Pirates Movie 2005 !!top!! Official
Ashworth and Raya are trapped in a mangrove swamp, their captured pinnace stuck in mud. Thorne’s frigate is closing in. Raya takes off her coat, ties a rope to a harpoon, and spears a passing crocodile. As the reptile thrashes, she says, "In my village, we call this riding the tempak ." Ashworth stares. "That's insane." She smiles—the first time she's smiled in the whole movie. "Yes. But he won't expect it." They are dragged through muck and shallow water, the frigate overshooting them by half a mile. It’s absurd, brilliant, and utterly believable.
The Last Galleon of the Sunda Sea
One night, his ship is boarded not by screaming savages, but by silent ghosts. A dozen figures in indigo-dyed silk drop from the rigging. At their head: Raya Malikai (Michelle Yeoh, in a career-best "why didn’t she get an Oscar?" performance). She doesn't brandish a cutlass. She simply walks up to Ashworth, presses a keris dagger to his throat, and whispers, "You sank my father's flag. Now you’ll help me raise it." pirates movie 2005
What follows is a cascade of practical, salt-stained adventure. No magic. No sea monsters. Just wet ropes, rusty culverins, and betrayal. Ashworth and Raya are trapped in a mangrove
A disgraced British naval officer must team up with a fierce Indonesian pirate queen to find a mythical galleon before a ruthless East India Company commander can use its treasure to start a war. As the reptile thrashes, she says, "In my
Thorne catches them at the reef. He doesn't want the letter. He wants to sink it. "A free Sunda," he says, standing on Ashworth's surrendered sword, "is a Sunda that sells to the French. To the Dutch. To anyone. I'm not a villain, Captain. I'm a grocer. And grocers hate chaos."