List of Pirates of the Caribbean characters

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This is a list of minor characters appearing in the film series Pirates of the Caribbean.

The Black Pearl under Hector Barbossa

This crew of the Black Pearl was originally raised and captained by Jack Sparrow. A decade prior to The Curse of the Black Pearl, they all supported Hector Barbossa's mutiny and soon after that, all of them became cursed after taking a piece from the cursed Aztec treasure. The curse made them immortal, but also resulted them in the impossibility to feel, taste or smell anything. In Lunar light, the cursed crew turn into rotten skeletons (dead on the inside). The curse was broken, and the ship fell into the hands of Jack once again. At the end of the third film, At World's End, it is back in the hands of Barbossa, although it was more like stealing than mutiny, somehow representing the reconciliation between the once-feuding captains.

Bo'sun

Bo'sun is the Boatswain (Bosun is the colloquial pronunciation of Boatswain) of Captain Barbossa's crew, played by Isaac C. Singleton, Jr. and voiced by Fred Tatasciore in Pirates of the Caribbean: The Legend of Jack Sparrow. He is a large African man, covered in ritual scarring. These scars and his thick accent suggested that he was brought to the Caribbean as a slave. He is the De Facto second in command of Barbossa, who led an assault on H.M.S. Interceptor. He seems to dislike Pintel and Ragetti and takes great delight in humiliating them, at one point forcing them to dress in women's clothing to distract H.M.S. Dauntless. He was on board the H.M.S. Dauntless Pirate enemies in the Port Royal world of Kingdom Hearts II, voiced by Beau Billingslea. In a battle, he fights using two hand-axes, though he draws a cutlass on Barbossa when the crew question Barbossa's command after Elizabeth's blood fails to lift the curse.

Clubba

Clubba is one of Barbossa's crew, played by David Patykewich. He is a large bald pirate with an earring in his left ear. He was one of the main raiders at Port Royal and is later seen aboard the Dauntless and on the Isla de Muerta. Toward the end of the film he is impaled on a pole along with Monk and Jacoby while in skeletal form and then pushed out of the moonlight, where the three are finished off by one of Jacoby's bombs.

Grapple

Grapple appeared in The Curse of the Black Pearl, played by Trevor Goddard. He earns his nick-name because he fights with a large grappling iron, as well as a small axe. He is paired with Mallot. He fights with Will Turner during the siege at Port Royal, during which a falling sign knocks him through a shop window, and later in his skeleton form terrorizes Elizabeth Swann aboard the Black Pearl by swinging with her through the air on a rope. He is also responsible for holding a struggling Will back while Elizabeth is being marooned alongside Jack. Near the end of the film, he and Mallot are left aboard the Black Pearl to guard the prisoners, and were knocked into the ocean after Elizabeth helps the prisoners escape.

A deleted scene shows Grapple and Mallot having a brief argument over sharing the cake as their first meal after the anticipated removal of the curse.

Jack the Monkey

Jack, a capuchin monkey, appears in all three films. The crew named him after their former captain, Jack Sparrow (a homage to Treasure Island, in which Silver's parrot was named after Captain Flint). He is Barbossa's pet and sails with him aboard the Black Pearl. Like the rest of the crew, he is cursed, turning undead in lunar light and bestowed with indestructibility. Jack became mortal again when Will lifted the curse, but in an Easter egg following the first film's credits, Jack is shown swimming back into the cave, where he steals an Aztec coin, becoming cursed again. Jack's choice to reclaim the cursed gold and therefore the curse, suggests that, all evidence to the contrary, he is immune to the negatives of the curse; possibly because he is in fact not human; or perhaps he values immortality over pleasures and vices.

The recursed Jack appears in an early scene of Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest. The Black Pearl crew like to shoot him, since he is immortal. Jack is later captured and bartered to Tia Dalma, in exchange for information about Davy Jones. Mr. Gibbs protests when Tia Dalma releases the monkey from his cage, saying, "You have no idea how long it took us to catch that!" Jack scampers into a back room and climbs atop a black boot, apparently belonging to Barbossa. When the resurrected Barbossa reveals himself at the film's conclusion, Jack is once again perched upon his master's shoulder.

In At World's End, Jack serves mainly as a comic relief character. He sets a chain reaction of fire-works explosions off that rescues the crew in Singapore. When Barbossa, Elizabeth, Will, Jack, and Mr. Gibbs aim guns at each other after their escape from Davy Jones's locker, Jack the Monkey points a pistol at Cotton's parrot to which the parrot squawks "Parlay." In the scene where the crew finds Jack Sparrow in Davey Jone's Locker, he asks, "Isn't there anyone who came to rescue me just because they missed me?" Jack was one of the few to say yes. In the maelstorm scene, he is shot from a cannon by Pintel and Ragetti (being undead, this does not harm him) and attacks Maccus. Whenever he assists anyone in battle, they usually respond by saying "Thank you, Jack."

In Curse of the Black Pearl, Jack is played by Tara, a ten-year-old female capuchin, and Levi, an eight-year-old male.[citation needed] The skeletal monkey was added in post-production by Industrial Light and Magic. In Dead Man's Chest and At World's End, Jack is played by Boo Boo, a twelve-year-old male and Mercedes, a ten-year-old female.[citation needed] The capuchin used on "At World's End" was Mercedes, renamed by Hollywood Chiquita, a female who sat on Geoffrey Rush's shoulder at the premiere of "At World's End". The monkeys are white-throated capuchins (Cebus capuchinus), obtained in Pennsylvania. They were trained by Boone's Animals for Hollywood, Inc.[citation needed] According to Keira Knightley, on the Knightley/Davenport commentary on "Black Pearl", the capuchins were very difficult to work with because they were easily distracted. Keira said, "Oh, and that monkey! I want...to stuff...the monkey!" Reportedly, actor Geoffrey Rush, who played Barbossa, would patiently wait for the capuchin to look in the direction it was supposed to, then deliver his lines.[citation needed] On some occasions, the monkeys were squirted with water guns to grab their attention.[citation needed] It is said in the commentary that Geoffrey Rush was accidentally hit by water a few times.

Jack the Monkey, was made as a plush by Disney World. He was also made as a plush both as a regular monkey and as a skeleton by Sega for its At World's End plush line. There are also toy figures of Jack in the Zizzle's wave four of Pirates of the Caribbean action figures packed alongside Marty, and in Mega Bloks' Singapore Escape set.

Jacoby

Jacoby only appeared in The Curse of the Black Pearl, played by Vince Lozano. His gimmick is throwing hand grenades, and his long black beard is almost always wreathed with smoke as if aflame, a gimmick inspired from the real pirate Blackbeard. He is one of the first clues that there is something abnormal about Barbossa and his men: during the siege of Port Royal, Will hits him in the back with a hatchet and "kills" him, but then Jacoby turns up alive and a short time later, laughs and waves at a flabbergasted Will. At the end of the movie, Jacoby ends up skewered on a metal pole with two other pirates while in their skeleton forms and Will and Elizabeth stick one of Jacoby's grenades into his ribcage and then shove all three of them out of the light, trapping the explosive inside his now flesh-covered self as it explodes, taking him and the two other Pirates with it. Before his demise, Jacoby, with smoke coming out of his mouth looks directly into the camera and whimpers, "No fair!" He is called Blackbeard on the commentary by Keira Knightley.

