well as to Jack Sparrow…which grows into something very
interesting.”
Also returning from “The Curse of the Black Pearl” is Jack Davenport as James Norrington, the British
naval officer who loses Elizabeth Swann to Will Turner and gets one-upped time and again by Captain
Jack Sparrow. “Jack Davenport is such a superb actor that we wanted him back in the party,” says
Bruckheimer. “He’s fun to work with and created a wonderful character which becomes more embellished,
richer and adds to the story. Jack is a major player in both the second and third films.”
“When we last saw Norrington,” says Davenport, “he was losing big-time on all fronts. He was losing
girls, he was losing people out of jail, being humiliated in every way. Hopefully, whilst he was being
humiliated, you kind of got a sense of him making mature decisions at difficult times. The thing that always
interested me about the role in the first film was that you have this character who’s a leader of men in a
very public role. And at the end of the first story, he’s in a situation where he’s having to deal with things
which are very private in an incredibly public arena, with something like 200 people standing around.
“When I read the script for DEAD MAN’S CHEST,” Davenport continues, “I was delighted to see how
they developed his character. Norrington has fallen on hard times. He doesn’t look the way he looked
before. He’s lost his job, his girl and his self-respect. And suddenly, he has a chance to sign up as a crewman
with none other than Captain Jack Sparrow. The question is, what’s Norrington after? Revenge? Elizabeth?
Or something else?”
(Coincidentally, Jack Davenport’s
father—the distinguished British stage
and screen actor Nigel Davenport—was
one of the stars of Alexander
Mackendrick’s “A High Wind in
Jamaica,” made some 40 years ago and
one of the best examples of the genre
before it vanished from theater screens.)
One by one, Bruckheimer and
Verbinski began to assemble the major
players of a huge cast, including new characters which add so much new life and texture to DEAD
MAN’S CHEST. To portray Davy Jones, who is as much sea creature as he is human, the filmmakers
selected the extraordinarily versatile British actor Bill Nighy, knowing that he would find the humanity
beneath the character’s beastly veneer. “Davy Jones is a deeply damaged and isolated individual,” says
Nighy. “He’s wounded so deeply that he determines that he will live a kind of semi-life, as long as it means
he doesn’t have to feel anything anymore. And so, he’s torn out the center of all feeling—his heart—and
locks it in a special chest. He also has control of a ‘pet,’ as it’s sometimes referred to, which is the
Kraken—a sea monster which is the likes of which you’ve never seen before, entirely malevolent, evil and
powerful beyond expression. If you possess Davy Jones’ heart, you control not only him, but the Kraken
as well, which in effect gives you control of the oceans.”
Nighy’s primary challenge would be that because of Davy Jones’ astonishing physical appearance, he
would be acting throughout the film in what resembles a gray track suit and matching cap with reference
marks for Industrial Light & Magic’s computer wizards, who would embellish it with the amazing details
as imagined by Gore Verbinski and famed conceptual artist Mark “Crash” McCreery. But Nighy was game
to take it on. “The first movie was not only successful,” he notes, “but is actually beloved, and has entered
the language in a way that I think few movies do. To be part of this was a very satisfying notion. As for
playing a character which will be physically embellished by computer wizardry, as an actor you use your
imagination. The same things are required of you, generally speaking.
“Of course,” adds Nighy dryly, “in DEAD MAN’S CHEST I’m playing a man who has an octopus
growing out of my chin, which I must admit, has thus far been outside of my experience.”
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The other new villain of DEAD MAN’S CHEST—perhaps even more villainous than Davy Jones,
whose viciousness stems from his all-too-human heartbreak from a thwarted love from the past—is the
cold, calculating and utterly ruthless Lord Cutler Beckett. Invited to inhabit this dastardly soul was Tom
Hollander, who so brilliantly portrayed Reverend Collins, the diminutive and hapless suitor of Keira
Knightley’s Elizabeth Bennet, in “Pride & Prejudice.” Hollander was attracted to playing Beckett because,
like the other characters developed for both the first and second films, he was multi-dimensional. “Soft
glove, hard fist,” notes the actor of his Beckett. “On the outside, he’s very arrogant and charming, but the
inside is incredibly hard.” Hollander also saw some similarities between the East India Trading Company,
as depicted in the story, and the modern world. “There’s a modern parallel to how Lord Cutler Beckett and
the East India Company operates in the story, with the pirates—who symbolize absolute freedom—being
squeezed out ruthlessly.
“Especially Jack Sparrow,” Hollander continues, “who in Beckett’s view is naughty, messy, has
dreadlocks, could do with a few more baths and, worst of all, is a pirate. To Cutler Beckett, Jack Sparrow
is a stray dog.”
Stellan Skarsgård, who has been a major star in his native Sweden since the 1970s and has become an
international player of considerable reputation and abilities, was pleased to be asked by Verbinski and
Bruckheimer to portray Bootstrap Bill Turner…a character much discussed in “The Curse of the Black
Pearl” but heretofore unseen. Skarsgård was well known to Bruckheimer, who had previously cast the
actor as a marauding Teutonic in “King Arthur.” “Stellan is a world-class actor,” says Bruckheimer, “and
Johnny and Orlando wanted to work with him. We knew that with Bootstrap Bill, Stellan would create a
wonderful, compassionate and interesting portrait of a man who’s losing himself bit by bit.”
“You could see in the first film that there was a lot of space for the actors to expand and bloom within
scenes,” says Skarsgård. “You also felt like they had a lot of fun doing it, which is very endearing.”
Another compelling new character in DEAD MAN’S CHEST, the mysterious Caribbean soothsayer
Tia Dalma, is essayed by one of Britain’s brightest young talents, Naomie Harris. “Tia Dalma’s a gypsy
queen, a free spirit, someone who has magic powers and the ability to see through people and understand
their deepest desires,” explains Harris. “She’s a very powerful woman, which I really like. She has
associations with the elements of nature, and she’s fiery and temperamental.”
David Schofield, the noted British character actor cast as Mercer, Lord Cutler Beckett’s merciless
enforcer, was delighted at the prospect of working with Keira Knightley. The last time he had seen her in
person was when she was three years old, and Schofield was performing on stage at the Chichester
(England) Festival with her father, actor Will Knightley. Schofield was also amazed at how many of his
countrymen (and -women) were to be performing in the second “Pirates” film. “It’s like there are all these
English theater actors being floated on a very luxurious Walt Disney mattress to exotic places. And they
can chat away happily about their English lives and their English feelings about things. But they’re
supported by this American structure. It’s a bit like an English glove with an American hand in it.”
Then there are the returnees who have come back to take yet another fantastic voyage on the Black
Pearl. “I never expected to be back,” says Jonathan Pryce, who indeed is back as Port Royal Governor
Weatherby Swann, Elizabeth’s loving if slightly befuddled father. Having missed all of the original
screenings and premieres of the first film because of his busy schedule, Pryce finally bought himself a
ticket to a cinema in London, “and could barely get a seat, which I thought was ironic. It was four or five
weeks after its initial opening, but the cinema was packed. It was a wonderful experience seeing the film
with a real audience, watching them laughing and watching the screen in amazement. It was very
gratifying to be in a commercial film that audience, young and old, responded to so well.”
Returning as Pintel and Ragetti—who endeared themselves to audiences as a sublime comedic pairing
in “The Curse of the Black Pearl”—are, respectively, Lee Arenberg and Mackenzie Crook. “Pintel and
Ragetti are marvelous characters to begin with,” says Jerry Bruckheimer, “but Lee and Mackenzie did a
brilliant job of taking something that was on the page and amping it to the nth degree.”
True to their roles, the U.S.-born Arenberg and British native Crook genuinely hit it off during the
filming of the first “Pirates” film, inseparable off as well as on screen. “We sort of stick together like some
ABOUT THE PRODUCTION
25
A PIRATE ODYSSEY
sort of 18th-century piratical Laurel and
Hardy,” notes Arenberg. “I always say that
the luckiest thing that happened to me is that
they couldn’t find short, bald and crazy in
London who was the right match for
Mackenzie. So they had an audition for
short, bald and crazy guys in Hollywood, and
that was a little bit of Kismet for me.”
Adds Crook, “Pintel and Ragetti are
pirates who, like most pirates, can swing
either good or bad depending on who’s
paying the best fee. They’re the classic
double act—one thinks he’s intelligent, and
the other one appears stupid—plus Pintel and Ragetti had the foresight to stick their hands up and
surrender at the end of the first movie.”
Jokes Crook, “We were smiling then because we knew we were making the sequel, and all the other
guys fooling around on deck didn’t!”
“I don’t know what the expectations were for the first film,” admits Kevin R. McNally, whose
Joshamee Gibbs has an encyclopedic knowledge of the lore of the seven seas and an epicurean taste for
rum. “Working on it, I had no idea what I was in, really, until I watched it with a group of friends in the
cinema. It came as a pleasant surprise to see just how good it was, adventurous, funny and character-rich.
I thought my pirate days were over, but when I was shooting ‘The Phantom of the Opera’ I met Mike
Stenson from Jerry Bruckheimer Films, who said ‘Pack your bags, Kevin, we’re going pirating again.’”
“I went into a state of bliss when I heard
they wanted me back for the second and
third movies,” says David Bailie, who
portrays the speechless pirate Cotton. “I’m
in my mid-60s, and not many actors can
round off their career doing three major
movies and all that it implies.”
When the filming of “The Curse of the
Black Pearl” finished, actor Martin
Klebba—who plays his namesake, Marty, a
Black Pearl crew member of short stature
but tall spirit—recalls that when he heard a
second (and third) “Pirates” movie was to be
made, “I thought, if they bring me back, cool. If they don’t, you know, I had a great time and enjoyed the
opportunity. When I got a call asking me to come in for a costume fitting for DEAD MAN’S CHEST and
‘Pirates III,’ I thought, ‘Wow! How often does this happen to an actor?!’”
2005 (and ’06): A Pirate Odyssey
If the filming of “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl” was an epic, then the
shooting of PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S CHEST could only be described, in the
ancient sense, as an odyssey. Journeying from location to location, island to island, production was, in
every sense, bigger than life, fraught with fantastic adventures, Promethean ambitions, Sisyphean
challenges, Herculean triumphs. More than a year of filming (albeit with occasional breaks, and with
much time devoted to the concurrent shooting of “Pirates of the Caribbean III”), a good part of it in the
Caribbean, inspired the cast and crew—many of them grizzled veterans of dozens of productions—to
redefine the parameters of their own experiences.
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“A movie like this becomes the pinnacle of your career,” notes executive producer Bruce Hendricks,
who is also Walt Disney Pictures’ president of physical production. “More than any other movie I’ve been
involved with—and I think now I’ve been involved with almost 300 of them in one way or another—the
‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ movies are the ones that you look back on and say, wow, we really accomplished
something.”
“It was like fighting a war,” recalls Eric McLeod, also an executive producer on the film. “We had to
build roads into places where people never filmed before, up mountainsides, through jungles, down into
beaches. In Dominica we had 500 cast and crew spread out in 80 different hotels, condos and houses. We
had 150 drivers spread out through the island every day to go pick up all those people. There were 40
accountants working out of offices in Los Angeles, Mobile, Alabama, St. Vincent, Dominica, the Bahamas
and the United Kingdom, working with seven different currencies. It was a moving army. The focus is
what’s happening in front of the camera, but there’s a massive circle of support required to get to that place.”
Serious preparation for PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S CHEST and “Pirates of the
Caribbean III” got underway in June 2004. Based upon the script by Elliott and Rossio, the production
team knew that one island location—as it was in the first film—would not suffice. “From the early
meetings with Jerry, Gore, Ted and Terry, we started to get a sense from the logistic standpoint of where
we were going,” recalls unit production manager Doug Merrifield, who served in the same position on
“The Curse of the Black Pearl.” “We knew that this time, we were going to be on various islands, versus
just St. Vincent. We were going to have more ships to deal with. It was becoming apparent that we were
going to be a road movie…although those roads were actually vast bodies of water between the different
locations. Beginning in late spring/early summer ’04, we began to thoroughly scout the Caribbean once
again.”
The pirate strongholds of Port Royal and Tortuga, familiar to viewers of “Pirates of the Caribbean: The
Curse of the Black Pearl,” were newly designed by Rick Heinrichs and reconstructed in St. Vincent’s
Wallilabou Bay, which also served as the location for the first film. Dominica, a green and unspoiled
paradise of burgeoning eco-tourism that’s just 29 miles long and 16 miles wide with a population of only
71,000, served as the backdrop for an extraordinary range of locations, from its palm-studded beaches,
jungles and rain forests to a lofty plateau. And in the Bahamas, the company would film in both The
Exumas and, further north in the chain, in an oceanfront facility on Grand Bahama Island.
“Some of these islands have few hotels, not many restaurants, little infrastructure,” says executive
producer Chad Oman. “That’s Gore having a huge imagination and a tough gut to choose those locations
despite the challenges, and you’ve got to give credit to the studio for allowing him to do that. Dick Cook,
Nina Jacobson and Bruce Hendricks all put a lot of confidence in both Gore and Jerry.”
At highest ebb, nearly 1,000 people were working in various departments during pre-production of
PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S CHEST, ranging the world from Los Angeles to
London to the Caribbean. It was an effort which defined “synergy,” as artists and craftsmen pooled their
skills to invent the impossible. And writers Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio did not just deposit the splendid
screenplay with the filmmakers and sail off into the sunset. Instead, they sailed off with the company to
every single location, a constant presence on the set, constantly creating and reinventing whenever the
need arose. “The reason our writers are here is because we have such a creative director and cast,” explains
Jerry Bruckheimer. “They come up with such imaginative ideas, and Ted and Terry can incorporate those
into the script before we actually shoot a particular scene. Plus, we’re always finding new things and
nuances when we film. Ted and Terry are so easy to work with, they love being on location, and they’re
very fast on their feet.”
Throughout filming, Bruckheimer, Verbinski, Elliott and Rossio would relentlessly pick over the script
with the minute attention to detail and seriousness of Talmudic scholars, which may come as something
of a surprise, considering the rambunctious humor of the “Pirates” movies. “There’s no heavier burden
than great potential,” sighed Ted Elliott at one point in the Caribbean, quoting that great American
philosopher, Charlie Brown. The filmmakers were aware of how high the expectations were for the new
“Pirates” films and were absolutely determined not to take any easy shortcuts.
27
A PIRATE ODYSSEY
THE VOYAGE BEGINS
Los Angeles: The Voyage Begins
Principal photography of PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S CHEST and the third
entry of the trilogy began on February 28, 2005 with studio and location work in L.A., and although the
first few sets were relatively modest—the rum locker of the Black Pearl and the interior of the Port Royal
jailhouse—production designer Rick Heinrichs’ large-scale masterworks were yet to be seen.
The natural locations and sets designed by Heinrichs unleashed his limitless imagination, providing
PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S CHEST with vastly scaled and richly imaginative
backdrops…not to mention a small fleet of new ships, including a redesigned, rebuilt and fully seaworthy
Black Pearl; Davy Jones’ magnificently detailed and terrifying Flying Dutchman; and the sleek 18thcentury British merchant ship Edinburgh Trader. Heinrichs and his creative team designed a huge range
of settings, from a massive swampland built on a Burbank soundstage, to the small but intricate dead
man’s chest of the subtitle.
“An amazing, creative individual,” says Jerry Bruckheimer of Heinrichs. Adds Johnny Depp, “I’ve had
the pleasure of working with Rick Heinrichs a number of times now over the years. And boy, oh boy, talk
about somebody outdoing themselves. He’s really gone far into the stratosphere and done some
monumental work. My initial reaction to much of the sets was…can I get the blueprints? ’Cause I want to
build this somewhere and live in it. Rick is a very gifted, talented artist, and we’re super lucky to have him.”
“I got excited when I first spoke to Gore,” recalls Heinrichs, “because he was sitting there drawing these
images of pirate ships and monsters, saying that he was taking what he had established in the first film to
a whole other level of mythology. We’re going to attempt to strike a similar balance in this film of scary
and humorous elements, which really goes back to the original theme-park attraction.
“Hopefully, people will be going home
from this movie with the same kind of
excitement that audiences got from the
Douglas Fairbanks and Errol Flynn movies
in the earlier part of the 20th century…but
with the kind of technology that we can
bring to bear on it now,” continues
Heinrichs. “We’re trying to take the first
‘Pirates’ film to the next step of virtuosity
so that we can walk that line between horror
and humor that gives you a great sense of
tingling excitement.”
Heinrichs was also intrigued by the fact
that although Verbinski’s “Pirates” films are to some degree rooted in history, they’re not imprisoned by
it. The films’ exact period is deliberately nebulous, but more or less the 1720s during the golden age of
piracy in the Caribbean. “One of the things I like to do when I’m approaching a project that’s offered to
me and when I’m trying to figure out whether to do it or not is—for instance—if it’s a period piece, is it
something that I can bring something to, or is the director trying to simply retell something historically
and wanting absolute period accuracy. That doesn’t particularly interest me. What I love about ‘Pirates’
and working with Gore is the fact that the history and period are backdrops, something that gives us a
sense of time and place. But everybody is excited to take that to the next level of stylization and re-
imagining. It’s like taking the elements and shaking them up and creating something different out of
them.”
Heinrichs, along with supervising art director John Dexter, three art directors, seven assistant art
directors, nine set designers, a props set designer, three conceptual artists, six illustrators, three model
makers, and various and sundry graphic designers, coordinators, researchers and assistants—not to
mention affiliated departments headed by set decorator Cheryl Carasik, property master Kris Peck and
construction coordinator Greg Callas—would achieve wonders on land and sea for DEAD MAN’S
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CHEST. A visit to the “Pirates” art department at Walt Disney Studios during pre-production revealed
detailed models, mountains of reference books, conceptual illustrations, blueprints and walls plastered
from one end to the other with reference artwork, from old paintings and etchings of ships, sea and
landscapes to ethnographic photographs, design sketches and reproductions of Howard Pyle illustrations
from his classic Book of Pirates (which both Verbinski and Heinrichs found “highly inspirational”).
While respecting, and often building upon, the designs of the first “Pirates” film, Heinrichs and his
team sought to “take things as far as we could to make the settings real, living things,” according to
supervising art director John Dexter. “That’s why so much of the research we do is from natural forms.”
Already under construction in Bayou La Batre,
Alabama—famed for its shipyards and expert
shipbuilders—was the brand-new, fully seaworthy and
subtly redesigned Black Pearl. “Because of the
importance of the ships, it’s almost like we had our own
mini art department that was dedicated just to their
design,” notes Rick Heinrichs. “We had the best guys
available, some of whom had worked on other ship
pictures in the past, ‘Master and Commander’ and
others. We were also aided by visual technology. All of
our ships were modeled in the computer as well, which
allowed us to transfer files back and forth between the
marine architect and engineers, who would tell us what
was going to be stable and not fall over in the water, and
that could withstand the kinds of speeds and stresses that
these ships were going to be in. The struggle was to
attain a certain look, and to do within a practical
package as well. They had to be affordable, they had to be floatable, and they had to be something that
looked good at the same time.
“We took the Black Pearl and gave it a little bit more of a swoop,” continues Heinrichs. “The Black
Pearl in the first film was established, to some degree, by the set of circumstances that they had. They built
the ship directly onto a barge and were limited by the dimensions of that barge. We’ve had a little more
freedom in this. I think that Gore discovered what he liked and what he didn’t like in the first film, and
he wanted a much more flexible Black Pearl that could move faster than one or two knots.”
The answer was for the production to build the new Black Pearl around an existing 109-foot-long boat
called the Sunset, an unglamorous craft which once serviced oil derricks in the Gulf of Mexico. It took
eight months of construction to build the new Black Pearl around the old Sunset, and by the time work
was finished, something familiar, yet brand-new, had been created. “The result was that from the waterline
up you had this beautiful pirate ship, the Black Pearl,” notes picture boat coordinator Will White. “But the
Sunset is still in there somewhere, with engines, fuel and water tanks, a galley and bunks.”
“In this movie, the Pearl is a much sexier, cool, edgier ship than last time,” adds supervising art director
John Dexter. True to its name, the Pearl has to appear black, but as Dexter points out, “it can’t just be
black…it has to have life to it. There are some metal pieces on the ship that rust. There’s certainly the sea
spray. We started with flat black and moved to something that was a little more interesting.”
Also under construction at this point for filming later in both Dominica and the Bahamas was the
stupendous Flying Dutchman. 170 feet long, 420 tons of brute nautical force, her rotting wooden decks
overgrown with barnacles, mussels and other detritus of the seven seas, the skeletal, crocodilian figure on
the foremast resembling a terrifying predator, her sails shredded into shards, her halls decked with boughs
of seaweed, 36 sealife-encrusted but fully operative cannons on either side of her hull, and two lethal
revolving cannons emerging from her bow threatening any and all who dare to stray into her path. The
Flying Dutchman and her crew have become so organically bound that it’s difficult to tell where one ends
and the other begins. The ship becomes more alive as her crewmen become more a part of her.
THE VOYAGE BEGINS
29
THE VOYAGE BEGINS
“When we were designing and building a set,” says Rick Heinrichs, “we tried to get a sense of reality,
place and history to that set by using color and texture which hopefully adds up into character. Something
that behind the actors will make it feel like they’re really in the environment. I think that reaches its zenith
with the Flying Dutchman. We wanted it to be an actual character in the film. We’ve put a lot of sea forms
everywhere—ferns, mollusks, barnacles and all the stuff that grows underwater. Whenever it’s being shot,
they’re wetting down the boat to make sure it feels alive.
