Cutler Beckett
Cutler Beckett | |
---|---|
Pirates of the Caribbean character | |
File:Beckett400px.jpg Tom Hollander as Lord Cutler Beckett in Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End | |
First appearance | Dead Man’s Chest |
Last appearance | At World’s End |
Portrayed by | Tom Hollander |
Voiced by | Mick Wingert |
Information | |
Gender | Male |
Occupation | East India Trading Co. (E.I.T.C.) Chairman Duly appointed Representative of George II[1][2] |
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Lord Cutler Beckett[3] is a fictional character portrayed by Tom Hollander in the second and third Pirates of the Caribbean films. He makes his debut in Dead Man's Chest as a major supporting villain and has a more central part in the franchise's third installment At World's End. A devious, ruthless, manipulative, perfidious and elegant genius, Beckett is the chairman of the "East India Trading Company", and representative of King George II.
Backstory[edit]
Beckett's backstory was not fully revealed until the release of Ann C. Crispin's novel Pirates of the Caribbean: The Price of Freedom. Cutler Beckett was born and raised in England. At a very young age, Beckett took employment in the East India Trading Commpany. While on a mission for the Company, he was captured by pirates led by Christophe-Julien de Rapièr. He was tortured for several weeks, an experience which left him with eternal hatred for all maritime outlaws, before he was ransomed by the Company. Over the years, he became the EITC Director for West Africa. Thirteen years prior to the events of Dead Man's Chest, Beckett provided Captain Jack Sparrow (who was under the employment of the E.I.T.C.) with the Wicked Wench to transport "a certain cargo" to the island of New Avalon in the Bahamas for Beckett's superior Viscount Penwallow. On voyage, Sparrow discovered the cargo was carrying slaves and set them free on the island of Kerma off the west coast of Africa. Beckett became enraged upon learning Sparrow's deed. Beckett ordered the Wicked Wench sunk and branded Captain Sparrow a pirate.
Beckett claims in Dead Man's Chest that Sparrow also left a mark on him. In the first movie, Commodore Norrington reveals a "P" branded on Jack's arm, saying Jack has had a run-in with the EITC. When William Turner asks Beckett what mark Sparrow left on him, Beckett merely changes the subject. Whatever it was, Turner surmised it was serious enough that what Beckett wants most in the world (with regards to him using Captain Jack's compass) is to see him dead.
Most of the "dirty work" Beckett desires is carried out by his right-hand man, Ian Mercer.
Appearances[edit]
Cutler Beckett makes no appearance in The Curse of the Black Pearl, although it is mentioned that Jack managed to escape several agents of the East India Trading Co. The books state that Jack's arm was branded because Jack refused to transport slaves and freed prisoners on his ship called the Wicked Wench. After this disobedience a furious Beckett in response ordered Jack's ship to be sunk and Jack branded a pirate. He was then imprisoned but he escaped and left a mysterious mark on Beckett that was so wounding to him that it resulted in him wishing nothing more in the world than to see Captain Jack Sparrow dead. Jack, after fleeing, tried to save his sinking ship, but ended up going down with it. Near death, Jack was found by Davy Jones. Jack promised Jones to serve Jones's ship The Flying Dutchman, if Jones would first raise the newly named Black Pearl for Jack to captain for 13 years before the debt was due. Jack repaired his ship, painted it black, bought several black sails to make it the fastest ship in the Caribbean, and hired his own pirate crew. When Jack vanished he was initially declared dead; Beckett learned from several battles with the Black Pearl that Jack was alive.
