Johnny Depp is old friends with his inner evil

Actor stars in Scott Cooper’s ‘Black Mass’ based on Irish-American gangster James Bulger.


Reuters September 06, 2015
Depp and his wife Amber Heard arrive for the red carpet event of the movie Black Mass at the 72nd Venice Film Festival. PHOTO: REUTERS

VENICE: Johnny Depp says he did not have to dig deep to tap into his evil side for his portrayal of the Irish-American gangster James “Whitey” Bulger in the film Black Mass, which screened out of competition on Friday at the Venice Film Festival.

“I found the evil in myself a long time ago and I’ve accepted it and we’re old friends,” Depp said when asked how he had transformed himself from the whimsical Captain Jack Sparrow of Pirates of the Caribbean into the Boston gangster.

Bulger, 86, who was captured in California in 2011 after 16 years on the run, is serving two life terms in prison for ordering or committing 11 murders during the 1970s and 80s.

Depp said that although Bulger had declined his request to him for his portrayal, he had worked on the assumption that the convict did not see himself as fundamentally bad.

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“I think you just have to approach him just as a human being in a sense that nobody wakes up in the morning and shaves or brushes their teeth and looks in the mirror and thinks ‘I am evil’ or ‘I’m going to do something evil today’,” Depp told a news conference.

“I think within the context of his business ... not only was the violence just a part of the job, but it was also kind of a language that the people he associated with and the people that he opposed ... understood.”

Black Mass explores Bulger’s reign as the boss of the Irish-American underworld and the close connections he forged with the FBI, which used him as a paid informer in order to crack down on the rival Italian-American mafia, but at the same time turned a blind eye to his own criminal activities.

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Scott Cooper, the director of Black Mass, said Boston was not special in this regard.

“Whether it’s Naples, Italy or it’s Detroit or it’s Los Angeles or it’s New York or it’s Boston, crime and politics tend to interweave and lead to disastrous consequences,” said Cooper.

Depp’s presence in Venice was greeted with hundreds of people flocking to see him. He was of the opinion that his fans are not his admirers but rather the people who finance his movies. “I thank my bosses outside,” he said.


Published in The Express Tribune, September 4th,  2015.

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