Salazar Pirates Of The Caribbean -
The flashback scene in Dead Men Tell No Tales is one of the franchise’s finest moments. A young, handsome Salazar (played with chilling stoicism by Anthony De La Torre) corners a young, reckless Jack Sparrow. Salazar gives the pirate a chance to surrender, to face the crown’s justice. Instead, the cunning Sparrow uses the geography against him, luring the massive Spanish warship The Silent Mary into the deadly Devil’s Triangle.
So raise a glass of rum (or Spanish sherry) to Captain Salazar. He may be dead. He may tell no tales. But he will never, ever stop hating Jack Sparrow. salazar pirates of the caribbean
His body reforms. His hair falls flat. He looks down at his hands, sees the flesh and blood, and realizes that his vengeance has no vessel anymore. He falls into a chasm in the ocean, not as a monster, but as a sad, tired old soldier finally allowed to die. The flashback scene in Dead Men Tell No
And that is the real curse of the sea.
This design choice is brilliant. It strips away the "fun" of piracy. There are no jokes with Salazar. There is no "savvy?" There is only the silent, grinding sound of his crew mopping the deck of a ship that no longer touches the water. You cannot talk about Salazar without bowing to Javier Bardem. The man knows how to play a quiet monster (see: No Country for Old Men ). Bardem brings a Shakespearean tragedy to the role. Yes, Salazar is a villain, but watch his eyes. Instead, the cunning Sparrow uses the geography against
