Black mass johnny depp, In the first trailer from the film, the star is almost unrecognisable. With piercing blue eyes, white hair and pasty skin, Depp looks as if he's at death’s door – and utterly terrifying.
As notorious Boston crime boss Whitey Bulger, he innocently asks his dinner party host for the secret family recipe for the steak he's just eaten.
He divulges the information and the tone quickly changes as Depp’s murdering mobster sinsterly warns of the dangers of revealing information. "Just saying can get you buried real quick," he warns in a brooding scene intercut with violence.
The crime drama tells the story of a real life mobster whose brother, played by Benedict Cumberbatch, was a US Senator.In the mid 1970s Bulger turned FBI informant, helping bring down the Italian Mafia in Boston.
In return his own criminal operations were largely ignored until the press exposed the scandal in the late 1990s.
In 2013 he was sentenced to two life terms plus five years for 31 offences, including complicity in 11 murders.
Director Cooper said: "This is a film about the abuse of power. In the city of Boston at this time, criminals and lawmen were virtually indistinguishable."
He divulges the information and the tone quickly changes as Depp’s murdering mobster sinsterly warns of the dangers of revealing information. "Just saying can get you buried real quick," he warns in a brooding scene intercut with violence.
The crime drama tells the story of a real life mobster whose brother, played by Benedict Cumberbatch, was a US Senator.In the mid 1970s Bulger turned FBI informant, helping bring down the Italian Mafia in Boston.
In return his own criminal operations were largely ignored until the press exposed the scandal in the late 1990s.
In 2013 he was sentenced to two life terms plus five years for 31 offences, including complicity in 11 murders.
Director Cooper said: "This is a film about the abuse of power. In the city of Boston at this time, criminals and lawmen were virtually indistinguishable."
Blogger Comment
Facebook Comment