Courtesy: "Associated Press (AP)", 14 May 2011
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Depp steers 'Pirates' into critical seas of Cannes     
CANNES, France     (AP)  -- Johnny Depp chuckled when asked if he was worried about the  notoriously harsh critics at the Cannes Film Festival, where his new  swashbuckler "Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides" played amid  far more sober fare.
Depp said his family -  French actress and romantic partner Vanessa Paradis and their two  children - are the only critics he needs.
"My  family have seen more of my movies than I have. In fact, a lot more,  including this one," Depp said at a news conference Saturday before the  "Pirates of the Caribbean" sequel screened. "They've been angels through  this process, because I started out secretly testing characters on them  to see how the reactions would be. When my daughter was little, we'd be  playing Barbies, and I'd start doing these voices. Finally, she just  said, `Stop.'
"So they go and see the movies,  and basically, I can tell by their reaction if I did all right or not.  So I'm very lucky in that way. They seem to enjoy them so far. I haven't  been fired by my kids."
And the Cannes  critics? Depp, 47, who spent the first two decades of his career in  quirky little movies that rarely found much critical support, was not  exactly quaking in his pirate boots.
"Yeah, I've always feared the critics," Depp said, laughing. "They really scare me."
The  fourth movie in the "Pirates" franchise inspired by the Disney  theme-park ride, "On Stranger Tides" casts Depp's boozy, woozy buccaneer  Jack Sparrow alongside a female pirate (Penelope Cruz) and her  notorious dad, Blackbeard (Ian McShane), in search of the fountain of  youth.
Geoffrey Rush reprises his role as  Sparrow's foil, Barbossa, with Jerry Bruckheimer back as producer on the  blockbuster franchise and "Chicago" filmmaker Rob Marshall taking the  wheel as director. The movie sails into theaters worldwide starting  Wednesday.
It was a reunion for Depp and Cruz, who previously costarred in 2001's crime story "Blow."
While  the characters of "On Stranger Tides" are obsessed with finding eternal  youth, the 37-year-old Cruz said she does not fret about growing old.
"Birthdays  are always something to celebrate. I'm looking forward to every step of  the way," Cruz said. "Maybe because I'm from Spain, that's looked at in  a different way there than, for example, a place like Los Angeles ...  there are a lot of things that I keep from my roots. And that's one of  them, the way we look at that. I never want to be afraid of that. Change  is good."
At Disney, the studio that  bankrolls the "Pirates" franchise, change was not always seen as good.  As the first movie was in production - "Pirates of the Caribbean: The  Curse of the Black Pearl" - Disney executives had hoped for a more  conventional swashbuckling hero than Depp's Sparrow, whom the actor  patterned on a cross between rocker Keith Richards and the cartoon skunk  Pepe LePew (Richards reprises his role as Sparrow's father in "On  Stranger Tides").
Sparrow mumbles, minces,  prattles and prances. He wears heavy eyeliner and a mess of baubles in  his braided hair and beard. His clothes resemble a gypsy's castoffs as  much as the attire of a dashing pirate.
"There  wasn't a group of Disney upper echelon who had any enthusiasm  whatsoever for what I was doing," Depp said. "They almost subtitled me."
But  with $2.7 billion in worldwide box office for the first three "Pirates"  movies, no one at the studio gripes about Sparrow's idiosyncrasies now.
Bruckheimer  has a script for a fifth "Pirates" movie in the works, and Depp said  he's on board to keep playing Sparrow as long as the right ingredients  go in.
"If you are surrounded by such an  amazing and creative force such as Jerry, such as Rob, such strong  actors like these guys, I think the possibilities are endless," Depp  said. "But really, ultimately and truly, these films are made for the  people who go in and they pay their hard-earned money to see these  things. And if the people get tired of it or something, that's when it  stops."
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Note: The viewpoint expressed in this article is solely that of the writer / news outlet. "FATA Awareness Initiative" Team may not agree with the opinion presented.
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