He is used as one of the Cursed Pirate enemies in the Port Royal world of Kingdom Hearts II, voiced by John DiMaggio. He is also a boss in the video game Pirates of the Caribbean: The Legend of Jack Sparrow.

Koehler

Koehler appears in The Curse of the Black Pearl, played by Treva Etienne & voiced by Fred Tatasciore in The Legend of Jack Sparrow. He is a skinny African man with dreadlocks. He is one of the first clues that there is something abnormal about Barbossa and his men: when he and Twigg encounter Jack in the dungeon after mistaking it for the armory, Jack tells them, "The deepest circle of Hell is reserved for betrayers and mutineers." Whereupon, Koehler reaches through the bars and seizes Jack by the throat, telling him he knows nothing of Hell. As Koehler's arm passes through a shaft of moonlight, it becomes skeletal, proving there is a curse.

Koehler is one of the pirates who briefly considers overthrowing Barbossa after the failed ritual to restore their mortality, claiming that every decision he has made led from bad to worse. But Barbossa stands firm and quells the mutiny. It is Koehler and Twigg who rig H.M.S. Interceptor to explode. At the end, Koehler and Twigg are among the pirates who walk underwater to the H.M.S. Dauntless and board her. During the battle, Koehler fights with Commodore James Norrington and is impaled by him, thus being mortally wounded when the curse is lifted, and he becomes the first pirate to die during the battle.

Mallot

Mallot appears in The Curse of the Black Pearl, and was played by Brye Cooper. He wields a large mallet for a weapon and is paired with Grapple. When Barbossa's crew is considering mutiny upon discovering Elizabeth is not immediately related to "Bootstrap" Bill Turner, he points out that Barbossa was the one who ordered Bill to be thrown over-board and thus lost, only furthering the pirate's time as being cursed. At the end of the film, he and Grapple are left aboard the Black Pearl to guard the prisoners and are knocked into the ocean by Elizabeth and Sparrow's crew after Elizabeth helps them escape.

A deleted scene shows Mallot and Grapple having a brief argument over sharing the cake as their first meal after the anticipated removal of the curse. Mallot is featured twice as a level boss in Pirates of the Caribbean: The Legend of Jack Sparrow.

Monk

Monk appears in the first film. He is a bald pirate, and has a tattoo on his chin. He fights with a sword, and was seen yelling "C'mon, you go!" when his crew raids Port Royal. He also appears harassing Elizabeth after the Interceptor is sunk. He fights Will Turner on the Isla de Muerta, alongside Jacoby. He is defeated when he is trapped on the metal pole with Jacoby, who is about to explode.

Scarus

Scarus was played by Tommy Schooler. When the British Navy won the battle on board the H.M.S. Dauntless, Governor Weatherby Swann wagged his finger at Scarus then brandished his fists at him pretending a punch.

Scratch

Scratch, played by Finius Egun, is one of the cursed pirates serving under Barbossa. He has blonde dreadlocks and wears an orange coat. He fights with a dagger and sometimes with a sword. He was seen during the raid on Port Royal and on Isla de Muerta when they tried to break both the curse with Elizabeth and Will. He is first seen behind Twigg durind the raid on Port Royal. He is also seen on the Black Pearl's bow when they attack the Interceptor.

Twigg

Twigg is a cursed pirate who only appeared in The Curse of the Black Pearl. He appears to be friends with Koehler as they are often seen together. He helped Koehler raid an armoury during the attack on Port Royal and also helped him rig the H.M.S. Interceptor with explosives. Although Koehler is killed in the battle aboard the H.M.S. Dauntless when the curse is lifted, Twigg and the other pirates surrender. He is played by Michael Berry Jr. Twigg's character is one of the cursed pirate enemies in the Port Royal world of Kingdom Hearts II.

The Interceptor and the Black Pearl under Jack Sparrow

Anamaria

Anamaria is played by Zoë Saldaña and is first seen in Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl. Her name is not a blending of the first names of two documented female pirates, Anne Bonny and Mary Read, but the middle name of one of screenwriter Terry Rossio's daughter. However, like Read and Bonny, Anamaria disguises herself as a man in order to join Captain Sparrow's crew. She does not make a reappearance in the sequel, Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest and is last seen in the final scene of Curse of the Black Pearl. 'She's off sailing in the Interceptor' explained Terry, as a possible explanation for why she is not in Dead Man's Chest or At World's End, though the ship that Anamaria sails off in cannot be the H.M.S. Interceptor as it was destroyed at the end of Curse of the Black Pearl, but this could also be construed as an idiom for her demise. Some fans believe that maybe she was Jack Sparrow's girlfriend or such before he met Giselle/Scarlett.

In the first film, Anamaria's first act at meeting Jack for the second time is to slap him across the face and accuse him of stealing her boat (which is confirmed on the Pirates of the Caribbean DVD game to be the boat that sank at the Port Royal harbor at the beginning of the movie). Jack would defend himself by claiming he was 'borrowing without permission' and promises to turn over the H.M.S. Interceptor to her as compensation. Anamaria agrees, although the H.M.S. Interceptor is later sunk during a sea battle with Barbossa, who was commanding the Black Pearl at that time. She appears to be the Black Pearl's second mate and bo'sun. When Jack is not on board the ship, she (along with Gibbs, the implied first mate) assumes command, manning the helm and shouting orders. At the end of the film, she places Jack's coat around his shoulders and offers him the wheel, willingly giving him back his position as rightful captain of the Black Pearl. She does not appear in the sequels, and many fans have assumed that Jack kept his promise and got her another ship or boat.

Cotton and his Parrot

Cotton is one of the pirates Jack Sparrow and Joshamee Gibbs hire at Tortuga in Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl. He had his tongue cut out by the Pelegostos before the events of The Curse of the Black Pearl took place[1] and taught the parrot to talk for him. None of his associates have figured out how he managed it. Both Cotton and his parrot loyally serve Jack throughout the events in Curse of the Black Pearl and returned in Dead Man's Chest and At World's End. In all three films, Cotton is played by David Bailie. His parrot, a Blue-and-yellow Macaw was voiced by Christopher S. Capp. Cotton serves as the helmsman of the Black Pearl as he is often seen at the helm. At one point in Curse of the Black Pearl, the parrot intones the famous phrase from the Disney ride: 'Dead men tell no tales!' At the main battle in At World's End, the parrot retreats repeating "abandon ship, abandon ship" before flying away. However, he returns after the battle. In Dead Man's Chest, he and his parrot are two of the few Black Pearl crew members to survive the Kraken's attack. The parrot's comments sometimes get it (and Cotton) into trouble, such as when, after Jack asks if the crew is upset with him, it says "walk the plank", causing Jack to point a pistol at it. The parrot also never gives a straight answer, so the crew just has to interpret what they think it means when it says something; when Jack asks the parrot if Cotton would be willing to sail with him, it responds with "Wind in the sails!", which Mr. Gibbs figures means "yes". They also appear along with the rest of the survivors of the Flying Dutchman attack in At World's End. They are with Jack's rescue crew and serve on the ship throughout the film. In the movie, the parrot and Jack the Monkey are often seen together and provide some comedy relief. Cotton is the only pirate to raise his hand when Jack, having explained his somewhat tortuous plan in At World's End, asks the crew: "Any questions?" What Cotton had in mind we will never know. When Barbossa, Jack, Elizabeth, Will, and Gibbs point pistols at each other, Jack the Monkey points a pistol at Cotton and the parrot asks, "Parlay?". Cotton survives the events that the Black Pearl's crew goes through and goes with Hector Barbossa when he steals the Black Pearl.