Dead Man's Chest[edit]
Beckett makes his first appearance in Dead Man's Chest as Chairman of the East India Trading Co. Beckett arrives at Port Royal seemingly to set it in order under Company control after the events of The Curse of the Black Pearl. Beckett carries warrants of arrest for the people involved in the events of the first film; Jack Sparrow (the pirate involved); Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann (aided in his escape); and James Norrington who resigned his commission months prior and disappeared (failed to go after Sparrow immediately)[4] – Beckett however offers a deal to Turner.[5] If Turner successfully locates Jack Sparrow for Beckett to employ as a privateer for England with his letters of marque and brings back Sparrow's compass for Beckett's use, Turner and Swann will be pardoned. Beckett desires the compass to locate the "Dead Man's Chest"; whosoever possesses Davy Jones's heart within the chest may dominate him by extortion and thus the ocean by extension.[6] This would allow Beckett to purge the seas from pirates en-masse.[6]
During the course of the film, Beckett has an artisan working on a massive painting of the World's map over his office's back wall. Throughout different scenes seen, the painting is slowly being completed.[5][7][8] When Beckett tells Turner he must give Jack Sparrow letters of marque to Jack to get him to unconditionally accept a pardon and commission as a privateer, Will warns him that Jack will not agree with Beckett's idea about employment giving him freedom. In reply Beckett states, "Jack Sparrow is a dying breed [a pirate]. Jack must find his place in the new world or perish."[5]
Will agrees and departs but Governor Swann has arranged a trip to London for Elizabeth with a friend of his, a captain of a local ship. When Beckett learns this and knowing that Elizabeth is the glue holding Will's agreement with him; he has his henchman Ian Mercer kill the captain and arrest Governor Swann for helping Elizabeth escape prison. However Elizabeth manages to escape the ambush, confront Beckett with a pistol to force him to sign and validate Letters of Marque to free Will, but only if she gets Beckett Jack's compass in return also.[7][9]
After Elizabeth leaves, Beckett imprisons Swann when Mercer reveals that he found a letter to the king on Governor Swann, giving a negative review on Beckett's authority and letting the king know what Beckett is illegally doing. Blackmailing him, he lets Swann know that he is sending EITC ships after the Black Pearl and if it is caught he will keep Elizabeth alive if Swann agrees to not tell the king about Beckett's crimes but good reports on Beckett's presence; also ignoring the fact that Swann warns him with that the Pearl is impossible to catch because of its speed.
At the end of the story, Norrington arrives at Beckett's home with his letters of marque and presents to him a sack containing Jones's beating heart as an exchange for his "old life." Beckett in return makes him an Admiral of the East India Trading Company, and then the Flying Dutchman arrives to Port Royal and Beckett is informed that the map of the world he requested is complete, meaning the East India Trading Company is now in a dominant position over the world.[8][10]
At World's End[edit]
Tom Hollander returns as Lord Cutler Beckett in At World's End; in this film he has been appointed representative of the King George II.[1] Beckett's ambitions now turn to discovering the Brethren Court and eliminating it, thus rendering pirates worldwide leaderless, allowing Beckett to exterminate them. At a mass hanging of people convicted of piracy or association with pirates, the prisoners start singing Hoist the Colours, a signal for the Brethren to assemble, as was Beckett's plan.[1] Meanwhile, the seas are being terrorized by the Flying Dutchman (now under Company control), which is destroying pirate ships mercilessly and leaving none alive. This annoys Beckett, who needs prisoners to interrogate.[11] He later has Governor Weatherby Swann assassinated because he "knows too much" and places Admiral Norrington in charge of the Dutchman.[12] Beckett then sails his ship-of-the-line, the Endeavour, to Singapore, where he learns that the Brethren will meet.[13]
By the middle of the film, Beckett acquires the Black Pearl in Asian seas through trickery and deception by Sao Feng who was originally promised the ship by Beckett.[14] When he encounters Jack Sparrow for the first time since their branding, Beckett learns that the Brethren are meeting at Shipwreck Cove and makes a deal with Sparrow. If Jack brings the Brethren and pirates out from the nigh-impregnable fortress to him, Beckett will keep Sparrow from Jones's judgment and will let him live. Beckett at first thinks about confiscating Jack's compass to find the Brethren, but Jack Sparrow warns him that the compass points to his most desired thing and since Beckett's desire is to see him (Jack) dead all the compass would point to would be Jack himself. Beckett decides to kill Jack Sparrow to satisfy this desire and then use the compass to find the Brethren but Jack makes another part of the deal that results with Beckett cancelling the killing.[14] Sparrow however flees with the Pearl after managing to damage Beckett's ship enough to have to postpone the pursuit of the Pearl. After finding Will Turner adrift at sea, Beckett, Turner, and Jones sail to Shipwreck Cove using Sparrow's compass. They arrive with an E.I.T.C. armada encompassing hundreds of ships, and the Pirate Lords have agreed to go to war at Jack's urging.[15] During a parley with Elizabeth, Barbossa, and Jack, Beckett calls Jack out as the "grand architect" of their plan, and Elizabeth gives Jack to Jones in exchange for Will's release; however, Jack had planned for this to happen, so he could get on board the Flying Dutchman and stab Jones's heart.
