Pirates Movie 2005 __link__ Official

They sail off on a patched-together junk. No sequel was ever made. But on DVD forums in 2006, fans wrote hundreds of pages of fan-fiction. And if you listen closely, you can still hear them arguing: Who would win in a fight—Jack Sparrow or Raya Malikai?

It was 2005. Pirates weren’t cool yet. Not really. Then The Last Galleon of the Sunda Sea hit theaters—and vanished. It wasn’t a blockbuster. It wasn’t even a hit. But for those who caught it on the bottom shelf of Blockbuster, wedged between Cutthroat Island and The Master of Ballantrae , it was magic. pirates movie 2005

The Galuh Pusaka isn't a ship. It's a sunken reef shaped like a galleon, its coral "bones" grown around the real treasure: a sealed porcelain jar. Inside is not gold, but the sultan's surat chiri —a letter of marque written on silk. It grants the holder the right to rule the Sunda as a free port, independent of any crown. They sail off on a patched-together junk

The movie opens on a churning monsoon. Captain Thomas Ashworth (played with grizzled weariness by a pre- Casino Royale Daniel Craig) is being drummed out of the Royal Navy. His crime? Refusing to fire on a sinking pirate skiff full of women and children. His punishment: a rotting sloop, a crew of convicts, and a mission to chart the "empty" waters of the Sunda. And if you listen closely, you can still