Actor Johnny Depp, who shot to fame with the role of Captain Jack Sparrow in Pirates Of The Carribean film series has been officially dropped from the franchise. "We want to bring in a new energy and vitality," Disney's production chief Sean Bailey told The Hollywood Reporter. Depp's last Pirates of the Caribbean was Dead Men Tell No Tales in 2017, which was the lowest performing of the five films.
"I love the (Pirates) movies, but part of the reason Paul and Rhett are so interesting is that we want to give it a kick in the pants. And that's what I've tasked them with." Disney has met with writing duo Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick to pen the script for a reboot following their success with the Deadpool superhero franchise, reports thesun.co.uk.
In October, scriptwriter Stuart Beattie appeared to confirm the news of Johnny's exit on DailyMail TV and revealed they will be reworking the entire franchise. Speaking about his exit, Beattie said: "I think he's had a great run. Obviously, he's made that character his own and it's become the character he's most famous for now. And kids all over the world love him as that character so I think it's been great for him, it's been great for us, so I'm just very, very happy about it."
He added: "I think Jack Sparrow will be his legacy. It's the only character he's played five times, it's the character he dresses up in to visit children in hospitals, it's what he'll be remembered for.
"Before Jack Sparrow came along, (Depp) was considered this kind of quirky, independent actor that made these really cool little Tim Burton films but he was by no means a movie star and a lot of people thought we were crazy for casting him at the time.
"Because he wasn't a proven commodity; you know, a big movie star. And we were making a big movie and we were putting this quirky, independent actor in the middle of it and people thought we were crazy."
(With IANS inputs)
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