Has Depp’s career walked the plank?
After another poor performance, audiences may have grown tired of the volatile actor’s oddball shtick, writes Robbie Collin
The most interesting thing about Johnny Depp’s performance in the new Fantastic Beasts film — arguably the only interesting thing — is that he is actually there to give it in the first place.
Two years ago, audiences who saw the first instalment in J K Rowling’s fantasy series were bowled a googly just before the closing credits, when the villain — a scheming magical enforcer called Percival Graves, played by Colin Farrell — morphed into a platinum-haired and pudgyfaced Depp.
The actor’s cameo appearance as Gellert Grindelwald, public enemy number one in the Wizarding World, had been kept secret — but for many of us, the surprise went off with less of a bang than a plop.
Farrell had made a suave and mysterious baddy, whose path through the next four proposed films might make all sorts of intriguing turns. But now the prospect of eight to 10 hours of oddball shtick loomed.
What’s more, six months earlier, Depp had been accused of domestic abuse by his now-ex wife, Amber Heard — which he strenuously denied — and their subsequent divorce has been one of the most bitter in recent Hollywood memory.
There had also been whispers of unpredictable behaviour on the set of the latest Pirates of the Caribbean film — later extensively fleshed out by crew members — that suggested the 55-year-old actor’s craft was not as laser-focused as it might have been.
Even at that relatively late stage in mid-2016, Depp could have been easily and quietly Kevin Spaceyed out of the picture. Nothing about the role of Grindelwald — a proto-fascist agitator whipping up anti-Muggle sentiment in the 30s — suggested Depp was the only man who could play him.
Also, no one knew he was actually in it. In a statement, Rowling admitted she and director David Yates had discussed recasting, but that based on their understanding of the situation they were sticking with the original casting, and “happy to have Johnny playing a major character in the movies”, before adding, a little spikily, that “conscience isn’t governable by committee”.
In other words, a reckoning had been made at Warner Bros that Depp would remain a viable star and asset until 2024 at least.
After eight years watching Depp floundering professionally, while his PR liability rating creeps ever higher, that seems to me an odd call indeed.
There is no mystery around why Depp should want another well-paid, recurring role. A legal spat with his former business managers last year shed light on a lifestyle that cost a reported average of US$2 million ($2.93m) a month, including a US$30,000 wine tab and a lump sum to fire friend Hunter S Thompson’s ashes into space from a cannon.
“It’s insulting to say that I spent US$30,000 on wine, because it was far more,” he clarified in a Rolling Stone interview, in which he also estimated the cost of Thompson’s extraterrestrial committal at US$5m.
His personal spending was presumably only able to hit such heights thanks to the Pirates franchise, which made him a megastar in 2003. And even last year, the middling fifth outing took more than US$1.1 billion worldwide.
But with Disney reportedly talking a reboot, Depp’s buccaneering days are likely numbered.
So what else has this decade yielded? Half-formed vanity projects (The Rum Diary), wacko-goth diminishing returns (Dark Shadows, Alice Through the Looking Glass),
glorified cameos (Into the Woods, Lucky Them), corny throwbacks (The Tourist) and outright abominations (Mortdecai).
There were also box-office bombs, The Lone Ranger and Transcendence,
both heavily marketed on Depp’s involvement. With combined losses of about US$300m, they suggest the public appetite for Depp is conditional on galleons and Jolly Rogers.
Next came an attempt to move back on to the Oscars radar with the 2015 true-crime saga Black Mass. But his performance as mobster “Whitey” Bulger was buried under unnecessary prosthetics that left Depp looking as if he was trying to act though a chapati.
Then there was to be a remake of The Invisible Man — part of a proposed “Dark Universe” of films at Universal, in which classic monsters would be revived. But after a Tom Cruise-led version of The Mummy failed to excite, the Dark Universe was quietly snuffed out.
Another true-crime thriller, City of Lies, in which Depp plays a detective investigating the 1997 murder of hiphop star Biggie Smalls, was meant to be out in September. But it was pulled from schedules and remains in limbo after its location manager filed a lawsuit alleging Depp assaulted him.
Perhaps Rowling and Warner Bros are banking on international audiences just not caring that much about Depp’s personal or professional travails. Even as the Pirates films faded in the West, the last one did gangbusters in China.
Perhaps there is also a hope he has one more iconic performance in him. It seems unlikely he is about to give the world his archetypal evil genius in episodes two to five of Fantastic Beasts, however. But perhaps he will discover a corner of his jungle that remains unscorched.