“The Dutchman was developed with an
eye towards history and a sense of the
architecture of ships in the 17th century,”
Heinrichs continues. “I wanted it to already
feel old in the period that the story takes
place in the early 18th century. I think the
Flying Dutchman has a combination of
historical elements, layered with fantastical
elements.”
The Flying Dutchman was partially
inspired by old Dutch “fluyts”—17th
century vessels which resembled galleons—
and more specifically, the Vasa, a massive
Swedish warship which sunk in Stockholm’s harbor upon its maiden voyage in 1628 (the ship was
salvaged in 1961 and is now housed in a special museum in the Swedish capital). With its high, heavily
ornamented stern, the ship provided a rich foundation for Rick Heinrichs’ wilder and more fantastical
designs.
“Rick and I tossed ideas back and forth for the Dutchman six months before we started filming,”
explains supervising art director John Dexter. “About three months after that, we got engineers involved
and our marine department, who let us know what we could and could not do with its design. Luckily, we
were very close. Then we hired set designers, model makers and illustrators to help us flesh those ideas
out and get them ready for construction. We built the ship simultaneously in Los Angeles and Grand
Bahama Island.
“It was such an incredibly challenging, beautiful piece,” continues Dexter, “and since it’s such a central
icon for the picture, we wanted it to look great. We started with a stiffened hull, a watertight compartment,
then a steel structure off of that. Then our guys stepped in and applied a lot of wood structure from there,
some steel to strengthen it, and then sculpted spray foam over that, followed by plaster.”
Working closely with Heinrichs, as he had done for years, was construction coordinator Greg Callas,
at the head of a department which, at its height, included some 450 craftsmen, encompassing carpenters,
plasterers, painters, landscapers and sculptors.
“I’d never built a ship before, and there’s a whole glossary of terms that you have to learn to understand
a wooden pirate ship,” explains Greg Callas. “We had to manufacture the capstan and the wheel, fife rail,
mizzenmast, mainmast, foremast…all of these things that I’d never imagined. There were a lot of people
involved in making the Black Pearl. We have a marine department which helped make the vessel run with
diesel motors. A rigging department to outfit everything with sails…rigging today is done with cables, but
on the Pearl, as well as the Flying Dutchman, it’s all period rigging with ropes, and then everything had
to be aged to look old. The sails had to be created according to 18th-century period. You just don’t go
down to a marine store and buy this stuff. Everything we did had to be manufactured.”
The Black Pearl and the Flying Dutchman were each constructed up to their first set of fighting tops,
with four complete sets of sails. The remainder of the masts and sails would be supplied later by the ubertech wizards of Industrial Light & Magic.
On the expansive grounds of what was once the aquatic theme park Marineland in Palos Verdes, with
an endless view of the Pacific Ocean, Heinrichs designed and built a Port Royal church for one of the
opening scenes of DEAD MAN’S CHEST, in which Will and Elizabeth’s wedding is rudely interrupted
30
by Lord Cutler Beckett and a troop of East India Trading Company militiamen. Not so coincidentally, it
was on this exact spot nearly three years earlier that Port Royal’s Fort Charles was constructed for the first
“Pirates” epic.
Constructing the Port Royal church in Palos Verdes was the first of many struggles that the production
had against the most unpredictable and uncontrollable of production challenges: Mother Nature. “When we
started to build the church exterior, we got 35 inches of rain,” recalls Greg Callas. “We lost 11 days to rain
at that location, so we worked 24 hours a day for the last two weeks before shooting to complete that set.”
How coincidental that the three scheduled days of filming in the church set required torrential rain,
which had to be provided by the special effects department!
Filming then shifted back to Stage 1 at Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, where the gun and hold decks
of the Black Pearl were designed and constructed with extraordinary realism, the burnished wood looking
like it had been weathered on rough seas for 50 years rather than a few weeks old. When outfitted by set
decorator Cheryl Carasik with the appropriate accoutrements—such as criss-crossing hammocks on the
hold deck and period-correct baskets, ropes, and gently swinging lanterns—the illusion of reality was
complete. Mounted on a gimbal, four hydraulic pistons on opposite sides of the set provided a rolling
motion which effectively mimicked the sea, providing the cast and crew with a milder sneak preview of
what would come later on the real Black Pearl while shooting in the Caribbean.
Also at Disney Studios, the captain’s cabins of both the Black Pearl and Edinburgh Trader were
constructed on Stage 5 for interior sequences. Filled with lustrous period detail, much of Captain Jack’s
cabin interior was constructed of solid, beautifully grained mahogany. Leaping a few miles to the
Universal Studios backlot, Rick Heinrichs, John Dexter, Cheryl Carasik and their teams accomplished an
extreme makeover of the legendary “Europe Street” area, originally built for the 1939 Charles Laughton
version of “The Hunchback of Notre Dame,” converting it into the atmospheric streets and back alleys of
Port Royal and Tortuga. Authentic-looking early-18th-century signage appeared on the shopfronts, and
with the addition of a massive overhanging silk, an open courtyard was converted into a large Tortuga
tavern, where Captain Jack and Will Turner search for a crew of souls to man the Flying Dutchman.
This sequence culminates in a boisterous brawl meticulously choreographed by stunt coordinator
George Marshall Ruge, with the help of his second-in-command, Dan Barringer. This provided the
physically fearless Keira Knightley with
her first opportunity to shine. “I had about
two weeks’ training for that in an L.A.
studio. When we actually came to shoot it,
it was slightly different because, rather than
an open studio, we were in a location just
crammed full of people, and it was a night
shoot as well. I didn’t get to do my bit until
about four in the morning, which isn’t
really the best way to do a fight sequence. I
just drank a lot of coffee.”
“Keira is a real quick study,” confirms
Ruge, “and a true athlete. We’re pretty
jaded in this business, but the crew was pretty amazed at what Keira accomplished. When you get
applause like that on set, it’s a good sign.”
Ruge, who also coordinated the amazing stunts on the first “Pirates” film, was delighted to reunite
with so many of the same personnel…particularly the stars. “Johnny’s a natural who doesn’t let on that it
comes so easily to him,” says the stunt coordinator. “He’s a very good athlete who colors all of the action
with character. DEAD MAN’S CHEST is my fifth film with Orlando, and they’ve all been big action
movies. He’s also a fantastic athlete and loves performing action. I keep telling Keira that if it ever falls
apart for her, we’ll give her a T-shirt and a hat and bring her on the stunt team. Her physicality is fantastic.”
Hundreds of colorful extras authentically attired by costume designer Penny Rose in perfectly filthy
THE VOYAGE BEGINS
31
THE VOYAGE BEGINS
and worn clothes, and carefully made up and coiffed to look like the scurvy knaves they were, populated
the tavern, flickering with candlelight and roistering with noise. Inside of the tavern, various foods fit for
a pirate’s palette were displayed on long wooden tables, including scooped-out bread loaves filled with
stew and soup…curiously resembling a dish served in Disneyland’s New Orleans Square just near the
entrance of the “Pirates of the Caribbean” attraction. The food stylists working on DEAD MAN’S CHEST
insisted that the resemblance was entirely coincidental.
Throughout the filming of DEAD MAN’S CHEST, Penny Rose was like a master builder, only with
fabrics rather than bricks and mortar. Rose approved of every single costume that went on every single body,
whether one of the stars or an extra who’s the sixth pirate from the left. Notes Lee Arenberg, “Penny is
amazing because she’ll have a pile of clothes sitting there, and with her keen eye she’ll pick a garment out,
have it distressed, aged, dyed, and suddenly, it becomes more than a costume. It becomes your character.”
“Penny Rose is a force of nature,” says Tom Hollander, who portrays Lord Cutler Beckett. “She’s a very
important person on the film, with boundless energy. In her wardrobe warehouse, Penny is like an empress
in a sort of tent of fabrics, with a lot of assistants rushing around, bringing this and that. “No, the brocade.
No, the gold. Bring the blue. I’m sick of the red. No, take it out. Bring it back. Take it in. Pull it down.”
Rose supervised a department which under her expert supervision literally combed the world for
fabrics and materials from which to create the more than 8,000 costumes required for DEAD MAN’S
CHEST and “Pirates III,” all of which she designed with the aid of associate costume designer John
Norster, costume supervisor Kenny Crouch (both whom she refers to as “the most important men in my
life”), and a large staff of costumers, cutters, ager/dyers, buyers, painters, leathermakers and various
assistants. Of paramount importance to Rose was for the costumes to look as if they were created in the
18th century in every detail. “I only do real,” says Rose. “There’s a lot of fantasy in the story, but not in
the costumes. We want these clothes to look like they’ve been slept in and worn forever. Aging and dyeing
for a period film are absolutely vital. I don’t like people to look as if they’ve just walked out of a shop.
It’s a really specialized field and very underestimated and undervalued, and the people who do it are
geniuses because it’s very subtle. And all of the shoes go into a cement mixer with a few rocks, and by the
time they come out they’ve aged five years.”
Penny Rose’s costumes for the leading
players indicate their transitions as
characters. For DEAD MAN’S CHEST,
there are virtually no changes at all in
Johnny Depp’s Jack Sparrow costume.
“Johnny just feels dead right,” notes Rose.
“He’s added a few things this time. He’s a
very thoughtful, caring actor in terms of
how he looks in character.” Captain Jack
Sparrow’s now-famous look was a
collaboration in the first film between
Penny Rose, key makeup artist Ve Neill,
key hairstylist Martin Samuel, and Depp himself. “Having spent some time with Keith Richards was
certainly a huge part of the inspiration for the character,” says the actor, invoking the name of the great
guitarist for The Rolling Stones. “I spent a little time with Keith here and there, and each time I’d see him
he’d have a new thing tied into his hair. ‘What is that hanging?’ I’d ask, and Keith would say, ‘Ah yeah, I
got that in Bermuda,’ or wherever. So it felt to me like Jack, on his travels and adventures, would see
something and go, ‘Oh yeah, I’ll keep that,’ tie it in his hair or have someone else do it. Each little trinket
would have a story. For example, the bone that hangs just above the bandana is a shinbone from a reindeer.
Then Jack has the dangly bits, beads, a chicken foot, a fertility symbol, weird animal tails. There’s no
telling where he got those, and it might have been lunch!”
“In the first film, Will Turner was a blacksmith with a crush on the Governor’s daughter. Now he’s
matured and has a more exciting look,” continues Rose. “Orlando and I got together and had a bit of a
32
back-and-forth, and I thought we would make Will look a little more sophisticated. For a good deal of the
film he’s wearing an olive-green leather pirate coat that makes him look more powerful.” Says Bloom,
“Penny has done an amazing job of taking Will to another level and loosening him up. The leather coat
we chose for Will to wear is kind of like a biker jacket for pirate times. Doing swordfights and getting wet
in a long leather coat has posed a few challenges, to say the least, but it’s worth every moment because
Penny’s vision for Will, and all of the characters, has helped them come alive.” Bloom’s main costume, it
might be added, includes a cream embroidered waistcoat which Rose constructed using antique table
linens found in Paris, a perfect example of her determination to use whatever works to accomplish her
design goals.
“Keira has at least three different looks in DEAD MAN’S CHEST,” Rose continues, “because
Elizabeth is really changing and maturing as well. Keira is very gung ho and will have a go at anything,
so she really took to the boy’s clothing that she wears for part of the film. She also wears a beautiful
wedding gown, but we only see it drenched in the rain!”
“Having worked with Penny on ‘Pirates’ and ‘King Arthur,’ I feel like I’ve spent my life with her, and I
love it,” says Knightley. She is, in the best possible way, a perfectionist. One of my favorite parts of the film
is before we start, having costume fittings with Penny and seeing her in charge of hundreds and hundreds
of costumes. Yet, as soon as you get into her
fitting room, she just cuts right to it. If you’ve
got a button that’s two millimeters out of
place, Penny will move it. If something needs
a bit of embroidery to be brought out, she
sees it immediately. She’s a forceful lady, and
one that I’m very glad to have around.”
The wedding gown is a fine example of
Penny Rose’s minute attention to detail. It’s
comprised of a deep-ivory silk and raffia
fabric embellished with a leaf, floral and fan
design. Rose used the fabric as is for the
skirts, but created her own design on the bodice by cutting around and repositioning the raffia details. The
stomacher (front of the dress) looks almost embroidered, with layer upon layer of this raffia design sewn
into it. The veil is an ivory silk chiffon, with delicate pearls sewn into the silk, attached to a wired tiara
that also contains the raffia fabric from the dress. And the petticoat of the dress was actually constructed
from an antique quilted cotton bedspread from Rome!
Some of the new characters also enticed Rose to new heights of creativity. “I loved doing Tia Dalma,
which was difficult, because the character lives in a swamp and she’s both glamorous and repulsive at the
same time. You wouldn’t want to sit too close to her, yet we still want to feel her power as a woman. I
thoroughly enjoyed it and working with the lovely Naomie Harris.”
“I absolutely love everything about how they’ve created Tia Dalma,” enthuses the beautiful Naomie
Harris, who is unrecognizable in her full makeup, hair and costume as the mysterious soothsayer. “Penny’s
costumes, the makeup that Ve Neill designed, the hair by Martin Samuel. I think it’s all absolutely
fabulous. I didn’t recognize myself at all when I looked in the mirror, and that’s the way it should be. I
love the fact that Tia Dalma is such a rugged, earthy, crazy kind of character, because I’ve never played
anything like this before. It’s really liberating.”
Although the physical details of Bill Nighy’s Davy Jones would be created through computer-
generated imagery, Rose nonetheless created an actual costume which served as a model for the Industrial
Light & Magic artists to work from. “They photographed Bill in his costume in minute detail, because
you can’t superimpose a concept onto a gray reference suit,” she says.
Rose had previously worked with Stellan Skarsgård on “King Arthur” and was happy to collaborate
with him again for his role as Bootstrap Bill. And unlike Bill Nighy, Skarsgård’s costume, makeup and
hair were shot “live” on camera, which required key makeup designer Ve Neill, key hairstylist Martin
THE VOYAGE BEGINS
33
THE VOYAGE BEGINS
Samuel and Penny Rose to collaborate on his amazing look, which necessitated the actor to spend some
three to four hours a day in the makeup and hair trailers, being transformed into his character.
Neill and Samuel’s extensive work would contribute greatly to the film’s overall look and atmosphere.
For example, Ragetti’s wooden eye has almost become a character unto itself. Actor Mackenzie Crook has
to wear not one but two contact lenses for this effect, sandwiched one on top of the other. “It’s
uncomfortable,” he admits, “but not painful. And it helps the character, because without it, I’m just any
other pirate.” Coincidentally, in real life, Crook has never worn contacts, “so this is into the deep end,” he
laughs. As for the shocking condition of the pirates’ teeth—which would delight contemporary dentists—
it’s all just carefully designed appliances and paint.
Also at Disney Studios, the company spent a week shooting on the huge “Pantano River” set, with Tia
Dalma’s tumbledown but richly decorated tree house as its centerpiece. Filling up almost every inch of the
240-foot-long, 130-foot-wide Stage 2, this set was a truly magical evocation of a Caribbean swampland
river, lined with stark, overhanging trees and brush and rickety lean-tos. The set was also the most
deliberate tip of the hat to the original Disneyland “Pirates of the Caribbean” attraction. “I remember as
a kid watching the episode of ‘The Wonderful World of Color’ which introduced the ‘Pirates’ ride,” recalls
Rick Heinrichs, “and being totally blown away by it at the time. The opportunity to be involved with
something that references this is, in my mind, a tribute to designers like Marc Davis and others who did
such incredible work. It was such a pleasure to be able to do that.”
(In fact, Heinrichs’ first job in Hollywood was at Disney’s WED Enterprises when many of the original
“Pirates of the Caribbean” attraction creators were still working there.)
It was no coincidence, then, that it was this set which drew a visit from the legendary Francis Xavier
“X” Atencio, the “Disney Legend” who wrote the script for the original theme-park attraction—working
from concepts and storyboards by another Disney great, Marc Davis—as well as the lyrics to George
Bruns’ music for what is now the world’s most famous sea chanty, “Yo Ho (A Pirate’s Life for Me).” The
DEAD MAN’S CHEST company rolled out the red carpet for “X,” honoring him with his own director’s
chair and with Jerry Bruckheimer, Gore Verbinski, Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom, Keira Knightley and a
long parade of cast and crew paying due homage. “Without this man,” spoke Verbinski for one and all,
“none of us would be here right now.”
Tia Dalma’s shack is lined from end to end and top to bottom with the bric-a-brac of Tia Dalma’s artful
profession. “I’ve never done a hoodoo voodoo, scary 1720s-ish bayou interior before,” laughs set
decorator Cheryl Carasik. “Gore wanted a lot of texture hung from the ceiling, so we prepped bottles
encrusted with jewels, along with dried herbs. Inside of the bottles were spiders, eyeballs and mushrooms
which actually started growing over a
period of time. And a lot of taxidermy all
over the place.”
The combined work of Heinrichs, art
director John Dexter and Carasik was
inspirational to the actors as well. “I think
one of the nicest compliments I ever
received was from Johnny when he walked
into Tia Dalma’s and told me that he didn’t
really know what he was going to do in
there, but there was so much great stuff to
play with that he was like a kid in a candy
store. You know, Johnny can take a simple
little trinket from a desk and turn it into the most amazing prop.”
“The Pantano River set at Disney was also designed to match the actual location chosen in Dominica
for the sequence, the Indian River,” explains construction coordinator Greg Callas. “The bloodwood trees
that border this river are so extraordinary, and we had to replicate them on stage from steel and car foam
and plater with silk leaves on them, which required a lot of work. We also built an above-ground tank
34
above the stage floor, which we filled with half a million gallons of water, which actually created the right
sense of humidity.”
Following the completion of the Pantano River sequence, the “Pirates” company hopscotched back to
Universal Studios, where a sneak preview of the “real” Flying Dutchman could be glimpsed in an exact
replica of its main deck for sequences with Orlando Bloom, Bill Nighy, Stellan Skarsgård and actors—
clad in similar gray reference suits as that worn by Nighy—portraying the ship’s bizarre crew.
On to the Caribbean: Return to “Vincy”
On February 28, 2005, the cast and crew of DEAD MAN’S CHEST packed their bags, kissed their
loved ones, and wedged themselves into a chartered L-1011 jet bound for the distant West Indies…and a
location journey of nearly a year’s duration which would prove to be as much of an adventure as anyone
could have predicted, and as much of a challenge as
anyone could have imagined.
First destination: the island republic of St. Vincent
and the Grenadines, 13 degrees north of the equator.
Because it’s not highly developed for tourism, which is
one of its great charms, St. Vincent’s airport cannot
contain anything bigger than a two-engine prop
commuter plane. Thus, the “Pirates” jet had to land on
the neighboring island of St. Lucia, situated between St.
Vincent and Martinique, and ferry the company, over
rough seas for two hours, to their destination. And if
seasickness was to become something of a motif
throughout production, the “Pirates” crew had some
good practice on that initial voyage.
Meanwhile, a monumental amount of equipment and
material were already on their way to the islands via air
and sea in a deployment which again echoed a military
campaign. “Priority equipment went by air,” recalls unit production manager Doug Merrifield, “but we also
chartered a freighter, loaded it up with all of our rolling stock and containers, and it sailed to St. Vincent,
and later to Dominica and then to the Bahamas. It became afternoon entertainment for the island people to
watch a procession from one end of the island to the other as our equipment came out of the port.”
Some 300 crew members were imported to St. Vincent from Los Angeles, Great Britain and many
other home bases, with their numbers considerably increased by local islanders also employed in a myriad
of departments. As St. Vincent lacks large resorts, crew members were housed at 43 different hotels, inns,
bed and breakfasts, condos and apartments sprinkled across the western part of the island. For many in
the company, it was old home week, as the first “Pirates” film shot in St. Vincent for nearly two months.
Also making the journey to the Caribbean was a veritable menagerie trained and accompanied by
Boone Narr and Mark Harden from Animals for Hollywood, which included two capuchin monkeys, two
macaws, a dozen goats, three pigs, two white horses, two carriage horses, three dozen chickens, six cows
and 14 ravens. In the first “Pirates” film, some of the on-screen creatures—including the Prison Dog, Jack
the Monkey and Cotton’s parrot—had their moment of stardom, which was about to be repeated. The
silent Cotton’s parrot is actually portrayed by two macaws, spicy and spirited avian creatures appropriately
named Chip and Salsa. “One’s a good flyer, the other’s a good sitter,” notes David Bailie, who portrays the
tongueless pirate. “God, if you heard him squawk! You have no idea what that squawk is like at a two-inch
range. Your head just rings.”
The Prison Dog, a beloved character both in the original Pirates of the Caribbean attraction and the
first film, is now played by Chopper, a friendly and unbelievably smart eight-year-old terrier mix. Twister,
who portrayed the role in “The Curse of the Black Pearl,” is now enjoying a well-deserved retirement after
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RETURN TO “VINCY”
years of film and television work. However, like many stars, Chopper needed time in the makeup trailer
to correctly align the color of his coat with Twister’s. “Chopper has an air-conditioned little trailer that he
stays in, and sometimes he allows me to go inside,” says Boone Narr ruefully. “Then, on his day off, he
expects me to run around and take care of him. Usually, I’m at his bark and call. He’s got me well trained.”
Once again, the beautiful inlet of Wallilabou Bay, due north from the island’s small capital of
Kingstown, would be the locale for both Port Royal and Tortuga exteriors. Rather than take the long and
winding (and sometimes treacherous) road from Kingstown to Wallilabou, most in the company preferred
to shuttle there on the water, a beautiful journey which skirted the lush shoreline dotted with palm trees,
banana plantations, mountains often shrouded by clouds and brightly colored little houses. Some
landlubbing crew members spent more time
on the water in the first weeks of Caribbean
filming than they had in their entire lives,
careening back and forth from one of the
three starting points in and around
Kingstown to Wallilabou, enjoying the
warm tropical breezes, sunshine and
spectacular views. Of course, there was the
occasional downpour and heavy ocean
swells to deal with as well.
