I have thought about At
World’s End more than you have.
More specifically, I have thought about the writing that
went into At World’s End more than
you have. If you really, truly, think that you’ve expended more mental energy on this film’s
plot than me, there’s a good chance that you are either Gore Verbinski, Ted
Elliot, or Terry Rossio, in which case I would like to say hello, thank you for
reading, and that I am a big fan of your work.
In all seriousness, At
World’s End is a film that has vexed me for years – not because I hate it,
or even dislike it. I actually like it a lot. I simply remain convinced, down to the very core of my
being, that it could have been better, and for the life of me I cannot confidently
identify how.
Nevertheless, At World’s End turns ten years old this week, which means, as was the case with The Curse of the Black Pearl and Dead Man’s Chest before it, it’s time for me to finally try quantifying those thoughts for all you nice people to politely skim.
A word of warning: I am really going to be digging into this one. We’re going deep, especially at the end. That’s why I would advise you to re-watch the movie before reading this. However, given that the movie is three hours long, I have a backup plan. Namely, summarizing the plot as concisely and in as much detail as possible. The problem is... I don’t want to do that. It sounds hard. So to pick up the slack, I’ve once again called upon the help of my trusty first mate and reliable performer of thankless tasks: Mr. Joshamee Gibbs.
Nevertheless, At World’s End turns ten years old this week, which means, as was the case with The Curse of the Black Pearl and Dead Man’s Chest before it, it’s time for me to finally try quantifying those thoughts for all you nice people to politely skim.
A word of warning: I am really going to be digging into this one. We’re going deep, especially at the end. That’s why I would advise you to re-watch the movie before reading this. However, given that the movie is three hours long, I have a backup plan. Namely, summarizing the plot as concisely and in as much detail as possible. The problem is... I don’t want to do that. It sounds hard. So to pick up the slack, I’ve once again called upon the help of my trusty first mate and reliable performer of thankless tasks: Mr. Joshamee Gibbs.
"Take what ya can. Give nothin' back. Seriously, the job market's terrible. I'm doin' this on commission." |
Whenever you’re ready, sir!
Mr. Gibbs Says: The pirate world is starin’ down the barrel
of a full-on crisis. Lord Cutler Beckett, head of the East India Trading
Company, has gained command o’ the Flyin’ Dutchman, the scourge o’ the sea, and
is usin’ it to massacre pirate crews left an’ right. This is all according to
Beckett’s plan, o’ course, for by whittling down our options, we pirates are
forced to turn to our last resort: the Summoning Song is sung, and the Brethren
Court is called.
Meanwhile, in
Singapore, Jack’s crew (sans Jack, and plus one Hector Barbossa) seek an audience
with the Pirate Lord Sao Feng, hoping to be loaned a ship and some men, in
addition to certain very special navigational charts. Sadly – or should I say
luckily – the whole thing goes pear-shaped, and when the EITC attacks, it
finally occurs to Sao Feng just who the enemy of his enemy is.
From there, we travel
to the world’s end and brave Davy Jones’ Locker, where we find ourselves
reunited with our dear Cap’n. On the way home, Elizabeth catches a glimpse o’
her father, Governor Swann, who was killed after learnin’ too much about the
heart o’ Davy Jones. Turns out that whoever stabs the heart must give up ‘is
own and take Jones’ place. The Dutchman must have a captain, after all.
Back in the world of
the living, we enjoy the shortest of respites, durin’ which Barbossa convinces
Jack to join him at the Brethren Court. But soon enough, we encounter more bad
news. See, in all the commotion, Master Will – facing, as he was, both a
treason charge and the eternal torment of his twice-cursed father’s pirate soul
– had struck a deal with both Sao Feng AND Beckett, and both were lyin’ in wait
for us when we returned. Will’s offer was to hand over Jack in exchange for the
Pearl, the only ship on the seven seas fast enough to run down the Dutchman.
O’course, bein’ a pirate, Sao Feng isn’t exactly inclined to follow through on
his half of the bargain, takin’ the Pearl for hisself. O’course, bein’ a
conniving businessman with no moral compass t’ speak of, Beckett gets the same
idea. No sooner has Sao Feng wrested the Pearl from Will’s grasp than he loses
it in turn.
Onboard Beckett’s
flagship, the Endeavor, Jack strikes up a deal o’ his own: he’ll lead Beckett
to this mass gathering of pirates, on the condition that he be spared in the
massacre Beckett has planned. Surely he simply forgot to include his loyal
first mate in that assessment.