Leech

Leech is an Indian pirate under Captain Jack in Dead Man's Chest. He contemplates mutiny because the crew is not getting paid at all, and claims that the Black Pearl can be crewed by six men. He dies on Pelegosto Island alongside several other crewmen when his cage falls into a vast canyon. Leech was portrayed by San Shella. It was revealed in the DVD commentary that Leech was intended to be a character that, when dead, would be missed therefore the directors spent sufficient amounts of time working on him.

LeJon

LeJon is a pirate that serves under Jack Sparrow in Dead Man's Chest. He is African, with large hair, and a deep accent.

He was one of the few pirates the cannibals left alive, and was put in the same bone cage as Marty, Gibbs, Will and Cotton.

He accompanied Jack Sparrow during the first visit to Tia Dalma’s house and presumably volunteered to wait outside as he's not seen inside. He continued to remain a part of Sparrow's crew, despite being present at the unsettling confrontation between the eccentric captain and the infamous Davy Jones.

After the fight on the Isla Cruces The Flying Dutchman pursued The Black Pearl. Once the "Kraken Hammer" was sounded LeJon yelled, "We must have hit a reef!" During the Kraken's attack LeJon picked up Elizabeth Swann's dropped rifle and attempted to fire a shot to ignite the barrels of rum and gun powder to burn the Kraken's tentacles, but was grabbed, hoisted into the air, pulled into the sea, and eaten. Despite his minor background appearance, LeJon is considered by some to be a main crew member of the Black Pearl under Jack's command.

LeJon is credited by the actor's stage name, which is Lejon.

Marty

Marty is a dwarf pirate that Jack Sparrow and Joshamee Gibbs hire out of Tortuga in The Curse of the Black Pearl. He loyally served Jack throughout the events of Curse of the Black Pearl and returns in Dead Man's Chest and At World's End.

What Marty lacks in size he makes up for in courage as is seen several times throughout all three films.

Marty's role is not very significant in the first film, where he has one line of dialogue and is not mentioned by name. However, his role becomes more significant, if not at least more memorable, in the sequels. Marty is one of the few surviving crew members who makes it through all of the Black Pearl's mishaps such as the Pelegostos and the Kraken. In the third installment of the series, At World's End, Marty joined in the journey to save Captain Jack and was one of the very few crew members (and the first) who raised his hand when Jack asked "Did no one come to save me just because they missed me?" Marty is the first one to notice the EITC armada, and participated in the maelstrom battle. He successfully blasted two Dutchman crew members into the abyss with his hand cannon. He went with Barbossa when he took back the Black Pearl and left Sparrow behind at Tortuga.

In all three films he is played by Martin Klebba, and he is voiced by James Arnold Taylor in The Legend of Jack Sparrow.

Background Crew-men

In the first film, Jack Sparrow recruited several unnamed pirates out of Tortuga to help him catch the Black Pearl. The Black Pearl itself had several unnamed pirates, albeit undead and far less friendly. Most of the crew aboard the Black Pearl were arrested or executed after the curse was lifted, and the crew Jack formed moved to the Black Pearl, along with Captain Jack, at the end of the film. In the second film, several crew changes had been made; notably, Anamaria was no longer in the crew, and an Indian man named Leech was contemplating a mutiny. Leech, however, was killed due to a mishap involving cannibals, along with most of the old crew, excluding Marty, Cotton, Gibbs, LeJon, and an unnamed Asian crewman who later died in a river. Jack later went back to Tortuga to get more crewmen, although this time he did not plan to keep them (as only six were needed to crew the Black Pearl), but rather to exchange them with Davy Jones for his own soul. The first four were apparently not sailor material, reflecting Jack's desperation. In the end, though, Jack never got to give them to Jones as his three days were up, and most of the crew was killed by the Kraken including Lejon. In the third film, several of Sao Feng's men served as the crew of the Hai Peng to Davy Jones's Locker and later the Black Pearl on the return trip. The leader of these volunteers appears to be Tai Huang, Sao Feng's loyal servant. Some of the crew transferred to the Empress, including Tai Huang, when it captured the Black Pearl, but others stayed behind, under orders from Sao Feng. Upon reaching Shipwreck Cove, Jack apparently had more pirates recruited for the upcoming battle. Many of these died in the battle, but many survived to later fire on Cutler Beckett and drive away the enemy fleet. At the end of the film, most of the background crew-men go with Barbossa when he regains possession of the Black Pearl.

The Flying Dutchman (under Davy Jones)

Each crew-man was originally a normal man who sold his soul to Davy Jones. Over time, each crew member became less humane and more aquatic, like the captain himself. There are nineteen crew members (the most visible of whom are Maccus, Hadras, Jimmylegs, Clanker, Koleniko and Palifico), plus six new ones being added in Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End; each was designed digitally, except for William "Bootstrap Bill" Turner. Note that Wheelback, Ratlin, Angler, Morey, and Old Haddy were designed entirely at Industrial Light and Magic, instead of being sketched by Crash McCreery. There were also many other background characters covered in coral, barnacles and sea-weed. It is possible that as many as ten of them were killed in "At World's End" by falling into the maelstrom, though there is evidence that suggests they may have survived when the Dutchman resurfaces after the battle. The crew-men revert to their humane forms when William Turner assumes command, the corrupted influence of Davy Jones removed.

Angler

Angler is a fat crew member with the face of an anglerfish. He can be seen in the background shortly after Will Turner gets whipped, as well as out on the deck during Liar's Dice, and is later seen turning the wheel to the Kraken Hammer. In At World's End, he was shot by Marty while attempting to swing aboard the Black Pearl, and falls into the maelstrom.

Broondjongen

Broondjongen is a crew member added in At World's End. Broondjongen's left side is partially split open by an enormous clam-shell, revealing a screaming skull and a pair of skeletal hands clutching the shell's lips, sunk into a mess of reddish offal (see image). One of the designers, Aaron McBride, said, "His torso splits open into a clamshell, with a withered figure contorted inside the clam in a death freeze, like when a dominant twin will absorb its sibling in utero and always has vestigial remnants of said absorbed sibling." He was seen firing the Flying Dutchman cannons in At World's End and was also seen on board the Black Pearl (stabed in the chest) and was trying to get it out while Barbossa was marrying Will and Elizabeth.He was not seen transforming into his old form or crowding around Will Turner when his heart was cut out. He most likely fell into the maelstrom during the final battle.

Clanker

Clanker is a crew-man with barnacles and mussels all over his face, and sea-weed for hair (see image). Clanker does battle with two balls of chain-shot; he was one of the crew-men whom Will fought on the wrecked ship, being the first to approach Will Turner while yelling, "Down on your marrow-bones and pray!" He can later be seen playing Liar's Dice with Koleniko and Maccus, and apparently has a decade of service aboard the Flying Dutchman shaved off of his sentence when Maccus loses the match. During the final battle in At World's End, he ends up fighting with Jack Sparrow on a rope swinging high above the deck of the Flying Dutchman. During the struggle, Jack Sparrow steals Clanker's gun and hits him with it, sending him falling into the maelstrom, though he is seen when the Dutchman Members turn human, this would implie that with some amazing luck he fell and landed on the Flying Dutchman. Actor Andy Beckwith performed the part, although the credits misspell the character's name as "Clacker". An action figure of Clanker was released in the first series of Secrets of the Deep action figures by Zizzle.

