Tim Burton’s classic movie, Edward Scissorhands, tells the story of Edward (Johnny Depp), an artificial man constructed of scissor blades, who falls in love with Kim (Winona Ryder) after getting taken in by a suburban family. The heartwarming, whimsical film from the ’90s still has a following today. So, where is the Edward Scissorhands cast now? Here’s what to know.
Where is ‘Edward Scissorhands’ cast member Johnny Depp now?
Johnny Depp played Edward, the artificially constructed, soft-spoken man who was known for his scissor hands. So, where is the most famous Edward Scissorhands cast member now?
Depp received a lot of press in 2022 due to his trial against Amber Heard. He accused Heard of fabricating domestic abuse accusations. Depp resigned from his role in Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore during the process due to his crumbling reputation. But now, it looks like he’s trying to make a comeback.
Where is ‘Edward Scissorhands’ cast member Johnny Depp now?
Johnny Depp played Edward, the artificially constructed, soft-spoken man who was known for his scissor hands. So, where is the most famous Edward Scissorhands cast member now?
Depp received a lot of press in 2022 due to his trial against Amber Heard. He accused Heard of fabricating domestic abuse accusations. Depp resigned from his role in Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore during the process due to his crumbling reputation. But now, it looks like he’s trying to make a comeback.
- 9/16/2023
- by Lauren Weiler
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
HBO’s In Treatment has seen Uzo Aduba’s Dr. Brooke Taylor help her patients process their own emotions and traumas, but in Season 4’s “Brooke Week 5,” the doctor helps herself.
Penned by Jennifer Schuur and directed by Karyn Kusama, the rebooted series’ episode is the next script in Deadline’s It Starts On the Page. The ongoing series highlights the scripts that are serving as the creative backbones of the TV awards season. The scripts are all being submitted for Emmy consideration this year and have been selected using criteria that includes critical acclaim, a range of networks and platforms, and a mix of established and lesser-known shows.
Faced with the possibility of reuniting with her son for closure, Brooke seeks out help and advice from mentor Dr. Paul Weston (Gabriel Byrne). But when it seems he’s unavailable, Brooke takes matters into her own hands and begins unpacking complicated feelings for her family,...
Penned by Jennifer Schuur and directed by Karyn Kusama, the rebooted series’ episode is the next script in Deadline’s It Starts On the Page. The ongoing series highlights the scripts that are serving as the creative backbones of the TV awards season. The scripts are all being submitted for Emmy consideration this year and have been selected using criteria that includes critical acclaim, a range of networks and platforms, and a mix of established and lesser-known shows.
Faced with the possibility of reuniting with her son for closure, Brooke seeks out help and advice from mentor Dr. Paul Weston (Gabriel Byrne). But when it seems he’s unavailable, Brooke takes matters into her own hands and begins unpacking complicated feelings for her family,...
- 6/24/2021
- by Alexandra Del Rosario
- Deadline Film + TV
In his latest interview/podcast, host and screenwriter Stuart Wright talks to J Blakeson (The Disappearance Of Alice Creed) about writing and directing the morally ambiguous, visceral, tar black comedy I Care A Lot, how you cast someone as high profile as Rosamund Pike to play such a nasty piece of work as Marla Grayson and much more.
Poised with sharklike self-assurance, Marla Grayson is a professional, court-appointed guardian for dozens of elderly wards whose assets she seizes and cunningly bilks through dubious but legal means. It’s a well-oiled racket that Marla and her business-partner and lover, Fran, use with brutal efficiency on their latest “cherry,” Jennifer Peterson – a wealthy retiree with no living heirs or family. But when their mark turns out to have an equally shady secret of her own and connections to a volatile gangster, Marla is forced to level up in a game only predators...
Poised with sharklike self-assurance, Marla Grayson is a professional, court-appointed guardian for dozens of elderly wards whose assets she seizes and cunningly bilks through dubious but legal means. It’s a well-oiled racket that Marla and her business-partner and lover, Fran, use with brutal efficiency on their latest “cherry,” Jennifer Peterson – a wealthy retiree with no living heirs or family. But when their mark turns out to have an equally shady secret of her own and connections to a volatile gangster, Marla is forced to level up in a game only predators...
- 3/2/2021
- by Stuart Wright
- Nerdly
With the perfect casting coup, Cadillac won hands down with their Superbowl ad which saw Timothee Chalamet as Edward Scissorhands son.
“This is the story of a boy with scissors for hands,” Ryder’s Kim says in voiceover.
Aided by his mother – which saw Winona Ryder reprise her role as Kim – Just like his father, Edgar Scissorhands has the same everyday issue’s, from attracting magnets, cutting the bell cord on the bus, to coming up with artistic creations at his fast-food job to the dismay of his boss. With the bus driver refusing to let Edgar, board the bus, the melancholy Edgar finally gets his own car.
The ad uses Edgar’s different abilities to illustrate the advantages of the Lyriq’s hands-free driving feature, called Super Cruise.
Also in news – One father would do anything for his kids in TV spot for ‘Nobody’
“It was pretty surreal to have Timothée play my son,...
“This is the story of a boy with scissors for hands,” Ryder’s Kim says in voiceover.
Aided by his mother – which saw Winona Ryder reprise her role as Kim – Just like his father, Edgar Scissorhands has the same everyday issue’s, from attracting magnets, cutting the bell cord on the bus, to coming up with artistic creations at his fast-food job to the dismay of his boss. With the bus driver refusing to let Edgar, board the bus, the melancholy Edgar finally gets his own car.
The ad uses Edgar’s different abilities to illustrate the advantages of the Lyriq’s hands-free driving feature, called Super Cruise.
Also in news – One father would do anything for his kids in TV spot for ‘Nobody’
“It was pretty surreal to have Timothée play my son,...