Barbossa does manage
to reason with Sao Feng, bringin’ him back into the pirate fold by revealing
the Ace he’s got hidden up his sleeve: Calypso, a goddess bound in human form, powerful
enough to stop Jones, Beckett, and the EITC – but it’ll take the entire
Brethren Court to free her. Sao Feng agrees, though he insists on takin’ a
little leverage along: in this case, Miss Elizabeth, who the Pirate Lord had
erroneously pegged as bein’ the goddess Barbossa spoke of.
The mistake be a reasonable one, says I. |
T’ make a long story
short, we reclaim the Pearl, make a daring escape from Beckett’s forces, and
split up with Sao Feng, both headed to Shipwreck Cove, where the Brethren Court
hold… er… court, I s’pose. The Pearl is swift, but Sao Feng’s ship, the
Empress, ain’t so lucky, as it falls victim to Jones and his Dutchman. A dying
Sao Feng passes his Piece of Eight on to Elizabeth, makin’ her one o’ the nine
Pirate Lords, as she and the rest o’ the survivors are brought aboard the ghost
ship. There she encounters Will’s father, ol’ Bootstrap Bill, who warns her
once more about the curse that awaits Jones’ killer.
O’course, for good ol’
Jack, that curse is lookin’ more and more like an opportunity: an eternal life
on the sea – with one day ashore every ten years, to stock up on rum and other
such essentials. He says as much to Master Will, after catchin’ him in the act
of leaving his own trail for Beckett. With a wink and a shove, he sends Will
over the edge, a victim of his own treachery.
Back on the Dutchman,
Elizabeth and her crew are freed by the lady’s erstwhile fiancé, Admiral James
Norrington – now in Beckett’s employ – though the gesture costs ‘im his life.
Will, meanwhile, gets picked up by the Endeavor, where he discovers that Jones
hisself was the one who taught the Brethren Court how to imprison Calypso, his
former lover. Will demands he, Elizabeth, and his father all walk free. In
exchange, he’ll guide Beckett to Shipwreck Cove, using the magic compass that
tricky Jack had slipped him.
As the Brethren Court
prepares to meet, Tia Dalma (née Calypso) reminds Barbossa that she didn’t
bring him back to life out o’ the kindness o’ her heart. She wants to be freed,
so she can take revenge on those who imprisoned her those eons ago. Hector makes
his case to the Court, but Elizabeth favors all-out war, an action that only a
Pirate King may declare. Jack, notin’ that parley also falls under a Pirate
King’s jurisdiction, calls for a vote, and casts his ballot for Elizabeth,
breakin’ a potential nine-way tie. King Swann sets up a meetin' with Beckett and Jones, exchangin' Jack for Will and puttin’ him aboard the Dutchman, just as the Cap’n
wanted.
Barbossa, over
Elizabeth’s protestations, performs the ceremony to free Calypso. Will tells
her o’ Jones’ betrayal, and she slips away into the sea, causin’ the mightiest
storm this old hand’s ever seen.
The Pearl and the
Dutchman take each other on, though Will and Elizabeth, in a case o’ what I
would call questionable priorities, find the time to join hands in holy
matrimony. By and by, Jack finds hisself holdin’ Davy Jones’ heart hostage,
only for the squid-faced fiend to create a whole new mess by stabbin’ poor
Master Will through the heart. Facin’ a tough choice, the Cap’n allows young William
to stab the heart in his place, and the storm breaks as Jones, now dead, falls
into the drink.
With the Dutchman now
under Will’s command, it and the Pearl broadside the Endeavor, destroying it
and killing Beckett. The rest of his fleet turns tail, leaving the age o’
Piracy to continue on just a mite longer.
…
Whew. Everybody okay?
As you can see, this is a plot that features a lot of moving
parts, especially near the middle. Everyone kind of explodes out in all
directions to whizz around for a while before suddenly regrouping. Which is
pretty standard for storytelling. After all, if the first act is about
establishing a problem, and the third act is about solving it, the second act
should, in theory, be about acquiring the tools – both mental and physical –
that are necessary to solve it. What strikes me about this particular story,
then, is that when you break it down, not that many tools are acquired during
that middle bit, and the ones that are tend to be pieces of information. (One
of those pieces of information – that whoever stabs the heart of Davy Jones
must become the Dutchman’s new captain – is acquired extremely early on, and
yet goes on to be acquired a second time after that. Perhaps just to make sure
we don’t forget?)
