After serving two decades in prison, Yellowbeard (Graham Chapman) breaks out determined to recover the treasure that he buried so long ago, alongside his son, old crew, and the British Navy.After serving two decades in prison, Yellowbeard (Graham Chapman) breaks out determined to recover the treasure that he buried so long ago, alongside his son, old crew, and the British Navy.After serving two decades in prison, Yellowbeard (Graham Chapman) breaks out determined to recover the treasure that he buried so long ago, alongside his son, old crew, and the British Navy.
- El Segundo
- (as Richard 'Cheech' Marin)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis movie was inspired by Keith Moon, drummer of the British rock band The Who, who was a personal friend of Graham Chapman. Moon wanted to play Yellowbeard, but could not due to ailing health. (Moon died in 1978). Chapman once recalled that Moon lived like a pirate with his wild ways. The character in this movie called Moon (Peter Boyle) was named after him as a tribute.
- GoofsWhen Dan embraces Yellowbeard and accidentally stabs him, the hilt of the dagger changes between shots.
- Quotes
Narrator: The pirate Yellowbeard captured many other galleons, killing over five-hundred men in cold blood. He would tear the captains hearts out and swallow them whole. Often forcing his victims to eat their own lips, he was caught and imprisoned... for tax evasion.
- Crazy creditsToward the end of the credits there is a dedication to Marty Feldman (who died during the filming) that simply states "For Marty"
- ConnectionsEdited into Group Madness (1983)
It isn't.
The list of talent in this movie is amazing - but the results are boring. There was enough talent here to make this into Blazing Saddles of the Sea with the right script. But the script wasn't right. Sure, it has a plot. But just about everything in it is lackluster. There's so much talent wasted on lame jokes and premises that fizzle that it becomes sad to watch it all slip away.
Most of the jokes are obvious, and the rest are either pointless or so base as to be insulting to the people they have performing them.
As an example, there's a scene early in the film where Eric Idle heads to Lord Lambourn's estate. As he gets out of his carriage, the camera cuts to a pile of horse manure. Then we cut to him stepping in the horse manure the last shot showed us. Then he stands there and waits for his assistant to clean his shoes while he's still standing in the manure. That's it. End Joke.
Just seconds later, after he meets lord and lady lambourn, the camera cuts to a man about 15 feet away peeing on a hedge. Lady lambourn tells him to stop it. He runs away. She chases him. That's it. End Joke.
If either of those sound lame when they're written out, they're just as bad when you're watching them. The movie is filled with bits that could have been in any movie about any subject, but they just happened to be in this movie because someone thought they'd get a laugh. They do nothing to advance plot, characters, or even the next 5 seconds of screen time.
And if you're thinking of watching for the performances--they don't really manage to salvage anything. It feels like after a certain point everyone started going through the motions just to get the film in the can.
- How long is Yellowbeard?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Captain Dotterbart
- Filming locations
- Rye, East Sussex, England, UK(some exteriors)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $6,500,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $4,300,000
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $1,564,155
- Jun 26, 1983
- Gross worldwide
- $4,300,000