Rumor has it 'Aquaman 2,' starring Amber Heard, is SO BAD, it's not even being marketed



"Aquaman" was a box office hit, however, like most Hollywood movies — the sequel is shaping up to be a disaster.

While the pandemic threw a wrench in its development, one of its lead stars was embroiled in the middle of a messy and extremely public court case.

That court case was between Johnny Depp and Amber Heard, which ended in Heard being almost completely written out of the "Aquaman" sequel.

“There are even rumors out there that the studio is so skeptical about how this film is going to perform at the box office that they’re not even bothering to market it,” Lauren Chen says, because they seem to recognize that they’re going to lose money doing so.

The film has reportedly undergone its third set of reshoots since it finished principal photography in January 2022 and cost around $200 million to make.

“Personally, I think that number is probably artificially low,” Chen says, noting the number of reshoots. “Anytime I hear that a film has had to undergo a reshoot, it’s kind of a red flag in my mind.”

Even the director, James Wan, has said he’s “had to make adjustments along the way,” which only confirms Chen’s belief that this film is likely to crash and burn.

As for test screening, there have also been reports that people have actually been walking out of screenings of "Aquaman."

“I’m not going to go into exactly what the alleged scene that caused people to walk out of the film is, but I mean, if it’s true — let’s just say it would in fact be a very disturbing scene to see in any movie,” Chen says.

There are now even rumors that Jason Momoa’s role in the DC Universe, which fans had previously been told was secure, is also up in the air.

“I guess we’ll just have to wait and see,” Chen adds.


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Netflix's new 'Depp v. Heard' documentary is FEMINIST PROPAGANDA



Netflix isn’t known for its neutrality, and according to Lauren Chen, the streaming giant’s new “documentary” about Amber Heard and Johnny Depp’s court case, "Depp v. Heard," is no exception.

Chen believes that even after Depp’s vindication in the courtroom, some people are incapable of letting go of the battle between the two, especially “establishment Hollywood weirdos as well as feminist activists.”

“Spoiler alert,” Chen says, “essentially what this documentary does is try to play defense for Amber Heard the entire time.”

During the trial, Heard was questioned about her claim that she donated her $7 million divorce settlement from Johnny Depp to charity when, in fact, that has yet to happen.

Heard told Depp’s lawyer that was incorrect and that she had “pledged” to donate — not actually donated — the $7 million and that she still intended “to fulfill those obligations.”

“That’s not an actual donation, that is a pledge. And the fact that the words donate and pledge mean different things and Amber was saying that she had donated when she had actually only pledged and hadn’t actually given the money yet — that is something that 99% of people, I think, agree on, that this was a lie,” Chen says.

However, the documentary claimed that this “was just one example of social media being unfair to Amber, because yeah, there are times when people use those terms interchangeably,” she adds.

Chen believes that while the documentary was supposed to be about the trial between Depp and Heard, it really just complained about the treatment Heard faced on social media during the trial.

“There was a strange undercurrent throughout the episodes, where it’s almost as if the filmmakers were trying to blame Johnny Depp personally for what strangers said about Amber online,” Chen says.

“I just find it interesting how, apparently, these filmmakers have a problem with the harassment or cancel culture that Amber Heard faced. However, they said nothing about the fact that this entire court case and this entire saga was actually started by Amber Heard herself when she wrote that op-ed for the Washington Post,” she adds.


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What did Amber Heard put in her nose 'right in front of God and jury'?



During the epic daytime drama known as Johnny Depp’s defamation lawsuit against his former wife Amber Heard, the "Aquaman" actress took the stand for the second day on Thursday to make a series of disturbing allegations against her ex-husband.

Heard broke down in tears as she described the details of Depp's alleged drug and alcohol-fueled abuse, which is why it definitely wasn't weird when the actress lifted a tissue to her nose and did something that looked a lot like a scene from "Pulp Fiction."

pic.twitter.com/uYoeCthA7K
— MetaMan X \u2122\ufe0f (@MetaMan X \u2122\ufe0f) 1651848069

A video of Heard's not-at-all-suspicious behavior has been making the rounds on social media, garnishing nearly 4 million views in just a matter of hours. BlazeTV host Chad Prather shared the viral video with the caption "Yo sis. What you doin?"