Instead, the priority seems to be maneuvering the various
pieces into their proper positions for the endgame. The result is a movie that
has a lot happening to little effect, or at least relatively inconsequential effect.
Take, for instance, the three-person scene between Will, Beckett, and Jones
aboard the Endeavor. I do quite like it, not least of all because it features
this exchange:
“You betrayed her.”
“SHE betrayed ME!”
“And after which betrayal did you cut out your heart, I wonder?”
Oh, snap. |
Nice, right? It’s a well-written line, and it shades in
Jones’ character. But the only thing that scene truly accomplishes is revealing to Will – and the audience – that
Jones taught the Brethren Court how to bind Calypso. Will also hands over
Jack’s compass to Beckett, allowing him to find Shipwreck Cove, but both Will
and Jack had already promised to lead him there, and Will was doing so from
aboard the Pearl. So the question becomes: is this revelation about Jones
information that Will, specifically,
needs to know? He does use it later in the film to send Calypso after Jones and
the Dutchman, but that storm-whirlpool combo isn’t exactly what I’d call a
targeted attack. So I would have to say that, no, it is not.
And yet, what happens to make this scene possible?
Mr. Gibbs Says: First things first, the Cap’n needs to throw
Master Will overboard. That’s simple enough, o’course, but then, ol’ Jack’s
never come across a task he couldn’t approach with a hearty bit o’ flair. So it
still takes a couple o’ minutes. Subsequent to that, he has to find his way
back to us, which Elizabeth manages during the parley, when she hands Jack over
to Jones as an exchange. Naturally, the Code is quite clear on the fact that
only a Pirate King can call fer such a parley, which means we find ourselves
needin’ to backtrack even farther, and ensure that Elizabeth finds herself on the
Empress when the time comes for Sao Feng to shuffle off this mortal coil. And THAT
bit o’ difficulty can’t be sorted out unless Sao Feng believes, at least for a
time, that our fair Elizabeth and the goddess Calypso are one and the same.
It’s all a bit… much.
I want to be clear – this isn’t sloppy writing. Every action
is motivated, with nothing happening simply because it ‘has to.’ And these intricate
gambits are executed with a high degree of elegance. One little bit of
intricacy that I love is the fact that the sword Will gets stabbed with in the
end is the very same sword he makes for Norrington in the first film, and that
Norrington uses to justify dropping the charges against him in its final scene.
That’s pretty neat. No, my argument is simply that intricate gambits aren’t
necessary in the telling of this story. Because, in spite of the way Mr. Gibbs
made it sound, the plot of this film is extremely simple. To be honest, from
beginning to end, only four things truly NEED to happen.
- Jack needs to be brought back from the Locker, so that the Brethren Court can be assembled (and also because we miss him).
- The Brethren Court needs to meet, so that they can declare war on Beckett and Barbossa can collect his Pieces of Eight.
- Beckett needs to find Shipwreck Cove, so that he can engage the pirates in battle.
- Jack and Will need to get aboard the Flying Dutchman, so that one of them can stab the heart of Davy Jones.
Everything else that happens, with the minor exception of
Barbossa’s Calypso subplot, is simply a means to one of these ends. The chain
of events I just laid out, while ultimately tying into the Calypso element as
well, mostly occurs to facilitate that fourth goal of getting Jack on the
Dutchman for the climax. By contrast, how does Will get on the Dutchman?
He swings aboard on a rope during the battle.
Kinda makes you wonder if Jack could have done that as well.
So, okay. It’s pretty convoluted, but that’s fine, as long
as the logic checks out (it does, mostly – but we’ll get back to that), and as
long as the character work is strong enough to make us care. In other words,
it’s time for my favorite subject: arcs.
Pirates, Cursed Seamen, and Trade Magnates: What Are Their Arcs? Do They Have Arcs?? Let's Find Out! |
As was the case with Dead Man’s Chest before it, At World’s End tries to be more of an
ensemble movie than one built around a single protagonist. This time, we divide
things up even more, offering us five characters with five different sets of
goals.