Crash

Crash has tendrils coming out of one eye and his right leg is fused with a tentacle. In place of a mouth he appears to have a crab's mandibles (see image). He wears a barnacled hat. Crash also has a sawfish bone sword which he uses to restrain Bootstrap Bill when Jones sends the Kraken after Will Turner. He is the guy who knocks out Will Turner on the runaground ship. He is also seen on Isla Cruses beach fight. He is seen transforming into human form in At World's End. Crash also fights with a pulley. When Will Turner became captain of the Flying Dutchman, his bone sword can be seen falling to the deck with the rest of the sea life off the rest of the crew. He was played by Patrick Hume.

Finnegan

Finnegan is a new crewmember added in At World's End. His head has the appearance of a rockfish with one side of his mouth twisted into a grim sneer (see image). One of the designers, Aaron McBride said, "Gore wanted him to have the coloring of a rockfish. Very aggressive red spotting to compliment the sharp serrated fins on his body. We gave him a hare lip so he would have a perpetual distorted snarl. He has a brief scene during the final battle in At World's End, where he fights Will." He is not seen at Will Turner's induction as the Flying Dutchman captain, suggesting that he fell into the maelstorm at some point.

Greenbeard

Greenbeard, the navigator of the Flying Dutchman, has a latticework of hanging seaweed covering his body. He also has mussels for teeth sunk into his face, which has one eye set within a slit-shaped socket. He is seen in the background yelling 'down' along with other crewmembers when Jones orders the Dutchman underwater. In response to Davy Jones' order to turn the Flying Dutchman around during the final battle in Dead Man's Chest, Greenbeard replies in an unintelligible snarl (see image.) According to the visual guide, his biology is like that of a plant, and no longer needs to eat or sleep. He navigates the ship while the crew is asleep, and can also be seen turning the wheel to the Kraken Hammer. He's first seen emerging from the run-aground ship right before Davy Jones first appears. A man denies Jones' offer to join his crew and has his throat slit and then thrown overboard by Greenbeard and Ratlin. In At World's End he was seen fighting with his bare fists in the final battle against an attacking crewman of the Black Pearl. Greenbeard is transformed back to his human form as Will becomes the new captain of the Flying Dutchman. He is played by Jason Kakebeen, although he was uncredited. His name is similar to Blackbeard.

Hadras

Hadras is played by Ho-Kwan Tse. His head is protected by a conch shell that sits on top of his neck attached by tendrils. Like his fellow crew member Old Haddy, he uses knuckle dusters as his weapon in battle. Old Haddy was based on his concept art before Hadras was redesigned with the hermit crab head. His knuckle dusters are visible when he restrains Bootstrap Bill when the Kraken is called for the first time in the movie. Hadras speaks Cantonese with a Cantonese accent.

While trying to recover the titular chest for Davy Jones, Hadras' conch-shell head was knocked off by a coconut thrown by Jack Sparrow. The disembodied head thereafter had to shout directions in Cantonese to the now blind and headless body. Later, Hadras' body carried the empty Dead Man's Chest back to the Flying Dutchman, and his head scuttled after it by pulling in its face and releasing the legs of a hermit crab. In later scenes aboard the Flying Dutchman, he can be seen with his head re-attached; in the DVD Commentary, the writers acknowledge this and cite the reason as sufficient time having passed for his head to reconnect to his body. He will get an action figure in the second series of At World's End action figures from Zizzle.

He has a brief scene in At World's End - during the final battle, the Dead Man's Chest falls on his head and pushes it deep into his body. Hadras then proceeds to stumble off the Flying Dutchman and into the maelstrom.

Jelly

Jelly is a new crewmember added in At World's End. He has jellyfish membranes growing all over his body like tumors as well as long tendrils hanging from his head and body. One of the designers, Aaron McBride, said, "The human bits you can see underneath the jellyfish membrane start to look like he was regressing back to an embryo. Like he was de-evolving. I looked at reference of chicken embryos developing in eggs." Also made one of Jelly's eyes entirely black and lifeless, like he has an eight-ball hemorrhage (see image.) Jelly was present during the battle in the maelstrom and is frequently seen fighting Barbossa on board the Black Pearl. He may have been seen on the Black Pearl behind Barbossa before Will was surrounded, indicating he may have survived.

Jimmylegs

Jimmylegs, played by Christopher Adamson, is the cruel boatswain of the Flying Dutchman. He has the face of a stonefish and has a fin on his back and he wears a red bandana (see image.) Unlike many of his fellow crewmen, Jimmylegs seems to take almost sadistic pleasure in serving under Captain Jones. Bootstrap Bill Turner mentions to Will Turner that Jimmylegs "prides himself on cleaving flesh from bone with every swing" whenever Jimmylegs is tasked with flogging crewmen [2].

At one point aboard the Flying Dutchman, Jimmylegs blames Will for failing to secure a mast tackle, which dropped a hoisted cannon, causing damage to the deck and injuring several crewmen (although this mishap was actually Bootstrap Bill's fault). Jimmylegs has Will restrained, and is just about to punish Will with five of his infamous lashings when Bootstrap Bill steps in and begs to take the floggings in Will's place. This request was not granted - however, Will receives a blessing in disguise when Bootstrap Bill is forced to carry out the punishment in Jimmylegs' stead, being as gentle on Will as possible. Afterward, Jimmylegs tells Will, "You had it easy, boy!"

During a scene when Jones orders the summoning of the Kraken, Jimmylegs is shown whipping several crewmen as they operate the Kraken Hammer. He was also part of the landing party sent by Jones to Isla Cruces to recover the Dead Man's Chest.

In At World's End, he and Koleniko lock Elizabeth Swann and the surviving Empress crew in the brig of the Flying Dutchman, and afterward, Jimmylegs has a good laugh at Elizabeth's expense when she asks him if he is Bootstrap Bill.

Jimmylegs appears in the final battle and is seen fighting Will and Elizabeth along with several other Flying Dutchman crewmembers. During Will's induction as the new captain of the Flying Dutchman, Jimmylegs is the bearer of the Dead Man's Chest, readying it to receive Will's heart. Along with the rest of the Flying Dutchman's crew, Jimmylegs regains his humanity after Will becomes captain.