Yo sis. What you doin?


Yo sis. What you doin?pic.twitter.com/3svtTEiYRb
— Chad Prather (@Chad Prather) 1651843561


For reasons we can't explain, some people on Twitter seemed to think Heard's actions had something to do with Coke, you know, the bubbly beverage. Though why she would put that in her nose is beyond us.

There\u2019s just some things you don\u2019t do. Like eat a cheeseburger on the toilet but snorting Coke while you\u2019re on the stand! Wow!
— \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8PhishieFromPhilly\ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 (@\ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8PhishieFromPhilly\ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8) 1651843974


That's a sneaky coke bump...\nRight in front of God and jury
— We are We The People (@We are We The People) 1651846714
@WatchChadpic.twitter.com/SQ3GzFh5N5
— Gagewells01 (@Gagewells01) 1651848467
quick bump on the witness stand?
— Dennis Gavin (@Dennis Gavin) 1651843659
I thought you were supposed to exhale when you blow your nose. Am I don't it wrong?
— Heather Fritz (@Heather Fritz) 1651844317
Blow ON the stand. Balls.
— \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8Ultra-MAGA Minister of Truth\ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 (@\ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8Ultra-MAGA Minister of Truth\ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8) 1651843916
Just a little booger sugar, NBD
— Some Who Call Me Tim (@Some Who Call Me Tim) 1651843955

Joe Rogan says 'crazy lady' Amber Heard is 'full of s**t,' bashes Disney for booting Johnny Depp: 'You f***ed up'



Joe Rogan weighed in on the ongoing saga between Johnny Depp and Amber Heard. The prolific podcaster proclaimed that Heard is "full of s**t" and the defamation trial is a "big win" for Depp. Rogan also slammed Disney for booting Depp as the star of "Pirates of the Caribbean."

During Tuesday's episode of "The Joe Rogan Experience," the podcast host discussed the $50 million defamation trial with fellow comedian Jessica Kirson.

"I'm watching this trial, and, like, it's a cautionary tale about believing in bulls**t, forming a narrative in your head like, 'We’re rebels together,'" Rogan told Kirson.

"That’s what I felt like about Anthony Bourdain and his relationship to that crazy woman," Rogan said, in an apparent reference to Italian actress Asia Argento.

"You're seeing it all play out in court," he added. "Like you're seeing all the crazy come out."

The two comedians joked about Depp's claim that Heard deposited a "fecal delivery" in their bed.

Rogan commented on the claim by Heard's attorneys that the 36-year-old "Aquaman" actress used makeup from Milani Cosmetics to hide bruises that were allegedly caused by domestic violence actions by Depp. However, the specific makeup was reportedly released in December 2017, and Heard filed for divorce from Depp in May 2016.

"She said that she used specific makeup to cover all of her bruises that Johnny gave her – which is not true," Rogan stated. "Well, the problem is it was a specific makeup. It turns out that the company didn't even make that makeup at the time that she was claiming she was using it."

"But that's what happens with people like that," Rogan continued. "People that are just completely manipulative and full of s**t like them."

Rogan referenced an article written by stand-up comedian Doug Stanhope – who is a friend of Depp.

Guest-writing for the Wrap, Stanhope asserted that Depp "was pilloried in the press for domestic violence" and that Heard would "manipulate and f*** with him for years."

"Johnny Depp got used, manipulated, set up and made to look like an a**hole. And he saw it coming and didn’t or couldn’t do anything to stop it," Stanhope wrote.

The UFC commentator said Stanhope told him that Heard is "out of her f***ing mind" and agreed with Rogan that she is "like a crazy actress."

Kirson added, "Of course, there's a ton of them."

Rogan also noted that Depp has been using drugs for a long time.

"He was famous when he was 20," Rogan said of the A-list actor. "And I don't think you get any kind of perspective like that. I think you're f***ed."

Depp has admitted to first experimenting with drugs at age 11.

Rogan said the defamation trial "is a big win for Johnny Depp," but a "big loss for 'Pirates of the Caribbean.'"

Rogan then bashed Disney, "How about f*** you guys. You got rid of the best f***ing pirate you’ve ever had for a crazy lady. You f***ed up."

