Did Captain Barbossa continue his career as a privateer in the fifth film?Did Captain Jack Sparrow eat people?What is the approximate age of Captain Jack Sparrow?What's the meaning of this conversation between Jack and Barbossa?How did the barnacles get there in Pirates of the Carribean: Dead Men Tell No Tales?Why did the Black Pearl not change?How did Jack Sparrow become the captain of the ship?Why did the Devil's Triangle only curse the crew of the Silent Mary?How does Captain Salazar know about the compass?What did Calypso say after Barbossa asked for her help?
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Did Captain Barbossa continue his career as a privateer in the fifth film?
Did Captain Jack Sparrow eat people?What is the approximate age of Captain Jack Sparrow?What's the meaning of this conversation between Jack and Barbossa?How did the barnacles get there in Pirates of the Carribean: Dead Men Tell No Tales?Why did the Black Pearl not change?How did Jack Sparrow become the captain of the ship?Why did the Devil's Triangle only curse the crew of the Silent Mary?How does Captain Salazar know about the compass?What did Calypso say after Barbossa asked for her help?
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In the fourth film, Captain Barbossa became a privateer by taking the royal pardon from King George. In the fifth film, he wears a British culture wig. His hat and clothes also belong to the British. And I don't think Great Britain will allow him to freely pirate the seas after all that happened.
character pirates-of-the-caribbean dead-men-tell-no-tales
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In the fourth film, Captain Barbossa became a privateer by taking the royal pardon from King George. In the fifth film, he wears a British culture wig. His hat and clothes also belong to the British. And I don't think Great Britain will allow him to freely pirate the seas after all that happened.
character pirates-of-the-caribbean dead-men-tell-no-tales
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In the fourth film, Captain Barbossa became a privateer by taking the royal pardon from King George. In the fifth film, he wears a British culture wig. His hat and clothes also belong to the British. And I don't think Great Britain will allow him to freely pirate the seas after all that happened.
character pirates-of-the-caribbean dead-men-tell-no-tales
In the fourth film, Captain Barbossa became a privateer by taking the royal pardon from King George. In the fifth film, he wears a British culture wig. His hat and clothes also belong to the British. And I don't think Great Britain will allow him to freely pirate the seas after all that happened.
character pirates-of-the-caribbean dead-men-tell-no-tales
character pirates-of-the-caribbean dead-men-tell-no-tales
edited Oct 1 at 4:23
galacticninja
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asked Sep 30 at 23:34
Kerem AygünKerem Aygün
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1 Answer
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No, he's no longer a privateer, but a powerful and wealthy pirate controlling the seven seas.
At one point towards the end of On Stranger Tides Barbossa declares,
"I care not for King George or tavern yarns that give hope for a
healed limb. But I'd give my left arm for a chance at Blackbeard."
and later after Blackbeard is defeated,
"All hands! Ply to windward! Get cracking, ye bloomin' cockroaches!
[laughs] The Crown served me well. But now, by the Gods of sea and
sky! Make way for Tortuga!"
Hector Barbossa returned to a life of piracy and at the beginning of Dead Men Tell No Tales, he's become 'the terror of seven sees' by use of Blackbeard's former sword and Queen Anne's Revenge...
He became the terror of the Seven Seas, pillaging the wealthy trade
ships and filling the holds of the Queen Anne's Revenge with treasures
beyond most men's wildest dreams. With the power of the Sword of
Triton, Barbossa finally fulfilled his old desire of living the life
of a rich rogue. He surrounded himself with riches, dressing himself
in finest uniforms he could steal, and even replaced his wooden peg
leg with one made of gold. He successfully took over the pirate
world, his name being whispered in fear across the Caribbean, and when
his Jolly Roger was spotted at sea, pirates and soldiers alike knew it
was only a matter of time before they were conquered.
It also becomes clear that there aren't many real challenges left and that he almost seems bored with this life style and it's the challenge of Salazar and reveal of Carina that seems to give the character some real meaning to his life back.
1
I'm wondering, whether was Jack ever afraid of his old first mate..
