Category: Johnny Depp (41-48 of 48)

Jan 12 2011 09:05 AM ET

Johnny Depp says he wouldn't change a thing about 'The Tourist' - EXCLUSIVE

TouristImage Credit: Peter MountainJohnny Depp tells EW he wouldn’t change a thing about his recent thriller The Tourist. The film, which also stars Angelina Jolie, was released last month to a tepid $16 million opening-weekend gross and often harsh reviews. (EW critic Owen Gleiberman wrote that while the film “isn’t a debacle … it’s a caper that’s fatally low on carbonation.”)

However, Depp says that even if he could go back in time to the start of the movie’s production, he wouldn’t alter the film one jot. “I’d do it exactly the same,” says the actor, who portrays a math teacher caught up in some international intrigue while on a European vacation. “I wanted to work with Angelina and I felt like I had a good handle on the character. It was not a character that I’d really played before. I don’t know the main ingredient of success at the box office. I just feel that’s not something I can do anything about.”  READ FULL STORY »

Dec 14 2010 03:30 PM ET

'Rango' trailer: Johnny Depp is such a chameleon

Johnny Depp is a chameleon. I’m not referring to his acting abilities, but to his character in the upcoming animated film Rango. The new trailer for the Gore Verbinski-directed film looks, well, Deppian. With that loud shirt and saucer eyes, Rango even resembles Hunter Thompson a tad, though Depp’s lizard is as timid as the Doctor was daffy. The story is set in the West, but don’t call it a Western. Verbinski has said that he considers his film a commentary on the Hero, with Rango being a lonely chameleon with an identity crisis. I love the look of the film, which eschews motion-capture and will not play in 3-D. It has it’s own gorgeous grittiness rare for an animated film.

When Verbinski previewed this trailer to the media two weeks, he said that it took Depp awhile to get the hang of his character because he generally likes to hide behind his characters, and this performance called for him to simply “act” in his street clothes. How ironic then: The character that is the purest version of Johnny Depp might be the one where’s he’s voicing a chameleon! Check out the clip below:

READ FULL STORY »

Dec 13 2010 05:39 PM ET

'Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides': The first trailer is here!

Time to haul that nautical lingo out of mothballs again. The first official trailer for Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides is here — anchors away! hoist the mainsail! — and considering this is just a teaser, Disney has stuffed it with a surprising number of goodies to keep fans satisfied as they wait the next six months for the movie’s release. The usual staples we’ve come to expect from the franchise are firmly in place: Exotic locales, Captain Jack Sparrow’s boozy banter, Geoffrey Rush’s gravelly-voiced Barbossa, a quest for a precious prize (this time, the fabled Fountain of Youth), and much buckling of swash. But the trailer also offers glimpses of some fresh additions to the series — most notably, Penelope Cruz as Sparrow’s saucy love interest, and Ian McShane, clad in roadie-for-Motörhead black leather, as Sparrow’s new nemesis, the pirate Blackbeard. Plus, cementing their status as the It Monsters of the moment: Zombies! The trailer lavishes most of its attention on Johnny Depp’s Jack Sparrow, which shouldn’t surprise anyone. Sparrow has always been the heart and soul of the franchise, and with the departure of Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley from the series, that’s more true than ever. Check it out:  READ FULL STORY »

Dec 2 2010 09:30 AM ET
Nov 23 2010 02:53 PM ET

Gore Verbinski rides with Johnny Depp for 'The Lone Ranger'

Lone-RangerImage Credit: Everett CollectionPirates of the Caribbean director Gore Verbinski will direct The Lone Ranger for Disney, according to a spokesperson for the studio. Deadline first reported the news that Verbinski would reunite with Pirates star Johnny Depp, who’s slated to play the Ranger’s sidekick, Tonto. Verbinski and Depp also collaborated on the upcoming animated film, Tango, in which Depp voices a desert lizard.

Read more:
Mike Newell in talks to direct ‘Lone Ranger’
Johnny Depp to star in ‘Lone Ranger’

Mar 15 2010 11:41 AM ET

Johnny, Matt, Leo, or RPattz: Who's your man?

green-zone-remember-meImage Credit: (left) Jonathan Olley; Myles AronowitzFor the record, I swear I will never again write the word “RPattz.” Blame it on the dizzying effects of the storm that turned the East Coast upside down on Saturday, ripping giant trees out by their roots. But you know what I mean: Depp, Damon, DiCaprio, and Pattinson all wanted you to choose them this past weekend, offering a quartet of movies that, taken together, might be read as the resting pulse of serious, mainstream American cinema. Which is why I’ve always had a particular fondness for springtime wide releases: They’re so content to be what they are. There’s no pretense, no great expectations. Spring movies don’t rattle their chains and bellow like summer joy-ride blockbusters; they don’t hustle for prestige (with the best of manners, of course) like autumnal Oscar bait. What you see is what you get.

