National Post

Best in the old West

Johnny Depp upped his game to play The Lone Ranger’s Tonto

- Bo B Th ompson The Lone Ranger opens wide on July 3.

Even in this laid-back tourist town, Johnny depp is being tracked by the media.

The 50-year-old is back in New Mexico to promote The Lone Ranger, a high-concept Western based on the 1950s TV show. The cast and crew spent months in and around the New Mexico frontier shooting the uS$200-million movie, so returning here seemed like a good idea.

The unwanted media attention, however passive, comes with the fame territory, and the Oscar-nominated actor seems resigned to enduring it whether he’s in Los Angeles or New york or the most elevated state capital (around 7,000 feet) in the u. S.

“I’m used to living like a fugitive now, so it doesn’t really matter,” says a smirking depp with key Lone Ranger cast and crew members at Bishops Lodge resort, a five-mile gallop north of Santa Fe. “Anonymity, yes I remember it. It ain’t there no more. Would I trade it [for something else]? I don’t know. I like my life.”

And why wouldn’t he? When depp hints that he wants to play Tonto in a blockbuste­r, a studio jumps in to make it so.

In the origins yarn, it’s not a surprise that depp’s Tonto is the focus of the Ol’ West action flick. An oddball banished from his tribe, Tonto discovers John reid, soon to be the Lone ranger (Armie hammer), after the city slicker reid gets ambushed along with a posse of Texas rangers that includes his brother (James Badge dale).

Left for dead, reid ends up the only survivor thanks to Tonto and a wild white stallion soon to be named Silver. When Tonto convinces reid to wear a mask as the Lone ranger, he eventually agrees. That’s when the duo join forces to seek revenge against the bushwhacke­rs.

Co-starring is William Fichtner, who portrays the Lone ranger’s archenemy, outlaw Butch Cavendish. Tom Wilkinson is the shifty railroad man trying to keep secrets. helena Bonham Carter is the one-legged saloon owner.

A mix of comedy and occasional drama, The Lone Ranger is a Western with a postmodern wink toward modern audiences and their new millennium cinema expectatio­ns. Certainly, a redo of The Lone Ranger seemed like a 21st-century stretch. The antiquated story of the masked lawman and his faithful native sidekick began as a 1930s radio show then morphed into a cornball 1950s TV series with a few B-movie spinoffs thrown in for good measure (as well as comic strips, animations, books, graphic novels and video games).

But depp says that he felt like he was in good hands during the updated transforma­tion to the big screen. After all, he was reuniting with the Pirates of the Caribbean team; power producer Jerry Bruckheime­r, director GoreVerbin­ski and screenwrit­ers Ted elliott and Terry russio. Together, they rejuvenate­d the pirates genre with four popular Captain Jack production­s that together earned more than uS$3.7billion in theatres world wide.

‘I know that I approached Tonto in the right way and that’s all that I can do’

Still, depp says that he was keenly aware of his challenge portraying the iconic Tonto, previously considered a symbol of disrespect. To counter that impression, depp made sure Tonto is a leader, not a follower, in The Lone Ranger, while offering his stilted english more as a comedy device than a salute to the past.

“The idea of some repercussi­on from my playing Tonto — I expected it,” depp says. “So long as I know that I have done no harm and have represente­d, at the very least the Comanche nation, in the proper light ... I’m OK.

“People can critique and dissect and do what they want, but I know that I approached [Tonto] in the right way and that’s all that I can do.”

To ensure that he was on the correct track, he met with Comanche elders and assorted native chiefs before filming to discuss the impact of portraying the character.

Certainly, his family’s native heritage wouldn’t allow him to drift into spoof. “I was told I was Cherokee as a kid. I was told I was Creek as a kid and Chickasaw. I’ve always had a fascinatio­n and a connection, so this film’s a great opportunit­y to chip away a little bit at the [Tonto] cliché.”

Mostly new to depp were the Old West activities. he attended a frontier boot camp (with hammer, Fichtner and Wilson) for a few weeks where he learned how to ride a horse, fire a gun, wield a knife and generally present himself as a native of that time.

It’s all in a day’s work. Pushing the career envelope is what he likes to do, and portraying Tonto in The Lone Ranger continues the trend. So what intrigues him now? “everything really,” says depp smiling. “It doesn’t take much for me — I’m a pretty cheap date.”

 ?? JOHN Shearer / The ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? “I’m used to living like a fugitive now,” Johnny Depp says of the media attention he gets.
JOHN Shearer / The ASSOCIATED PRESS “I’m used to living like a fugitive now,” Johnny Depp says of the media attention he gets.

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