– Vishwa
Oct 1 at 6:42
2
A golden peg leg seems... impractical.
– Kakturus
Oct 1 at 9:52
@Kakturus Aye, but it looked nice!
– Darth Locke
Oct 1 at 12:49
@Vishwa I think Jack's too perpetually drunk to be afraid of quite a lot of things he should be.
– user25730
Oct 1 at 23:17
@Vishwa the first film proposed if he was brilliant or just crazy. Between the second and third films he kind of breaks down via death/davy jones locker, but then kind of bounces back in the fourth film, only to completely loose it and become super scared (compass = thing you fear most) in the fifth film. I'm not even convinced it was Salazar that he was scared of, but the implications of undoing curses, such as bringing Davy Jones back as hinted at in the post credit scene.
– Darth Locke
Oct 2 at 13:12
|
show 2 more comments
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
No, he's no longer a privateer, but a powerful and wealthy pirate controlling the seven seas.
At one point towards the end of On Stranger Tides Barbossa declares,
"I care not for King George or tavern yarns that give hope for a
healed limb. But I'd give my left arm for a chance at Blackbeard."
and later after Blackbeard is defeated,
"All hands! Ply to windward! Get cracking, ye bloomin' cockroaches!
[laughs] The Crown served me well. But now, by the Gods of sea and
sky! Make way for Tortuga!"
Hector Barbossa returned to a life of piracy and at the beginning of Dead Men Tell No Tales, he's become 'the terror of seven sees' by use of Blackbeard's former sword and Queen Anne's Revenge...
He became the terror of the Seven Seas, pillaging the wealthy trade
ships and filling the holds of the Queen Anne's Revenge with treasures
beyond most men's wildest dreams. With the power of the Sword of
Triton, Barbossa finally fulfilled his old desire of living the life
of a rich rogue. He surrounded himself with riches, dressing himself
in finest uniforms he could steal, and even replaced his wooden peg
leg with one made of gold. He successfully took over the pirate
world, his name being whispered in fear across the Caribbean, and when
his Jolly Roger was spotted at sea, pirates and soldiers alike knew it
was only a matter of time before they were conquered.
It also becomes clear that there aren't many real challenges left and that he almost seems bored with this life style and it's the challenge of Salazar and reveal of Carina that seems to give the character some real meaning to his life back.
1
I'm wondering, whether was Jack ever afraid of his old first mate..
– Vishwa
Oct 1 at 6:42
2
A golden peg leg seems... impractical.
– Kakturus
Oct 1 at 9:52
@Kakturus Aye, but it looked nice!
– Darth Locke
Oct 1 at 12:49
@Vishwa I think Jack's too perpetually drunk to be afraid of quite a lot of things he should be.
– user25730
Oct 1 at 23:17
@Vishwa the first film proposed if he was brilliant or just crazy. Between the second and third films he kind of breaks down via death/davy jones locker, but then kind of bounces back in the fourth film, only to completely loose it and become super scared (compass = thing you fear most) in the fifth film. I'm not even convinced it was Salazar that he was scared of, but the implications of undoing curses, such as bringing Davy Jones back as hinted at in the post credit scene.
– Darth Locke
Oct 2 at 13:12
|
show 2 more comments
No, he's no longer a privateer, but a powerful and wealthy pirate controlling the seven seas.
At one point towards the end of On Stranger Tides Barbossa declares,
"I care not for King George or tavern yarns that give hope for a
healed limb. But I'd give my left arm for a chance at Blackbeard."
and later after Blackbeard is defeated,
"All hands! Ply to windward! Get cracking, ye bloomin' cockroaches!
[laughs] The Crown served me well. But now, by the Gods of sea and
sky! Make way for Tortuga!"
Hector Barbossa returned to a life of piracy and at the beginning of Dead Men Tell No Tales, he's become 'the terror of seven sees' by use of Blackbeard's former sword and Queen Anne's Revenge...
