5 Best Johnny Depp Performances
5 Best Johnny Depp Performances
 Edward Scissorhands  (1990): The first of Depp's collaborations with Burton, who would go on  to become his frequent director and good friend. The seeds were planted  here for one of Depp's key on-screen personalities: the  quirky-funny-awkward-sweet misfit. He's all that and so much more as the  title character, the creation of an inventor who died before his work  was complete, leaving Edward to fend for himself in the outside world  with scissors for hands. He's initially feared, but then his gentle  demeanor wins over the bored residents of a tacky suburban enclave,  including the beautiful teenager Kim (Winona Ryder). It's a whimsical  and dark fairy tale, and Depp's delicate performance is just  heartbreaking. I cry every time I watch it.
 
 
Ed Wood  (1994): Depp's next film with Burton was the hilarious, sorta-true,  black-and-white biopic about the director Ed Wood, who achieved cult  status by infamously making some of the worst films known to mankind,  including "Plan 9 From Outer Space" and "Glen or Glenda." Depp infused  the performance with the clueless, cheery optimism of a would-be auteur.  But in portraying Wood's secret, inner life -- his proclivity for  dressing in women's clothing-- he also found a sweetness and a  sensitivity. You get the feeling that Depp (and Burton) were never  making fun of Wood, but rather saluting him with an affectionate homage. 

Pirates of the Caribbean:The Curse of the Black Pearl  (2003): The first time he played the role of Capt. Jack Sparrow, it was  a startling thing to behold. He seemed kinda drunk and vaguely  effeminate, out of control yet always on top of his game. Depp was  clearly channeling Keith Richards (who would show up in later  installments in a cameo as Jack's dad), and yet he had created an  indelible figure that was entirely his own. It was unpredictable, and  that was thrilling. The first "Pirates" movie earned Depp the first of  his three best-actor nominations. Now the novelty has long since worn  off, but Jack can still be a kick.

 Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street  (2007): Back with Burton, Depp earned his third best-actor Oscar  nomination for playing the title character in this film adaptation of  Stephen Sondheim's revered musical. He and co-star Helena Bonham Carter  aren't exactly singing -- they're really acting the music most of the  time -- but that makes the whole experience feel even more frightening.  Still, in playing a vengeful barber who slits his customers' throats,  Depp took on the kind of challenging role that's become his trademark;  he can do anything, and he makes it look easy. With his shock of  black-and-white hair and an obsessed look in his darkened eyes, Depp's  Todd could be a long-lost, evil relative of Edward Scissorhands.

Rango (2011): With an honorary mention for Tim Burton's Corpse Bride  (2005). These animated films reveal Depp's ability to provide a rich  characterization, even when you can't see him. In "Rango," he lends his  voice as a quick-talking lizard with a flair for the theatrical. Dumped  in the tiny desert town of Dirt, this domesticated pet reinvents himself  as Rango, and he's one tough hombre. Depp is wonderfully goofy here; he  sounds playful and free. In the gorgeous and strange "Corpse Bride," a  wonder of stop-motion animation and digital technology, Depp dials it  down to play a young man who's shy, skittish and subdued, but just as  fully fleshed out as any human being he's portrayed throughout his  varied career.
 
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
  
 
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