If someone with no connection or
knowledge of DEAD MAN’S CHEST
found themselves sailing into Wallilabou
during filming, they would have felt like they had slipped into a time tunnel and out the other end. The
clock had seemingly been turned back nearly 300 years to the days when European hegemony over the
Caribbean was constantly being challenged by the pirates who freely roamed the waters. Rick Heinrichs
and his team re-created Port Royal in even greater detail than the first film, with the added structures of
the East India Trading Company dock and offices. Anchored in the bay was an impressive array of period
vessels, dominated by the 169-foot, full-rig H.M.S. Bounty, which in DEAD MAN’S CHEST is seen as
the Edinburgh Trader.
The Bounty, like its real-life namesake, has had an extraordinary history of its own. She was built for
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s 1962 version of
“Mutiny on the Bounty,” which starred
Marlon Brando, Trevor Howard and
Richard Harris. The first ship ever built
from the keel up especially for a motion
picture, construction of the Bounty began in
Lunenburg, Nova Scotia in February 1960,
and spent seven months being constructed
with more than 400,000 board feet of
lumber in the Smith and Rhuland Shipyard
before sailing for Tahiti and the production
of the blockbuster feature. Although the
historical Bounty was 85 feet long, its
cinematic reconstruction was 118 feet in length so as to allow the cameras more free movement during
shooting, and her total height from deck to the top of the mainmast is 103 feet. For “Mutiny on the
Bounty,” the ship made the 7,327-mile voyage from Lunenburg to Tahiti via the Panama Canal in 33
sailing days. Forty-three years later, the Bounty, under Captain Robin R. Walbridge, would be required to
sail a mere 2,096 statue miles (1,821 nautical miles) in 14 days from Bayou La Batre—where she was
being refitted and repainted as the “Edinburgh Trader”—to St. Vincent, with stops along the way in
Miami, Florida and Mayaguez, Puerto Rico for fuel and provisions.
36
The Bounty was joined in Wallilabou Bay by several more “picture boats” from near and far, under the
supervision of marine coordinator Dan Malone, assistant coordinator Bruce Ross and picture boat
coordinator Will White and their team, who were aided and abetted by boat captains, water safety
personnel, technicians, sailmasters and handlers, the rigging crew under Courtney Andersen, and
dockmaster Douglas “Kino” Valenzuela, who was often like a waterbound traffic director. Among them
were: Sloop Providence, a 110-foot topsail fighting sloop, a replica of Rhode Island’s first naval vessel,
seen in DEAD MAN’S CHEST as the “Perseverance” (the Providence departed its Rhode Island home
for the Alabama shipyard in a blizzard in January 2005 and sailed from Bayou La Batre to St. Vincent in
a swift 15 days); St. Peter, a 74-foot schooner from Antigua; and Unicorn, a 145-foot barque from its home
base of St. Lucia, portraying “Terpsichore.” The support flotilla in “Walli” included 12 support boats of
various kinds, not to mention some dozen British longboats faithfully reconstructed from original 18thcentury plans.
The primary set in the new and improved Port Royal was Lord Cutler Beckett’s imposing headquarters,
with a huge map of the world clearly dictating his “today, the Caribbean; tomorrow, the world” philosophy.
“We were revisiting the Port Royal set from ‘The Curse of the Black Pearl,’” says Rick Heinrichs, “and
the challenge was to let the audience know they were in the same place, but also that some period of time
had passed. Ironically, the original set was still there at Wallilabou two years after they shot the first film,
and we were going to use what was left. Not two months before we shot there on DEAD MAN’S CHEST,
a tremendous surge came up and knocked the remaining sets into the water. So we had to do a complete
reconstruction.”
On the East India Company dock, set
decorator Cheryl Carasik and her assistants
created an array of cargo and goods. “We
researched all of it, trying to imagine what
they would be importing and exporting. We
had special ivory tusks—not the real thing,
of course—molded in Los Angeles, because
ivory was highly coveted at that time. We had
tea boxes, silk, chickens in cages, bundles. At
the last minute, Gore wanted a little fishing
village off to the side of where Lord Cutler
Beckett’s office was on the Port Royal set, so
I actually went to the next village from Wallilabou Bay and saw how they dried their fish on mats made
of sticks and bamboo. We bought fishing nets from them, as well as about 40 fresh fish!”
“I’ve never seen anything like it,” says Tom Hollander of his days of filming in Wallilabou Bay. “Only in
this production can you turn around, look out of the window of the set, and see 850 people pulling up rigging
on a huge old ship, with another ship sliding in behind it. It’s hyper-real, in a way. The production design is
wondrous, the level at which they’re working is remarkable. We just wander into the sets and go, ‘Oh yeah,
this looks good,’ but obviously the most enormous kinds of work go into all this detail, and scale that I’ve
never seen before. These people are all experts at what they do, it’s the most inspired sort of creativity.”
“The sets for this film support everything you do,” adds Jonathan Pryce, “because the authenticity and
attention to detail are quite extraordinary. When we shot the scene in Beckett’s Port Royal office with me
and Tom Hollander, normally that would be a kind of fairly intimate scene probably shot inside of a studio
soundstage. But in our film, you look out of the window and there’s a whole world of life on the dockside
going on. Ships are being loaded. Bananas are going up and down the gangplank. Boats are coming in and
out. It’s a great approach to filmmaking. It’s a great mix of old-fashioned filmmaking and modern
technology.”
Typical of the film’s attention to minute detail was the enormous amount of goods that spilled out from
property master Kris Peck’s truck like a cornucopia. At one point, Peck and assistant propmaster Michael
Hansen had eight prop trucks in all four countries in which DEAD MAN’S CHEST was filmed, waiting to
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ADVENTURES IN DOMINICA
supply whatever necessary to appropriately outfit an actor, extra or stuntplayer. Much of Peck’s work was
done in collaboration with Rick Heinrichs’ art department or, if there were mechanics involved, with special
effects and other technical divisions. For the pistols, swords, daggers and other weaponry, Peck worked
closely with armorer Kelly Farrah, an expert in the field who’s also quite an historian, as well as historical
adviser Peter Twist, who served in the same capacity on the first film. Although many of the weapons are
replicas or realistically fabricated from latex, Captain Jack Sparrow’s sword is the real 18th-century deal
(although obviously, less lethal versions were used for the swordfighting sequences). “We have 300 swords,
and they were all manufactured for this movie,” notes Peck. “The pirates’ swords are down, dirty and
grungy. We have dress swords for characters like Commodore James Norrington and Governor Weatherby
Swann. Our Flying Dutchman crewmen have swords that are encrusted with oceanic life.”
Perhaps the most important prop of all, however, was the titular object—the dead man’s chest itself,
designed with intricate nautical motifs.
“Gore made it very clear to us that since
this was the title that was going to be on
every billboard, poster, bus-stop bench and
grocery store line, he wanted us to get it as
right as possible,” says Peck. “This
integrated more departments than any prop
I’ve ever worked on. The writers, the
illustrators, the production designer, the
sculptors, the molders and then onto the
prop shop for the mechanics. It had to look
unbreakable, like a cast-iron skillet.”
As it was on the first go-round, the
shooting in “Walli” was the biggest show in town for Vincentians. Just outside of the gates which ran
across the perimeter of the set from the main road, hundreds of people were just “limin’,” island patois for
“hanging out,” chatting, partying and peering at the grand spectacle. From a distance, the huge helium
lighting balloons prepared by chief lighting technician Rafael Sanchez and his team, suspended in the
night sky, presented a surreal sight to islanders and tourists alike. “Vincys” are fiercely proud of their
country and took an almost proprietary joy in the fact that one of the most successful films in history had
been partially filmed on their small but vibrant island…and now it was happening all over again.
“‘Pirates’—Our Movie!” was the headline of an article written by St. Vincent lawyer Vynnette A.
Frederick for a local newspaper: “‘Pirates’ brought Hollywood home,” she wrote. “It put money in our
coffers, brought jobs for our people, and above all else, we now have the right to brag that St. Vincent and
the Grenadines, just like Trinidad and Jamaica, can be considered a ‘movie location.’ Every time you drive
along the Leeward Coast, it is almost impossible not to look out to the horizon and hope for a glimpse of
the Black Pearl.”
Beware of Falling Coconuts: Adventures in Dominica
So little known is the “isle of beauty, isle of splendor,” as its national anthem justly boasts of the
Commonwealth of Dominica, that some personal effects equipment of the company wound up in the more
familiar, but very far-flung, Dominican Republic! Only 29 miles long and 16 miles wide, with a
population of 71,000 souls, the former British colony—wedged between the French islands of
Guadeloupe to the north and Martinique to the south—has become an exciting new destination for
adventurous eco-tourists, but is hardly developed for mass tourism…or, for that matter, filmmaking on a
grand scale.
But after scouting the magisterial visual sites of the island, Gore Verbinski was determined that
Dominica would provide the majority of the land-based Caribbean backdrops for DEAD MAN’S CHEST,
and Jerry Bruckheimer was willing to back his director up so as to give the film a completely fresh look.
38
“We selected Dominica as a major location because it’s beautiful and virtually untouched,” notes
Bruckheimer. “Because it has such a jagged coastline, they can’t get cruise ships in, which prevents the
island from becoming overly developed. You’re not seeing the same landscapes, jungles and mountains as
you have in other movies. Dominica is one of the most picturesque places in the world, but totally
undiscovered by filmmakers.” Verbinski and production designer Heinrichs decided that Dominica would
serve as location for two major settings in DEAD MAN’S CHEST: the humorously terrifying native
island and Isla Cruces, both wholly fictitious settings located only in the imagination of the filmmakers.
A large amount of the DEAD MAN’S CHEST action sequences take place on those locations, which
meant that actors and stunt players would be
performing their daring feats in difficult
environments and intense heat. Perfect for a
pirate movie!
“Dominica is a gorgeous island, but
some of the amenities aren’t there,” explains
Jerry Bruckheimer. “We employed a lot of
people on the island, and they were brilliant
and wonderful to work with. But if a piece
of equipment breaks down, it takes at least
two days to get it replaced from off-island,
so we had daunting production challenges.
The hotels weren’t exactly fancy, but
everybody bonded together. It was like going to camp. A lot of cast and crew lived in cabins, slept in
mosquito netting and had dinners on the beach. We really had to make do.”
“If Gore found a location that was inaccessible, that was usually his favorite one,” laughs executive
producer Bruce Hendricks. “Dominica is what the Caribbean looked like 200 years ago. You needed the
wildness and natural beauty that some of the more offbeat and remote places, like Dominica, offer. Gore,
like any great director, pushes you to go a step beyond. The great ones have to be leading the charge up
the hill, they have to be the ones with the vision to push frontiers and boundaries, both artistically and
technically. A rational person would not go there, and they wouldn’t take along 500 of their closest friends
and hundreds of tons of equipment. It takes a purpose and single-mindedness to pull something off like
that, and Gore is all of that, and more.”
“Dominica doesn’t have a history of big film production,” adds Caribbean production supervisor Tom
Hayslip. “They’ve hosted documentaries and nature films, but in terms of being able to handle the amount
of people we had to bring in—just the accommodations alone—was a challenge for the island.” Adds first
assistant director Peter Kohn (who later handed the reins of that position to second A.D. Dave Venghaus
when the time came close for his wife to give birth to their new child), “Dominica has its own weather
system. It rains in one part of the small island, and not in the other, and somehow it always seemed to rain
on us!”
Dominica would present massive challenges for Rick Heinrichs and construction coordinator Greg
Callas. “The first time I saw those locations, I was wondering how we were going to do it,” admits Callas.
“The island is small, but because of the road conditions it can take you three hours to get from one end to
the other. Logistically, it was incredibly difficult, but we had to satisfy the wants and needs of Gore. The
art department worked very hard to design things that would fit into certain spaces, and then we had to get
to those spaces. Because supplies are so limited on islands like Dominica, we had to bring in everything,
like an entire hardware store: every nail, piece of wood, sack of cement and plaster, gallon of paint. The
equipment we take for granted, like scissor lifts, boom lifts and forklifts, don’t really exist in Dominica, so
we imported them from other countries in the Caribbean and South America. We implemented a lot of old-
school construction, because we didn’t have the luxury of the 21st century there.”
DEAD MAN’S CHEST began shooting in Dominica smack in the middle of a campaign for the
island’s prime ministry so heated that it made the last U.S. elections look like a polite tea party. “You
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ADVENTURES IN DOMINICA
figure that a remote Caribbean island would be nice and quiet,” says actor Kevin R. McNally. “But on the
first night I was in Dominica, I went to bed at about ten at night, and all of a sudden hell broke loose in
the street. They started campaigning at midnight and continued until 7:00 in the morning with whistles,
rattles, music, cars revving up and down the street. Back home in England, there’d be, perhaps, a man in
a suit coming around once during the campaign at 4:00 in the afternoon so he doesn’t disturb your tea.”
But the film’s company had much else on their minds other than whether or not incumbent Roosevelt
Skerrit or challenger Edison James would win (by the way, it was Mr. Skerrit who emerged the victor).
For cast and crew, the great challenges were defying the island’s unpredictable weather, with intense heat,
humidity and sudden rain showers and thunderstorms, circumnavigating the perilous, narrow mountain
roads, hardly big enough for two compact sedans traveling in opposite directions let alone 16-wheel
equipment trucks, avoiding constrictor snakes (non-poisonous but with mighty hugs) and other unfamiliar
flora and fauna.
The production team spearheaded the
creation of an entire infrastructure for the
DEAD MAN’S CHEST company, including
towers for cellular telephones and wireless
internet. More than 600 members of the
“Pirates” crew invaded a welcoming
Dominica, which provided some 400 more
workers to the company working in a vast
array of behind-the-scenes and on-camera
positions. And if it’s true that an army travels
on its stomach, the same could be said for a
movie company. On the biggest shooting
days in Dominica, caterer Paul Kuzmich and his hard-working crew would have to feed anywhere from
780 to 840 people. For breakfast alone, the hungry company would consume 1,100 to 1,500 eggs, 100 to
160 pounds of bacon, 80 loaves of bread, 50 pounds of sausage, 400 pastries and 10 to 12 cases of fruit.
And except for some delicious local produce, everything else had to be shipped in from the United States.
Meanwhile, it was incumbent upon craft service maestro Ted Yonenaka and his equally energetic assistant
Lea Anderson to haul food carts into the most unlikely places to keep the company watered and fortified
between Kuzmich’s meals.
Filming in Dominica began on Monday, April 18th on the island’s Hampstead Beach, a bucolic stretch
of sand overlooking a glistening turquoise sea on the island’s northeast coast, backed by a lush, tangled
jungle and coconut palm groves. In fact, some of it had been created just for the film, with art director
William Ladd Skinner bringing in some 7,000 plants, primarily non-edible dasheen and transplanted
palms. Several sequences were shot in and around Hampstead, including the three-way swordfight
between Jack Sparrow, Will Turner and James Norrington on a huge, runaway mill wheel, which promises
to be one of the most complex sequences yet seen on film. Among the dangers of this remarkable scene
was the fact that heavy coconuts were occasionally dropping from nearly 100-foot-tall palms while it was
being filmed, with some of the crew donning hardhats and Gore Verbinski wearing a good, old-fashioned,
“Gunga Din”-style pith helmet!
“The wheel was a very difficult set piece for all concerned,” explains stunt coordinator George
Marshall Ruge. “There were extreme physical demands and a number of safety concerns involved.” The
mill-wheel sequence is a perfect example of the symbiosis between departments that characterized the
entire production. Recalls Ruge, “Many departments and people were involved in making the wheel
sequence a reality. I specifically worked in collaboration with the special effects and visual effects
coordinators, production designer, art director, propmaster, construction coordinator, director of
photography, camera operators and more. But most notably, it was Gore’s grand vision, commitment and
enthusiasm that inspired the sequence for all of us, and I worked closely with him in every aspect to help
bring it to life.”
40
The wheel was constructed of steel with
art-directed layers, weighing more than
1,800 pounds and reaching 18 feet tall.
There were two versions, one a “cart”
version supported by “training wheels,”
with the actual mill wheel pulled by cables
on a winch system, with camera platforms
built onto the training wheel cart that
surrounded it. “The other version,” notes
Ruge, “was affectionately called the ‘paint
roller.’ The wheel was attached to steel tow
bars and literally towed by a flatbed truck
that also served as a makeshift camera
platform at times.”
To enable the wheel to roll more smoothly, paths were created through the jungle, because if the terrain
were too tough, “it made it impossible for the performers to stay on the wheel or maintain the necessary
hand-eye coordination for the swordfight.”
Before the sequence went in front of the cameras, there were several pre-production rehearsals within
a five-week span and a series of location rehearsals over the course of three weeks whenever time
permitted Ruge to muster the three actors and his stunt team.
“Oh boy, I’ll never forget the faces on Gore and George when it was time to load me into that massive
wheel,” recalls Johnny Depp. “Gore just started laughing, because it was such an absurd and bizarre
request for grown men to ask of each other: ‘Okay, what we’d like to do now is bind you inside the wheel,
tether you to the walls of this thing, give you a sword, and as the wheel is rolling you’re gonna go upside
down several times.’
“It was so bizarre that it was completely appealing,” Depp laughs. “I’ve done some really obtuse and
strange things in this movie, at some point there are no surprises. But because of who Gore and George are,
and how brilliant they are at their jobs, you have complete trust, which is the whole key to filmmaking.”
“It’s a truly remarkable sequence that only Gore, Ted and Terry could have come up with and that
George could have made work,” says Orlando Bloom. “We spent many days harnessed inside of that wheel,
doing crazy fights up and down, around and around. It would make a fun ride in an amusement park…if it
weren’t so uncomfortable.” Also occasionally harnessed inside of the wheel doing 360-degree revolutions
were camera operators Martin Schaer and Josh Bleibtreu, just one of the extremely unusual positions in
which they and their compatriots often found themselves during the DEAD MAN’S CHEST shoot.
Jack Davenport points out that although there are CGI elements which enhanced the scene, most of it
was live on-camera. “It’s a classical swordfight scene with shots which can’t be faked. When you see us
upside down, with the veins in our forehead popping out, it’s real.”
But the boys weren’t the only ones who got to have all the fun. The sequences shot in Dominica also
gave Keira Knightley ample opportunity to flex her action muscles, and the fearless performer was up for
anything stunt coordinator George Marshall Ruge wanted to throw at her. “On the first movie, I was
begging for a swordfight, but I never got one. This time, I’ve got two big ones, and two swords as well,
so I was very happy.”
A sequence shot both in Dominica and later, the Exumas, called upon Knightley to take swords in hand
and kick some serious Flying Dutchman crewmen butt. “The weather was absolutely boiling, and we were
in this amazing coconut grove,” she recalls. “George and his stunt team were completely fantastic. They’re
so patient and really take you through the action one step at a time. I’m a huge believer that if this is
something that my character has got to do, then I want to really know how to do it. And if you’re shooting
an action movie, it’s really boring if you don’t actually do the action. When you’re doing the fight
sequences, a lot of the time we’re having a full run at it, so you can really get into it, and that’s fantastic.
It’s nice to feel like you’re a part of the team. What George and his people do is invite you into the team.
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41
ADVENTURES IN DOMINICA
And my stunt double, Lisa Hoyle, is absolutely brilliant.”
As were the other stunt doubles for the stars, including Tony Angelotti, Theo Kypri, Zach Hudson and
Thomas Dupont, who leapt, fought and achieved truly death-defying feats when common sense (and
insurance policies) prevented an often-willing Depp, Bloom and Knightley from accomplishing the stunts
themselves.
South of the Dominican capital of Roseau
is an aerie appropriately called High Meadow,
which, along with a nearby spot overhanging
the main road called Twin Peaks, was selected
as the location for the richly and wittily
designed native village of the “Pelegostos,” a
wholly tongue-in-cheek and fictitious creation
(as is the island they live on) inspired by pirate
folklore.
“One of the great things that Gore and the
writers have done with the concept of the
Pelegostos village,” says Rick Heinrichs, “is
to create this wonderful escape episode, which puts the pirates into a completely absurd but funny set of
circumstances which becomes a comedy of errors. Part of the physical comedy is that the village is set way
up in the mountains, with the huts on top of different pitons with rope bridges between one and the other.
The huts themselves are an organic riff on a skull, with eye and mouth holes, and everything brought up into
a bun at the top. It gives a kind of animus to the entire village.
“The overall look of the Pelegostos and their environment is an example of a lot of early-on design
exploration and consultation between Gore, Penny Rose, Cheryl Carasik, Ve Neill and Martin Samuel’s
makeup and hair departments and myself,” Heinrichs continues. “We were exploring a lot of different avenues
to go with the natives, and we ended up with this kind of crazy pastiche which is completely imaginary.”
And imaginative. Throughout the film, Ve Neill and Martin Samuel—both of whom were nominated
for Academy Awards® for their work on the first “Pirates” film—headed large teams of some of the
industry’s most accomplished makeup and hair artists to transform perfectly reasonable human beings into
gnarly unwashed pirates, foppish, bewigged aristocrats and, in the case of the Pelegostos, wildly painted,
tattooed and accessorized natives. Some 130 members of the great Kalinago Nation, the original
inhabitants of many Caribbean islands (including Dominica), participated as extras in these scenes,
thoroughly enjoying their brush with stardom with good humor and a sense of fun at the film’s
inventiveness (numerous other Kalinagos worked on the production in various occupations as well).
