Fylm | Synmayy Dzdan Dryayy Karayyb 1 Dwblh Farsy Bdwn
Arman shook his head, frozen.
The movie had turned into a labyrinth of lost dialogues. Arman had to walk through scenes from the film, but each scene had been rewritten by underground Persian translators: instead of fighting skeletons, he fought "censorship ghouls" who stole syllables from people's mouths.
Arman read them aloud.
Arman laughed. He’d seen Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl a dozen times. But the promise of a different ending intrigued him. fylm synmayy dzdan dryayy karayyb 1 dwblh farsy bdwn
Captain Jack (the Persian dub version) leaned out of the TV frame and said: "می دانی چرا این نسخه بدون پایان معمولی است؟" — "Do you know why this version is without the usual ending?"
In the final scene — not the original ending — Elizabeth Swann (now voiced by a legendary but forgotten Iranian actress) handed Arman a scroll. On it were all the missing lines: jokes about mullahs, romantic whispers, even a scene where Jack calls the British Navy "استعمارگرهای ترسو" ("cowardly colonizers").
Then, halfway through the film, the screen glitched. When it returned, the characters were speaking directly to Arman. Arman shook his head, frozen
In a small, dusty video store in southern Tehran, just before the sanctions tightened, a young film enthusiast named found a bootleg DVD. The cover read in broken English: "Fylm Synmayy Dzdan Dryayy Karayyb 1 — Dwblh Farsy Bdwn" . Below it, someone had scribbled in Farsi: "بدون سانسور، بدون پایان معمولی" — "Without censorship, without the usual ending."
"فیلم سینمایی دزدان دریایی کارائیب ۱ دوبله فارسی بدون" → "Pirates of the Caribbean 1 movie, Persian dubbed, without..." (probably missing the last word, like “without censorship” or “without subtitle”).
That night, he put the disc into his old player. The movie started normally — the familiar Disney castle, then the fog over the sea. But the Persian dubbing was… strange. The voice actor for Jack Sparrow didn’t sound like Johnny Depp; he sounded like an old Tehrani bazaar merchant, using idioms like "چی شد بابا؟" ("What happened, dude?") instead of "Savvy?" Arman read them aloud
Jack smiled, his kohl-rimmed eyes flickering like bad tracking. "Because in this version, the treasure isn't gold. It's language. Every word they cut from the original dubbing — every joke, every curse, every political joke the censors removed — became a living curse. We're stuck in the film until someone speaks all the forbidden words aloud."
If you're asking me to based on that phrase, I'll take it as a creative prompt — mixing the world of Pirates of the Caribbean with an original Persian-inspired twist, plus a meta element about watching a dubbed version.


