The opening
sequence of Dead Men Tell No Tales finds young Henry (Lewis McGowan) rowing out to sea, tying a bag of rocks to his leg and plunging into the sea — where he lands on the deck of the sunken Flying Dutchman and we learn that he is the son of Will Turner (Orlando Bloom).
Not exact matches
One
sequence in particular that displays the power and emotional range
of Dale in the role, comes at the end
of the film when he is left as the only
man willing to bury his
dead brother at the funeral
of Kennedy's killer.
A combination
of Aronofsky's Pi (doing the «math = god = madness» equation much better, I should add), Good Will Hunting, Marathon
Man, and eventually Drop
Dead Fred, A Beautiful Mind ultimately outsmarts itself by blurring reality and fiction so awkwardly that when a pivotal uplift
sequence occurs towards the end, one is left wondering for a time whether that, too, is some kind
of delusion.
Pirates
of the Caribbean:
Dead Men Tell No Tales MPAA Rating: PG - 13 for
sequences of adventure violence, and some suggestive content.
The MPAA rated Pirates
of the Caribbean
Dead Man's Chest PG - 13 for intense
sequences of adventure violence, including frightening images.
Rated PG - 13 were this fall's All the King's
Men («for an intense
sequence of violence, sexual content and partial nudity») and DOA:
Dead or Alive («for pervasive martial arts and action violence, some sexuality and nudity») and next winter's Ghost Rider («for horror violence and disturbing images, including flaming heads»).
Pirates
of the Caribbean:
Dead Men Tell No Tales is rated PG - 13 by the MPAA for
sequences of adventure violence, and some suggestive content.
The MPAA rated Pirates
of the Caribbean:
Dead Men Tell No Tales PG - 13 for
sequences of adventure violence, and some suggestive content.