Koleniko

Koleniko is a pufferfish-like crew member of the Flying Dutchman in Dead Man's Chest and At World's End, played by Clive Ashborn. Half of his face is like that of a pufferfish, with a great swollen amber eye and a spiny cheek which slowly inflates and deflates with his breathing. He wears a brown bandanna and cloak which he ties around his neck, and also a very large round earring in his left ear. However, if looked at very closely in some shots, he appears to have two earrings, the second one being at the top of his ear, presumably in his cartilage. He uses a variety of different weapons such as a knife, axe and a sword. Judging by the orders Davy Jones gives him, Koleniko is one of the coxswain. During a scene on the Flying Dutchman, he plays a game of Liar's Dice with Maccus and Clanker as Will and Bootstrap Bill spectate. Koleniko wins the match after Maccus erroneously calls him out (and apparently has 10 years of service aboard the Flying Dutchman shaved off of his sentence as a reward). He is thought to be smoking a pipe for a few seconds when the crew arrives on the Pearl for the first time, but he is actually holding his blade in his mouth, which is the very same blade used to restrain Pintel in the next scene. Later, Jones passes the order to Koleniko to set course for Isla Cruses, with Jones adding to "Get me there first," to which Koleniko asks in puzzlement, "First?" During the battle at Isla Cruces, Koleniko is seen fighting Jack Sparrow. He appears to be friends with Maccus as they are seen together many times. In At Worlds End he is seen multiple times in the background. He is the first crewmember to arrive at the place of Norrington's death. Along with most of the crew, Koleniko becomes human when Davy Jones is killed and Will Turner assumes the command of the Flying Dutchman.

Maccus

Maccus is the first mate of the Flying Dutchman under Davy Jones in Dead Man's Chest and At World's End, and is played by Dermot Keaney. He has the head of a hammerhead shark, his right eye being normal while the left has migrated to the far end of his head. His teeth are also shark-like, with his lips stained red with blood presumably from biting himself. A set of crustacean-like legs spouts from his back [3], which can be seen on his action figure by NECA, and in the scene in which we first see Davy Jones. Sega has released a Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest Plush Maccus. He was first designed with hair and a cap, and only half his face in hammerhead form. The fingers of his left hand also closely resemble crab legs, seen when Will challenges Davy Jones to a game of Liar's Dice. [4] Maccus' name is Celtic for 'hammer', [5] an obvious reference to his transformation. He is seen frequently conversing with Davy Jones throughout the film. At one point, he loses a game of Liar's Dice to Clanker and Koleniko (which apparently curses him with 20 more years of service aboard the Flying Dutchman - 10 from each of his opponents). In At World's End, Maccus is again frequently seen with Davy Jones. He was also present during the death of Admiral James Norrington, and the final battle. He is seen in the final battle fighting with a hand axe. During a brief struggle with Will, Maccus is distracted by Jack the Monkey (who clutches to his face) and falls below the deck. Maccus is not present (or at least not seen) when Will is inducted as the new captain of the Flying Dutchman, however, when the Flying Dutchman's surviving crewmen revert back to their human forms, a man holding an axe similar to Maccus' is shown. Maccus had several figures releases, a poseable four-inch Maccus from Zizzle, a seven-inch battle clashing Maccus from Zizzle, a highly detailed seven-inch Maccus from NECA, and smaller figures from Zizzle. It can also be noted that Maccus is one of the most recognizable of Davy Jones' crew members and is a fan favorite.

Manray

Manray is a new crewmember added in At World's End. He has a manta ray as a head with a long whiplike tail in the back (see image.) One of the designers, Aaron McBride, said, "Elongated the tail on the back of his head. Almost like when a robber wears a stocking over his face and it pushes and pulls the features of their face flattening and distorting them. Gave him silver eyes and very small pupils to look like psychopath.” In "At World's End" he is seen fighting Will Turner, Elizabeth and other Black Pearl crewmen. When the Dutchman crew members revert to their human forms, Manray is seen among them. [6]

Morey

Morey is a new member of Jones's crew in At World's End. Where his head and neck should be, there is a gaping hole going in his torso within which lives an enormous Moray Eel that serves as his head. Morey's preferred fighting tactic is to use his own sword to block his opponent's sword, and then maul the opponent's head using his sharp fangs. At one point, during an attack on the Empress by the Flying Dutchman, Morey uses this tactic to kill one of Sao Feng's soldiers. During the battle in the maelstrom Morey attempted to use this same tactic on Barbossa, but the cunning pirate decapitated him and shoved him into the maelstrom instead.

Ogilvey

Ogilvey is the head gunner of the Flying Dutchman whom Davy Jones orders to arm the triple-cannons. Ogilvey's face has lost all humanity; he has only one red eye at the top of his head and a twisted, inhuman mouth (see image.) Ogilvey wears a bandana and fights with a hook. He is also in appearance very wraith-like, wretched, and dark. When Will was fighting the crew on the wrecked ship, he cut Ogilvey's stomach open, causing his insides, fish and sea slime, to spill on the deck. Ogilvey was also seen turning the wheel to the Kraken Hammer and behind Will Turner during the game of Liar's Dice with Davy Jones. In At World's End, he regains his humanity when Davy Jones dies, as seen here with him in human form. [1]. He was played by Jonathan Linsley.

Old Haddy

Old Haddy is a crew member wearing a stocking cap and a green, sleeveless shirt, is covered in mussels and fights with knuckledusters. He can be seen during the Isla Cruces beach fight, when he teams up with Quittance to fight Pintel and Ragetti. Old Haddy is based on Hadras' concept art, before he (Hadras) was redesigned with the hermit crab head. He can be seen turning the wheel to the Kraken Hammer. In At World's End, he is seen manning the cannons in the final battle, though it is unknown if he survives.

Palifico

Palifico is Davy Jones' personal guard, appearing to be primarily reef-like in appearance. He fights with two rusted swords fused to his hands, although he is seen without them through most of the movie (see image, second from right). In place of eyes, nose, and mouth, Palafico has a cluster of tentacles and two fanworms in his eye sockets. He is played by Winston Ellis in Dead Man's Chest and was made into an action figure by NECA[7]. The 'profile card' packaged with his toy cites him as depressed and hopeless, and serving as Davy Jones' bodyguard. He was seen turning the wheel to the Kraken Hammer, and after the Kraken destroys the Black Pearl, he says "The captain goes down with his ship" in reference to Jack Sparrow. In At World's End he is seen multiple times, fighting, at the scene in which Will's heart is cut out, and multiple background times as well. Palafico regains his humanity after Will Turner became the new captain of the Flying Dutchman.

Penrod

Penrod, played by Peter Donald Badalamenti II, is the half-human, half-lobster member of Davy Jones's crew. His body is completely encased in an exoskeleton, with a pair of antennae protruding from either side of his mouth, resembling a mustache. Penrod is noticeably smaller than his fellow crewmen (he was most likely a little person in his former human life). During a scene in Dead Man's Chest when Davy Jones and his crew board the Black Pearl, Penrod restrains Marty (aptly enough). He seems to be delegated to the role of a background character, as he has no speaking part in the series. Penrod regains his humanity when Will Turner assumes command of the Flying Dutchman. Penrod was made as a plush for Sega's Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End plush assortment.

Piper

Piper is a new crewmember added in At World's End. His body is covered with tube coral, with his face almost completely gone save for his skeletal teeth. His ribs can also be seen through holes in his body. One of the designers, Aaron McBride, said, "I tried not to give him specific eyes. Instead added many coral tubule holes to his face so to resemble many possible eyes like a spider.” He fights Will and Elizabeth in the final battle. His ultimate fate is unknown, although it can be assumed that he fell into the maelstrom during the final battle.