He became the terror of the Seven Seas, pillaging the wealthy trade
ships and filling the holds of the Queen Anne's Revenge with treasures
beyond most men's wildest dreams. With the power of the Sword of
Triton, Barbossa finally fulfilled his old desire of living the life
of a rich rogue. He surrounded himself with riches, dressing himself
in finest uniforms he could steal, and even replaced his wooden peg
leg with one made of gold. He successfully took over the pirate
world, his name being whispered in fear across the Caribbean, and when
his Jolly Roger was spotted at sea, pirates and soldiers alike knew it
was only a matter of time before they were conquered.
It also becomes clear that there aren't many real challenges left and that he almost seems bored with this life style and it's the challenge of Salazar and reveal of Carina that seems to give the character some real meaning to his life back.
1
I'm wondering, whether was Jack ever afraid of his old first mate..
– Vishwa
Oct 1 at 6:42
2
A golden peg leg seems... impractical.
– Kakturus
Oct 1 at 9:52
@Kakturus Aye, but it looked nice!
– Darth Locke
Oct 1 at 12:49
@Vishwa I think Jack's too perpetually drunk to be afraid of quite a lot of things he should be.
– user25730
Oct 1 at 23:17
@Vishwa the first film proposed if he was brilliant or just crazy. Between the second and third films he kind of breaks down via death/davy jones locker, but then kind of bounces back in the fourth film, only to completely loose it and become super scared (compass = thing you fear most) in the fifth film. I'm not even convinced it was Salazar that he was scared of, but the implications of undoing curses, such as bringing Davy Jones back as hinted at in the post credit scene.
– Darth Locke
Oct 2 at 13:12
|
show 2 more comments
No, he's no longer a privateer, but a powerful and wealthy pirate controlling the seven seas.
At one point towards the end of On Stranger Tides Barbossa declares,
"I care not for King George or tavern yarns that give hope for a
healed limb. But I'd give my left arm for a chance at Blackbeard."
and later after Blackbeard is defeated,
"All hands! Ply to windward! Get cracking, ye bloomin' cockroaches!
[laughs] The Crown served me well. But now, by the Gods of sea and
sky! Make way for Tortuga!"
Hector Barbossa returned to a life of piracy and at the beginning of Dead Men Tell No Tales, he's become 'the terror of seven sees' by use of Blackbeard's former sword and Queen Anne's Revenge...
He became the terror of the Seven Seas, pillaging the wealthy trade
ships and filling the holds of the Queen Anne's Revenge with treasures
beyond most men's wildest dreams. With the power of the Sword of
Triton, Barbossa finally fulfilled his old desire of living the life
of a rich rogue. He surrounded himself with riches, dressing himself
in finest uniforms he could steal, and even replaced his wooden peg
leg with one made of gold. He successfully took over the pirate
world, his name being whispered in fear across the Caribbean, and when
his Jolly Roger was spotted at sea, pirates and soldiers alike knew it
was only a matter of time before they were conquered.
It also becomes clear that there aren't many real challenges left and that he almost seems bored with this life style and it's the challenge of Salazar and reveal of Carina that seems to give the character some real meaning to his life back.
No, he's no longer a privateer, but a powerful and wealthy pirate controlling the seven seas.
At one point towards the end of On Stranger Tides Barbossa declares,
"I care not for King George or tavern yarns that give hope for a
healed limb. But I'd give my left arm for a chance at Blackbeard."
and later after Blackbeard is defeated,
"All hands! Ply to windward! Get cracking, ye bloomin' cockroaches!
[laughs] The Crown served me well. But now, by the Gods of sea and
sky! Make way for Tortuga!"
Hector Barbossa returned to a life of piracy and at the beginning of Dead Men Tell No Tales, he's become 'the terror of seven sees' by use of Blackbeard's former sword and Queen Anne's Revenge...
He became the terror of the Seven Seas, pillaging the wealthy trade
ships and filling the holds of the Queen Anne's Revenge with treasures
beyond most men's wildest dreams. With the power of the Sword of
Triton, Barbossa finally fulfilled his old desire of living the life
of a rich rogue. He surrounded himself with riches, dressing himself
in finest uniforms he could steal, and even replaced his wooden peg
leg with one made of gold. He successfully took over the pirate
world, his name being whispered in fear across the Caribbean, and when
his Jolly Roger was spotted at sea, pirates and soldiers alike knew it
was only a matter of time before they were conquered.