Two or three days after the Washington Post published Heard's December 2018 op-ed about being a victim of domestic violence, Depp said that Disney informed him that the company would not cast him again as Captain Jack Sparrow in the successful "Pirates of the Caribbean" franchise.

"And also having worked on those films with those people, and having put a lot of my own rewriting, dialogue, scenes, and jokes and whatever they are," Depp said in court on Monday. "I didn't quite understand how, after that long relationship, and quite a successful relationship, certainly for Disney, that suddenly I was guilty until proven innocent."

Depp is suing Heard for $50 million because of the Washington Post op-ed piece, claiming that the article caused him to be blacklisted from Hollywood. Heard is countersuing her ex-husband for $100 million in damages – claiming that Depp's legal team made false claims about her accusations.

The trial is in its third week and is expected to last six weeks.

(WARNING: Explicit language)

The Johnny Depp-Amber Heard Trial www.youtube.com

Secret video of Johnny Depp smashing cabinets resurfaces during defamation trial; alleged photos of cocaine lines and bloody lampshades revealed by Amber Heard's defense team



The second week of Johnny Depp's $50 million defamation trial against Amber Heard ended with a bang. Video of Johnny Depp smashing cabinets before pouring himself a large glass of wine was shown to jurors on Thursday. Heard's defense team also presented photos of alleged drug use and a bloody lampshade.

Depp goes on an angry rampage

A video of Depp cursing and slamming cabinet doors in a fit of rage was shown in court. The video, from 2013, was secretly recorded by Heard in the kitchen of Depp's West Hollywood home.

Depp storms into the kitchen and Heard asks, "What happened?"

Depp then fiercely opens cabinet doors and then violently slams them shut after retrieving a glass cup.

Amber says, "Nothing happened this morning, you know that?"

More objects are heard being slammed in the background before Depp responds, "Nothing happened to you this morning." He then gets another glass cup.

Heard replies, "I just woke up, and you were so sweet and nice. We're not even fighting this morning. All I did was say, 'Sorry.'"

Depp raises his voice as he exclaims, "Did something happen to you this morning? I don't think so." Then the sound of more objects being destroyed can be heard in the video.

"You wanna see crazy? I'll give you crazy," the "Pirates of the Caribbean" actor announces. As he pours himself a large cup of wine, he proclaims, "Here's crazy."

Heard asks Depp if he drank an entire bottle of wine "this morning."

Depp then realizes that Heard is secretly filming him with her cell phone.

Depp grabs the phone and yells, "You got this going? You sic that s*** on me, motherf***er?"

Heard responds, "You were smashing s**t."

The camera goes dark, and it sounds as if Heard chuckles.

As Depp is leaving the room he shouts, "A**."

At the trial in Fairfax, Virginia, Depp reacted to the video of him smashing cabinets.

"I don't know about anyone else, but I have had experiences in my life where one does stray from complete control over their emotions at times, and that is a very normal, primal thing to do," Depp said, according to Insider. "I did assault a couple of cabinets, yes."

Depp defended himself, "I did not try to intimidate Ms. Heard. If she was intimidated, why was she filming? If she was scared to death, why didn't she leave?"

Content Warning: graphic video

Video shown of #AmberHeard recording #JohnnyDepp slamming cupboards and other objects. Depp discovers her recording. \n\n@LawCrimeNetworkpic.twitter.com/U3DNPgb6N0
— Cathy Russon (@Cathy Russon) 1650572387

Alleged photos of lines of cocaine and bags of marijuana revealed

An alleged photo of a table containing lines of cocaine, whiskey, and a Keith Richards CD was presented to the jurors during cross-examination. The photo was allegedly taken at Heard's former home in March 2013 by the "Aquaman" actress – who claimed that Depp consumed the drugs and alcohol one morning before an argument.

Depp acknowledged that he had "fallen off the wagon" during the time the photo was taken.

WTTG reported, "When asked by attorneys if the white lines in the photo were indeed cocaine, Depp answered, 'I would assume.' When asked if the cocaine was his and if he kept it in a box that says, 'Property of JD' with a skull and crossbones image on it, Depp answered, 'Well the beautiful composition of the photograph would suggest that, certainly.'"