After an epic battle between the Flying Dutchman and the Black Pearl, Beckett is worried his advantage is lost when the Pearl seemingly sinks the Dutchman. When it resurfaces, he orders the Endeavour and the Dutchman forward to order an attack on the Pearl, and does not realize that he has lost control of the latter ship, now commanded by Will Turner. Accordingly, the Black Pearl and The Flying Dutchman flank the Endeavour and open fire from both sides, tearing the ship apart. Beckett, visibly shocked and unable to react, stays on board his ship as the crew abandons it. He slowly descends the deck stairs, and subsequently dies when the powder magazine of the Endeavour explodes.
Characterization[edit]
W. Wesley Pue of the University of British Columbia writes that "the excesses of duly constituted authority" is "personified in Lord Cutler Beckett and his officers" in Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End. Pue sees this excess as potentially paralleling a modern administration during the War on Terror. Pue writes, "As in Lord Cutler Beckett’s administration, the measures are temporary, limited to the duration of a ‘war’ on terror." Pue subsequently asks, "Who, we wonder, can protect us from modern-day Lord Cutler Becketts?"[16]
Other appearances[edit]
Cutler Beckett makes his debut appearance in the Kingdom Hearts video game series in Kingdom Hearts III, reprising his role from At World's End. He is voiced by Wataru Yokojima in the Japanese version and by Mick Wingert in the English version.
Tie-ins[edit]
Outside the films, Cutler Beckett also appears in the novel Pirates of the Caribbean: The Price of Freedom, where his backstory is heavily detailed, as he is one of the two POV characters. He is an EITC Director for West Africa, presiding over the EITC businesses from his office in Calabar. He gives Jack Sparrow the merchant vessel Wicked Wench, and sends Jack to search for the mythical island of Kerma and the city of Zerzura. When Jack frees a cargo of black slaves, Beckett orders his men to burn the ship.
In the now-defunct Disney's Pirates of the Caribbean Online MMORPG game, Cutler Beckett did not appear as an actual character in the game, but there was a location that players can visit known as Beckett's Quarry, in the island of Padres del Fuego. The quarry is a maze of mining tunnels where the EITC apparently forces prisoners into manual labor. Also, the island of Kingshead is a massive fortress that is said to be built to Beckett's standards for overseeing the Company's activities in the region.
References[edit]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End, Ch.1
- ↑ Pirates of the Caribbean: The Complete Visual Guide, page 44, "Lord Cutler Beckett" (the "Letters" are pictured having "king George"'s signature, it is assumed he is the first)
- ↑ The "Letters of Marque", with the signature of Lord Cutler Beckett - Disney exhibition of the theatrical properties used in the movie
- ↑ Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, Ch.1
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, Ch.3
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, Ch.18
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, Ch.16
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, Ch.27
- ↑ Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, Ch.6
- ↑ "Trilogy Deleted Scenes".
- ↑ Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End, Ch.5
- ↑ Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End, Ch.12
- ↑ Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End, Ch.4
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End, Ch.11
- ↑ Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End, Ch.19
- ↑ W Wesley Pue, "Chapter 4. Protecting Constitutionalism in Treacherous Times: Why ‘Rights’ Don’t Matter," Fresh Perspectives on the ‘War on Terror’ (November 8, 2007).
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