Subtitle Pirates.of.the.Caribbean:.At.World's.E... _HOT_
The subtitle, At World's End, was decided by visitors to the message boards of Wordplay, the website created by screenwriters Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio. The two proposed titles, World's End and At World's End, were given as the final choices, with a further choice to include or exclude the apostrophe.[3] In 2014, a late production draft was posted on Wordplay Archives, under the title Calypso's Fury. According to Terry Rossio, the title was never in serious contention, simply a working title, until marketing deadlines forced the eventual title to be determined.[4] Uncharted Waters was at one point rumored to be a proposed title.
subtitle Pirates.of.the.Caribbean:.At.World's.E...
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The answer to all of these questions should be that it doesn't really matter. Because, ultimately, "Age of Ultron" is a pretty meaningless subtitle, since it seems almost impossible to imagine anyone over the age of 12 walking up to a movie theater ticket booth and asking for a movie called "The Avengers: Age of Ultron." Instead, they'll politely request a ticket for "Avengers 2." And that's what they'll get, without feeling like they're headed into a marble-mouthed '50s sci-fi movie.
For some reason, studios have gotten allergic to numbers. This summer's sequel to J.J. Abrams' "Star Trek" reboot wasn't called "Star Trek II," like the original set of films. Maybe because this is set in a parallel universe (or something), it had to be called "Star Trek Into Darkness," a name that was made even dopier when the movie proved to be so lightweight that it practically floated away, like it was stranded in deep space. This winter will see the second chapter in Peter Jackson's already overlong "Hobbit" saga, with "The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug" (grammar police alert: two definite articles in one title is always a drag, plus a preposition, puh-leeze). "The Desolation of Smaug" might be the most leaden subtitle in recent memory; it practically drags the entire title down to the hellish depths of Mordor.
It's not like the sequel subtitle has had a particularly fabled history ("Breakin' 2: Electric Bugaloo" anyone? Or "Spy Kids 2: The Island of Lost Dreams?" What about "Basic Instinct 2: Risk Addiction?"), it's just that studios have dispensed with the numbers almost entirely. This strategy isn't tricking anyone, since it'd be impossible to know that "Star Trek Into Darkness" was anything but a sequel to the much-better 2009 movie, but by the time "Star Trek To A Place Slightly Near Jupiter" comes out, it might be confusing as to where, exactly, this falls in the franchise. 041b061a72