- WILL needs THE BLACK PEARL to KILL DAVY JONES and SAVE HIS FATHER
- BARBOSSA needs JACK to ASSEMBLE THE BRETHREN COURT and FREE CALYPSO
- BECKETT needs ALL PIRATES IN ONE PLACE so that he can KILL THEM
- JACK needs TO BE ALIVE AGAIN so that he can LIVE FOREVER
- ELIZABETH is PRETTY MUCH JUST ALONG FOR THE RIDE AFTER ACT ONE
As we already noted, this makes the plot nice and twisty and
(relatively) engaging, but it also makes it difficult to find an emotional
through line. It would be nice if we could put the focus back on Will as we
close out the trilogy, or even make Elizabeth the main protagonist, just so
that everyone in the core trio gets a turn. But while our two star-crossed
lovers certainly have the most things happen
to them – as I said once before, they end the film as Pirate Grim Reaper
and Pirate King, respectively – neither one undergoes any notable growth as a person. Elizabeth absolutely comes
into her own as a capable woman who has surpassed any need of rescuing, but
she’s arrived at that point before the film starts. (She might even have arrived
at that point before the last film ended.)
As for Will… y’know, he sure is there on screen. Walking around. Doing stuff.
He really wants to save his dad, that Will. Good for him.
Pictured: Will Turner, doing his best |
This all means that, once again, our hopes for a traditional
protagonist rest on the shoulders of Captain Jack Sparrow. And, once again, Jack’s
arc actually looks pretty good, in theory. It even does a lot to salvage the
seemingly arc-derailing send-off that he got in the second movie. Let’s look at
it while adding in the context from that earlier film:
Mr. Gibbs Says: The poor Cap’n’s been havin’ a rough go of things. After bein’ raked over the coals for his selfishness, Jack finally does something to help someone besides hisself, and it proves to be the death of him – in a sadly non-metaphorical sense. After his so-called friends (and faithful crew) miraculously return him to the world of the living, only to reveal that they got selfish reasons o’ their own, he decides that bein’ charitable just ain’t his bag. He’ll be looking out for hisself, first and foremost, and that means makin’ sure he never, EVER finds himself in that Locker a second time. And yet, at film’s end, with immortality restin’ in the palm of his hand – again, in a distinctly non-metaphorical sense – he chooses to be selfless, and gives it up for the sake o’ love. Someone else’s love, at that.
Mr. Gibbs Says: The poor Cap’n’s been havin’ a rough go of things. After bein’ raked over the coals for his selfishness, Jack finally does something to help someone besides hisself, and it proves to be the death of him – in a sadly non-metaphorical sense. After his so-called friends (and faithful crew) miraculously return him to the world of the living, only to reveal that they got selfish reasons o’ their own, he decides that bein’ charitable just ain’t his bag. He’ll be looking out for hisself, first and foremost, and that means makin’ sure he never, EVER finds himself in that Locker a second time. And yet, at film’s end, with immortality restin’ in the palm of his hand – again, in a distinctly non-metaphorical sense – he chooses to be selfless, and gives it up for the sake o’ love. Someone else’s love, at that.
Like I said, that’s pretty good. I would rather the arc not
have to span two movies, but the breaking point is well chosen, and length is
essentially the only reason these are two movies anyway. What I’m getting at
is, he has an interesting, nuanced starting point, and an ending point that
provides closure. The difference between those starting and ending points is
substantial enough to be satisfying, but small enough to make sense. That’s the
frame of a good arc.
The problem, then, is that Jack’s movement through this arc isn’t very well motivated. You could argue that not a single thing that happens in this entire, two hour and fifty minute movie moves him in a direction where he would be willing to make that sacrifice. Elizabeth does nothing to make amends for her betrayal, Will doesn’t seem inclined to forgive and forget being handed over to Jones, and Jack shows no affection towards either one of them. In fact, if you’ll forgive the tangent, I would go so far as to say that none of the relationships, between any of the characters, are advanced at all in this film. For a movie this long – and one that closes out a trilogy, no less – that’s not great. The characters work with one another to further their own goals, but for Jack in particular, that’s true of literally anybody. And it means that all of our de facto hero’s growth happens in that singular moment aboard the Dutchman. His arc is… well, not really an arc so much as a choice.