It also becomes clear that there aren't many real challenges left and that he almost seems bored with this life style and it's the challenge of Salazar and reveal of Carina that seems to give the character some real meaning to his life back.
answered Oct 1 at 0:26
Darth LockeDarth Locke
17k2 gold badges38 silver badges86 bronze badges
17k2 gold badges38 silver badges86 bronze badges
1
I'm wondering, whether was Jack ever afraid of his old first mate..
– Vishwa
Oct 1 at 6:42
2
A golden peg leg seems... impractical.
– Kakturus
Oct 1 at 9:52
@Kakturus Aye, but it looked nice!
– Darth Locke
Oct 1 at 12:49
@Vishwa I think Jack's too perpetually drunk to be afraid of quite a lot of things he should be.
– user25730
Oct 1 at 23:17
@Vishwa the first film proposed if he was brilliant or just crazy. Between the second and third films he kind of breaks down via death/davy jones locker, but then kind of bounces back in the fourth film, only to completely loose it and become super scared (compass = thing you fear most) in the fifth film. I'm not even convinced it was Salazar that he was scared of, but the implications of undoing curses, such as bringing Davy Jones back as hinted at in the post credit scene.
– Darth Locke
Oct 2 at 13:12
|
show 2 more comments
1
I'm wondering, whether was Jack ever afraid of his old first mate..
– Vishwa
Oct 1 at 6:42
2
A golden peg leg seems... impractical.
– Kakturus
Oct 1 at 9:52
@Kakturus Aye, but it looked nice!
– Darth Locke
Oct 1 at 12:49
@Vishwa I think Jack's too perpetually drunk to be afraid of quite a lot of things he should be.
– user25730
Oct 1 at 23:17
@Vishwa the first film proposed if he was brilliant or just crazy. Between the second and third films he kind of breaks down via death/davy jones locker, but then kind of bounces back in the fourth film, only to completely loose it and become super scared (compass = thing you fear most) in the fifth film. I'm not even convinced it was Salazar that he was scared of, but the implications of undoing curses, such as bringing Davy Jones back as hinted at in the post credit scene.
– Darth Locke
Oct 2 at 13:12
1
1
I'm wondering, whether was Jack ever afraid of his old first mate..
– Vishwa
Oct 1 at 6:42
I'm wondering, whether was Jack ever afraid of his old first mate..
– Vishwa
Oct 1 at 6:42
2
2
A golden peg leg seems... impractical.
– Kakturus
Oct 1 at 9:52
A golden peg leg seems... impractical.
– Kakturus
Oct 1 at 9:52
@Kakturus Aye, but it looked nice!
– Darth Locke
Oct 1 at 12:49
@Kakturus Aye, but it looked nice!
– Darth Locke
Oct 1 at 12:49
@Vishwa I think Jack's too perpetually drunk to be afraid of quite a lot of things he should be.
– user25730
Oct 1 at 23:17
@Vishwa I think Jack's too perpetually drunk to be afraid of quite a lot of things he should be.
– user25730
Oct 1 at 23:17
@Vishwa the first film proposed if he was brilliant or just crazy. Between the second and third films he kind of breaks down via death/davy jones locker, but then kind of bounces back in the fourth film, only to completely loose it and become super scared (compass = thing you fear most) in the fifth film. I'm not even convinced it was Salazar that he was scared of, but the implications of undoing curses, such as bringing Davy Jones back as hinted at in the post credit scene.
– Darth Locke
Oct 2 at 13:12
@Vishwa the first film proposed if he was brilliant or just crazy. Between the second and third films he kind of breaks down via death/davy jones locker, but then kind of bounces back in the fourth film, only to completely loose it and become super scared (compass = thing you fear most) in the fifth film. I'm not even convinced it was Salazar that he was scared of, but the implications of undoing curses, such as bringing Davy Jones back as hinted at in the post credit scene.
– Darth Locke
Oct 2 at 13:12
|
show 2 more comments