Quittance

Quittance is one of the background characters on the Flying Dutchman. He has seaweed for hair, an anemone for a mouth and a moray eel living in a hole in his chest, which reveals itself as Will Turner learns the rules of Liar's Dice. He also has a clam for a right eye. According to the visual guide, his biology is like that of a starfish, and he is able to regenerate limbs, although this is never shown. His right hand is a starfish as well. In one scene, he teams up with Old Haddy and fights Pintel and Ragetti. They knock Quittance to the ground and he grabs for the Dead Man's Chest as they run off with it. Quittance can also be seen right next to Davy Jones before Jones orders to dive with the Flying Dutchman. Quittance was performed by Marc Joseph, although his part was uncredited. Quittance can be seen near the end of At World's End as all the remaining Dutchman crew gather to cut out Will's heart. He regains his humanity once Will becomes his new captain.

Ratlin

Ratlin is a crew member that appears to have been fused with rope and sailcloth (see image (shown on the ropes)).He is the second goon to attack Will on the run aground ship. He and Greenbeard throw the crewmember who refused to serve on the Dutchman overboard after Greenbeard cuts the man's throat. He has ropes fused to his face. He can be seen clearly on the ropes when Davy Jones orders the ship underwater. His name is a play on his description, as ratlin is part of a ship's rigging. Ratlin turns the wheel to the "Kraken Hammer." He is seen when Will becomes captain, and regains his humanity. He fights with an axe, and one of his legs has a sea shell attached to it.

Two Head

The dual crewmen are two brothers who serve as deckhands and assist in preparations for the summoning of the Kraken. They resemble conjoined twins, although it is revealed that their current state was a result of their servitude, assimilating each other while adopting sea-creature features. They are joined from the shoulder down, each one with one arm and a third leg ending in a stump where they are connected. Two other arms hang limp from their front and back from the center. The left twin has a horseshoe crab on his head with its claws hanging down like hair, and they both have small beards of coral and eyes like polyps. One of them, during the Liar's Dice match, pulls something off of the other one's chest and eats it, and they can later be seen turning the wheel to the Kraken Hammer. They are seen near the end of At World's End as all the remaining Dutchman crew gather to cut out Will's heart. Two Head were performed by real-life twins Chris and Michael Symonds. The parts are credited in At World's End as Twin#1 and Twin#2

The two brothers that were joined together when Davy Jones was captain of the Flying Dutchman were never actually born as conjoined twins. The reason why they are joined together is because that is the result of their eternal servitude aboard the Flying Dutchman. After Davy Jones is slain and Will Turner becomes the captain of the Flying Dutchman, the curse on the crew of the Flying Dutchman is lifted and they become human again. The two brothers become normal twins again and are no longer joined together.

Urchin

Urchin was a crewmember created entirely for At World's End. He wears a hat, has a hook nose, and is covered in urchin spines. During the final battle, he fights Barbossa, who was attempting to marry Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann. At some point, Urchin was knocked into the maelstrom or otherwise defeated, as he is not present for Will Turner's induction as captain of the Flying Dutchman.

Wheelback

Wheelback is the crewmember who has a wheel sticking out of his back. His eye is fused with a compass and his left arm with a club. He is seen foreground carrying a lantern when the crew is lifting up the cannon. He is seen shortly after with Angler when Will gets whipped. He is seen turning the wheel of the Kraken hammer and in the beach fight at Isla cruses. He has chains and other metal objects on his back. In the third movie he is seen fighting one of Mistress Ching's assistants and in the final battle with Will, he regains humanity after Davy Jones is killed.

Wyvern

Wyvern's transformation is one of the most dramatic, as he has integrated into the Flying Dutchman's hull, becoming part of the vessel itself in the form of different species of coral. His role as a crew member is relegated to forever holding a lantern. Wyvern is the one who tells Will Turner about the Dead Man's Chest. He temporarily pulls himself loose from the wall (exposing his brain, which was both located behind his neck and resembling brain coral) before snapping back to his usual, unconscious state. Wyvern was played by John Boswall and was not seen in At World's End, although it is assumed that he would have regained his humanity after Davy Jones' death.

The Empress (under Sao Feng)

This Asian pirate warship is featured in Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End (2007). She is captained by Sao Feng, pirate lord, and crewed by his gang of pirates from Singapore.

Lian and Park

Lian and Park, (Michelle Lee and Adrienne Wong) are twins. They serve under Captain Sao Feng. They were seen in At Worlds End next to Sao Feng when he first appeared. When Jack is first mentioned, they both giggle but stop when Sao Feng glares at them. They both were killed by Mercer.

Tai Huang

Tai Huang, (played by Reggie Lee) is one of the bodyguards working for Sao Feng and considered by many to be Feng's right-hand man. According to the New Visual Guide, he is not only Sao Feng's most loyal assistant, but he is also apparently his first mate in some cases. Although it "took some time for him to accept taking shortcuts through sewers on missions." He joins Jack Sparrow's crew on their quest to save Jack and later serves Elizabeth Swann.Tai Huang also was made into a 3 inch scale figure by zizzle and Tai came in a MEGA BLOCKS two pack with Sao Feng.

Boiler Room Attendant

The Boiler Room Attendant an incredibly obese crewman who shoveled coal for Sao Feng's steam, and was knocked unconscious by Marty. He was played by Tyler Tuoine.

Mushroom Ear

Mushroom Ear was a guest in Sao Feng's bath house who had stayed in the water for so long that his face had sprouted mushrooms. He was played by Edwin Habacan.

Steng

Steng was assumed to be one of Sao Feng's bodyguards, but when it was discovered he had a fake dragon tattoo, everyone realized he was a spy for the English soldiers. He was played by Tory Tanakan Jr He was briefly mentioned in the junior novel of the movie: Sao Feng grabbed Steng and held a blade up to the pirate's face., page 38 of the "Special Edition" hardcover; and also Admist the fighting, Pintel spotted Steng, and, seeing his dragon tattoo, thought that he was a fellow pirate., page 40 of aforementioned book. Both instances were also seen in the movies.

Background Crewmen

Sao Feng seems to have many more crewmen at his disposal than the other Pirate Lords, and many never actually serve on the Empress or the Hai Peng, instead taking residence in his bath house.

Brethren Court

The Brethren Court is a group of prominent pirates who have met four times in council; the first meeting was to entrap Calypso, while the fourth freed her. Each pirate has a personal talisman in place of a piece of eight (as they were too poor to even offer an actual coin at the time). The members of the fourth Brethren Court were:

The Royal Navy

Lieutenant Gillette

Lieutenant Gillette, played by Damian O'Hare, is a Royal Navy officer and Commodore James Norrington's Flag-Lieutenant in Port Royal. In The Curse of the Black Pearl, Norrington entrusted him the H.M.S. Dauntless twice; one time in Port Royal, when he prepared the Interceptor for the chase after the Black Pearl, but Jack Sparrow and Will Turner managed to capture the H.M.S. Dauntless and then the H.M.S. Interceptor, the second time at Isla de Muerta, when Norrington and the marines went to the cave. Gillette stayed on the ship and participated in the battle aboard H.M.S. Dauntless at the end of the film, and managed to survive.

Gillette does not appear in Dead Man's Chest or At World's End. While no reason is given for his absence in the films, it is conceivable that he was among Norrington's men lost to the sea when Norrington attempted to sail through the hurricane in pursuit of Jack Sparrow. However, it is also conceivable he was just somewhere else at the time.