There was even an invented language for the Pelegostos called “Umshoko” that was developed by
dialect coach Carla Meyer and UCLA linguist Peter Ladefoged. “Gore didn’t want the natives to be
identified as anything in particular,” says Meyer. “So Peter drew from several international languages,
mixed with Pig Latin and English words spelled backwards.” A few examples of this brand-new tongue?
“Rah rah rah fi fi” means “big, big, big fire.” “Bugo” means “please.” “Kamino” means “come back.”
The Pelegostos village is a highly inventive pastiche of primitive designs laced with a mordant sense
of humor. In addition to the twined branches which compose the native huts, much of the village is
constructed and decorated with the materials left over from the Pelegostos’ enemies…that is, bones and
other residue. Instead of beaded curtains in the entrance of the circular doorways to give their inhabitants
some privacy, they’re fabricated with small bones instead. Skulls are a major motif, used in all sorts of
ways that Martha Stewart never even imagined (but might very well admire). The long and very rickety-
looking rope bridge linking one side of the village to the other looks treacherous—in fact, feels
treacherous when walking over it and viewing the sheer 60-foot drop below—but it’s a marvelous illusion.
In fact, strong steel pilings supported the bridge, making it as safe as crossing the Golden Gate.
Construction coordinator Greg Callas actually imported a construction team from Las Vegas which has
built suspension bridges at theme parks and zoos throughout the world.
42
“For the Pelegostos huts, we had to build a shell, a superstructure, of very lightweight material to get
its initial shape,” explains Callas. “Then we manufactured some fiberglass skins to put over the top that
looked like roots and tree limbs. Then we wrapped the whole thing with real roots and tree limbs, so these
huts became incredibly heavy when we had to move them.” To get the trucks up to the Pelegosto village
location, Callas had to build a 15-degree road up the hillside. “There’s no road in Dominica that’s 15
degrees,” he notes. “That’s almost straight up! It’s pretty radical, but we got all our trucks and crew up
there, we even got portable toilets up there. One of the local Dominican contractors was incredible in
helping us accomplish that feat.”
“What goes through my mind when I remember the Pelegostos village is 385 skulls,” laughs Cheryl
Carasik. “On a location like that, it just becomes your daily life. It was so beautiful, and the resources were
so magnificent, that you just became part of that set. The local people we hired were so fantastic. We had
two guys who didn’t miss a beat, they were really enthusiastic. We’d say that we needed some vines to
wrap on the joints of Pelegostos furniture that we’d made, and off they’d go into the bush and come back
two hours later with an armful of them.”
A section of the comedy-action village sequence, in which Will Turner and other Black Pearl pirates
are imprisoned in large circular cages made of human bones (which were actually fabricated from latex
and foam), was shot in Dominica’s remarkable TiTou Gorge, part of the magnificent Morne Trois Pitons
National Park in Dominica’s south-central
interior. The icy waters necessitated the
crew to don wetsuits, and matters were not
helped when drenching storms threatened to
derail the day’s filming…but as many
pointed out, hey, it’s a rainforest! “Just
when I was thinking that I had forgotten
what it was like to be cold in sizzling hot
Dominica, ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ has a
way of granting your every wish,” says
Kevin R. McNally. “So for the scene in
which the bone cage drops into a gorge, they
found the coldest water in Dominica and
kept us there for two days! But TiTou Gorge was a fantastic place, only 10 feet wide and a sheer drop
from the rock face to the beautiful, clear, cold water that we were in.”
The bone-cage scene was another singular event which required the expertise of a whole range of
departments, including, of course, stunt coordinator George Marshall Ruge. “The reality of putting people
into these things, rolling them down hills, off cliffs, swinging between cliff walls, proved extremely
problematic. How do you build a cage that’s structurally sound but light enough for people to pick it up
and run with? There was a lot of research and development, and we came up with various versions of the
cage. One made of lightweight foam to run with, another built from more substantial materials for rolling.
“The running joke was that if you’re in the cage, you don’t come out unbattered and unbruised,”
continues Ruge. “It was pretty difficult to navigate with six people and 12 legs sticking out of this thing,
but we got it done.”
And then there was Captain Jack Sparrow’s mad dash down the beach to escape from a highly agitated
group of islanders, which was filmed on Hampstead Beach. “It was utterly exhausting,” admits Johnny
Depp. “Two hundred people dressed as natives chasing me down the shoreline on the beach while in full
Jack Sparrow regalia. It felt like days and days of that. But the end result was worth it.”
The Indian River, a gorgeous stretch of shallow water flowing into the ocean at Portsmouth on the
northeast part of Dominica, “portrayed” the Pantano River, which our (anti) heroes must navigate to reach
Tia Dalma’s treehouse. The Indian River—which was actually explored by Christopher Columbus in the
15th century—is lined with beautifully gnarled terra carpus officinalis (bloodwood) trees, whose roots
sometimes spread up to 20 feet. This is the real-life location which was re-created on the Pantano River
ADVENTURES IN DOMINICA
43
ADVENTURES IN DOMINICA
set constructed months before on Stage 2
at Walt Disney Studios in Burbank. With
the art department’s contribution of
wooden shacks on the banks of the river,
the location took on the same feeling as
both the stage set and the swamp area of
the “Pirates of the Caribbean” ride. “We
prefabricated those shacks in our
warehouse, disassembled them, put them
on these little boats, took them out to the
locations and set them up in a couple of
days,” explains Greg Callas.
Because of the Indian River’s
ecological sensitivity, all cast, crew and equipment had to be sent upriver in boats which were either
manually rowed or utilized electric motors only (no outboards), taking upwards of 45 minutes to an hour
to reach the filming area. Once again, stormy weather interrupted filming, but the skies ultimately cleared
enough to allow Gore Verbinski and the stars to complete their designated work. And for anyone heading
back upriver at dark after wrap, the massive fireflies doing circle eights in the night sky reminded one
again of the ride that started it all.
Atop a ridge with a magnificent unspoiled view of the Caribbean, Verbinski and Bruckheimer
discovered another wonderful location as a backdrop for the spectacular three-way swordfight in Vielle
Casse, which is situated on the island’s northern tip. It’s here that Rick Heinrichs designed a ruined,
abandoned church and adjacent graveyard on Isla Cruces, and the broken-down mill wheel which
becomes a runaway vehicle. “When we were scouting back in October 2004,” recalls production manager
Doug Merrifield, “we were literally going all the way around the island with the Dominican Coast Guard.
At one point we had transferred into a small inflatable craft, and we suddenly looked up at this fabulous
site. Some of us jumped over the sides and swam to shore, and then walked the location.”
“The location is like a peninsula, surrounded on three sides by the ocean,” explains Greg Callas. “I asked,
‘Where’s the equipment going to go?’ They said, ‘Don’t worry about that, just build the set.’” It took Callas
and company four months to construct the dilapidated church, which stands at the height of a six-story
building. Forty U.S.-based workers were joined by another 40 Dominican laborers. “What a hard-working
people the Dominicans are,” praises Callas. “They gave us everything they had and were a big asset.”
The fieriest location on Dominica—which is saying something of a place where the mean temperature
during filming usually hovered around 93-95 degrees Fahrenheit—Vielle Casse is on the dry side of the
island, hence little cloud cover and a merciless sun with nary a breeze coming off the water to offer blessed
relief. For many days of filming in Vielle Casse, the heat index sent the temperatures soaring well over
100 degrees. Depp, Bloom and Davenport—as well as Bruckheimer, Verbinski and the entire company—
had to grin and bear it, sweating through the sword-swinging action.
To access the Vielle Casse location, one actually had to walk down a 30-degree-graded road from the
main thoroughfare, which was not accessible by most vehicles. The downhill walk in the intense heat wasn’t
so bad…but going up again, especially after a 12-hour day of sizzling in the tropical sun, was something else
again. “This is all part of the ‘Pirates’fitness program,” said Merrifield. “You don’t need a gym membership.
You just need to work on ‘Pirates of the Caribbean.’ Gore and Jerry will get you into great shape!”
The physical rigors obviously presented nearly impossible challenges to director of photography
Dariusz (Darek) Wolski and his crew, as well as his longtime associates, key grip Mike (Pop) Popovich
and chief lighting technician Rafael (Raffi) Sanchez. “Darek is a brilliant artist,” states Jerry
Bruckheimer. “I’ve worked with him a number of times, not only on the first ‘Pirates’ movie, but also
‘Crimson Tide’ and others. He’s very quick, gets things done, and does very complex lighting in a minimal
amount of time.”
Wolski knew what the challenges were on DEAD MAN’S CHEST and faced each one of them with
44
insurmountable energy and true grit, along with his entire crew, which included units both under the sea
(headed by Pete Zuccarini) and in the skies above (led by David B. Nowell). “You just have to understand
that you don’t have complete control over the elements, and once you accept that, you can get creative,”
says the cinematographer. “When you’re dealing with forces of nature—the sun going in different
directions, clouds coming in, wind blowing—there are just so many variables. You have to be flexible, and
maybe come up with an idea at the last minute. There’s so much beauty in coincidence. I don’t believe in
rules. I believe in intuition. No matter how many discussions, storyboards of pre-visualizations were
created, we were still dealing with things that we couldn’t conceive and we had to adapt constantly.”
Wolski utilized the full panoply of equipment available to contemporary filmmakers, some of which
was specifically invented for DEAD MAN’S CHEST. Richard Jones, a resourceful member of Rafael
Sanchez’s grip department, designed and built a complex camera platform, mounted on a crane, and
capable of holding an entire Super Technocrane. Together, the unit stood at 80 feet tall, right up to the
highest mast of the Edinburgh Trader and thereby giving Verbinski and Wolski freedom to film the Kraken
attack from any conceivable angle. But Wolski also had no problem scaling down to the basics when the
scene called for it. “We’re basically using every tool to get what we want, but when it comes to simple
performance pieces, we can do a lot of it handheld, or with a simple dolly move. But then you have shots
which are bigger than life, like when Captain Jack falls 300 feet down through three hanging bridges while
attached to a pole.”
Following the completion of nearly eight tough but rewarding weeks of filming on the island on May 26th,
the cast, crew and their island hosts enjoyed what was humorously called the “Dominica Survivor Party.”
“One of the best things we do in our industry is to travel the world, but we don’t do it as tourists, it’s
almost as if we become semi-locals,” says Lee Arenberg. “Dominica is an incredibly beautiful place, but
it’s definitely off the beaten path, and to find yourself living that way for a few months will change your
life and inspire you. It may have been some of the hardest living, because we all like to have a nice bed,
a little cable T.V., internet access and the like. But sometimes you’ve just got to do the best you can, and
I think that once we got through that part of the journey, we all realized just how special that was.”
“Please Do Not Feed the Iguanas”: The Exumas, and an L.A. Sojourn
By this point in production, the crew had become not unlike pirates themselves, albeit of a kinder,
gentler nature. The Jolly Roger was proudly flown from many a production vehicle and support crafts,
several crew members sprouted tattoos and sported pierced ears or noses, wore head scarves and
bandanas, and several proudly wore silver or gold skull-and-crossbones rings especially designed by
makeup artist Joel Harlow.
The Bahamas, in times past, had seen the likes of such legendary pirates as Henry Jennings, Henry
Morgan, Edward “Blackbeard” Teach, Charles Vane, Stede Bonet, Captain Benjamin Hornigold, Woodes
Rogers, “Calico Jack” Rackman, Captain John Wyatt, Thomas Austis, Henry Every, Richard Worley,
Samuel Belamy and Bartholomew “Black Bart” Roberts. But the Bahamas hadn’t seen nothin’ yet…for
it was about to receive a long visitation from Captain Jack Sparrow and company!
From Dominica, the DEAD MAN’S CHEST company flew to the Exumas, one of the southernmost
chains in a pearly string of some 700 islands which comprise the Bahamas. “I think the Exumas were the
most beautiful of all the islands,” says Jerry Bruckheimer. “It’s got these white beaches and sand bars,
gorgeous aquamarine water, just amazing to look at. When you see it on screen you won’t believe it’s real,
you might think it was digitally created. But that’s actually the way it is.” Here, a sand spit of almost pink,
fine sand called White Cay was discovered, serving as yet another location for the three-way swordfight
and other sequences. White Cay was only accessible by water, so the company was required to drive
southeast from the hotel zone and board one of many boats which brought them some 30 minutes later to
a floating base camp comprised of two 200-foot barges, tethered together, on which one could find actors’
trailers, equipment trucks, catering tent, tables and chairs, an entire floating base of operations. From here,
one had to travel in a small Carolina Skiff or shallow draft inflatable craft to make a wet beach landing on
45
THE EXUMAS, AND AN L.A. SOJOURN
THE EXUMAS, AND AN L.A. SOJOURN
the cay. Gore Verbinski required 360-degree
angles on the cay, hence the necessity of
keeping it clear of trucks, vehicles and
equipment. The company could only shoot in
specific tidal conditions, which limited the
number of hours available for filming. “What
an organization that was,” recalls assistant
director Peter Kohn, “for everybody to be
able to have their breakfast burrito, get their
equipment, load it onto another boat and then
be transported to an island. You don’t get
experiences like that…it’s just phenomenal.”
“Please do not feed the iguanas,”
implored the call sheets while shooting on White Cay, so as to protect the friendly sole inhabitants and
indigenous population from the affectionate attentions of the company. (The company called upon
wildlife biologist Joseph A. Wasilewski, based in Homestead, Florida, to make certain the iguanas weren’t
disturbed.) Human and reptile respected each other’s space, but the iguanas seemed as fascinated by the
filming as the DEAD MAN’S CHEST company were by them. The crew also received an unexpected
visitation from another, somewhat more threatening creature while filming on White Cay. “A hundred
yards from land a little nurse shark showed up,” recalls marine coordinator Dan Malone. “Most of the
crew wasn’t familiar with sharks, so they found it a little unnerving, but we told them, ‘Don’t worry about
them, they’re just curious. They’ll swim by and check you out.’ Production shut down for a minute while
everyone focused on the shark, and then we got back to work.”
A scheduled summer break in filming brought the company back to hearth and home in early June
following the initial spate of shooting in the Exumas, resuming once again in early August back in Los
Angeles. Back at the former Marineland site in Palos Verdes, Verbinski continued directing the Pelegostos
island bone-cage sequence, and this time, some of the stars—including Orlando Bloom, Kevin R.
McNally, David Bailie and Martin Klebba—found themselves in a bone cage set loose from a 100-foottall crane, swinging freely in long, wide arcs. Bloom definitely enjoyed the ride, while some others were
looking a bit green in the gills when emerging from their “E”-ticket adventure.
“The bone-cage sequence was crazy,” recalls Bloom. “The first time we dropped from the crane, nobody
knew what to expect, and it was like a bungee-jump feeling…your stomach completely leaves you. Believe
me, moments like that will never be forgotten!”
Palos Verdes also saw the construction of a
100-foot-long, 50-foot-high cliff wall, also used
in the bone-cage sequence, which was required
to be maneuverable from a 90-degree angle
down to a 45-degree angle. “We had to build a
steel wall that’s hinged,” explains Greg Callas,
“and incredibly heavy. To make it work, I have
two 160-ton cranes to move this wall from point
A to point B, and then brace it off.”
Filmed at Disney Studios were sequences
inside of Davy Jones’ extraordinary Flying
Dutchman captain’s cabin. “Davy Jones’ cabin certainly has a very operatic feel to it,” says Rick Heinrichs. “He
plays an enormous pipe organ that we had to design and build from scratch. It plays as a normal organ would,
but the pipes have grown fantastically into all of these underwater shapes, with steam coming out of them. The
organ itself has shell and sea life textures, backed up to the window of the stern. We also designed a painting
above the organ keys which has a weirdly sweet and romantic feel to it. That was intentional, because we were
trying to give Davy Jones’ character some pathos, because he’s mourning the loss of a lost love.”
46
Back to the Bahamas, Hurricanes and All
After several weeks of filming a spectacular opening sequence for “Pirates of the Caribbean III,” the
company once again boarded a chartered jet on September 19th and flew off to its fourth and final location
destination of Grand Bahama Island to begin work at The Bahamas Film Studio at Gold Rock Creek. The
start-up studio provided the company with the necessary space in which to shoot extensive seagoing
sequences with the numerous ships assembled for DEAD MAN’S CHEST, including a limitless horizon
from a semi-enclosed marina for filming, as well as temporary floating barges in which the vessels could
be safely moored, or filmed upon, when not out at sea. A vast, empty concrete space which had been
vacant for years now became the production’s base camp for months, housing a motley conglomeration of
some 57 assorted trailers and equipment trucks shipped in from Los Angeles, 72 freighter containers
utilized to hold and store material of every kind, 11 cranes and Condors and four office trailers. One of
the shipping containers was humorously and creatively converted into “Prop the Pyrate,” through which
extras walked through to become suitably “propped out” as pirates, including swords, pistols, baldrics and
other lovely accoutrements of the profession. “Enter a lubber, leave a pyrate,” announced a sign painted
in period style at the entrance of the container. “Come board, grab your gear, and set course to the sea
through the exit!” And indeed, the blue-green Atlantic was no more than 10 steps away from that exit.
Following an initial week of literal smooth sailing in beautiful weather, Mother Nature threw her first
knuckleball at the DEAD MAN’S CHEST company for a week thereafter, drenching Grand Bahama
Island in buckets of torrential rain and stirring up the seas until the Atlantic resembled a Jacuzzi with the
switch turned on “high.” “When you’re working on water,” explains Bruckheimer, “the weather changes
constantly, the wind shifts, the waves go in different directions, which makes it difficult to work. We’re
very conscious of safety, and we had our marine unit move the vessels, shepherd us back and forth from
land to sea, get food out to cast and crew working on the ships and take them back to shore at night. Along
with our marine unit, we also had expert divers.”
“The boat-to-boat transfers were the most dangerous thing we dealt with on a daily basis,” notes Dan
Malone. “On one day, while holding the Black Pearl against the wind, we had a four-foot swell rolling in
there, and although we’ve designed these nice little ramps that we use to bring people on board from the
inflatable boats, you still worry about that misstep. If someone tries to step from the inflatable to the Pearl
without judging the waves and listening to the captain, they can take a header between the boat and the
ramp. Thankfully, we never had a serious accident.”
On rougher days, many in the crew were reminded of the familiar amusement-park rides in which a
pirate ship swings back and forth, faster and faster…except, this time, it was real!
But for the actors filming on the new, improved Black Pearl, a sense of nostalgia was tinged with a
new excitement. “I think the new Pearl is all of our favorites,” says Keira Knightley. “It’s much more user-
friendly than the first one, because it’s bigger. I remember on the first film, you couldn’t seem to get out
of the way and there was no way to sit. The ship is very beautiful, which is always helpful when you’re
fighting Krakens.”
“The first and second Black Pearls are both beautiful works of art,” adds Lee Arenberg, “but the actual
physical filming on the new ship is much more exciting. You’re actually moving at speed, and when you
come around doing these passes at the Flying Dutchman, it’s just thrilling. We’re on a seaworthy craft now,
as opposed to the barge that sort of bobbed in the water and would take forever to line up. The bar has
been raised.”
The weather and sea conditions presented more challenges to Gore Verbinski and company as they
filmed, with great detail and a plethora of stunts and action, the attack of the monstrous Kraken on the
Edinburgh Trader. For this purpose, Rick Heinrichs’ art department constructed an exact replica of the
Bounty without, of course, the “guts” of the ship. Stunt coordinator George Marshall Ruge and his second
in command, Dan Barringer, put their fearless team through their paces, with major contributions from
the special effects and visual effects departments.
The Kraken is inspired by a thousand years of seagoing mythology, with, perhaps, a tip of the hat to
BACK TO THE BAHAMAS
47
BACK TO THE BAHAMAS
the famed giant squid in Walt Disney Pictures’ own 1954 classic “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.” The
word “Kraken” was first heard in 12th-century Norwegian legends, referring to a creature the size of an
island, and usually depicted as a giant squid. In these legends the Kraken’s many arms or tentacles could
reach to the top of a ship’s mainmast and could without any great effort capsize a full-rig vessel. So great
was the creature’s fame that it was even immortalized in British poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson’s “The
Kraken,” scribed in 1830. In the 20th century, stamp collectors could find the Kraken’s image on postages
from such diverse countries as Canada and even the Commonwealth of Dominica, one of the DEAD
MAN’S CHEST host countries.
For the Kraken attacks on both the
Edinburgh Trader and Black Pearl, stunt
coordinator George Marshall Ruge and
his team of stuntplayers and riggers had
to create multiple ratchets which
simulated people getting whacked or
pulled into the air by the monster’s
tentacles. “The reality of doing the stunt
rigging on these ships is that there’s a
mast here, or ropes hanging down there,
or grates in the middle of the deck. So we built an overhead system on both of the ships that ran their full
lengths in between the yardarms, with travelers on the cables which allowed us to move pick point
virtually anywhere in between the masts. We were on water, so everything was moving, but the multilayered system gave us the ability to move things around pretty freely.”
Among the stunt heroes was Orlando Bloom himself, who, as often as feasible (and as he would be
permitted by production), performed his own feats of derring-do, sometimes more than 30 feet up in the
rigging of the high masts of the Edinburgh Trader. “There’s one scene in which I’m on the mast, jump into
a sail, slash it with a dagger and slide down. This is like real Errol Flynn stuff, which is every boy’s dream.
I really do feel like I am living a lot of these boyhood dreams on a movie like this. And I’ve trained hard to
be fit and agile enough to do things like this so I don’t hurt myself. It’s a major part of who Will Turner is.”
