Johnny Depp will be working on low-budget movies to kick-start his career

The layoffs of Warner Bros and The Walt Disney Company, his films’ withdrawal from Netflix, and his legal troubles have put Johnny Depp’s career in jeopardy. The big studios don’t want to partner with the actor classified as a “woman abuser” after his legal troubles with Amber Heard and must reinvent himself in the industry.

Depp will not return as Jack Sparrow in the following episodes of ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ and was replaced by Mads Mikkelsen in ‘Fantastic Animals and Where to Find Them’ in the role of Gellert Grindelwald, his most iconic roles in recent years. His bet to kick-start his career will be a low-budget cinema.

The journalist specializing in information from Hollywood and the film industry, Daniel Richtman, recently assured on his Patreon channel that Johnny Depp, 57, has explored some proposals to continue to generate income, after the losses he has suffered and his expenses with lawyers. .

While it is true that the interpreter made a considerable fortune from his successful appearances in the cinema and what he generated with his rock band ‘Hollywood Vampires’, he must keep his capital.

Batalla judicial crook Amber Heard

Depp, who was awaiting approval from a Virginia judge to annul a lawsuit against Amber Heard for defamation and $ 100 million, received the opposite: the judge rejected his petition for annulment and upheld the also actress’s complaint .

Heard filed the complaint for the aforementioned amount and motive for ‘the smear campaign’ against her, which caused cyberbullying against her, even asking to expel her from ‘Aquaman 2’, a Warner Bros tape and in which she will return in the role of Mera.

Johnny Depp still has to appeal to a court against the verdict in “The Sun,” a media outlet that called him a “woman abuser” and which brought him a verdict in court for alleged defamation. In addition, a lawsuit against Amber Heard for defamation will begin in May, after her ex-partner published an article about gender violence in ‘The Washington Post’ in 2018.

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