"Caribbean" is a pirate story set in 1728, with an unusual plot and no real swashbuckling. Most of the short scenes with the pirate ship, Niobe, are of a distant three-master on the open water. The sails seem to be full but the ship isn't moving through the water and is listing heavily to the port side. Very weird and amateurish production. It's a Technicolor movie made by Pine-Thomas Productions at the Paramount Studios.
The plot is just interesting enough to keep one watching it, with a cast of some well-known actors of the day. But the story and screenplay drag on and on. It has a stagy feeling of scenes on the ship and on the island. The main cast are fairly good, but the rest - including those playing the Caribbean island natives seem wooden and hesitant.
John Payne has the lead as Dick Lindsay, with Arlene Dahl as a somewhat object of his affections late into the film. The best names, and acting, are by Francis L. Sullivan as Andrew MacAllister, Willard Park as Shively, Cedric Hardwicke as Captain Francis Barclay and Dennis Hoey as Burford. Hardwick's Barclay seems a bit overly dramatic and cultured for a pirate role, even with his background in the film. No one could play the nasty, mean, heartless characters that Sullivan could, and his MacAllister here is as unlikeable as one can get.
Anyone expecting a swashbuckler will be disappointed. And, there isn't that much action or adventure at all. It's mostly a fictional picture of a small island kingdom of sorts, where a tyrannical master (Sullivan's MacAllister) has enslaved the islanders. And a tale of revenge by a former colleague whose life and family were ruined by MacAllister. The ending has a very interesting twist - sort of bittersweet.
Here are some lines from this film.
Robert MacAllister, "I was beginning to wonder if I'd be forced to dine with the crew tonight." Captain Francis Barclay, "My crew doesn't dine - it gorges, Mr. MacAllister."
Captain Francis Barclay, "Suppose I offer you your freedom and a hundred thousand pieces of eight?" Dick Lindsay, "That's a lot of supposing. What would I have to do?" Captain Barclay, "As you're told." Lindsay, "For how long?" Barclay, "That depends on you - unless, of course, you got killed in the line of duty." Lindsay, "And if I refuse?" Barclay, "You'll probably get killed out of the line of duty." Lindsay, "When do I begin?" Barclay, "It may surprise you to know, Mr. Lindsay, that you began when we first met."
Elizabeth, head maid, "When two stones meet, they make fire. When right man and woman meet, same thing."