Lieutenant Groves

Lieutenant Groves is a British Royal Navy Officer under Commodore James Norrington's authority in The Curse of the Black Pearl. Groves talks to Norrington when Will and Jack steal the Dauntless. He gives orders to the sailors and marines to open fire on the Interceptor when she was stolen by Will and Jack. Groves does not appear again until At World's End. When he appears, he is an East India Trading Company officer and is Lord Cutler Beckett's second-in-command lieutenant on the H.M.S. Endeavour. He is on the vessel when Sao Feng and the pirates open fire on the Endeavour. He is also on board the vessel during the Maelstrom battle. He orders the crew to abandon ship when Beckett is in a state of shock. Assuming he got off the ship in time, Groves would have survived the battle.

Mullroy and Murtogg

Mullroy and Murtogg are two Royal Marines in Port Royal. Mullroy is played by Angus Barnett and Murtogg is played by Giles New.

The two are comic relief characters, similar to Pintel and Ragetti. A running gag is that they can be easily distracted by getting them into an argument (such as whether or not the Black Pearl is a real ship or whether "fish people" are automatically inferior) while Jack almost gets away with what they are guarding (such as getting aboard the H.M.S. Interceptor or stealing the Dead Man's Chest). They both participate and survive in the battle aboard H.M.S. Dauntless in The Curse of the Black Pearl. At the end of the film the pair are seen at Jack Sparrow's execution, wearing the formal white wigs and uniform appropriate to an event of that nature.

They do not appear in Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, but they return in At World's End, serving under Lord Cutler Beckett as guards, (apparently working for the East India Trading Company instead of the Royal Navy) over the Dead Man's Chest (see image). It is ironic that in the first film, Mullroy and Murtogg were the "good" comic relief characters and Pintel and Ragetti were the bad, and in the third film, Pintel and Ragetti are the "good" comic relief characters, and Mullroy and Murtogg are the "bad", or at least working for the "bad". In the end, they sneak aboard the Black Pearl during the final fight (as their ship was being attacked). They are seen wearing pirate clothes and overzealously uttering pirate phrases, such as "Arr!" or "Shiver-me-timbers," but it is not established whether they have actually become pirates under Captain Hector Barbossa to survive or whether they are simply in disguise. However, they are still on the Black Pearl after Barbossa abandons Jack and Joshamee Gibbs at Tortuga, which may indicate that they aren't ready to rejoin the Royal Navy. Even though they are put through many perilous situations, they never get killed.

The East India Trading Company

Mercer

Mercer is Lord Cutler Beckett's loyal personal assistant in Dead Man's Chest and At World's End, played by David Schofield. Despite serving faithfully in his official capacity as a clerk, Mercer also carries out some of Beckett's more sinister agendas as an assassin and a spy. In Dead Man's Chest Mercer killed Captain Hawkins, who offered to transport Governor Weatherby Swann's daughter, Elizabeth Swann, to England. He then had the Governor detained. Later, Mercer was at Tortuga, where he located fugitives Elizabeth, James Norrington, Jack Sparrow, and the Black Pearl's crew. In At World's End, Mercer was in Singapore and killed Lian and Park, Sao Feng's bodyguards. He then spied upon Will and Feng's agreement. He told Beckett that Governor Swann knew about the heart. He then appeared again on the Black Pearl and informed Sao Feng about Beckett's double cross of him (Sao Feng had made a deal for the Black Pearl with Beckett). Somehow, he got onto the Dutchman and served as Davy Jones' keeper after the death of Norrington, until Jones killed him by using his facial tentacles to break his neck during the battle in the maelstrom.

Lieutenant Greitzer

Lieutenant Greitzer, played by David Meunier, is an East India Trading Company (EITC) officer on board the H.M.S. Endeavour. Lord Cutler Beckett controls the ship and orders Greitzer to head for where the Empress and Black Pearl meet. They follow a "bread crumb" trail made up of floating bodies thrown overboard by Will Turner.

Cartographer

The Cartographer was employed by the East India Trading Company (EITC) to draw a map of the world for Lord Cutler Beckett. When he receives new information about newly explored areas and locations, he extends the map. The map grows as Lord Beckett's power increases. In the original screenplay by Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio, Joshamee Gibbs stated that Jack Sparrow was his apprentice when he worked for the EITC.

Crew of the Edinburgh Trader

Captain Bellamy

Captain Bellamy, played by Alex Norton, commands the merchant vessel, Edinburgh Trader, that Elizabeth Swann stows away in Dead Man's Chest. Later, his ship picks up Will Turner at sea. However, Will's presence aboard their ship dooms everyone to suffer Davy Jones' wrath. Jones's monstrous Kraken attacks and sinks the ship; Bellamy is the first to die when he is snatched off the deck by one of the kraken's tentacles. Samuel Bellamy is the name of a real-world pirate whose career lasted less than one year.

Bursar and the Quartermaster

Bursar and the Quartermaster are two crewmen of the Edinburgh Trader who found Elizabeth Swann's dress, and believed it belonged to a ghost. A heated debate ensued about the nature of the 'ghost' until Elizabeth tricked them into believing the ghost desired passage to Tortuga. Bursar later tells Will that they had made a sizeable profit in Tortuga, although off records. Later, as the Kraken was attacking, the Bursar held out the dress, yelling "Take it, Take it!" believing the Kraken to be supernaturally linked to the supposed ghost. However, he was swept away by a tentacle anyway. The ultimate fate of the Quartermaster, however, is not depicted onscreen; he was either killed in the Kraken attack, or picked up by Davy Jones's crew, whom offered no quarters. The Bursar was played by Max Baker and the Quartermaster was played by Steve Speirs.

Edinburgh Trader crew

The Edinburgh Trader was crewed by superstitious crewmen; they were played by Matthew Bower (a sailor), David Sterne (the cook) and Michael Enright (a deckhand). All hands were killed by the Kraken when it attacked the ship, and the few survivors were captured and killed by the Flying Dutchman’s crew on Davy Jones' orders.

Tortuga Inhabitants

Scarlett

Scarlett is most likely a prostitute, although her occupation is never stated. She has flaming red hair and typically sports both a red dress and an excess of blush. She and Jack Sparrow had met before the first movie, and her animosity towards him (echoing that of Giselle and Anamaria) became a running gag. When Jack appears in Tortuga, she approaches him. He is delighted to see her, but she slaps him and stomps off in a huff, to which Jack says to Will Turner "Not sure I deserved that."

Scarlett appears in all three films, but in the children's novelization of Dead Man's Chest, she has Giselle's role; she slaps Will as a callback to the gag in the first film, only because he is looking for Jack. Scarlett is based on the redheaded woman in the auction scene of the Pirates attraction. She reappears at the end of At World's End when she and Giselle slap Jack for "lying" that he had a grand, majestic ship (the Black Pearl was stolen by Barbossa and the crew). Outraged that the Pearl is gone, he tells Scarlet and Giselle: "Yes, I lied to you. No, I don't love you. Of course it makes you look fat. I've never been to Brussels. It is pronounced 'e-gre-gious.' By the way, no. I've never actually met Pizarro, but I love his pies. And all of this pales to utter insignificance in light of the fact that my ship is once again gone. Savvy?" Scarlett was played in all three films by Lauren Maher. She also appears in Pirates of the Caribbean: The Legend of Jack Sparrow where she is voiced by Nika Futterman.