When asked if he would often drink whiskey in the morning, the 58-year-old actor retorted, "Isn’t happy hour any time?" The gallery laughed at the actor's response.

Johnny Depp says it's unlikely he kept cocaine in this metal box with "Property of JD" on it, depicted next to lines of cocaine.\n\n"When you put it in a box like that, chances are very good you\u2019ll leave a trail of a long line of cocaine behind you walking down the street,"pic.twitter.com/9ZU0MEwD7F
— Jacob Shamsian (@Jacob Shamsian) 1650553702

Heard's lawyer J. Benjamin Rottenborn asked about text messages sent between Depp and musician Marilyn Manson – which included a photo of four large bags of weed at the actor's recording studio.

Speaking about the photo, Depp said, “Yes, sir. That is a lot of marijuana.”

An attorney for Amber Heard continues questioning Johnny Depp about his drug use under cross. \n\nATTORNEY: "Mr. Depp, I'd like to ask you about this photo. This is a photo of four pretty huge bags of marijuana. Correct?"\n\nJD: "Yes sir. That is a lot of marijuana."\n#deppvsheardpic.twitter.com/56Qb76aSnb
— Teresa Whitaker (@Teresa Whitaker) 1650570548

Jurors were shown a photo of Depp “passed out” on a couch with ice cream all over his clothes that his ex-wife allegedly took in Boston in 2014.

The "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas" star said he had worked a 17-hour day and had taken some opioids.

"Ms. Heard asked me to hold the ice cream as she noticed that I was on the nod – that means falling asleep – from the 17-hour day that I had worked and also the opiates that I had ingested," Depp testified.

“If you’ll notice, my right hand is in my pocket, so I wasn’t participating in the festival of ice cream," he noted.

"That was a wonderful picture for her to take,” Depp continued.

Rottenborn: This is you passed out?\n\n#JohnnyDepp: Passed out is an interesting word. I was asleep. \n\nDepp says he'd just worked a 17-hour day. He claims #AmberHeard stuck the ice cream in his hand knowing he was nodding off. "That was a wonderful picture for her to take."pic.twitter.com/sJv06RKOcy
— Cathy Russon (@Cathy Russon) 1650556508

A bloody lampshade revealed

A photo of a lampshade "painted" with a mixture of paint and Depp's own blood was introduced into court this week. The photo was reportedly taken at a house in Australia that the couple were staying at.

Depp said he poured himself two or three "stiff shots of vodka," stressing that it was the "first taste of alcohol I had had for a long time."

Heard allegedly told him, "Oh, you're drinking again."

Depp claimed, "She walked up to me, grabbed the bottle of vodka and then just stood back and hurled it at me. It just went right past my head and smashed behind me."

Depp responded by pouring another shot of vodka from another bottle, while Heard was allegedly "flinging insults left, right, and center."

"She then grabbed that bottle and threw that at me," Depp said, specifying that he was hit with the bottle on his hand after the large vodka bottle "made contact and shattered everywhere."

"I felt no pain at first all. I felt heat, and as if something was dripping down my hand," Depp recalled. "I was looking directly at my bones sticking out. Blood was just pouring out."

"I don’t know what a nervous breakdown feels like, but that’s probably the closest that I’ve ever been," he suggested. "Nothing made sense and I knew in my mind and in my heart that this is not life. No one should have to go through this."

He revealed that because of his meltdown that he was compelled "to write in my own blood on the walls."

"Little reminders from our past that essentially represented lies that she had told me and lies that I had caught her in," the actor explained. Depp said that he hid in the bathroom and texted his doctor to provide medical treatment for his hand.

Rottenborn said there was "a coffee cup stuck into the screen" of the TV, a broken window, "a penis" drawn on a painting, and messages written in blood and paint all over the walls and furniture.

In a previous trial in the U.K., Depp remembered, "I recall painting on a lampshade, on a wall, on a mirror. I remember dunking my finger into paint thinner and using paint when I had run out of blood to paint with, and I could have defaced the painting I suppose, but I do not remember a painting specifically."

