Helena Bonham Carter and Johnny Depp



 

Let’s get one thing straight. We don’t like pretty boys. When it comes to guys, the less attractive the better, we usually say. The ugly ones try harder. Plus they’re less likely to leave you and easier to control. We make an exception for Johnny Depp, however. Dude is hot and not in a “No, no honey, please don’t talk and ruin it” kind of a way. The man actually has something to say and tells it like it is.

In the new issue of Rolling Stone, for instance, Hollywood’s beloved can-do-no-wrong actor admits that he actually never wanted to be an actor at all. Also, he does it for the money! Let’s just hope he doesn’t leave us for France.

On dropping out of school at 16 to be a musician:
“My parents said, ‘OK, kid, you’ve taken yourself out of school, so you fend for yourself.’ So there weren’t many options. I was very close to joining the Marine Corps… So I sat down with the dean and said, ‘Listen, I made a mistake and I’d like to try again.’ And bless him, he said, ‘Johnny, I don’t think that’s such a good idea. You love your music, that’s the only thing you’ve ever applied yourself to. Go out there and play.’”

On why he became a guitarist and not a singer:
“I didn’t want to be that guy at all. Plus, singers had to do stuff that I found mortifying, like jump around. Horror show. I just liked playing very loud and keeping my head down, staying in the dark.”

On acting:
“I never wanted to be an actor. It just seemed like a good way to make easy money. I didn’t care what the movies were. If you were going to pay me, fine. That was my philosophy.”

On how Nicolas Cage got him into acting:
“Nic said, ‘Why don’t you try acting? I think you could probably do it.’ I remember saying, ‘I’ll try anything, man.’ I gotta live without calling home and begging for money.’ So I met his agent, and she sent me to read for a movie [Nightmare on Elm Street], and they hired me.”

On his past substance abuse:
“I’m a dumb-ass, and I poisoned myself for years. Now I understand things better.”

(source)

 



Dec 122007
 

Johnny Depp is considering an offer to star in two forthcoming Pee-Wee Herman movies, playing the legendary kids’ character. Paul Reubens, who played Pee-Wee in TV shows and films until 1990, has completed two scripts he hopes to bring to the big screen in 2009.

Reubens hopes to reprise the role himself, but admits he has also spoken to his Blow co-star Depp about taking on the part.

Reubens tells MTV, “(He said) Let me think about it.”

Besides appearing together in Blow, the two actors are also linked through director Tim Burton – one of regular Depp-collaborator Burton’s first films was 1985′s Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure.

(source)

 

Johnny Depp




Vanessa Williams

Mira Sorvino


 


 

TIM Burton has been told to tone down the gore in the screen version of “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street,” starring Johnny Depp. The suits at Warner Bros. “became a tad squeamish when they viewed grisly footage of blood splashing across the set as Depp slits the throats of his customers,” London’s Daily Mail reports. In another scene that has the studio on edge, a 10-year-old boy feeds human body parts into a meat grinder to make meat pies. The movie, co-starring Helena Bonham Carter and Sacha Baron Cohen, opens in December.

(source)

 

Johnny Depp’s Pirates Of The Caribbean character Jack Sparrow will feature in a new television series.

Disney is reportedly planning to make a TV spin-off of the swashbuckling franchise with Sparrow as its main character.

A source tells British newspaper The Daily Star, “The idea is that we focus on a much younger Jack Sparrow and show fans how he became a famous pirate.

“The film has been such a success with spin-offs such as toys and video games and books, it only seems right to do a TV series.”

It is hoped a host of high profile celebrities will provide the voiceover for the series. The source adds, “Since the film attracted guests like of Keith Richards, you can imagine the stars who will want to pop up in the television show.”

The film starring Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom and Kiera Knightley has become one of the most popular movie franchises and made the character Jack Sparrow the biggest cinema icon for the past decade.

Curse of the Black Pearl, the first in the trilogy, grossed $654 million worldwide. Dead Man’s Chest, despite getting mixed reviews from the critics, became the fastest film to reach the $1 billion mark.

When released on DVD Dead Man’s Chest sold 10.5 million copies in its first week making it the biggest home video debut in 2006.

Summer 2007 brought At World’s End, the final film in the trilogy, and to date it has grossed $939 million at the worldwide box office, making it the largest gossing movie of the year so far.

 

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