Giselle

Giselle, (played by Vanessa Branch) is a blonde wench of dubious occupation. After seeing his encounter with Scarlett, she demanded Jack identify who she was before slapping him; Jack Sparrow admits to Will Turner after the slap that he might have deserved it. Giselle reappears in Dead Man's Chest during Will's hunt for Jack, having since become friends with Scarlett. After Scarlett claims that she had not seen Jack in over a month, Giselle asks "When you find him, will you give him a message?" and then slaps Will. She reappears at the end of At World's End when she and Scarlett slap Jack for "lying" that he had a grand, majestic ship (this was true, but it was "commandeered" by Barbossa once more).

Pirate Musical Band

This band consists of three pirates playing in a bar on Tortuga; one of them plays a guitar, another an accordion, and the third one plays a fiddle. They were portrayed by uncredited layman actors and resembles the three singing pirates from the ride. The pirates on the ride perform Yo Ho (A Pirate's Life for Me) while the band in the movie plays a variation of a traditional piece called Fisher's Hornpipe during the pub brawl.

Port Royal Inhabitants

John Brown

John Brown, played by Ralph P. Martin, is the owner of the blacksmith's shop in Port Royal where Will Turner is an apprentice at the beginning of The Curse of the Black Pearl. Brown is depicted as a lazy drunkard who sleeps all day, letting Will do all the work while he takes all the credit and the profit. However, he assisted (and took the credit) in capturing Jack Sparrow by breaking an empty bottle over his head during his swordfight with Will.

Estrella

Estrella, played by Paula Jane Newman, is a maid in the governor’s household. She warned Elizabeth Swann when the Black Pearl’s landing party, led by Pintel and Ragetti, attacked the house. She escaped and presumably reported to Governor Weatherby Swann and James Norrington about Elizabeth’s kidnapping. She appeared only in The Curse of the Black Pearl.

Harbourmaster

The Harbourmaster is a British civil servant who has been corrupted by dealings with pirates, smugglers, and various other criminals. He is assisted by a young black boy. His expensive clothes are bought with the bribes he accepts. His duties are to register all ships, goods, and persons arriving in the harbour and to collect fees. When Jack arrived in Port Royal on his sinking boat, he bribed the harbourmaster to conceal his identity and then proceeded to steal his unattended purse. He was played by Guy Siner and only appeared in The Curse of the Black Pearl.

Prisoners

The four Prisoners, played by Michael Sean Tighe, Ben Wilson, Antonio Valentino and Mike Babcock, are awaiting execution for undisclosed crimes in a cell next to Jack’s cell. The prisoners futilely attempted to retrieve the keys from the Jailhouse Dog by offering food, but failed as Jack said. Jack had, after all, told them not to keep it up, as the dog would not move. When The Black Pearl attacked Port Royal, a cannonball blasts a hole in the wall and the prisoners escaped. Their further fate is unknown. In the second movie, Dead Man's Chest, similar pirates appear when Elizabeth is imprisoned. This time, instead of attracting the Dog, they whistle and beckon at Elizabeth to come closer.

The Jailhouse Dog/Poochie

The Jailhouse Dog (named 'Poochie' by the fans after Pintel uses the name to address the dog) first appears in The Curse of the Black Pearl and always carries the jail keys in its mouth. Prisoners futilely attempt to retrieve the keys from it by any means necessary. When Jack was in the jail, he tells the other prisoners that calling the dog will not work. However, after the Black Pearl blasts a hole in the wall, allowing the other prisoners to escape, a desperate Jack also tries calling the dog, with more success, but it flees when two Black Pearl crewmen burst in, thinking the prison is the armoury.

Apparently, Pintel and Ragetti, are more successful in convincing the dog. In the second movie, Dead Man's Chest, they are seen in a rowboat with the dog who is holding the keys (pictured). Somehow they managed to get the keys from the dog and escape jail. During their voyage to Pelegosto, the dog jumped from the boat and swam to shore, waiting at the beach. Shortly after, the dog is chased by cannibals after they failed to catch Jack. In a post-credits scene, the cannibals have made the dog their new chief.

In At World's End, the dog is present during the Brethren Court; how he came there was unknown (causing Pintel and Ragetti confusion). Captain Teague explains the dog's presence by saying, "Sea turtles, mate." The dog is more scruffy and now bears the keys to the Pirate Codex instead of the jail.

The dog is based on the canine in the prison scene from the Disney Pirates of the Caribbean attraction.

A plush toy of Poochie the Prison Dog, is made by Walt Disney. Sega also made a Poochie plush toy as part of its Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest plush collection.

In pirates online a dog appears inside a jail cell still holding the keys.

The Executioner

The Executioner is a fat, brutish man in a leather hood and apron. He appears in the Curse of the Black Pearl, when he is in charge of Jack's execution. However, the execution efforts were halted by Will, who fought with the Executioner in an attempt to rescue Jack, which ultimately succeeded in the Executioner cutting the rope holding Jack, who then fled to the balcony with Will. The executioner reappears in At World's End, aiding Lord Cutler Beckett in the execution of many people accused of piracy or befriending those accused, even a young cabin boy that he apparently shows no remorse for.

Other

Cabin Boy

The Cabin Boy, shown at the beginning of At World's End, is about to be hanged for sympathizing with pirates. He is listed as Cabin Boy in the film's credits and is played by (Brendyn Bell). He starts to sing "Hoist the Colours", the song that signals the Pirate Lords that a meeting of the Brethren Court is necessary. He is hanged and a piece of eight that he had been holding onto falls silently to the ground, foreshadowing the near end of piracy.

Will Turner III

Will Turner III is portrayed by Dominic Scott Kay (though some have mistaken him as the cabin boy from the beginning of the film). He is nine years old and is listed in the credits as "Young Will Turner," though fans have dubbed him William Turner III (others call him 'Liam' so as not to confuse the boy and his father). He is the son of Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann, and the grandson of 'Bootstrap' Bill and Governor Weatherby Swann.

He appears in the scene after the end credits in At World's End. He is seen with Elizabeth as they await Will's return after 10 years. He sings Yo Ho (A Pirate's Life for Me) as he stands on a cliff before the sunset. It is the same verse of the song a twelve year old Elizabeth was heard singing at the beginning of Curse of the Black Pearl.

Larry

Larry was a sailor that Jack Sparrow had supposedly sailed with before. He had lost both of his arms and part of his eye according to Jack. It is, however, unknown if he was actually real or just made up by Jack to prove a point to Joshamee Gibbs about pirates not being very imaginative with names. Jack says, "I once sailed with a geezer, who lost both his arms and part of an eye." To which Gibbs asks "What did you call him?" After pausing a moment Jack simply says "Larry".

Hawkins

Hawkins was a sea captain who offered to transport Elizabeth Swann to England to escape Lord Cutler Beckett as a favor to Governor Weatherby Swann. Hawkins was killed by Beckett's henchman, Mercer just as Elizabeth and her father arrived at the pier. Although Elizabeth escaped, Governor Swann was taken into custody by Lord Beckett and later forced into working on Beckett's behalf. Hawkins is notable in that in the DVD commentary, the writers intended for him to have a connection to Robert Louis Stevenson's novel, Treasure Island by being the father of Jim Hawkins, the book's protagonist. However, in the novel, Jim's father actually died in England from an illness, and did not disappear at sea as the writers claimed. This connects the film to other pirate lore, as Jim Hawkins was an acquaintance of John Silver, who feared Captain Hook, the boatswain of Blackbeard, a real pirate.

References