Johnny Depp Movies Perfect for Halloween

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Johnny Depp in 'Edward Scissorhands'
Johnny Depp in ‘Edward Scissorhands’ | RT Classic Trailers

Johnny Depp has been portraying loveable eccentrics for the majority of his career. With outlandish costumes, elastic facial expressions, and adaptive vocals, he slips seamlessly from maniacal and mad to playful and perverse or compassionate and confused. What better time to celebrate Depp’s most beloved characters than during spooky season — when his fans will be exiting their homes decked out with scissors for hands or a red suit and a top hat? 

‘Edward Scissorhands’ 1990 | Max

Depp and famed director Tim Burton began their longtime collaboration with the heartwarming dark fantasy Edward Scissorhands. The film follows Edward (Depp) — the product of a scientist’s unbridled urge to create an animated human being. The scientist dies before he can finish assembling Edward, leaving the gentle soul with a freakish appearance made threatening with razor-sharp scissors for hands. Exploring themes of isolation and difference, Depp captures Edward’s vulnerability and innocence with an otherworldly beauty and nuance. There’s a poignant sense of tragedy inherent to the character longing for connection, but the film boasts memorable moments of whimsy and charm due to Depp infusing the character with innocent smirks and bewitching peculiarity. 

‘Sleepy Hollow’ 1999 | Max 

Based on Washington Irving’s 1799 novel The Tale of Sleepy Hollow, the story follows Ichabod Crane (Depp) as he investigates a series of decapitations in the small town of Sleepy Hollow — only to confront a ghostly headless horseman and unravel a dark web of betrayal and witchcraft. 

As would be expected of a Depp character, Ichabod boasts eccentricities and quirks that highlight his off-kilter personality and unorthodox approach to detective work. From his aversion to blood (which is not exactly convenient for a man in his line of work) to his fastidious attention to detail, the character is a quizzical Depp at his finest. Freakish and boasting a methodical approach to speech — that is at once detached and astute — he is the unconventional progressive operating within (and against) a society steeped in tradition. 

‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory’ 2005 | Prime Video

In 2005’s Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Depp takes on the beloved Willy Wonka in a whimsical yet dark retelling that reflects Tim Burton’s signature surrealistic and quirky filmmaking approach. Depp’s Wonka boasts a more mysterious demeanor than his predecessor and is quite unpredictable. Despite the character’s general air of whimsy, his intentions seem tinged with a slight nefarious undertone. Combining a childlike wonder (and vocal delivery) with a melancholic interior world, Depp creates a Wonka that is crazed and ceaselessly buoyant, lovable yet slightly fear-inducing. 

‘Dark Shadows’ 2012 | Hulu

Turn the clock back to 18th-century Maine and follow Barnabas Collins (Depp), a rich and powerful playboy, who sets his personal doom into motion when he breaks the heart of a witch, Angelique. Angelique turns Collins into a vampire and buries him alive. When he emerges from his coffin two centuries later, he no longer recognizes his hometown of Collinsport, and his once-grand estate is in ruin…as is what remains of his familial legacy. 

From staring at lava lamps in awe to brushing his teeth in the mirror sans reflection, Depp devours this role with a perfect fish-out-of-water performance. “How soon can the horses be ready,” he asks of his ‘70s family, to which Michelle Pfeiffer replies, “We don’t have horses. We have a Chevvy.” “What sorcery is this!? He indignantly proclaims at a television set playing The Carpenters, before snatching away the back panel and asking the “tiny songstress” to reveal herself. From his distinctive physicality — marked by graceful yet stiff movements — to his somehow alluring charm in the face of utter preposterousness — Depp’s Barnabas pays homage to classic Vampires while offering up those beloved Burton-esque idiosyncrasies. 

‘Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street’ 2007 | Hulu

How could we leave out the throat-slitting barber of Fleet Street on a vengeful quest to right a past wrong that involved him losing the love of his life? Depp lends his vocals to the 2007 Tim Burton-ified version of Stephen Sondheim’s magnum opus in a retelling that may lack the Broadway musical’s sense of satire and fun but offers up a compelling Depp in its place. 

Depp sings well enough, but it is his maniacal darkness and unrelenting mercilessness selling the part. He is brooding and haunted, cold and calculative yet tragedy-stricken and melancholic. Pushed by grief and misery, despair has led to his menacing nature, and Depp captures such complexity with each song he serenades audiences with. He is a killer. He is a hunter. He is a monster, but we’re on his side from the get-go. 

‘Into the Woods’ 2014 | Disney+ 

Depp lends his vocals to a Stephen Sondheim adaptation once again for Disney’s 2012 musical fantasy Into the Woods. The musical is a beloved twist on classic fairytales such as Cinderella, Little Red Riding Hood, and more that promises to warn audiences to be careful what they wish for —  and be careful what they do to achieve such desires — for all dreams fulfilled bear consequences. 

Though Depp boasts quite a small role in the film, it’s memorable and worthy of a spot on this list. He plays The Wolf — who gets the chance to sing the playful and sexually-laden number “Hello, Little Girl” to an innocent yet curious Little Red Riding Hood. With a twitchily smirking lip and a sniffling nose to get a scent for his “meal,” Depp transforms into the ravenous wolf with snarls and growls to boot. He’s at once a scheming salesman and an alluring beast. Laying on the ground and swinging his tale as if it were a feather boa, Depp cons his prey with the promise of excitement. 

‘Alice in Wonderland’ 2010 | Disney+

Though not the most critically acclaimed film on this list, Johnny Depp as The Mad Hatter is the definition of dream casting. The film follows Alice as a teenager returning to Wonderland, yet she has no recollection of the place she visited as a young girl (except in scattered dreams). Down the rabbit hole, she goes, where she runs into some dear old friends — including Hatter. 

Depp’s Hatter is exactly what you would expect. Boasting a childlike enthusiasm and an endless supply of energy, Depp’s wide-eyed expression perfectly complements Hatter’s gentle interior. He’s colorful — both literally and metaphorically — and boasts that tinge of melancholy customary of Depp’s Burton-created characters. Eccentricity meets sympathy. Captivating in his utterly crazed performance, the character’s unpredictability and expressive intensity make him the most compelling presence on the screen.