The problem, then, is that Jack’s movement through this arc isn’t very well motivated. You could argue that not a single thing that happens in this entire, two hour and fifty minute movie moves him in a direction where he would be willing to make that sacrifice. Elizabeth does nothing to make amends for her betrayal, Will doesn’t seem inclined to forgive and forget being handed over to Jones, and Jack shows no affection towards either one of them. In fact, if you’ll forgive the tangent, I would go so far as to say that none of the relationships, between any of the characters, are advanced at all in this film. For a movie this long – and one that closes out a trilogy, no less – that’s not great. The characters work with one another to further their own goals, but for Jack in particular, that’s true of literally anybody. And it means that all of our de facto hero’s growth happens in that singular moment aboard the Dutchman. His arc is… well, not really an arc so much as a choice.
There’s a charitable reading of this somewhere; while we can
throw out the idea that Jack has always been a fundamentally good person –
remember that he previously served Will to Davy Jones on a silver platter – he does always have his own best interests
at heart. And I can see him being self-aware enough to recognize that this
time, a selfless act really will be to his benefit in the long run. As his
father points out to him, it’s not just about living forever. It’s about living
with yourself, forever.
I honestly don’t know if I like that suggestion enough to
forgive the misstep overall, because, as in the last movie, we can clearly see
those dominoes being set up over the course of the first hour. But I will say
that it’s close. It’s very close.
I don’t have much else left to say, except for one minor
point. So in the spirit of the film, I’m going to use that one minor point to
justify the inclusion of… well, of just a whole big thing. You’ll see.
There is a MAJOR plot hole in this film that I’m amazed no
one else has picked up on, if only because there are scenes upon scenes
dedicated to otherwise filling the space it occupies. Lord Beckett, after
successfully forcing his opponents’ hand and bringing about a meeting of the
Brethren Court, is in need of someone to lead him to their location. Over the
course of the film, both Jack and
Will promise to do this, and both of them fulfill that promise in their own
way. At least half of the second act is dedicated to it, and this bargaining
chip is the only reason Jack even escapes his confrontation with Beckett alive.
Given that so many moving pieces go into his acquisition of this information, one
gets the sense that Shipwreck Cove must be impossibly difficult for outsiders
to find.
If only Beckett had an ally who had been there before.
Say, someone who had attended the very first meeting of the
Brethren Court.
*Cough Cough* |
Yeah. I don’t know what to tell you.
OR DO I?
Four years ago, in my first real post on this blog, I made the claim that At World’s End is about as well-told as it could possibly be, short of a page one rewrite.
Four years ago, in my first real post on this blog, I made the claim that At World’s End is about as well-told as it could possibly be, short of a page one rewrite.
So guess what I did?
No, it’s not REALLY a page one rewrite, but it definitely
involves some substantial changes. Let’s just say that if my version went
through WGA arbitration, I’d get a writing credit for sure. But I’m tired. So
to lay it all out for you, I’m once again going to give Mr. Gibbs the floor.
Mr. Gibbs Says: Before I say anythin’ more, we’re gonna have
to make some changes lookin’ back. A year ago, I suggested an alternate ending
to our last bit of excitement what ended with Cap’n Jack’s untimely demise.
We’re going to assume, for our purposes, that this ending holds true, minus th' part where the Dutchman's crew goes free. And if’n
you don’t feel like going back to check, suffice it to say that both the Kraken
and Davy Jones are dead. Perhaps that sounds drastic to ye, but trust me, I
know what I’m doin’.
That exchange aboard
the Endeavor that we quoted above and all agreed was so nice? We’ll change it,
just a touch, so it’s not so obviously Calypso bein’ discussed, and slot it
into the last movie in place of the Liar’s Dice scene, which I never liked
anyway.
Now then.
For a time at the
beginning o’ this version, we’re gonna play coy about who’s captaining the
Dutchman in Jones’ absence. Point o’ fact, that be the secret that Elizabeth’s
father is killed for learnin’: not that the heart MUST be replaced, only that
it HAS been.
The rest o’ the first
hour wouldn’t change much, until we return from the Locker. Rather than a
triple alliance, between Sao Feng, Will, and Beckett, Will has made separate
alliances with each of ‘em, promising the Pearl to Sao Feng and Sao Feng (plus
Jack) to Beckett. I reckon that gives Sao Feng more incentive t’ join us in the
end, and clears up what everyone thought they were getting outta the deal. I
fer one never understood why Sao Feng would want to risk a deal with Beckett
when his only leverage was the promise of a lone, already-dead pirate. When we
split up, both Elizabeth AND Will would go with Sao Feng – one as an honored
guest, the other in the brig.
