(ANSA) - LONDON, AUGUST 17 - Johnny Depp embarks on a boarding up against Hollywood, accusing the 'star system' of having boycotted it for some time.
"It's been five surreal years", is how the protagonist of the Caribbean Piraites defines the turbulent period of the legal confrontation with his ex-wife, the actress Amber Heard, who went to the courts to report a series of abuses suffered in their agitated relationship as a couple.
The actor 'confessed' in an interview with the British Sunday Times. He admits as a "man and actor" that he has passed through a chaotic situation in recent times but relaunches, promising to "shed light" on him. He has already tried in different ways but with poor results: like the lawsuit against the British tabloid Sun who in 2018 had defined lastar a "thug" husband. Depp still has disputes in the divorce lawsuit with Heard in the US.
Meanwhile, the American production company MGM, which bought the rights to its latest film entitled 'Minamata', has decided not to distribute it in the United States. In the film he interprets the documentary photographer William Eugene Smith, who in the 1970s denounced the effects on the Japanese population of mercury poisoning (a pathology later known as Minamata disease, from the name of the Japanese town most affected).
Depp and director Andrew Levitas have no doubts that the choice of the giant depends on the actor's personal problems and the bad repercussions that these could have on the image of the company with the roaring lion, even more filled with the Hollywood world still shaken by the '#MeToo campaign. 'against sexual harassment of women. (HANDLE).