- 2/8/2021
- by Zehra Phelan
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
What the Cannes virtual marketplace proved earlier this year is that even without the in-person meetings, the red carpet galas and all the press hype, there’s still room for a lucrative sales market surrounding these virtual events. While that’s true of this year’s Toronto International Film Festival, the hybrid physical and virtual fest is operating on a slimmed down lineup of movies. And with Oscar eligibility requirements pushed back to 2021, there isn’t the same need for all of these movies to make a splash. That said, we are looking forward to quite a bit at this year’s TIFF, and so are buyers.
“Bruised”
Halle Berry takes a beating as a washed-up Mma fighter looking to make her redemption fight in “Bruised,” which is also Berry’s directorial debut. The film is set in New Jersey and explores her fight to get back into shape and win back her child.
“Bruised”
Halle Berry takes a beating as a washed-up Mma fighter looking to make her redemption fight in “Bruised,” which is also Berry’s directorial debut. The film is set in New Jersey and explores her fight to get back into shape and win back her child.
- 9/9/2020
- by Brian Welk
- The Wrap
Tim Burton’s Edward Scissorhands has passed the test of time. Over the past three decades, this classic fairy tale’s universal - yet deeply personal – narrative has only become more compelling than its Frankensteinesque plot may suggest. For those who still have yet to see it, the film follows its title character in his satirical and profoundly emotional exploration of suburbia. Edward, played by Johnny Depp, is somewhere between man and machine, living alone in a foreboding mansion. When Avon Resident Peg Boggs, played by Dianne West, stumbles upon Edward, a moment of sympathy compels her to take him in. Things start to get complicated when Edward catches feelings for Peg’s daughter, Kim, and the townsfolk begin to sensationalize his bladed fingers. What follows is a reflection of our society’s misperceptions of those who are, as Burton would say, only different.
- 7/27/2020
- by Tiger Russell-Yeh
- Hollywood Insider - Substance & Meaningful Entertainment
Stars: Clint Eastwood, Bradley Cooper, Michael Peña, Laurence Fishburne, Alison Eastwood, Dianne West, Manny Montana, Taissa Farmiga, Andy Garcia, Jill Flint, Clifton Collins Jr. | Written by Nick Schenk, Dave Holstein | Directed by Clint Eastwood
The Mule, directed by Clint Eastwood, is the actors first foray back into the world of acting since his supporting role in the release of Trouble with the Curve in 2012. The acting legends turn as 90-year-old Korean War veteran Earl Stone is a welcome return to the craft as an actor; and as a director as he puts forth a terrifically compelling picture full of tension, charisma and heart that feels as if it was plucked straight out of the directors 1970s filmography.
Gone is the excessive and highbrow level of narrative or production method often found in Eastwood’s latest directorial exploits in The 15:17 to Paris, Sully and American Sniper. In its wake, and terrifically executed for that matter,...
The Mule, directed by Clint Eastwood, is the actors first foray back into the world of acting since his supporting role in the release of Trouble with the Curve in 2012. The acting legends turn as 90-year-old Korean War veteran Earl Stone is a welcome return to the craft as an actor; and as a director as he puts forth a terrifically compelling picture full of tension, charisma and heart that feels as if it was plucked straight out of the directors 1970s filmography.
Gone is the excessive and highbrow level of narrative or production method often found in Eastwood’s latest directorial exploits in The 15:17 to Paris, Sully and American Sniper. In its wake, and terrifically executed for that matter,...
- 1/30/2019
- by Jak-Luke Sharp
- Nerdly
Author: Zehra Phelan
“You’re were only supposed to blow the bloody doors off” is and will always be Michael Caine’s most iconic line of all time, uttered in the 1969 British Caper The Italian Job. With a career spanning a hefty 64 years between 1953 and 2017, Caine hits our screens yet again this week starring opposite Morgan Freeman and Alan Arkin in Going in Style, a remake of the 1979 heist comedy directed by Zach Braff. It tells the story of a trio of retirees who plan to rob a bank after their pensions are cancelled, proving he isn’t quite ready to hang up his acting shoes to start drawing his own pension.
At the tender age of 84 the man previously known as Maurice Joseph Micklewhite, now known as Sir Michael Caine after being knighted by the queen in 2000, has starred in a staggering 125 films in his career to date. His...
“You’re were only supposed to blow the bloody doors off” is and will always be Michael Caine’s most iconic line of all time, uttered in the 1969 British Caper The Italian Job. With a career spanning a hefty 64 years between 1953 and 2017, Caine hits our screens yet again this week starring opposite Morgan Freeman and Alan Arkin in Going in Style, a remake of the 1979 heist comedy directed by Zach Braff. It tells the story of a trio of retirees who plan to rob a bank after their pensions are cancelled, proving he isn’t quite ready to hang up his acting shoes to start drawing his own pension.
At the tender age of 84 the man previously known as Maurice Joseph Micklewhite, now known as Sir Michael Caine after being knighted by the queen in 2000, has starred in a staggering 125 films in his career to date. His...
- 4/5/2017
- by Zehra Phelan
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
Tina Fey and Amy Poehler‘s latest film collaboration – Sisters – has received only mediocre reviews from film’s top critics. In Sisters, written by longtime SNL writer Paula Pells, Fey and Poehler play sisters Kate and Maura Ellis. Sisters shows the two wildly different siblings host one last bash at their parents’ (James Brolin, Dianne West) home […]
The post ‘Sisters’ Review Roundup: Tina Fey & Amy Poehler Comedy Gets Mixed Notices appeared first on uInterview.
The post ‘Sisters’ Review Roundup: Tina Fey & Amy Poehler Comedy Gets Mixed Notices appeared first on uInterview.
- 12/18/2015
- by Chelsea Regan
- Uinterview
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