The Kraken is masterfully brought to life in DEAD MAN’S CHEST by a phalanx of visual effects
artists at Industrial Light & Magic, the live-action elements meticulously calibrated with the visual effects
plans. “The Kraken sequences were extensively pre-visualized,” notes visual effects supervisor John
Knoll, “and we were literally shooting specific pieces to conform to that animatic blueprint. The Kraken
scenes are technically very complex, because there’s a lot of interaction with water and we see shots
looking down the whole of the ship, with a dozen tentacles swarming around, picking characters off the
deck. Putting the composites together are very difficult…every shot takes months of effort.”
The mandate set by Jerry Bruckheimer and Gore Verbinski for DEAD MAN’S CHEST was for ILM
to raise the bar higher once again, as they had on the first “Pirates” film. DEAD MAN’S CHEST required
three times as many visual effects shots as did “The Curse of the Black Pearl,” which itself represented a
quantum leap of visual effects technology.
Despite the fact that the film traffics in pure fantasy, Verbinski was absolutely insistent that the
unbelievable look believable in every way. “CGI is not a verb,” Verbinski has been known to say. Rather,
he sees it as a tool to be used to embellish and enhance.
“Because Gore has been through the process and understands every nut and bolt of what ILM is
doing,” says visual effects supervisor Charlie Gibson, “he can put that aside and just charge forward,
knowing that ILM will eventually be able to catch up and meet his vision somewhere near the very end
of the schedule. What’s unique about the visual effects in this film, for me, is how freely Gore is able to
use what ILM can offer. The net result of that confidence and understanding is that the discussions move
on past the technical to the creative.”
“Gore is great visually,” notes visual effects supervisor John Knoll—who served in the same capacity
on the first film and works alongside fellow ILM supervisor Bill George on DEAD MAN’S CHEST—
48
“and he has a really strong technical background. Gore comes in with very strong opinions of how he
wants to do things. This film is not just a rehash of the last one. Gore and the writers have come up with
a lot of really great and fresh ideas.” Knoll and George sought to free Verbinski up as much as possible to
shoot as he wanted without worrying about the visual effects which would come later. “I have enough
confidence in our crew that we could track those cameras, and that if we need to put computer-generated
characters behind the live actors, we can just rotor that edge and not have to worry about having a blue
screen in there.”
Although Davy Jones and his crew are digitally enhanced, “it was important to have good actors cast
at playing those roles,” notes Knoll. “Because a really good actor brings soul to the whole process, and it
helps everybody on the set. Gore works with the actor in a very normal way like every other part of the
picture. Bill Nighy and all of the actors playing Davy’s crew really own the roles. They’ve thought the
characters through, and they’re bringing everything they can to these CG characters.”
Because Verbinski insists that fantasy look as authentic and real as possible, ILM developed new
technologies for DEAD MAN’S CHEST, including the creation of Davy Jones and his crew. Explains Bill
George, “We’re trying something new and challenging on this project. In the past, when you’ve done a
CG character—especially one that’s supposed to move like a human—you shoot a clean plate that the
character will go into, and at a later time on a different stage you shoot what’s called motion capture. This
is a process where you’ve got a number of cameras, perhaps 12 or 15, all focused on a character who’s
wearing a black skintight suit with little markers on it. Then, as that character moves, using the cameras
the computer triangulates where each point is in space and therefore the movement. You can then take that
animation file and plug it into a character so that it will move as the actor did on stage. It’s a very long
and laborious process.
“The technology has evolved to the point now where we’re trying to capture that exact same data by
only using two video cameras as we’re shooting the actual shot,” continues Bill George. “The difference
now is that instead of splitting it into two separate shoots, it’s happening all at the same time. There’s a lot
of advantages to that. In the first ‘Pirates’ film, when an actor was fighting one of the cursed skeleton
pirates, he was basically fighting with thin air, pretending that someone was there. Now the ‘live’ actors
are actually interacting with a real person, which is much more realistic and natural.”
“The impact of this is really profound,” says Charlie Gibson, “because so much of the character
animation is about nuances of performances, particularly Bill Nighy. The film is edited based on very
subtle facial expressions, attitudes, and even the less tangible things, like his mood and the feeling behind
his eyes, all of these things that you get from a great actor. Bill is a fountainhead of amazing variety. He
never repeats himself, there’s always some interesting aspect to his performance.”
Nighy himself was highly amused by the process in which ILM converted him into the fully tricked-
out Davy Jones. “The first thing they did was cyber-scan me, which they did in a sort of mystery truck
lined with screens and computers. Then, on set, I wore a gray suit which had reference points comprised
of white bubbles and strips of black and white material, so that when they come to interpret your physical
performance, they’re better placed to do so. I don’t understand any of it, but I’m currently the world-record
holder for playing the organ with an imaginary octopus beard. This is pioneering stuff, state-of-the-art.”
Knoll and George were a tag team on set, either one present at all times on all locations, as the other
one returned to ILM headquarters in San Francisco to work with their team of artists and technicians on
bringing it all to life. “One of our tasks on set was to deal with improvisation and change,” notes Knoll,
“because no matter how much you’ve thought these things out in advance, the situation is always different
in front of the camera. Or there’s an opportunity to do something that’s creatively better, which might
mean that the camera will be in a different position, or that there’s some other technical challenge that you
didn’t anticipate. It’s important that someone from visual effects is there to make decisions quickly.”
Also helping to keep things atmospheric throughout the shoot on every location were special effects
coordinators Michael Lantieri and Allen Hall. Whether creating steam and smoke rings from Davy Jones’
massive musical organ, smashing full-sized ships in half, firing off batteries of cannons, or laying down
massive amounts of smoke and fog around the Black Pearl and Flying Dutchman, these physical “in-
BACK TO THE BAHAMAS
49
BACK TO THE BAHAMAS
camera” effects were no less magical than that conjured by the ILM experts. So much fog was required
for the sequences shot in the Bahamas that Hall had two large boats equipped with large jet pulse engines,
not to mention an actual aircraft jet engine mounted on a larger craft. “We actually bought out the world’s
supply of fog fluid for this movie,” Hall
admits.
Dealing with Grand Bahama’s fickle
weather became almost routine for
Verbinski and company, but what was
looming in October could never have been
predicted. Although Caribbean production
supervisor Tom Hayslip had written a
detailed, 27-page Hurricane Preparedness
Plan in September, it was, of course, hoped
that it would never have to be implemented.
But on Tuesday, October 18th, it became
clear that Tropical Storm Wilma—having
just been promoted to Hurricane Wilma—was about to make a sudden right turn away from the Yucatan
Peninsula and head directly toward Florida and, just 50 miles beyond, Grand Bahama Island. As the
humidity increased and the clouds began to build, production hurriedly began preparing for the worst. It
was a terrible irony that just two weeks earlier, the pre-production crew of another Jerry Bruckheimer
production, “Déjà Vu,” had to be evacuated from New Orleans as the monstrous Hurricane Katrina
stormed its way toward the Gulf. Now, Bruckheimer and his production team began organizing the huge
task of securing the production facilities as much as possible while ensuring the safety of the company.
Grand Bahama Island is flat as a pancake, has no high ground, and had taken huge hits in September
2004 from both Hurricanes Frances and Jeanne. When the company went to sleep on the night of October
18th, Wilma was only a category-one hurricane. By the next morning, it had graduated not only to a
category five, but also to new status as the most powerful hurricane in recorded history, with sustained
winds of 175 and gusts up to 215 miles per hour. “We were alerted about a week prior to the hurricane
and made the decision to pull everybody out just in case it picked Grand Bahama Island,” recalls
Bruckheimer. “And fortunately for us, we got everybody out, locked down our ships in the harbor and had
them all battened down. We had only minor
damage, considering what could have
happened.”
After raising havoc in Florida,
Hurricane Wilma smashed into Grand
Bahama Island on October 24th as a
category two, with sustained winds of 100
miles per hour. It was a mercifully quick
visitation, lasting just four hours, and
although the studio site was spared much
damage, Grand Bahama’s West End and the
village of Eight Mile Rock were badly hit. In just three-and-a-half days, sand deposited by the storm surge
was removed from the base camp site, washed-out roads rebuilt and the entire base camp reformed as if
nothing had happened. The Grand Bahamians, with their characteristic fortitude and courage, had
survived yet another in a long string of hurricanes that have bedeviled their island during storm season.
And DEAD MAN’S CHEST and “Pirates III” continued filming on the Black Pearl and Flying Dutchman
and a floating set of a ship scuttled after its encounter with the Kraken, until another planned break for
the holidays in December.
Returning to the Bahamas in the second week of January 2006, the filming of DEAD MAN’S CHEST
finally wrapped with the conclusion of Kraken attack sequences, and, ironically, shooting Captain Jack’s
50
introduction at the start of the film as one of the last scenes to be shot. The weather on Grand Bahama
had now cooled considerably, enough so that parkas had to be donned for night shooting. “We’ve been
through every possible circumstance of weather,” said Johnny Depp at that juncture in the shoot. “When
we started out down in St. Vincent and then on to Dominica, there was sweltering, intense heat and
humidity. Now it’s touching between 30 and 50 degrees at night. It’s pretty strange. Also, we’re still
shooting scenes that we started a year ago. You’ve really got to keep all the dots connected at all times.”
And although Verbinski and company remained until the end of February working on “Pirates III”
sequences, DEAD MAN’S CHEST—almost exactly one year to the day filming had began in Burbank—
was a wrap.
On that final day on location in the Caribbean, the company gathered in the catering tent in the Grand
Bahama base camp and was addressed by Bruckheimer, Verbinski and their production team, which
included some of the following salient details:
• The production’s travel coordinator had booked over 10,000 one-way tickets, not including charter
flights.
• 475 cell phones were distributed in Dominica.
• 550 barrels had been built by set dressing.
• 178 barrels of smoke had been used by the special effects department.
• Over 6,000 batteries were used by the sound department.
• At one time there were over 200 walkie-talkies being used on set by various departments.
• Between ship rigging, marine, set decoration and props, production used over 463,000 feet of
rope…which translates into 87 miles!
• Between the first, second and element units, 335 miles of film had been shot…enough to stretch
from Los Angeles to Sacramento.
• Catering served over 200,000 meals.
Now it was time for cast and crew to return home to loved ones and process a year’s worth of
memories. “It’s been amazing at every level,” says Johnny Depp. “You become kind of like a weird gypsy
family, a traveling circus.”
“Being away from family and friends for
long periods of time can be difficult, but we
have created our own kind of family
environment, and there’s a great atmosphere
on set,” notes Orlando Bloom. “The hours
can be long and the work is definitely
challenging, but we all know what we’re
working on, a once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity. It’s quality entertainment,
family fun, with a great story and plotline
that everyone can enjoy. It doesn’t take
itself too seriously, which frees it up to
everything that it wants to be as a movie, and more. I feel like I’m living many dreams, all at the same
time, whether it’s swinging from ropes, rolling in a bone cage, sliding down sails, or kissing a beautiful
girl. The actual work that goes into it is really difficult, and it’s made to look easy on camera. But it’s so
much fun doing it. I feel very lucky, because it’s a great group of people, and there’s a lot of thought and
care that goes into the whole process of making this movie.
“I can’t imagine it will ever be done like this again,” concludes Bloom. “It sort of feels like the end of
an era in terms of making movies this way. And I think we all feel very lucky to be a part of it.”
“It was an adventure in the spirit of pirate movies themselves,” says assistant director Peter Kohn. “It’s
not like making the movie…it’s like being in the movie, ‘livin’ the ride,’ as one of our T-shirts says.”
“Audiences are going to get everything that anybody wants when they put their money down to enter
a cinema,” says Bill Nighy. “Romance, adventure, thrills, danger, wonder. Things they’ve never laid eyes
BACK TO THE BAHAMAS
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BACK TO THE BAHAMAS
on before, worlds they’ve never visited before. It’s really difficult to pull off an adventure movie that’s
authentic and satisfying and, at the same time, make everybody laugh in the dark at regular intervals.”
“I’ve never been in anything as big as this,” notes Kevin R. McNally, “and you might worry that you
could get lost in it all. But the great thing about Jerry’s production, Gore’s direction, and Ted and Terry’s
writing is that what they’re most interested in is character. So despite the gigantic sets, the visual effects,
the spectacle, the real meat of the film is when we all get down, talk, plan, plot and just be pirates together.
You don’t get lost in the sea of organization and logistics.”
“I have a profound respect for Gore and always have since the first instant we worked together on the
first film,” says Johnny Depp of his “Pirates” director. “But on this one, watching what he’s had to deal
with on a daily basis is incredible. With the kind of pressure he’s been working under, I’ve never seen him
step outside or lose his composure, or his vision. He just sort of deals and fights his way out of that corner.
It’s pretty miraculous to witness. Gore is one of those directors where, as an actor, you could almost get
away with not reading the script at all and just sort of trusting his knowledge of the material. He knows it
that well.”
“Gore is a phenomenal director,” adds Orlando Bloom. “When I saw the first movie, I was blown away
by how he had managed to maintain such incredible integrity with the story and the characters. Gore has
a tremendous ability to motivate a crew and has a spirit and youthful energy to attack whatever scene we’re
up against, no matter how complex it might be.”
Keira Knightley concurs with her fellow “Pirates” stars. “I don’t know how Gore’s brain can focus on
so many different things at once, but it’s very impressive. I think it’s important that in a film like this,
which is in the realm of fantasy and dreams, to actually have an emotional core that feels real. And that’s
what I think Gore does…he always makes it real.”
And all agreed, whether it was another go-round or the first time, that there was nothing like being on
the set of a Jerry Bruckheimer film. “The first film felt very intimate and got more and more grand as
time went on,” says Depp. “This one is just totally, utterly Jerry Bruckheimer, which means that it’s very
grand but done with incredible taste. Jerry uses the best guys in the business, and it’s impressive.”
“Jerry has a team of people around him who have the ability to tackle pretty much anything that’s asked
of them by Gore and the screenwriters,” adds Orlando Bloom. “There’s always a sense of ‘How can we be
better?’ that’s part of Jerry’s attitude toward life and moviemaking: that there’s nothing you can’t do. It’s
a courageous way to make films, fearless
and sometimes a little overwhelming.”
“I’ve done three films with Jerry now,”
says Keira Knightley, “and it’s just amazing.
They’re really, really big! The scale of these
movies is just huge. Jerry has created an
entire pirate world, and we’re all part of it.
It’s fantastic.”
“Jerry Bruckheimer is one of a kind,”
adds Lee Arenberg. “He’s truly an
impresario, because he gives you the tools
to do what you need to do. His focus is
super-strong, he has a gold thumb and hires
great people to work for him. I think that’s a true sign of power, giving the trust and respect to the team.”
“You can’t drift through a Jerry Bruckheimer movie,” adds Kevin R. McNally. “You can’t come to
work half-cocked. You see everybody around you up to their full game, and it’s really inspiring. He’s very
hands-on, and you know that everything is up to 110 percent.”
“Jerry’s strength is that he has no weakness,” says Bruce Hendricks. “He really understands audience’s
tastes and makes sure that a movie like this is accessible to young and old viewers alike.”
But the work was far from over…a hiatus from the filming of “Pirates of the Caribbean III” was
required so that Bruckheimer and Verbinski could begin dealing with the myriad post-production
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elements, leaping into the cutting room with film editors Craig Wood and Stephen Rivkin as well as
dealing with visual effects, sound effects, music scoring and a thousand other details required for
completing DEAD MAN’S CHEST in time for its July 7th opening. Walt Disney Imagineering got to
work on revising the “Pirates of the
Caribbean” attraction, scheduled to reopen
in concert with the new film’s premiere.
Explains Jerry Bruckheimer, “They’re
adding some of our iconic characters to the
ride, which will be thrilling for us to go
through and see characters that we created
now become part of the Disney world.”
And, oh yes…following the theatrical
opening of PIRATES OF THE
CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S CHEST,
Bruckheimer, Verbinski and their company
of latter-day buccaneers would once again
raise the Jolly Roger high and head back onto sets, soundstages and high seas to complete work on the
tentatively titled “Pirates of the Caribbean III.”
The Black Pearl will sail again…and the “Pirates of the Caribbean” odyssey continues!
ABOUT THE CAST
JOHNNY DEPP reprises his Academy Award®- and Golden Globe®
nominated role of Captain Jack Sparrow in PIRATES OF THE
CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S CHEST. Depp also received a British
Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) nomination and a Screen
Actors Guild Award® for his portrayal of Captain Jack in “Pirates of the
Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl.”
Depp has earned both critical and popular acclaim for his unique
work in a variety of memorable feature films. Most recently, he
collaborated with director Tim Burton for the fourth and fifth times, on
“Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” for which Depp received a Golden
Globe® nomination for Best Actor in a Comedy or Musical, and “Tim
Burton’s Corpse Bride,” which received a 2005 Academy Award®
nomination for Best Animated Film. Based on the beloved Roald Dahl classic, Depp portrayed eccentric
chocolatier Willy Wonka in “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” which opened to impressive critical and
box-office success internationally. For “Tim Burton’s Corpse Bride,” Depp loaned his voice to the lead
character of Victor Van Dort in the wildly imaginative film, which was one of last year’s most celebrated
releases. In a striking contrast, Depp also recently starred opposite John Malkovich and Samantha Morton
in Laurence Dunmore’s “The Libertine” as 17th-century womanizing poet John Wilmot, the Earl of
Rochester.
Depp received an Academy Award® nomination, Golden Globe® nomination, Screen Actors Guild
Award® nomination and BAFTA nomination for his role as J.M. Barrie in Mark Forster’s “Finding
Neverland,” in which he starred opposite Kate Winslet and Freddie Highmore.
Depp’s other screen credits include David Koepp’s “Secret Window,” Robert Rodriguez’s “Once Upon
a Time in Mexico,” Albert and Allen Hughes’ “From Hell,” Ted Demme’s “Blow,” Lasse Hallström’s
romantic comedy “Chocolat,” Julian Schnabel’s “Before Night Falls,” Sally Potter’s “The Man Who
Cried,” Tim Burton’s “Sleepy Hollow,” Roman Polanski’s “The Ninth Gate” and Terry Gilliam’s “Fear and
Loathing in Las Vegas.”
Hailed as the “Best Actor” of his generation for his performance in Mike Newell’s “Donnie Brasco”
ABOUT THE CAST
53
ABOUT THE CAST
with Al Pacino, Depp has also starred in Jim Jarmusch’s “Dead Man” and in Jeremy Leven’s “Don Juan
DeMarco,” in which he starred as a man convinced he is the world’s greatest lover, opposite legendary
actors Marlon Brando and Faye Dunaway.
It was his compelling performance in the title role of Tim Burton’s “Edward Scissorhands” that
established Depp as one of Hollywood’s most sought-after talents and earned him a Best Actor Golden
Globe® nomination. He was honored with a second Golden Globe® nomination for his work in the offbeat
love story “Benny & Joon,” directed by Jeremiah S. Chechik. Depp reunited with Burton for the critically
acclaimed “Ed Wood,” for which his performance garnered him his third Best Actor Golden Globe®
nomination.
Other films include Lasse Hallström’s “What’s Eating Gilbert Grape?,” Emir Kusturica’s “Arizona
Dream” and John Badham’s “Nick of Time.”
Depp began his career as a musician, joining a rock group named Kids, which eventually took him to
Los Angeles. When the band broke up, he turned to acting and earned his first major acting job in
“Nightmare on Elm Street.” He went on to earn roles in several films, including Oliver Stone’s Academy
Award®-winning “Platoon.” Depp then won the role that would prove to be his breakthrough, as
undercover detective Tom Hanson on the popular Fox television show “21 Jump Street.” He starred on the
series for four seasons before segueing to the big screen in the lead role of John Waters’ “Cry-Baby.”
Depp starred and made his feature directorial debut opposite Marlon Brando in “The Brave,” a film
based on the novel by Gregory McDonald. Depp co-wrote the screenplay with his brother D.P. Depp.
ORLANDO BLOOM (Will Turner) reprises his role as Will Turner
opposite Johnny Depp and Keira Knightley in PIRATES OF THE
CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S CHEST.
Bloom first captivated both audiences and filmmakers with his
portrayal of Legolas in Peter Jackson’s “Lord of the Rings” trilogy—“The
Fellowship of the Ring,” “The Two Towers” and “The Return of the
King.” He will next be seen starring in Frank E. Flowers’ independent
ensemble “Haven,” which he also executive produced.
Having worked with Ridley Scott on “Black Hawk Down,” Bloom
reteamed with Scott to star in his epic drama about the Crusades,
“Kingdom of Heaven.” He followed that with his first contemporary
American role opposite Kirsten Dunst in Cameron Crowe’s
“Elizabethtown.” Other film credits include “Ned Kelly,” opposite Heath Ledger, and Wolfgang Petersen’s
“Troy,” opposite Brad Pitt and Eric Bana.
Bloom was born in Canterbury, England. He joined the National Youth Theatre in London and gained
a scholarship to train with the British American Drama Academy. On completion of his scholarship,
Bloom made his feature-film debut in BBC’s “Wilde,” starring Jude Law.
He was then accepted to Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London. In his four years there, he
performed in several productions including “Little Me,” “A Month in the Country,” “Peer Gynt,”
“Mephisto” and “Twelfth Night.” Upon graduation, a then-unknown Bloom was cast in the role that would
launch his career.
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The relatively brief but remarkable career of 20-year-old KEIRA
KNIGHTLEY (Elizabeth Swann) has now culminated with 2005
Academy Award® and Golden Globe® nominations as Best Actress for her
luminous, internationally acclaimed performance as Elizabeth Bennet in
Joe Wright’s screen adaptation of “Pride & Prejudice.”
The celebrated body of work already amassed by Knightley at her
tender age has demonstrated not only extraordinary versatility but also an
artistically adventurous spirit in selecting a wide range of projects in
diverse genres.
