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The Pirate Movie

The Pirate Movie (1982)

August. 06,1982
|
5.3
|
PG
| Drama Action Comedy Music

A comedy/musical utilizing both new songs and parodies from the original (Gilbert and Sullivan's Pirates of Penzance), as well as references to popular films of the time, including Star Wars and Raiders of the Lost Ark. In your typical boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boy fights girl with swords plot, the story revolves around Mabel ...

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Reviews

Fairaher
1982/08/06

The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.

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Siflutter
1982/08/07

It's easily one of the freshest, sharpest and most enjoyable films of this year.

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Tayyab Torres
1982/08/08

Strong acting helps the film overcome an uncertain premise and create characters that hold our attention absolutely.

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Justina
1982/08/09

The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.

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rosannag
1982/08/10

I still have my VHS tape and have watched it 100s of times over the years. I need this to come out on demand, please! I cannot remember the last time I even owned a VHS player to watch this.

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Mike4920
1982/08/11

I think this is a cute comedy - a clear variation made in 1982 of the Gilbert and Sullivan 'Pirates of Penzance'. This movie lends itself more to teenage girls. It is a fun movie! My daughter loved it - probably because it gave her someone to look up to or fantasize emulating. My daughter liked the costumes. There was no swearing, no blood or violence. It was good clean fun. The music and singing was a big hit for our family while watching it. The movie was not a big hit, the acting was not great, no-one got any big awards. But it was a feel good movie that was exciting for young teenagers to watch. It took a long time to come to DVD. I wish it was available on Vudu.

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Tracy Winters
1982/08/12

0 stars for this goofy pirate flick which features Kristy McNichol (I call her Krusty McCluckol) as a lame dreamer with designs on being popular.Cliché gay pirate jokes, dumb songs, atrocious choreography, bad acting, incompetent direction, confused plotting, and general miscasting are some of the problems encountered when viewing this film. How McCluckol secured this role is beyond logical thinking. Chris Atkins as the male lead is at least pleasant to ogle. Too bad the same can't be said for Mucknuckle who resembles a sleepy chicken with a bad haircut.A prime example of a studio having leaped before they looked.

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mark.waltz
1982/08/13

If you thought "Xanadou" and "Can't Stop the Music!" had gay sensibilities or camp moments then watch this pathetic rip-off of Gilbert and Sullivan's most revived operetta where the film is supposed to be oh-so-straight but ends up as oh-so-stupid and oh-so-offensive. Moments of the original score are tossed together with a new fangled pop score so bad that all those great memories of the early 80's and the fun bad trends that came out of them are all washed away. O.K., so the idea of pairing Christopher Atkins and Kristy McNichol seemed like a good idea at the time. He was the newest hearth-throb after "The Blue Lagoon" and she was oh-so-cute as Buddy on "Family", the tomboy everybody liked. What they forgot to give them was a script, here so obviously slap-dash that the results are as jaw-dropping as the audience members of "Springtime For Hitler" in "The Producers". (Please don't throw your playbills at me for saying so!).It is obvious to me that this was tossed together so fast not only because of the success of "The Pirates of Penzance" on Broadway but in expectation of the movie version of that show yet to be released. Like previous similarities between similar plotted movies released within months of each other (Think "Black Sunday" and "Two Minute Warning"), it's almost like sabotage. While "The Pirates of Penzance" came and went very quickly when it was released early in 1983, this film had a release the previous summer and obviously soured anybody interested in seeing a mostly faithful movie version of a hundred year old British operetta.McNichol is Mabel, a geeky teen-aged girl hanging around the beach who somehow is obsessed with pirate movies and after being left behind after mean girls prevent her from boarding tour guide Atkins' boat, she ends up dreaming she's the heroine of Gilbert and Sullivan's operetta. He, of course, is the dashing hero, raised by pirates, yet determined to make his own way and find true love with the opposite sex. But the pirate king (Ted Hamilton) isn't willing to let him go and threatens to stand in the way of his heterosexual happiness. A wasted Maggie Kirkpatrick takes the normally scene-stealing role of nurse Ruth and turns it into almost a bit part,lacking the zest of the many veteran comics who played the role on Broadway and Angela Lansbury who showed screen audiences her musical talents in one of the rare times she actually got to use her own singing voice in the movies.The worst Major General ever, Bill Kerr comes on like gang-busters with absolutely no subtly or humor like George Rose was doing on stage and later in the authentic film version. Sprinkled throughout this are spoofs of pop-culture characters popular at the time, such as Inspector Clouseau and Indiana Jones, proving what one critic said about it being "the rip-off movie". While the original operetta at times can be outright silly and sometimes eye-rolling, this version made me roll my eyes so much I was afraid of being able to see out of the back of my head or through my ears.Then, there's the truncated score, an assassination of sorts where only a handful of the original score is used (or misused) and the new songs (with the possible exception of the song in the opening film-within-a-film) are dumber than any of the slobs of the slobs-vs.-the-snobs comedies popular at the time. "Happy Ending" is a bit of a catchy tune, but it's a horribly weak way to wrap up the plot, and McNichols' being forced to pair couples up had me sneering not cheering. "Pumpin And Blowin'" gets my vote for one of the top five worst movie songs ever written, and perhaps in the top ten of all songs ever written. It makes the theme from the original "The Blob" seem like "As Time Goes By" in comparison.

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