And by that measure, Alice in Wonderland, Green Zone, Shutter Island, and Remember Me comprise a pretty classy assortment pack. (For the mainstream comedy alternative, add She’s Out Of My League.) Here’s Tim Burton’s family fairytale made by one of the medium’s most inventive visual stylists, starring one of the medium’s most interesting chameleons; Paul Greengrass’ distinctive action pic, incorporating essential information about current events; Martin Scorsese’s lavish construction of a big old spooky junky thriller; and dewy romantic mush that ends with the kind of howling tonal misstep that makes bad movies interesting.

When you look it at it that way: Cool! (And no one is angling for an award!)

So who was your man this weekend?

Mar 9 2010 03:38 PM ET

'Alice in Wonderland' is a huge hit, but is Tim Burton struggling to hold onto his creepy-cool imagination?

johnny-deppImage Credit: Ed Wood: Everett Collection; Alice: DisneyBack in the mid-’90s, I was having a drink with a prominent filmmaker who had risen up in the indie movement, and we started to talk about Tim Burton, whose career at that point, with the recently released Mars Attacks! (a bomb — though seriously underrated in my book), was headed toward a tricky moment of truth. The filmmaker, who was dealing with a few struggles of his own, smiled and gave me a line about Burton that he’d obviously thought of, and used a number of times, in the past. He said: “What’s a director supposed to think when his best movie is his biggest failure and his worst movie is his biggest hit?”

That line was just glib enough to echo and resonate, even if it wasn’t entirely true. The two Burton films he was talking about were Ed Wood (1994), the great, one-of-a-kind biopic of the legendarily awful poverty-row movie director Edward D. Wood Jr. — a movie that I, too, consider to be the highlight of Burton’s career, though one whose reputation dramatically outstripped its popularity; and Batman (1989), the industry-shaking earthquake of a comic-book smash that was really the first, trend-setting example — before Steven Soderbergh, Sam Raimi, Christopher Nolan, etc. — of a director like Burton, all but defined by the flukiness of his personal vision, crossing the corporate channel to make a megabucks studio blockbuster.

Let me state right up front that I don’t agree with the aesthetically dismissive assessment of Batman. I think it’s a flawed but still marvelous movie — a very grand gem of gothic baroque kitsch, with a performance by Jack Nicholson that’s more than just one actor’s over-the-top, zany-hambone showcase. Even though he was officially playing the film’s villain, what Nicholson, as the Joker, expressed is a playfully demonic, bats-in-his-belfry joy that linked him, in spirit, to every great, bent Burton hero, from Pee-wee Herman to Beetlejuice to (one year later) Edward Scissorhands.

Nevertheless, I think that my director acquaintance was onto something. He was, in a way, almost anticipating the trouble that a filmmaker like Burton would have, in the new franchise-happy Hollywood, attemping to bring his vision to full, prankishly surreal flower in a mainstream context. READ FULL STORY »

Feb 24 2010 10:47 AM ET

Johnny Depp, on '48 Hours Mystery,' will go to bat for a convicted killer -- but before this case attracted a movie star, it was already a great movie

johnny-depp-48hoursImage Credit: CBSYou may or may not have heard about Johnny Depp’s crusade. He has long been the most private of movie stars, but this Saturday night, he will break character when he appears on the CBS investigative news show 48 Hours Mystery to defend the West Memphis Three, who as teenagers were found guilty of the hideous 1993 murder of three 8-year-old boys in West Memphis, Arkansas. Depp joins a handful of other entertainers — Eddie Vedder, Winona Ryder, the Dixie Chicks — who claim that the convicted killers are innocent, and that they were railroaded for the crime because of their associations with heavy-metal music, goth fashion, and the occult. One of the three, Damien Echols, is now on death row. (The other two, Jason Baldwin and Jessie Misskelley, received life sentences.)

The reason that Damien became the focus of the case is that he was portrayed in court as a teenage satanist, which inflamed the community. Actually, he was a follower of Wicca — which may, in a place like West Memphis, seem interchangeable with “satanism.” Even so, that hardly makes him guilty.

I’m as skeptical as anyone when celebrities like Sean Penn pick and choose a cause to flaunt and lecture us about. It isn’t hard, though, to see why Johnny Depp has fastened onto Damien Echols and the West Memphis Three. There have always been innocents on death row, but the issue of people falsely incriminated by their association with subversive pop culture obviously touched a deep nerve in Depp. (As a comrade of Keith Richards, he’s had his own associations with devilish rockers, even if they are in their sixties.) In 17 years, there has never been forensic evidence linking Damien Echols, or any of the West Memphis Three, to this crime. What interests me about Depp’s appearance on 48 Hours is that it marks the re-opening of a case that has already been the subject of a memorable and disturbing movie: Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky’s great 1996 documentary Paradise Lost: The Child Murders at Robin Hood Hills. You have never seen anything quite like it. READ FULL STORY »

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