Knightley first made headlines in Gurinder Chadha’s sleeper hit,
“Bend It Like Beckham,” as teenage soccer player Jules Paxton opposite
Parminder K. Nagra. She was then selected by director Gore Verbinski
and producer Jerry Bruckheimer to portray Elizabeth Swann opposite Johnny Depp’s Captain Jack
Sparrow, Orlando Bloom’s Will Turner and Geoffrey Rush’s Captain Barbossa in the 2003 worldwide
blockbuster “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl.” Demonstrating equal amounts of
beauty and backbone as an aristocratic young woman swept into a fantastical adventure, Knightley is
again portraying Elizabeth in PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S CHEST and the
tentatively titled “Pirates of the Caribbean III,” both films again directed by Verbinski and produced by
Bruckheimer.
After wrapping “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl,” she went straight into
production on another epic Jerry Bruckheimer Films production, “King Arthur,” in which she portrayed
Guinevere. Directed by Antoine Fuqua, the film also starred Clive Owen as Arthur.
Released in November 2003, Knightley appeared in Richard Curtis’ “Love, Actually” as part of an
impressive ensemble cast that included Colin Firth, Hugh Grant, Laura Linney, Liam Neeson, Alan
Rickman and Emma Thompson. In addition to “Pride & Prejudice”—in which she starred with Matthew
Macfadyen, Brenda Blethyn, Judi Dench and Donald Sutherland—2005 also saw Knightley starring as
controversial model-turned-bounty-hunter Domino Harvey in Tony Scott’s innovative action drama
“Domino.”
In 2006, Knightley traveled to Western Europe during a break in the filming of PIRATES OF THE
CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S CHEST and “Pirates of the Caribbean III” to star for director Francois
Girard (“The Red Violin”) in his film adaptation of Alessandro Baricco’s best-selling novel, “Silk.” The
romantic drama also stars Michael Pitt, Alfred Molina and Koji Yakusho. This was immediately followed
by her starring role in “Atonement” for her “Pride & Prejudice” director, Joe Wright. Chanel also
announced in April 2006 that Knightley would be the new face of its Coco Mademoiselle fragrance.
Making her professional acting debut at the age of seven on British television in “Royal Celebration,”
some of Knightley’s early credits include the features “A Village Affair,” “Innocent Lies” and “Star Wars:
Episode 1—The Phantom Menace,” as well as performances in the TV series “The Bill,” the television
movies “Treasure Seekers,” “Coming Home,” Walt Disney’s “Princess of Thieves” (starring as Robin
Hood’s daughter Gwyn) and the miniseries “Oliver Twist” and “Doctor Zhivago,” in which she portrayed
Lara Antipova in the adaptation of Boris Pasternak’s classic novel. Her other feature films have included
“The Hole,” “Pure” and “The Jacket,” a thriller in which she starred opposite Adrien Brody.
The daughter of playwright Sharman Macdonald and actor Will Knightley, she was born in Teddington,
Middlesex, England. Knightley currently makes her home in London.
ABOUT THE CAST
55
ABOUT THE CAST
STELLAN SKARSGÅRD (Bootstrap Bill) became a familiar figure
to audiences around the world after playing opposite Emily Watson in
Lars von Trier’s “Breaking the Waves.” But Skarsgård’s career stretches
back more than 30 years, with numerous brilliant performances in a wide
range of films, theater and television roles. As a teenager in his native
Sweden, Skarsgård was the star of the 1968 TV series “Bombi Bitt och
jag” and was a practiced TV, film and stage actor while still in his early
20s. With Hans Alfredson’s “The Simple-Minded Murderer,” the
Gothenburg-born Skarsgård’s fame spread far beyond Scandinavia. His
role as a naïf driven to violence by the cruelty of others won Skarsgård
the Berlin Film Festival’s Silver Bear Award.
Through more than 60 films since, Skarsgård has proven himself a
remarkably versatile actor. In between starring as the Swedish superagent Carl Hamilton in Pelle
Berglund’s “Code Name Coq Rouge” and “The Democratic Terrorist,” Skarsgård played the title role in
Kjell Grede’s “Good Evening, Mr. Wallenberg,” the true story of the Swedish diplomat who saved
thousands of Jews from Auschwitz. His other credits in notable Scandinavian films have included
Alfredson’s “P&B,” Bo Widerberg’s “The Serpent’s Way up the Naked Rock,” Kjell-Ake Andersson’s
“Friends,” Grede’s “Hip Hip Hurrah!,” Carl Gustaf Nykvist’s “The Women on the Roof,” Sven Nykvist’s
“The Ox” (Academy Award® nominee for Best Foreign Language Film), Ake Sandgren’s “The Slingshot,”
Hans Petter Moland’s “Zero Kelvin” and “Aberdeen” and Erik Skjoldvjaerg’s “Insomnia.”
Skarsgård’s reputation began winning him roles in the United States and throughout the world, with
key performances in such films as John McTiernan’s “The Hunt for Red October,” Carroll Ballard’s
“Wind,” Peter Antonijivic’s “Savior,” Udayan Prasad’s “My Son the Fanatic,” Steven Spielberg’s
“Amistad,” Gus Van Sant’s “Good Will Hunting,” John Frankenheimer’s “Ronin,” Renny Harlin’s “Deep
Blue Sea,” Jonathan Nossiter’s “Signs and Wonders,” Mike Figgis’ “Time Code,” Istvan Szabo’s “Taking
Signs” and Matt Dillon’s “City of Ghosts.” Following their collaboration on “Breaking the Waves,” which
won the Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival, Skarsgård once again starred for Lars von Trier in
“Dogville.”
Most recently, Skarsgård has been seen in Jerry Bruckheimer’s production of “King Arthur” opposite
Clive Owen and Keira Knightley, as Father Merrin in Renny Harlin’s “Exorcist: The Beginning” and in
Sturla Gunnarsson’s “Beowulf & Grendel,” filmed in Iceland. Concurrently with filming PIRATES OF
THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S CHEST, Skarsgård was also traveling to Spain to star in the title role
of Milos Forman’s “Goya’s Ghosts” as the legendary Spanish artist Francisco Goya.
On television, Skarsgård has starred in Ingmar Bergman’s “School for Wives,” Bo Widerberg’s “The
Wild Duck” and, in the U.S., “Noon Wine” for PBS, “The Harlan County War” for Showtime and “Helen
of Troy” for the USA Network. He is also one of Sweden’s most celebrated stage actors, having spent 16
years at the Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm working with such directors as Ingmar Bergman, Alf
Sjoberg and Per Verner-Carlsson.
BILL NIGHY (Davy Jones) delighted international audiences with
his scene-stealing turn as aging rocker Billy Mack in Richard Curtis’
“Love, Actually,” which won him a British Academy of Film and
Television Arts Award for Best Supporting Actor. In the same year, he
won a BAFTA Best Actor TV Award for the series “State of Play.” He also
received the Los Angeles Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor
in “I Capture the Castle,” “Love, Actually,” “AKA” and “The Lawless
Heart.” His work in Peter Cattaneo’s “Lucky Break” brought him a Best
Supporting Actor nomination from the British Independent Film Awards,
as did his chilling performance in Fernando Mireilles’ “The Constant
Gardener” in 2005. Nighy has twice won the Evening Standard’s Peter
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Sellers Award for Best Comedy Performance: in 1998’s hit ensemble comedy “Still Crazy” and in 2004
for “Love, Actually.”
Nighy was born in Caterham, Surrey, England. Originally determined to become a journalist, he
switched careers after he trained at the Guildford School of Dance and Drama, soon winning roles on
stage, screen and radio. He appeared in Tom Stoppard’s “Arcadia” and David Hare’s “Skylight” and
“Blue/Orange” at the National Theatre, and he played the role of Sam Gamgee in the original BBC radio
production of “The Lord of the Rings.”
His numerous feature-film credits have included “Eye of the Needle,” “Curse of the Pink Panther,”
“The Little Drummer Girl,” “Fairy Tale: A True Story,” “Underworld” and, more recently, Working Title’s
acclaimed zombie comedy “Shaun of the Dead,” “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy,” “Underworld:
Evolution,” “Stormbreaker” and “Notes on a Scandal.”
On British television, Nighy has appeared in the series “Fox,” “Agony,” “Making News,” “The Men’s
Room,” “The Maitlands,” “Kiss Me Kate” and “State of Play,” the miniseries “Reilly: Ace of Spies,” “The
Last Place on Earth,” “Eye of the Storm,” “The Canterbury Tales” and “He Knew He Was Right,” and the
TV movies “Easter 2016,” “Hitler’s S.S.: Portrait in Evil,” “Agatha Christie’s ‘Thirteen at Dinner,’”
“Longitude,” “The Lost Prince,” “The Young Visiters” and “The Girl in the Café,” the latter bringing him
a 2004 Golden Globe® nomination for Best Actor in a Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made for Television.
In 2001, Nighy earned a Laurence Olivier Theatre Best Actor Award nomination for his role in the
National Theatre production of Joe Penhall’s “Blue/Orange.”
Until his role as Commodore James Norrington in “Pirates of the
Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl,” JACK DAVENPORT was
probably best known to American audiences for his role as Peter Smith-
Kingsley in the critically acclaimed “The Talented Mr. Ripley.”
Davenport made his film debut in Mike Leigh’s “Career Girls.” His
other credits include “Fierce Creatures,” “Tale of the Mummy,” “The
Wisdom of Crocodiles,” “The Bunker” and “The Wedding Date.” He also
appeared and executive produced two acclaimed short films, “Ticks” and
“Subterrain.”
On television, Davenport has been seen in the series “Ultraviolet” and
“Coupling,” as well as “The Real Jane Austen,” co-starring Anna
Chancellor; “The Wyvern Mystery,” with Derek Jacobi and Iain Glen for
the BBC; two series of the BBC’s award-winning “This Life”; and the miniseries “Dickens,” in which he
portrayed Charles Dickens’ son, and the recently completed “Mary Bryant.”
Davenport has appeared on radio in “A Clockwork Orange” and “The Cruel Sea.” He also participated
in a special recording of “Man and Superman” with Ralph Fiennes, Judi Dench and Juliet Stevenson to
mark 30 years of radio plays.
He was nominated for a Laurence Olivier Award for his role in the critically acclaimed production of
“The Servant” at the Lyric Theatre and recently appeared in London’s West End in his much-praised one-
man show entitled “How to Lose Friends and Alienate People.”
Born in London, England, Davenport studied literature and film at the University of East Anglia. He
is the son of actors Maria Aitken and Nigel Davenport and is married to actress Michelle Gomez.
ABOUT THE CAST
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ABOUT THE CAST
KEVIN R. McNALLY returns to his role as the often sauced but
always reliable Joshamee Gibbs. A well-known actor in his native U.K.,
McNally has played leading and supporting roles on stage, film and
television for nearly 30 years. McNally made his feature-film debut in the
James Bond adventure “The Spy Who Loved Me,” with his other early
credits including “The Long Good Friday,” “Enigma,” “Not Quite
Paradise,” “Cry Freedom” and “All Things Bright and Beautiful.” More
recently, McNally has appeared in “The Legend of 1900,” “Entrapment,”
“When the Sky Falls,” “Johnny English,” “De-Lovely,” “Andrew Lloyd
Webber’s The Phantom of the Opera” and “Irish Jam.”
McNally’s numerous television credits include the Emmy® nominated
“Shackleton” for the A&E Network and “Conspiracy” for HBO, both of
which received BAFTA Awards in the United Kingdom. He’s appeared over the years in such miniseries
as “Poldark II,” “Masada,” “Diana,” “Thin Air,” and “Love and Reason” and the TV movies “Praying
Mantis,” “Jekyll & Hyde,” “Stalin,” “Abraham,” “The Smiths,” “Dunkirk” and “Blood Lines.” McNally
has also been a series regular on “The Devil’s Crown,” “Tygo Road,” “Full Stretch,” “Dad,” “Underworld,”
“Up Rising” and “Bedtime.”
In London’s West End, McNally has appeared on stage opposite Maggie Smith in “The Lady in the Van”
and Juliette Binoche in “Naked.” He also starred in Terry Johnson’s “Dead Funny” at the Savoy Theatre.
JONATHAN PRYCE reprises his role from “Pirates of the
Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl” as Governor Weatherby Swann.
Pryce has excelled in equal measure on both stage and screen and, in the
process, has demonstrated himself to be one of Britain’s most versatile
talents. On stage, Pryce this year was nominated for a Laurence Olivier
Award for his performance in Edward Albee’s “The Goat, or Who Is
Sylvia?” Previously, he received Olivier Awards for Best Actor in
“Hamlet” and Outstanding Performance in a Musical for “Miss Saigon,”
in which he originated the role of The Engineer. Pryce was also
nominated for “The Taming of the Shrew” at the Royal Shakespeare
Company and for the role of Fagin in the 1995 West End revival of the
musical “Oliver!” When Pryce opened on Broadway in “Miss Saigon,” he
garnered the Outer Critics Circle, Drama Desk and Variety Club Awards. For his major stage debut in
“Comedians,” Pryce received a Tony Award® for Best Actor. Pryce also starred as Henry Higgins in the
recent hit West End revival of “My Fair Lady.” Pryce is currently starring in the smash hit Broadway
musical “Dirty Rotten Scoundrels.”
On screen, Pryce’s roles have been equally wide-ranging, most notably in Terry Gilliam’s “Brazil” and
“The Adventures of Baron Munchausen,” Martin Scorsese’s “The Age of Innocence,” David Mamet’s
“Glengarry Glen Ross,” Christopher Hampton’s “Carrington” (for which he received the Best Actor prize
at the Cannes Film Festival), Alan Parker’s “Evita” (in which he acted and sang the role of Juan Peron),
the James Bond thriller “Tomorrow Never Dies” and John Frankenheimer’s “Ronin.” Most recently, Pryce
appeared in Irwin Winkler’s “De-Lovely,” Terry Gilliam’s “The Brothers Grimm” and Terrence Malick’s
“The New World.”
For television, Pryce was honored with Emmy® and Golden Globe® nominations for HBO’s
“Barbarians at the Gate,” and appeared in “Thicker Than Water,” “Great Moments in Aviation,” “Mr.
Wroe’s Virgins” and “Selling Hitler.” He will also be seen in the starring role as an eccentric professor in
an as-yet-untitled CBS pilot comedy.
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NAOMIE HARRIS (Tia Dalma) has been acting professionally since
she was nine years old. She was spotted while attending The Anna Scher
Theatre School, an after-school drama club for inner-city children in
London, whose young alumni have included Kathy Burke, Pauline Quirke
and Martin Kemp. Encouraged by Anna Scher, Harris started auditioning
and secured the first of numerous roles on British television.
At 18, still adamant that she wanted to pursue her career as an actress,
Harris accepted a place at Pembroke College, Cambridge University, to
study Social and Political Sciences. After graduating in 1998, she gained
formal training as an actress at the prestigious Bristol Old Vic Theatre
School.
Having completed her training in June 2000, Harris’ break came
when she auditioned for director Danny Boyle and was offered the co-lead in his feature “28 Days Later,”
written by Alex Garland (“The Beach”). The film, shot mostly with digital cameras, became a box-office
success upon its release in 2003.
Harris went on to play the lead in BBC’s “The Project,” a two-part political docu-drama. She was most
recently seen in “Trauma” opposite Colin Firth and Mena Suvari, starring with Pierce Brosnan, Salma
Hayek and Don Cheadle in Brett Ratner’s “After the Sunset” and in “Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull
Story,” director Michael Winterbottom’s critically acclaimed adaptation of Laurence Sterne’s classic 18thcentury novel. She will next be seen starring with Jamie Foxx and Colin Farrell in Michael Mann’s
“Miami Vice.”
TOM HOLLANDER (Lord Cutler Beckett) grew up in Oxford,
went to school locally and read English literature at Cambridge. As a boy,
he was a member of the National Youth Theatre and the National Youth
Music Theatre. While at university, he was a member of the Cambridge
Footlights Revue and played a much-celebrated “Cyrano de Bergerac” at
the Arts Theatre, directed by Sam Mendes.
His early career was primarily theater-based. In 1991, he was
nominated for the Ian Charleson Award for his performance as Celia in
Cheek by Jowl’s all-male production of “As You Like It.” In 1992, he won
the Ian Charleson Award for his performance as Witwoud in Peter Gill’s
production of “The Way of the World” at the Lyric Hammersmith. He
went on to play Macheath in “The Threepenny Opera” at the Donmar
Warehouse and then, famously, he created the central role of Baby in the original production of Jez
Butterworth’s “Mojo” at the Royal Court Theatre.
This brought him to the attention of filmmakers Terry George and Jim Sheridan, who cast him as the
head of the Northern Irish Security Forces in the controversial “Some Mother’s Son,” opposite Helen
Mirren and Fionnuola Flanagan. He then returned to the theater to play “Tartuffe” at the Almeida for
Jonathan Kent, for which he received a Best Actor Award from Time Out and a special commendation
from the Ian Charleson Awards. In 1997, he received another special commendation for his performance
as “The Government Inspector,” again at the Almeida and directed by Jonathan Kent. No other actor in
the award’s history has received so many commendations.
After playing Saffy’s Euro-trash fiancé in the final episode of “Absolutely Fabulous,” Hollander went
on to star opposite Joseph Fiennes and Rufus Sewell in the 1998 film “Martha, Meet Frank, Daniel and
Lawrence.” He subsequently starred in such features as “Bedrooms and Hallways,” “The Clandestine
Marriage,” Ben Elton’s “Maybe Baby,” “The Announcement,” Michael Apted’s “Enigma” and Neil
LaBute’s “Possession.” He also portrayed Osborne Hamley in Andrew Davies’ BBC’s “Wives and
Daughters.”
Hollander returned to the stage to play the title role of Moliere’s “Don Juan” at Sheffield’s Crucible
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ABOUT THE CAST
Theatre to critical acclaim. He was then handpicked by director Robert Altman to play a leading role in
“Gosford Park” with a Screen Actors Guild Award®-winning ensemble cast that included Dame Maggie
Smith, Kristin Scott Thomas, Michael Gambon, Helen Mirren, Richard E. Grant and Emily Watson. He
then portrayed King George V in Stephen Poliakoff’s BBC drama “The Lost Prince” and, in the BBC’s
four-part drama “Cambridge Spies,” Hollander portrayed the infamous spy Guy Burgess.
Returning to the big screen, Hollander played the lead role in Paul Abascal’s “Paparazzi,” produced by
Mel Gibson for Icon Productions. The film, which was shot in Los Angeles, co-starred Tom Sizemore,
Cole Hauser and Robin Tunney. In June 2003, Hollander filmed Richard Eyre’s “Stage Beauty,” costarring Billy Crudup, Claire Danes and Ben Chaplin. Two months later, he started rehearsing for his lead
role at the Donmar Warehouse in John Osborne’s “The Hotel in Amsterdam.” Directed by Robin Lefevre,
the play opened to great critical acclaim.
Remaining on the stage, Hollander next appeared in “Picadilly Jim” alongside an all-star cast that
included Sam Rockwell, Tom Wilkinson, Amanda Peet, Alison Janney, Frances O’Connor, Brenda
Blethyn and Hugh Bonneville. He went on to film the role of George Etherege in “The Libertine,” directed
by Laurence Dunmore and starring Johnny Depp, John Malkovich, Samantha Morton and Rosamund
Pike. Hollander received a British Independent Film Award nomination as Best Supporting Actor for this
performance in 2005. He also co-starred with Keira Knightley, Matthew MacFadyen, Donald Sutherland
and Brenda Blethyn in his acclaimed role as Reverend Collins in the international success “Pride &
Prejudice.” Most recently, Hollander appeared in the ensemble cast of “The Darwin Awards,” which
premiered at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival.
LEE ARENBERG (Pintel) has the remarkable ability to morph
himself into frightening aliens, twisted psychotherapists, lascivious
entertainment executives and, with “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse
of the Black Pearl,” a scurvy knave of a pirate. Most frequently referred
to as a character actor, Arenberg maintains a flourishing acting career of
almost 20 years, spanning television, stage and film.
Arenberg has appeared in more than 30 movies, including “Cradle
Will Rock,” “RoboCop 3,” “Waterworld,” “Bob Roberts,” “The
Apocalypse,” “Cross My Heart” and “Dungeons & Dragons.”
Bitten by the acting bug at the age of eight when he appeared in a
Hebrew school play, the Los Angeles native attended Santa Monica High
School with “brat packers” Sean Penn, Robert Downey, Jr., and Emilio
Estevez and co-wrote a play with Estevez which was directed by Penn. Arenberg’s first professional job
was in 1986 at the Mark Taper Forum in “Ghetto,” a play directed by Gordon Davidson. Within weeks, he
was cast in three films, including “Tapeheads” opposite Tim Robbins and John Cusack.
Guest appearances on television began in 1987 with the hit sitcom “Perfect Strangers” and have
continued with memorable roles such as the parking-space-stealing New Yorker on “Seinfeld”; the
murderous rock promoter in “Tales From the Crypt”; and the notoriously huge studio head, Bobby G., on
the controversial syndicated comedy “Action”; as well as roles on “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation,”
“Charmed,” “Scrubs,” “Arli$$,” “Friends,” “Star Trek: The Next Generation,” “Deep Space Nine” and
“Voyager!”
Arenberg credits much of his development as an actor to his participation in the Actors’ Gang, one of
Los Angeles’ oldest theater companies. The Actors’ Gang was founded by Arenberg in 1981 with Tim
Robbins and other friends from UCLA. After 20 years as an actor in the group, he recently made his
writing and directing debut with “Foursome,” a play about golf, sex and witchcraft.