When the Dutchman
attacks… aye, that’s where things get tricky. I can’t seem to shake the thought
that Will shoulda been the one to become a Pirate Lord and then Pirate King –
both for irony’s sake, given his hatred o’ pirates back in th' first film, and
because his later death would return the Brethren Court to its status quo. But
the title suits Elizabeth just as well, makin’ this, essentially, a matter o’
preference. What really matters is the revelation o’ the Dutchman’s new
commanding officers: Ian Mercer, Beckett’s attack dog of a right-hand man,
acting under the supervision of one James Norrington.
Elizabeth has the same
confrontation with Norrington in regard to her father’s death, but now Master
Will has a chance to speak with his father, face to waterlogged face. It’s here
that we learn, fer the first time, that only the Dutchman’s captain can free a
member of its crew, and that killin’ the captain brings about dire
consequences. I reckon ye can be nice an’ leisurely-like with this sequence,
considerin’ that the relationships between those on board are stronger, and
there be no threat o’ Jones hangin’ over everyone’s head. When Norrington does
eventually let the prisoners go, he belays Bootstrap’s attempt to raise an
alarm, an order ye figure the elder Turner must be happy t’ obey. (I always did
wonder how Elizabeth escaped the way she did, with the Dutchman’s crew on high
alert and barely a minute’s head start.) When Mercer tries to give Norrington
hell for it in the morning, the Admiral calls his bluff, sayin’ only that
Beckett would be mighty cross should he end up dead.
From here, ye can either
have Jack leave a trail for Beckett as he promised, or have William do it from the
Empress, layin’ the groundwork for a deal with Mercer. Again, it’s a question
o’ preference. (Though notice that with Jones out o’ the picture, the thought
of Beckett needin’ help to find our hideaway regains its significance.)
When our trio reunites
at Shipwreck Cove, Jack learns of this new possible immortality, and his clever
mind gets right to work. He jumps ship on the Calypso idea, so t’ speak, and
backs Will’s (or Elizabeth’s) plan for war. Once the king be elected (whichever
o’ the two ye like), Jack sneaks off alone to board the Dutchman. No doubt
gettin’ caught and tryin’ t’ invoke parley his own damned self.
Changes t’ the final
battle would be minor, to a point. Jack fights Mercer for the key rather than
Jones, but there still be a whole mess o’ confusion about. Will duels with
Norrington, but when the Admiral nearly strikes down Elizabeth, come to help,
Will acts on instinct and stabs his wife’s former fiancé through the chest,
revealing that HIS – not Mercer’s – is the heart bound to the Dutchman.
Ol’ Jack arrives on
the scene, heart in one hand, dagger in t’other, but Elizabeth pleads with the
Cap’n not to do it. Norrington, if ye can believe it, feels less strongly about
the whole thing. He doesn’t much care fer bein’ cursed, y’see, and welcomes
Jack takin’ his place if that’s what he really wants. T’ prove his point, he
drops his sword. Furious, a disarmed Mercer scoops the sword up and plants it
into the nearest torso, which happens t’ belong to poor William. Seein’ this,
Bootstrap dives on Mercer and… well, let’s just say he kills ‘im.
Observin’ his former
love’s grief, Norrington offers his heart to Will – if Jack be willin’ to hand
it over, that is. All eyes turn to him, and o’course, he does the right thing
in the end. A dyin’ Norrington says his farewell to Elizabeth, and plunges into
the sea, his sacrifice in the name o’ love calming Calypso’s fury an’ ending
the storm. (I like the thought o’ seein’ his corpse send out a shockwave once it’s beneath the waves, sort of a parallel to Elizabeth’s necklace at the
start o’ the first film. Bookends, and all that.)
The rest would play
out just as it did. After all, if ye change EVERY part o’ somethin’, is it even
that thing anymore? Huh. How’s that for a paradox? Came up with that meself, I
did. Think I’ll call it the Ship O’ Gibbs Paradox. Aye.
So there you have it. A trilogy of films four years in the
making becomes a trilogy of blogposts four years in the making. I feel like I
should say something poetic to put a nice bow on things... but like I said, I’m
tired. Mr. Cotton, you can have the last word. Don’t waste it.
"*Squawk!* Abandon ship! Abandon ship! *Squawk!*" Oh, that's real nice. |