LOTRFan said:
We are introduced to his father, but with little consequence but a lame gag with mom's shrunken head - not to mention the initial gag being Richards himself.
While I would agree that Richards entire casting is due to Deep's interview after Pearl acknowledging him, I disagree about him being nothing more than a gag. He tells Jack (and forgive me if I paraphrase this wrong), "It's not about living forever, m'boy, it's about being able to live with what ya done." This, to me, signaled a change in Jack that lead to him sacrificing his chance at being cursed in order to save Will.
LOTRFan said:
For the entire movie Jack is nothing more than a delusional, schizophrenic, talking to himself or otherwise being the source of lame gags. He is NOT the witty, scheming character we saw in the first film, and lacks any real intelligence whatsoever. There is a glimpse of greatness when he meets with Beckett, but sadly, we see him slip right back into the half-wit he becomes.
Were we watching the same movie? Jack set up all of the "endgame" encounters. His "bargaining" with Beckett was but a small part in the grand scheme. Lets look at it all.
1.) Without Jack (and to an extent, Teague), the Brethren would never have called for the Pirate King vote.
2.) This one relates to 1, but without Jack's shrewd planning, would Elizabeth have become the Pirate King? Do you think it was just luck that Jack was in a position to vote for Elizabeth ... the only one who was willing to vote for an attack?
3.) Without Jack's help, Will would have never been able to bargain with Beckett. In fact, without Jack giving him his compass, Will would have had nothing to bargain with in the first place. I love the line after he gets the compass, "What am I suppose to do with this?" Jack replies, "Once you start thinking like me, you will know what to do with it."
4.) Do you think it was also an accident that Jack went with Elizabeth and Barbossa to the meeting before the battle? As his hallucinatory image tells him, "well, you planned worked to get aboard, but what now?" While this was probably still part of his plan to become the Captain of the Flying Dutchman, it was an truly inspired plan.
5.) Related to number 4, but exactly how do the pirates get to the Heart without Jack being aboard the Dutchman? And without Jack, who helps Will stab the heart, there by saving Will's life?
I am sorry, but I think that the Jack in part 3 is a league above the Jack in part 1. Maybe his madness or the realizations of being dead made him more effective ... who knows. If you didn't like the movie, I am fine with that. It's your opinion. But, to say he wasn't shrewd or witty doesn't make sense to me.