Heard's legal team asked Depp about other destructive behavior, "You've trashed hotel rooms simply because you had a bad couple of days and an unpleasant time, right?" Depp replied, "I have assaulted a couch or two, yes, sir."

This lampshade was on the floor at the Austrailia house. #JohnnyDepp admits to writing this in a mixture of paint & blood with his injured finger. "GOOD LUCK AND BE CAREFUL AT TOP". Depp says he wrote it, "I thought it was good advice." \n\n#AmberHeard @LawCrimeNetworkpic.twitter.com/TRvQ5mYH1G
— Cathy Russon (@Cathy Russon) 1650567896
Images have been submitted to the court showing Johnny Depp\u2019s graffiti on the mirror of a rented house in Australia in his blood, in paint, and lipstick during an argument with his then wife Amber Heard.He denies attacking her describing the claims as \u201cfabricated and vicious\u201dpic.twitter.com/sDk0ckNMVl
— Adele Robinson (@Adele Robinson) 1594296992

Celebrities are expected to testify

Depp is suing Heard, 35, for $50 million over an op-ed piece she wrote in the Washington Post in 2018 – where she alleged that she is a victim of domestic abuse. The article does not name Depp specifically, but the Jack Sparrow actor claims that the opinion piece cause him to be blacklisted from the entertainment industry.

Deadline reported, "The trial, which is underway, runs Monday through Thursdays, with Fridays off. It is set to run for five weeks. However, there will be a pause from May 9-12 as Judge Azcarate attends to a previously scheduled conference engagement."

The outlet noted that celebrities such as Tesla CEO Elon Musk, as well as actors James Franco and Paul Bettany, are expected to testify in the trial.

Amber Heard admits hitting Johnny Depp in secret recording. Depp reveals addiction to opioids during defamation trial.



Amber Heard admitted to hitting Johnny Depp in a secret recording that was unveiled during the "Pirates of the Caribbean" star's $50 million defamation trial. Also during Wednesday's testimony, Depp chronicled his long history of drug use that began at age 11.

Secret recording of Heard hitting Depp revealed

A recording was played during the defamation trial in which Heard admits to starting a "physical fight" with Depp.

"I didn't punch you. ... I was hitting you, it was not punching you. You didn't get punched, you got hit. ... I did not f***ing deck you, I f***ing was hitting you. But you're fine, I did not hurt you ... you're a f***ing baby. You are such a baby, grow the f*** up, Johnny," Heard said on the secret recording, according to Yahoo.

After the audio was played in a Virginia court, Depp added, "What was just played on these audio recordings was very much the tone, and the aggression, and the attitude, and the need for a fight from Ms. Heard."

Depp claimed that Heard started "scratching" him in December 2015. He said that while attempting to "restrain" her that there was "accidental contact, but not a head-butt" as she has claimed.

"There was some kind of contact with our heads, with our foreheads, as would happen when you're trying to calm someone like that," Depp told the court. "That's when she accused me of head-butting her and breaking her nose. There was no blood. I didn't hit her nose."

Depp claimed that Heard said she was bleeding from her nose and that she was holding a tissue to her nose. Depp said he fished the used tissue "out of the trash bin" and stated "it was nail polish" on the tissue and not blood.

Newsweek reported, "In the recording, Depp can be heard asking his former wife whether she had 'lost memory' about 'kicking' in the door of a bathroom that he had retreated to, before allegedly hitting him 'in the skull.'"

Heard blamed her actions on the prescription sleeping pill Ambien.

"I was upset, there was a lot going on and I was on an Ambien," Heard said. "Why are you obsessing over the fact I cannot remember the way you are remembering it? I said I was sorry. I'm not denying it."

Depp accused his ex-wife of "physical abuse" that was "constant," as well as "bullying" him and others.

There was reportedly a "staircase incident," where Depp claimed that Heard "roundhouse" punched him in the cheek.

The "Aquaman" star first accused Depp of domestic abuse and violence during the couple's divorce proceedings in 2016. Depp said he "felt sick" about the accusations and was "very confused" and "very hurt" by Heard's "treachery."

When asked if he ever assaulted Heard, Depp responded, "Never." When asked if he ever sexually assaulted the actress, he answered, "Never. Certainly not." Depp continued, "Never did I myself reach the point of striking Ms. Heard in any way, nor have I ever struck any woman in my life."