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Before his memorable role as the wooden-eyed Ragetti in “Pirates of
the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl,” MACKENZIE CROOK
was probably best known as Gareth Kenan in the multi-award-winning
BBC show “The Office,” the highest-rated and fastest-selling comedy in
Britain. Crook has starred in many hit comedies and was nominated for
a prestigious British Comedy Award in 2001.
Crook’s other feature films have included “Still Crazy,” “The
Gathering,” “Finding Neverland,” “Sex Lives of the Potato Men,”
“Churchill: The Hollywood Years,” Terry Gilliam’s “The Brothers
Grimm,” Michael Radford’s “The Merchant of Venice” and “Land of the
Blind.” He also appeared in HBO’s highly acclaimed “The Life and Death
of Peter Sellers,” which starred “Pirates of the Caribbean’s” Geoffrey
Rush in the title role. During the hiatus between the completion of PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN:
DEAD MAN’S CHEST and the resumption of filming on “Pirates of the Caribbean III,” Crook starred
on the London stage in the drama “The Exonerated,” directed by Bob Balaban.
Born in Kent, England, Crook started out as a stand-up comedian on the British club and theater circuit.
DAVID BAILIE (Cotton) has worked in the entertainment industry
for 43 years. He arrived in England from South Africa in 1960 and
trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. He spent most of the
following 10 years working in theater at the Royal Shakespeare Company
at Stratford-Upon-Avon and at the Royal National Theatre alongside and
understudying Sir Laurence Olivier, where he also portrayed Florizel
opposite Judi Dench’s Perdita in “A Winter’s Tale.”
Since that time, Bailie has continued to work on stage and has also
expanded his repertoire to include television and film. He has performed
on stage in “Murder in the Cathedral,” “Macbeth,” “Waiting for Godot,”
“Two Gentlemen of Verona,” “Faustus,” “The Three Musketeers” and
“The Canterbury Tales,” among other notable plays.
On television, Bailie has appeared in “The Play for Today: Lonely Man’s Lover,” “Play of the Month:
The Little Minister,” “Dr. Who,” “Robots of Death,” “Warships,” “Blake’s Seven,” “Onedin Line” and,
more recently, “The New Adventures of Robin Hood,” “Crime Unlimited,” “Gunpowder Plot” and the
telefilm “Attila.”
Among Bailie’s motion-picture credits are “Henry VIII and His Six Wives”; the Hammer horror
classics “The Creeping Flesh,” “Son of Dracula” and “Legend of the Werewolf ”; “Cutthroat Island”; “The
Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc”; and “Gladiator.”
DAVID SCHOFIELD (Mercer) has enjoyed success on stage, films
and television. Born in Manchester, England, as one of 10 children in a
working-class family, he caught the acting bug at the age of 12. He left a
rough inner-city boy’s school three years later and took various odd jobs
before writing a letter to a local repertory theater. Finally granted an
audition two years later, in 1967, Schofield was accepted on the lowest
rung of the ladder as student assistant stage manager and was paid all of
10 dollars a week. There he worked in every department as a propmaker,
soundman, writer, stage sweeper and teamaker, putting in 14-hour days,
six days a week.
After two seasons, Schofield applied to acting colleges and was
accepted by the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art at the age
of 19. Following three years at the Academy, Schofield acquired an agent and left school early to pursue
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ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS
his path as a working actor (30 years later, Schofield maintains the same agent). Schofield’s distinguished
stage career has seen the actor performing some of the great classical roles including Angelo in “Measure
for Measure” and Mark Antony in “Julius Caesar” for the Royal Shakespeare Company and a long
association with the Royal National Theatre appearing in numerous productions, including “The
American Clock,” “Antony and Cleopatra,” “The Elephant Man” (for which he created the title role),
“Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,” “As You Like It” and “Plenty.” He’s also acted on the West End stage
in both musicals and straight plays.
Making his feature-film debut in “The Dogs of War,” Schofield has appeared in a wide range of roles
in such films as “An American Werewolf in London,” “The Last of the Mohicans,” “Anna Karenina,” “The
Musketeer,” “From Hell,” “Superstition,” “Unstoppable” and as Falco in Ridley Scott’s Academy Award®
winning “Gladiator.” Schofield’s television credits are too numerous to mention.
Schofield’s greatest passions in life are his 25-year-long marriage to wife Lally and their children, Fred
and Blanche.
MARTIN KLEBBA, another veteran of the first “Pirates of the
Caribbean,” repeats his role as the diminutive but tough Marty. The native
of Troy, Michigan, has enjoyed numerous credits in feature films and
television as both actor and stunt player. His motion-picture credits as an
actor have included “Men in Black II,” “A Light in the Forest,” “Cradle 2
the Grave,” “El Matador,” “Looney Tunes: Back in Action” and
“Americano.” He was a stunt player in the films “The Hand That Rocks
the Cradle,” “The Animal,” “Planet of the Apes,” “Leprechaun: Back 2
Tha Hood,” “Van Helsing” and “SuperBabies: Baby Geniuses 2.”
On television, Klebba is perhaps best known for his role as Randall
Winston in multiple episodes of “Scrubs,” and he has also appeared in the
TV movies “Snow White” and “The Santa Trap,” and in the series
“National Lampoon’s Gordo’s Road Show,” “Cedric the Entertainer Presents,” “Andy Richter Controls the
Universe,” “Mad TV,” “Just Shoot Me!” and “Malcolm in the Middle.” Klebba starred in the title role as
tough detective Hank Dingo in Comedy Central’s “Knee High P.I.” He’s also a frequent guest on Howard
Stern’s hugely popular radio program.
ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS
Working in a wide range of budgets with many of today’s top talents, GORE VERBINSKI (Director)
is considered one of the top visionary directors of his generation. With only five feature films to his credit
thus far, Verbinski’s box-office success totals over $1 billion worldwide.
“The Weather Man,” Verbinski’s fifth movie, starred Nicolas Cage, Michael Caine, Hope Davis and
Gil Bellows. Previously, Verbinski directed the immensely successful “Pirates of the Caribbean: The
Curse of the Black Pearl,” starring Johnny Depp, Geoffrey Rush, Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley.
Released by Walt Disney Pictures in 2003, the film went on to become one of the top-grossing films of
the year and earned Depp an Oscar® nomination for his performance. Prior to this swashbuckling
adventure, Verbinski directed the chilling horror film “The Ring,” starring Naomi Watts, raising the bar
for fans of the genre around the world. “The Ring” grossed nearly $130 million domestically and helped
to make Naomi Watts a household name. Always enigmatic in his choices and willing to cross genres,
“The Weather Man” represents Verbinski’s first foray into drama.
Prior to embarking into the world of features, Verbinski was an award-winning commercial director.
The UCLA graduate also cut his teeth extensively in directing high-profile music videos for such cutting-
edge artists as Bad Religion and The Crystal Method.
Verbinski lives with his family in Los Angeles.
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Great stories, well told. They can be for audiences in darkened movie theaters or home living rooms.
They can feature great movie stars or introduce new talent. They can be true adventure, broad comedy,
heartbreaking tragedy, epic history, joyous romance or searing drama. They can be set in the distant or
recent past, an only-imagined future or a familiar present. Whatever their elements, though, if they begin
with a lightning bolt, they are stories being told by JERRY BRUCKHEIMER (Producer), and they will
be great stories, well told.
The numbers—of dollars and honors—are a matter of often-reported record. Bruckheimer’s films have
earned worldwide revenues of over $13.5 billion in box-office, video and recording receipts. In the 20056 season, he had nine series on network television, a feat unprecedented in nearly 60 years of television
history. His films—14 of which have grossed over $100 million domestically—have been acknowledged
with 35 Academy Award® nominations, five Oscars®, four Golden Globes®, 43 Emmy® award nominations,
seven Emmys®, 16 People’s Choice nominations, six People’s Choice Awards, and numerous MTV
Awards, including one for Best Picture of the Decade.
But the numbers exist only because of Bruckheimer’s uncanny ability to find the stories and tell them
on film. He is, according to the Washington Post, “the man with the golden gut.” He may have been born
that way, but more likely, his natural gifts were polished to laser focus in the early years of his career. His
first films were the 60-second tales he told as an award-winning commercial producer in his native
Detroit. One of those mini-films, a parody of “Bonnie and Clyde” created for Pontiac, was noted for its
brilliance in Time magazine and brought the 23-year-old producer to the attention of world-renowned ad
agency BBD&O, which lured him to New York.
Four years on Madison Avenue gave him the experience and confidence to tackle Hollywood, and, not
yet 30, he was at the helm of memorable films like “Farewell, My Lovely,” “American Gigolo” and 1983’s
“Flashdance,” which changed Bruckheimer’s life by grossing $92 million in the U.S. alone and pairing
him with Don Simpson, who would be his producing partner for the next 13 years.
Together, the Simpson/Bruckheimer juggernaut produced one hit after another, including “Top Gun,”
“Days of Thunder,” “Beverly Hills Cop,” “Bad Boys,” “Dangerous Minds” and “Crimson Tide.” Box-
office success was acknowledged in both 1985 and 1988, when the National Association of Theater
Owners (NATO) named Bruckheimer Producer of the Year. And in 1988, the Publicists Guild of America
named him, along with Simpson, Motion Picture Showmen of the Year.
In 1996, Bruckheimer produced “The Rock,” re-establishing Sean Connery as an action star and
turning an unlikely Nicolas Cage into an action hero. “The Rock,” named Favorite Movie of the Year by
NATO, grossed $350 million worldwide and was Bruckheimer’s last movie with Simpson, who died
during production.
Now on his own, Bruckheimer followed in 1997 with “Con Air,” which grossed over $230 million,
earned a Grammy® and two Oscar® nominations and brought its producer the ShoWest International Box
Office Achievement Award for unmatched foreign grosses.
Then came Touchstone Pictures’ megahit “Armageddon,” starring Bruce Willis, Billy Bob Thornton,
Ben Affleck and Steve Buscemi. Directed by Michael Bay, it was the biggest movie of 1998, grossing
nearly $560 million worldwide and introducing legendary rock band Aerosmith’s first number-one single,
“I Don’t Want to Miss a Thing.”
By the end of the millennium, Bruckheimer had produced “Enemy of the State,” starring Will Smith
and Gene Hackman and “Gone in 60 Seconds,” starring Cage, Angelina Jolie and Robert Duvall, both
grossing over $225 million worldwide; “Coyote Ugly,” whose soundtrack album went triple platinum; and
the NAACP Image Award-winning “Remember the Titans,” starring Denzel Washington. His peers in the
Producers Guild of America acknowledged his genius with the David O. Selznick Award for Lifetime
Achievement in Motion Pictures.
He began the 21st century with triple Oscar® nominee “Pearl Harbor.” Starring Affleck, Josh Hartnett
and Kate Beckinsale and directed by Bay, the film was hailed by World War II veterans and scholars as a
worthy re-creation of the event that brought the United States into the war. In addition to multiple award
nominations and the Oscar® for Best Sound Editing, it earned over $450 million in worldwide box office
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ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS
and has topped $250 million in DVD and video sales.
“Black Hawk Down,” the story of the 1993 Battle of Mogadishu, starred Hartnett, Eric Bana and Ewan
McGregor and was directed by Ridley Scott. The adaptation of the Mark Bowden bestseller was honored
with multiple award nominations, two Oscars® and rave reviews.
And then in 2003, Bruckheimer unveiled “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl.”
Starring Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom, Geoffrey Rush and Keira Knightley and directed by Gore
Verbinski, the comedy/adventure/romance grossed more than $630 million worldwide, making it
Bruckheimer’s highest-grossing film, earning five Academy Award® nominations and spawning two
upcoming sequels.
Since then, The Films That Begin With The Lightning Bolt have included “Bad Boys II”; the raucously
funny “Kangaroo Jack,” a family film that won an MTV Award for Best Virtual performance for the
kangaroo; “Veronica Guerin,” starring a luminous Cate Blanchett as the Irish journalist murdered by
Dublin crime lords; and “King Arthur,” with Clive Owen starring in the revisionist retelling of the
Arthurian legend.
In 2004, “National Treasure,” starring Cage and Sean Bean in a roller-coaster adventure about solving
the mystery of untold buried treasure, opened to cheering audiences and grossed more than $335 million
worldwide.
Teaming for the sixth time with director Tony Scott, Bruckheimer is currently in production on “Déjà
Vu,” the story of an ATF agent who falls in love with a complete stranger as he races against time to track
down her brutal killer. The film stars Denzel Washington, Jim Caviezel, Paula Patton and Val Kilmer and
is scheduled for a late 2006 release.
Could the master film storyteller make the same magic in 47 minutes for the living-room audience?
Apparently. As Time magazine recently wrote, “The most successful producer in film history…is on his
way to becoming the most successful producer in the history of TV.”
Bruckheimer brought the power of the lightning bolt to television in 2000 with “C.S.I.,” starring
William Petersen and Marg Helgenberger. It quickly became the number-one show on television,
averaging 25 million viewers a week and, along with its two spin-offs, “C.S.I.: Miami”—distinguished as
the biggest television series on a global scale in 2005—and “C.S.I.: NY,” helped catapult languishing CBS
back to the top of the broadcast heap.
Bruckheimer Television broadened its imprint by telling compelling stories and delivering viewers in
huge numbers with “Without a Trace,” “Cold Case,” three-time Emmy® award-winning “Amazing Race”
and “Close to Home” for CBS and “E-Ring” for NBC.
In 2006, Bruckheimer was honored with a Doctor of Fine Arts degree from The University of Arizona,
his alma mater. “Bruckheimer is unique in the industry in that his creative vision spans both large and
small screens. We are pleased to recognize his work through this honor,” said Maurice Sevigny, dean of
the UA College of Fine Arts.
Bruckheimer has been successful in many genres and multiple mediums because he’s a great storyteller.
Look for the lightning bolt. The best stories are right behind it.
MIKE STENSON (Executive Producer) is president of Jerry Bruckheimer Films for which he
supervises all aspects of film development and production. Before joining the company, he was an
executive in charge of production at Disney, responsible for many Bruckheimer films, including
“Armageddon,” “The Rock,” “Crimson Tide” and “Dangerous Minds.” More recently, Stenson served as
a producer on “Bad Company” and “Gone in 60 Seconds” and as an executive producer on “Glory Road,”
“National Treasure,” “King Arthur,” “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl,” “Bad Boys
2,” “Veronica Guerin,” “Kangaroo Jack,” “Black Hawk Down,” “Pearl Harbor,” “Coyote Ugly” and
“Remember the Titans.”
Born and raised in Boston, Stenson graduated from Harvard University with a bachelor’s degree in
economics and a master’s in business administration. After his undergraduate stint, he started as a
production assistant in New York and worked for two years in independent film and television as an
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assistant director and production manager before returning to Boston to complete his graduate education.
After completing business school, Stenson moved to Los Angeles, where he began his tenure at Walt
Disney Studios in Special Projects for two years before moving into the production department at
Hollywood Pictures as a creative executive. He was promoted to vice president and subsequently executive
vice president during his eight years with the company, overseeing development and production for
Hollywood Pictures as well as Touchstone Pictures. In addition to the many Bruckheimer films, Stenson
also developed several other films and nurtured them through production, including “Rush Hour,”
“Instinct,” “Six Days, Seven Nights” and “Mr. Holland’s Opus.”
While at Disney, many filmmakers attempted to woo Stenson away from the studio, but not until 1998
did he entertain leaving. With his newest position at the helm of Jerry Bruckheimer Films, Stenson
spearheaded Bruckheimer’s plan to expand the company’s film production schedule.
CHAD OMAN (Executive Producer) is the president of production for Jerry Bruckheimer Films for
which he oversees all aspects of film development and production. Oman produced, along with
Bruckheimer, “Remember the Titans,” starring Denzel Washington for Walt Disney Pictures, and “Coyote
Ugly,” starring Piper Perabo and John Goodman for Touchstone Pictures.
His most recent executive-producer credits for Jerry Bruckheimer Films include “Glory Road,” starring
Josh Lucas; the international hit “National Treasure,” starring Nicolas Cage; and “King Arthur,” starring
Clive Owen and Keira Knightley. He also executive produced the critically acclaimed “Veronica Guerin,”
starring Cate Blanchett; as well as the blockbuster hits “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black
Pearl,” directed by Gore Verbinski and starring Johnny Depp; “Bad Boys II,” starring Will Smith and Martin
Lawrence; “Black Hawk Down,” directed by Ridley Scott and starring Josh Hartnett; “Pearl Harbor,” starring
Ben Affleck, Kate Beckinsale and Josh Hartnett; “Gone in 60 Seconds,” starring Nicolas Cage, Angelina
Jolie and Robert Duvall; “Enemy of the State,” starring Will Smith and Gene Hackman, “Armageddon,”
starring Bruce Willis and Ben Affleck; and “Con Air,” starring Nicolas Cage and John Malkovich.
In addition to his work on JBF’s many motion-picture projects, Oman also supervised production on
several television projects including ABC’s drama “Dangerous Minds,” starring Annie Potts, and the ABC
drama “Swing Vote,” written by Ron Bass and starring Andy Garcia.
Prior to joining Simpson/Bruckheimer in 1995, Oman was a founding employee of the Motion Picture
Corporation of America. After six years, he left the independent production company as senior vice
president of production.
Oman served as an associate producer on “Dumb and Dumber,” starring Jim Carrey; executive
produced Touchstone Pictures’ “The War at Home,” starring Emilio Estevez, Kathy Bates and Martin
Sheen; and co-produced “The Desperate Trail,” with Sam Elliott, and “The Sketch Artist,” starring Drew
Barrymore and Sean Young. Oman produced “Hands That See,” with Courteney Cox, and “Love, Cheat
and Steal,” with John Lithgow and Eric Roberts.
Oman graduated from Southern Methodist University with a degree in finance. He also attended the
University of California at Los Angeles, where he studied screenwriting, and New York University, where he
participated in the undergraduate film-production program. He was born and raised in Wichita Falls, Texas.
BRUCE HENDRICKS (Executive Producer) was also an executive producer on the Jerry Bruckheimer
Films productions of “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl” and “Pearl Harbor.”
As a filmmaker for over 25 years, Hendricks has been associated with many of the most prestigious,
top-grossing films in motion-picture history. He has a unique position in the entertainment industry,
working as a studio executive, producer and director.
As president of physical production for Walt Disney Studios, Hendricks oversees all aspects of live-
action feature-film production at the company. In this capacity, he has supervised the making of over 200
motion pictures and filmed in more than 20 countries. Among these films are the blockbusters “The Sixth
Sense,” “Armageddon,” “The Rock” and “Pretty Woman,” to name a few. His directing credits include the
large-format film “Ultimate X,” as well as numerous music videos and television programs.
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Hendricks is a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and the Directors Guild
of America. He received an Emmy® award for his work on the telefilm “The Wave.” A native of Dallas,
Texas, Hendricks holds a Bachelor of Science degree in film production from the University of Texas.
ERIC McLEOD (Executive Producer) has a wide range of production experience as a producer,
executive producer and unit production manager. Most recently, McLeod served as executive producer of
“The Dukes of Hazzard” and producer of the smash hit “Mr. and Mrs. Smith,” starring Brad Pitt and
Angelina Jolie. Previously, he was executive producer of “The Cat in the Hat,” “Showtime,” “Bubble Boy”
and “Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery” and producer of “Austin Powers in Goldmember,”
“The Cell” and “Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me.”
Earlier in his career, McLeod was co-producer of “Feeling Minnesota” and “Now and Then,” line
producer of “Corrina, Corrina” and “Even Cowgirls Get the Blues” and associate producer of “Live Wire.”
He has also served as unit production manager on several of the above films, as well as on “Enemy of the
State,” “Wag the Dog,” “Wide Sargasso Sea” and “The Rapture.” McLeod began his work in motion
pictures as a production coordinator on John Waters’ “Cry-Baby,” starring Johnny Depp, Gus van Sant’s
“Drugstore Cowboy” and production supervisor on “8 Seconds.”
Academy Award®-nominated writers TED ELLIOTT and TERRY ROSSIO wrote the DreamWorks
animated feature “Shrek,” winner of the first Academy Award® for Best Animated Film in 2002.
In 1992, the pair co-wrote the highest-grossing film of the year, the Disney animated feature
“Aladdin,” starring Robin Williams. Their live-action feature-film credits include: “Little Monsters,”
starring Fred Savage; “Small Soldiers,” starring Kirsten Dunst; “Godzilla,” starring Matthew Broderick;
and “The Mask of Zorro,” starring Antonio Banderas and Anthony Hopkins.
In 1996, Elliott and Rossio became the first writers signed to an overall writing and producing deal at
DreamWorks SKG. Their animated projects at DreamWorks include “Shrek,” with Mike Myers and Eddie
Murphy; “The Road to El Dorado,” featuring Kevin Kline and Kenneth Branagh; “Antz” (creative
consultants), featuring Woody Allen; and “Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas” (creative consultants),
featuring Brad Pitt and Catherine Zeta-Jones.
In 2003, Elliott and Rossio co-wrote Jerry Bruckheimer’s production of “Pirates of the Caribbean: The
Curse of the Black Pearl,” winner of the People’s Choice Awards for Best Picture and recipient of five
Academy Award® nominations, including Best Actor for Johnny Depp.
Elliott and Rossio have been members of the Writers Guild of America, West, since 1986.
DARIUSZ WOLSKI,ASC (Director of Photography) most recently served as cinematographer on the
thriller “Hide and Seek,” starring Robert De Niro and Dakota Fanning, and the Jerry Bruckheimer
productions of “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl” and “Bad Company,” starring
Anthony Hopkins and Chris Rock. Prior to that, he showcased his talents on director Gore Verbinski’s
“The Mexican,” starring Julia Roberts and Brad Pitt.
