Johnny Depp Joined by Stellar Cast in Action Comedy “MORTDECAI”
Upbeat,
satirical and utterly hilarious, the novels featuring Charlie and his
manservant Jock Strapp had Johnny Depp laughing out loud after reading the
script for the film “Mortdecai.” “I’d
read them years before and they made me laugh out loud,” says Depp. “They are
irreverent and insane in a way I thought would translate well to the screen.”
In “Mortdecai,” Charlie charms,
schemes and blunders his way in and out of hilariously compromising situations
as he attempts to beat out an array of international evildoers on the trail of
a priceless Goya masterpiece that could also be the key to claiming missing
Nazi millions.
Charlie Mortdecai is a
connoisseur of good food, fine libations, beautiful women and the most elite
trappings of wealth. He also frequently finds himself entangled in matters of
an ambiguous legal nature. Asked by MI5, the British Security Service, to track
down a missing Goya painting, Charlie hopes to discharge his debts to “Queen
and country” by retrieving the purloined artwork.
“Actually, Charlie gets involved
in finding the Goya because he sees an opportunity to sell it,” Depp says. “His
aristocratic ways are intact, but his bank book is worn out and Charlie needs
to rectify that.”
Badly behaved, violently
snobbish and completely self-interested, Charlie was also endlessly appealing
to the actor. “He is a blatant narcissist who has no relationship with the
truth, except as he sees it,” says Depp. “What drew me to the character more
than anything was the challenge of making this guy, who is a little bit shady
and most definitely a con man, someone you can sympathize with.”
Charlie’s luscious blonde wife
Johanna is played by Academy Award® winner Gwyneth Paltrow. Johanna and Charlie
have been together since college. She is posh and very clever—certainly more
clever than Charlie. “Gwyneth is
perfection as Johanna,” says Depp. “This a caper movie, teetering toward farce,
and timing was everything. She had that down pat.”
Everywhere Charlie Mortdecai
goes, he is accompanied by his manservant and right-hand-man Jock Strapp, a
faithful but upbeat bruiser who dedicates his life to protecting his boss. British actor Paul Bettany, who plays Jock,
was introduced to the project by Johnny Depp while the two were filming
Transcendence. “Johnny asked me if I’d ever read the Mortdecai books,”
remembers Bettany. “I hadn’t and he gave me all of them. Afterwards Johnny
mentioned he was going to make them into a film and asked if I wanted to play
Jock.”
Depp says that while Bettany is
not known as a comedic actor, he is one of the funniest people around. “He was
the only person who could play Jock in my eyes,” he adds. “That fact that he’s
a big, tall, seemingly serious Nordic god of a man only makes it funnier.”
Charlie’s insecurities are
reinforced by the arrival of Alistair Martland, an old friend from their
college days who is still attracted to Johanna. A highly placed officer in the
MI5 - British Security Service, Martland is a sensitive, softhearted
poetry-reading detective who loses his composure whenever Johanna is around. On
the trail of the missing Goya masterpiece, he comes to Charlie for help. McGregor was drawn to the film’s combination
of wit and broad physical comedy. “It reminds me a lot of the Pink Panther
movies from the 1970s,” he says. “There’s a humor to it that I haven’t seen on
screen for a long time. It’s very cleverly written.”
Follow “Mortdecai” and his
amusing crime fighting adventures when it opens January 22 in theatres
nationwide.
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