Wolski has collaborated with several notable directors, including Andrew Davis on “A Perfect
Murder,” Alex Proyas on “Dark City” and the cult favorite “The Crow,” Peter Medak on “Romeo Is
Bleeding,” as well as Tony Scott on “The Fan” and the Don Simpson-Jerry Bruckheimer production
“Crimson Tide.” For his work on the controversial, highly acclaimed “Crimson Tide,” he garnered an ASC
Award nomination for Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography.
Born in Warsaw, Poland, Wolski attended the Film School in Lodz. After immigrating to the United
States in 1979, he worked on documentaries, industrials and smaller independent films.
His first big break came in 1986 on the film “Heart,” when he was asked to replace the
cinematographer who moved on to work on another project. Soon after, Wolski moved to Los Angeles
where he worked as a director of photography on music videos and commercials for such directors as Alex
Proyas, David Fincher, Tony Scott and Jake Scott. He went on to work on the Roger Corman-produced
feature “Nightfall” and on the PBS American Playhouse production of “Land of Little Rain.”
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RICK HEINRICHS (Production Designer) is one of film’s most original and innovative visual artists,
masterfully creating alternate universes entirely appropriate to his film’s stories and settings. He won an
Academy Award® for his work on Tim Burton’s “Sleepy Hollow,” for which he also won a British Academy
of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) and Art Directors Guild Awards, among others. He received another
Oscar® nomination and Art Directors Guild Award for his highly imaginative designs for “Lemony
Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events.”
The creative collaboration between Heinrichs and Tim Burton dates back to their early studio days at
Walt Disney Pictures when the two produced the animated short “Vincent” and the theatrical short
“Frankenweenie.” They later teamed on Burton’s first theatrical feature, “Pee-wee’s Big Adventure,” and
then “Beetlejuice.” Heinrichs had already begun his climb up the film-career ladder as set designer on
“Ghostbusters II” and “Joe Versus the Volcano” in 1989, before teaming with his college friend in the
same capacity on “Edward Scissorhands” the next year.
In 1992, Heinrichs moved up to art director on Burton’s “Batman Returns,” having previously done
that job on “Soapdish.” He also served that year as visual consultant on “Tim Burton’s The Nightmare
Before Christmas.” Later, Heinrichs was production designer on Burton’s hit remake of “Planet of the
Apes.”
Heinrichs’ other credits as production designer include “Hulk,” “Bedazzled,” “The Big Lebowski” and
“Fargo.” He also worked as art director on “Tall Tale” and as set designer on “The Fisher King.”
PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN’S CHEST reunites PENNY ROSE (Costume
Designer) with director Gore Verbinski following their collaborations on both “Pirates of the Caribbean:
The Curse of the Black Pearl” and “The Weather Man.” For “Pirates of the Caribbean,” Rose was
nominated for both the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) and Costume Designers
Guild awards. She also designed the costumes for Jerry Bruckheimer’s production of “King Arthur,”
starring Clive Owen and Keira Knightley.
Rose had received a previous BAFTA nomination for her work on director Alan Parker’s acclaimed
screen version of Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice’s musical “Evita,” starring Madonna and Jonathan
Pryce. Rose is a longtime collaborator of Parker’s and has designed costumes for three of his other films:
“The Road to Wellville,” “Pink Floyd: The Wall” and “The Commitments.”
Rose’s additional credits include “The Sleeping Dictionary,” Neil Jordan’s “The Good Thief,” “Just
Visiting,” “Entrapment” and Disney’s hit remake of “The Parent Trap,” directed by Nancy Meyers. Earlier
in her career, she designed costumes for Brian De Palma’s “Mission: Impossible” and has twice worked
with Academy Award®-winning director Lord Richard Attenborough on “Shadowlands” and “In Love and
War.” Her resume also includes Christopher Hampton’s “Carrington,” Vincent Ward’s “Map of the Human
Heart,” Bill Forsyth’s “Local Hero,” Pat O’Connor’s “Cal,” Marek Kanievska’s “Another Country” and
Jean-Jacques Annaud’s “Quest for Fire.” Most recently, Rose designed the costumes for the Walt Disney
Pictures comedy “Wild Hogs,” starring Tim Allen, Martin Lawrence and John Travolta.
Rose was trained in West End theater and began her career there and also in television, designing for
commercials where she first met such directors as Alan Parker, Adrian Lyne, Ridley and Tony Scott and
Hugh Hudson. She was born and raised in Britain and is fluent in French and Italian.
CRAIG WOOD (Editor) has enjoyed a long and rewarding association with director Gore Verbinski,
most recently editing the director’s “The Weather Man.” Previously, he edited Verbinski’s “Pirates of the
Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl” and the horror thriller “The Ring,” which garnered almost $250
million in worldwide box-office receipts and has gone on to become a rental sensation. Previously, Wood
served as the editor on both “The Mexican” and “Mouse Hunt.” The duo also collaborated on more than
a dozen commercials, including the Clio Award-winning Budweiser “Frogs” and the 1996 short film “The
Ritual,” as well as Verbinski’s video “Negasonic Teenage Warhead” for the rock group Monster Magnet.
Wood was an additional editor on Randall Wallace’s “We Were Soldiers,” starring Mel Gibson. Other
editing credits include “Highway,” Bronwen Hughes’ romantic comedy “Forces of Nature,” starring
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ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS
Sandra Bullock and Ben Affleck, “Secrets of the City” and Alex Proyas’ 1989 feature film “Spirits of the
Air, Gremlins of the Clouds.”
Born in Sydney, Australia, Wood began his career at age 19 as assistant editor in the documentary
department at the Australian Broadcasting Corporation television network before moving into music
videos and commercials. He has fashioned the videos of such artists as Smashing Pumpkins, Bjork, Fiona
Apple, Garbage, Tina Turner, Tom Petty, UB40 and Janet Jackson, not to mention creating stylish ads for
various corporate clients.
STEPHEN RIVKIN,A.C.E. (Editor) is another “Pirates” returnee, having served as one of the editors
of “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl.”
Since the early 1980s, Rivkin has edited or co-edited such diverse films as Michael Mann’s “Ali”; the
action thriller “Swordfish”; the comedies “My Cousin Vinny,” “Robin Hood: Men in Tights” and “Nine
Months”; Wolfgang Petersen’s thriller “Outbreak”; the war drama “Bat-21”; and, for director Norman
Jewison, “Only You,” “Bogus,” “The Hurricane” and “The Statement.” He also edited Rob Cohen’s action
spectacle “Stealth,” starring Josh Lucas, Jamie Foxx and Jessica Biel. Earlier in his career, Rivkin edited
and was the associate producer on the features “Youngblood” and “The Personals.”
Among Rivkin’s television credits are TNT’s CableACE Award-nominated “Nightbreaker,” HBO’s
“The Comrades of Summer” and “El Diablo,” as well as Lifetime’s “Wildflower” and the CBS movie “The
Girl With the Crazy Brother,” the latter two directed by Diane Keaton.
Rivkin was born and raised in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
German-born composer HANS ZIMMER (Music) is recognized as one of Hollywood’s most
innovative musical talents, having first enjoyed success in the world of pop music as a member of The
Buggles. The group’s single Video Killed the Radio Star became a worldwide hit and helped usher in a
new era of global entertainment as the first music video to be aired on MTV.
Zimmer entered the world of film music in London during a long collaboration with famed composer
and mentor Stanley Myers, which included the film “My Beautiful Laundrette.” He soon began work on
several successful solo projects, including the critically acclaimed “A World Apart,” and during these
years, Zimmer pioneered the use of combining old and new musical technologies. Today, this work has
earned him the reputation of being the father of integrating the electronic musical world with traditional
orchestral arrangements.
A turning point in Zimmer’s career came in 1988 when he was asked to score “Rain Man” for director
Barry Levinson. The film went on to win the Oscar® for Best Picture of the Year and earned Zimmer his
first Academy Award® nomination for Best Original Score. The next year, Zimmer composed the score for
another Best Picture Oscar® recipient, “Driving Miss Daisy,” starring Jessica Tandy and Morgan Freeman.
Having already scored two Best Picture winners, in the early ’90s, Zimmer cemented his position as a
preeminent talent with the award-winning score for “The Lion King.” The soundtrack has sold over 15
million copies to date and earned him an Academy Award® for Best Original Score, a Golden Globe®, an
American Music Award, a Tony® and two Grammy Awards®. In total, Zimmer’s work has been nominated
for seven Golden Globes®, seven Grammys® and seven Oscars® for “Rain Man,” “Gladiator,” “The Lion
King,” “As Good as It Gets,” “The Preacher’s Wife,” “The Thin Red Line” and “The Prince of Egypt.”
With his career in full swing, Zimmer was anxious to replicate the mentoring experience he had
benefited from under Stanley Myers’guidance. With state-of-the-art technology and a supportive creative
environment, Zimmer was able to offer film-scoring opportunities to young composers at his Santa
Monica-based musical “think tank.” This approach helped launch the careers of such notable composers
as Mark Mancina, John Powell, Harry Gregson-Williams, Nick Glennie-Smith and Klaus Badelt.
In 2000, Zimmer scored the music for Ridley Scott’s “Gladiator,” for which he received an Oscar®
nomination, in addition to Golden Globe® and Broadcast Film Critics Awards, for his epic score. It sold
more than three million copies worldwide and spawned a second album, Gladiator: More Music From the
Motion Picture, released on the Universal Classics/Decca label. Zimmer’s other scores that year included
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“Mission: Impossible 2,” “The Road to El Dorado” and “An Everlasting Piece.”
Some of his other impressive scores include Jerry Bruckheimer’s productions of “Days of Thunder”
and “Pearl Harbor”; Gore Verbinski’s “The Ring”; four films directed by Ridley Scott, “Matchstick Men,”
“Hannibal,” “Black Hawk Down” (also produced by Bruckheimer) and “Thelma and Louise”; Penny
Marshall’s “Riding in Cars With Boys” and “A League of Their Own”; “True Romance”; “Tears of the
Sun”; Ron Howard’s “Backdraft”; “Smilla’s Sense of Snow”; and the animated “Spirit: Stallion of the
Cimarron,” for which he also co-wrote four of the songs with Bryan Adams, including the Golden Globe®
nominated “Here I Am.”
At the 27th annual Flanders International Film Festival, Zimmer performed live for the first time in
concert with a 100-piece orchestra and a 100-person choir. Choosing selections from his body of work,
Zimmer performed newly orchestrated concert versions of “Gladiator,” “Mission: Impossible 2,” “Rain
Man,” “The Lion King” and “The Thin Red Line.” The concert was recorded by Decca and released as a
concert album entitled The Wings of a Film: The Music of Hans Zimmer.
In 2003, Zimmer completed his 100th film score with “The Last Samurai,” for which he received both
a Golden Globe® and a Broadcast Film Critics nomination. His other recent credits include Nancy Meyers’
comedy “Something’s Gotta Give,” the animated DreamWorks films “Shark Tale” and “Madagascar,”
James L. Brooks’ “Spanglish,” “The Ring 2,” the summer blockbuster “Batman Begins” and Gore
Verbinski’s “The Weather Man.” Most recently, Zimmer scored Ron Howard’s “The Da Vinci Code” and
Nancy Meyers’ new film for Sony Pictures, “Holiday,” starring Kate Winslet, Cameron Diaz, Jack Black
and Jude Law.
Zimmer’s additional honors and awards include the prestigious Lifetime Achievement Award in Film
Composition from the National Board of Review and the Frederick Loewe Award in 2003 at the Palm
Springs International Film Festival. Zimmer has also received ASCAP’s Henry Mancini Award for
Lifetime Achievement.
Zimmer and his wife live in Los Angeles. He is the father of four children.
JOHN KNOLL (Visual Effects Supervisor) shared an Academy Award® nomination for his work on
“Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl.” He joined Industrial Light & Magic as a
technical assistant in 1986 and was soon promoted to motion-control camera operator for “Captain EO.”
After three years of operating, Knoll was called upon to work on the groundbreaking digital effects for
“The Abyss.” Since that time, he has been promoted to visual-effects supervisor, heading up the visual
effects on more than 20 feature films and commercials. His film background, coupled with an advanced
understanding of digital technologies, has made Knoll a much sought-after effects supervisor, with two
Academy Award® nominations for “Star Wars: Episode II—Attack of the Clones” and “Star Wars: Episode
I—The Phantom Menace” (the latter earning him a BAFTA nomination as well).
Knoll’s resume also includes “Star Wars: Episode III—Revenge of the Sith,” “Mission to Mars,” “Deep
Blue Sea,” “Star Trek: First Contact” and “Mission: Impossible,” among others.
Knoll’s interest in filmmaking began at an early age. Having a keen interest in model making, Knoll
was mesmerized by the original “Star Wars.” During a visit to ILM in 1978, he was able to observe
firsthand the world of visual effects. Inspired to learn more, Knoll attended the University of Southern
California’s Film School and earned a Bachelor of Arts in cinema production, while freelancing as a
model maker at a variety of Los Angeles-based production facilities.
During his last year at USC, Knoll took an advanced animation class where he built a motion-control
system from an Oxberry animation stand, an Apple II computer, a CNC milling-machine controller and a
bunch of industrial surplus stepper motors. Impressed by the student film generated from this class
project, ILM hired Knoll as a technical assistant for motion-control photography. Greatly impressed by
visits to ILM’s newly founded computer graphics department, Knoll took up computer graphics as a
hobby. Teaming up with his brother, who was working on his doctoral thesis in computer vision at the
University of Michigan, the Knoll brothers created Photoshop in 1987.
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BILL GEORGE (Visual Effects Supervisor) joined Industrial Light & Magic in 1981. Since then, he has
worked as model-shop supervisor, art director, matte painter, commercial director and visual-effects supervisor.
Some highlights of his career include miniature construction and design on “Blade Runner,” art
direction and design for five of the “Star Trek” films, directing over 30 commercials at ILM and
overseeing model construction on “Ghostbusters 2” and “Alive.” In 1988, he received an Academy Award®
for Best Visual Effects for his work on “Innerspace.”
In 2002, director Steven Spielberg entrusted George to update his beloved character E.T. using digital
character animation for the 20th Anniversary Edition of “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial.” George recently
received yet another Academy Award® nomination for the third installment of the highly successful “Harry
Potter” series, “Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.”
ALLEN HALL (Special Effects Coordinator) won an Oscar® for his groundbreaking work on Robert
Zemeckis’ “Forrest Gump” and was nominated for Ron Howard’s “Backdraft” and Ron Underwood’s
“Mighty Joe Young.” “Forrest Gump” also won Hall a British Academy of Film and Television Arts
(BAFTA) Award, with “Backdraft” receiving a nomination.
Hall’s numerous credits as special-effects coordinator or supervisor have included such notable films
as “Popeye,” “Top Gun,” “The Untouchables,” “Scrooged,” “Dead Poets Society,” “Avalon,” “For the
Boys,” “Cutthroat Island,” “The Long Kiss Goodnight,” “Contact,” “Babe: Pig in the City,” “U-571,” “Dr.
Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas,” “Road to Perdition,” “Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines,”
“Constantine” and “Elizabethtown.”
MICHAEL LANTIERI (Special Effects Coordinator) won an Academy Award® for his work on
Steven Spielberg’s “Jurassic Park” and was nominated for Spielberg’s “AI—Artificial Intelligence,” “The
Lost World: Jurassic Park” and “Hook,” as well as Robert Zemeckis’ “Back to the Future Part II.” He won
British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) Awards for “Jurassic Park,” “Back to the Future
Part II,” Zemeckis’ “Death Becomes Her” and George Miller’s “The Witches of Eastwick” and was
nominated for Francis Ford Coppola’s “Bram Stoker’s Dracula” and Spielberg’s “Minority Report.”
Lantieri’s numerous other credits as special-effects supervisor have included some of the biggest films
of the past 20 years, including “Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home,” “Who Framed Roger Rabbit?,” “Twins,”
“Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade,” “Back to the Future Part III,” “The Flintstones,” “Casper,” “Congo,”
“Matilda,” “Mars Attacks!,” Gore Verbinski’s “Mouse Hunt,” “Deep Impact,” “Wild Wild West,” “Jurassic
Park III,” “Hulk,” “Seabiscuit,” “The Terminal” and “Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events.”
Lantieri also directed the feature thriller “Komodo.”
GEORGE MARSHALL RUGE (Stunt Coordinator) returns following his thrilling work on “Pirates
of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl,” which won him an American Choreography Award. Ruge
was the stunt coordinator/action designer on Peter Jackson’s “The Lord of the Rings” trilogy, which
included some of the most ambitious and complex action sequences in motion-picture history. He was also
stunt coordinator and second unit director on Jerry Bruckheimer’s production of the action hit “National
Treasure.”
Born in San Francisco, Ruge studied theater arts and acting at San Francisco State University where
he also studied fencing, specializing in the saber. His first opportunity to duel on stage was in the role of
Macduff in “Macbeth.” While working as an actor in Bay Area theater, film and television productions,
he also directed plays for The Loft Theatre Group, of which he is a founding member. The company
produced several original plays while Ruge was in residence.
After graduation, he relocated to Los Angeles to pursue a career in film. Since that time, Ruge has
performed in numerous feature-film productions, among them “Come See the Paradise,” “L.A. Story,”
“The Doors,” “The Rocketeer,” “Chaplin,” “Robin Hood: Men in Tights,” “Mars Attacks!,” “George of the
Jungle,” “Conspiracy Theory,” “City of Angels,” “Bulworth,” “Lethal Weapon 4,” “The Mask of Zorro,”
“Gattaca,” and “Dr. Dolittle,” among many others. He doubled George Hamilton in the fencing scenes of
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“Zorro, the Gay Blade” as well as portraying longtime hero Basil Rathbone in the biographical telefilm
chronicling Errol Flynn’s life, “My Wicked, Wicked Ways.” Ruge also dueled with Peter O’Toole in “My
Favorite Year,” playing the role of Lord Drummond opposite O’Toole’s Robin Hood characterization.
On television, Ruge has guest-starred in numerous episodes of such series as “Knots Landing,”
“Wizards and Warriors,” “The Twilight Zone,” “Tour of Duty,” “Quantum Leap,” “SeaQuest DSV,”
“Walker, Texas Ranger,” “V.I.P.,” “Chicago Hope” and “Nash Bridges.”
Ruge was the recipient of the Bank of America Drama Award for Acting and the Drama Circle Critics
Award for Best Actor in a dramatic play and garnered a Stuntman’s Award for Best Fight Sequence in a
Motion Picture. Ruge has served two elected terms, in 1996 and in 2000, as President of the Stuntman’s
Association of Motion Pictures.
Ruge is a published poet and has written several screenplays.
One of the most renowned makeup artists in motion pictures, VE NEILL (Key Makeup Artist and
Designer) was nominated for her work, along with key hairstylist and designer Martin Samuel, for a Best
Makeup Academy Award® for “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl.” Over the course
of her 27-year career, Neill has won three Academy Awards®, two Emmy® awards and two Saturn Awards,
with a total of 16 international nominations for her creative and innovative makeups.
From her early career as a rock ’n’ roll stylist, Neill began to develop her skills as a designer and
makeup artist. Specializing in concept, design and execution, Neill entered the film industry and
discovered a talent for extreme fantasy makeup. These unique skills put her at the forefront of the early
1980s film extravaganzas.
Neill created space travelers for the first “Star Trek” film and for the hit comedy “Galaxy Quest,” rock
’n’ roll vampires for Joel Schumacher’s “The Lost Boys” and visions of the afterlife for Tim Burton’s
wacky comedy “Beetlejuice,” her first Oscar®. In addition, she turned Robin Williams into a Scottish
nanny for “Mrs. Doubtfire” (Neill’s second Oscar® win), Martin Landau into horror king Bela Lugosi for
Burton’s “Ed Wood” (her third Academy Award®) and brought to life an onslaught of villains, beauties and
superheroes for Burton’s “Batman Returns” and Schumacher’s “Batman Forever” and “Batman & Robin.”
She gave Patricia Arquette the “Stigmata,” transformed Christine Baranski into “The Grinch’s” sexy
girlfriend, aged Johnny Depp 60 years for the film “Blow” and turned Jude Law into the perfect Love
Robot for Steven Spielberg’s “A.I.: Artificial Intelligence.” Her other credits have included Burton’s
“Edward Scissorhands,” Danny DeVito’s “Matilda” and “Hoffa,” and Spielberg’s “Amistad.”
MARTIN SAMUEL (Key Hairstylist and Designer), along with Ve Neill, was a recipient of an
Academy Award® nomination for their work on “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl.”
Samuel has worked as a hairstylist in the entertainment industry for over 25 years and has headed the hair
department on more than 20 feature films. His expertise in both period and contemporary designs has
earned Samuel an international following.
His resume includes such diverse films as “The Man Who Fell to Earth,” “Little Buddha,” “Coal
Miner’s Daughter,” “Wild Wild West,” “Jane Eyre,” “Blow,” “Hollow Man,” “The Life of David Gale,”
“What a Girl Wants,” “Secret Window,” “Sahara,” “Bandidas,” “Domino” and “Chromophobia.” He was
nominated for British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) Awards for “Pirates of the
Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl” and his work with Madonna on Alan Parker’s “Evita,” and he
won Britain’s Best Screen Hairstylist of the Year Award for two years running for “Evita” and “Angels and
Insects.” He also won the Hollywood Makeup Artist and Hairstylist Guild Award for Best Character Hair
Styling for “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl” and received a second nomination for
Best Period Hair Styling.
Born and raised in London, Samuel and his wife, Mary, live in Los Angeles.
Information contained within as of June 21, 2006.
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