Feces on the bed

Depp claimed that human feces were dumped on the couple's marital bed after a fight on Heard's birthday in April 2016. A photo of the feces was shown in court. The Captain Jack Sparrow actor believes that Heard or her friend purposely put the fecal matter on the bed, but Heard said her dog is at fault.

"My initial response to that was, I laughed," Depp reacted to seeing a photo of the feces. "It was so outside, it was so bizarre and so grotesque that I could only laugh."

In November 2020, a British judge delivered his opinion on the feces.

"For what it is worth, I consider that it is unlikely that Ms. Heard or one of her friends was responsible," High Court Judge Andrew Nicol wrote, adding, "It was Ms. Heard who was likely to suffer from the feces on the bed, not him."

The judge noted that Heard’s dog named Boo "had an incomplete mastery of her bowels after she had accidentally consumed some marijuana."

Depp said of the dogs, "They're teacup Yorkies. They weigh about 4 pounds each. The photograph that I saw — I lived with those dogs for many years. It was not the dogs. ... I didn't feel like I deserved that kind of treatment."

Depp wrote dark texts about Heard

Heard's lawyer Benjamin Rottenborn asked Depp about dark text messages that he allegedly sent to British actor Paul Bettany.

Rottenborn read aloud a text message Depp sent to Bettany on June 11, 2013: "Let's burn Amber!!!"

Another text read, ''Let's drown her before we burn her!!!''

Rottenborn read another message: "I will f*** her burnt corpse afterward to make sure she is dead."

Rottenborn asked Depp, "Did I read that right?"

Depp replied, "You certainly did."

Rottenborn inquired, "You wrote that about the woman who would later become your wife."

Depp said, "Yes."

“I am ashamed of some of the references made and embarrassed at the tone that in the heat of the moment, the heat of the pain I was feeling, went to dark places," Depp said in a low voice on the stand. "Sometimes pain has to be dealt with humor, and sometimes dark, very dark humor."

Depp reveals a long history of drug use

During his testimony, Depp revealed that he started using drugs as a child. At age 11, Depp said he would sneak into his mother's "nerve pills." By age 15, Depp said he had tried every drug he knew of.

The 58-year-old actor said he didn't take the drugs as a way to "party," but rather to "dull the pain" of the trauma he had suffered during his youth.

"It was self-medication ... to take the edge off," he told the court.

Deadline reported, "Making sure his version of events didn’t completely diverge from what others have said, Depp did admit that he was 'addicted' to the prescription opioid Roxycodone after suffering a back injury from performing an action scene on 2011’s 'Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides.'"

Depp said, "I was bit by the snake, and before you know it that monkey is on your back to stay."

He claimed that he kicked the opioid habit and hasn't taken the drug again.

NPR reported, "It wasn't until about four or five years had gone by, and he was already with Heard, that he tried to kick the opiate. Since then he has remained off of all opiates, Depp testified. However, Depp said he smokes marijuana and has done cocaine with Heard's sister on two to three occasions."

"I am not some maniac who needs to be high or loaded all the time,” he said.

Heard's attorneys accused Depp of being a "monster" while abusing drugs and alcohol, claiming that the actor was "delusional" and "paranoid."

$50 million defamation lawsuit

Depp said he lost "nothing less than everything" because of Heard's accusations against him — which he claims got him blacklisted from Hollywood.

Depp filed a lawsuit against Heard in March 2019, accusing her of defaming him in a Washington Post op-ed article where she described herself as a victim of domestic violence. The essay didn't directly name Depp as an abuser, but his 2019 court complaint stated, "The op-ed plainly was about Ms. Heard's purported victimization after she publicly accused her former husband, Johnny Depp, of domestic abuse in 2016, when she appeared in court with an apparently battered face and obtained a temporary restraining order against Mr. Depp."

Depp is suing Heard for $50 million in compensatory damages and a punitive award of at least $350,000, along with attorneys' fees and court costs. Heard is currently counter-suing Depp for $100 million.

Heard and Depp got married in February 2015. Heard filed for divorce in May 2016, then obtained a temporary restraining order days later. The couple settled their divorce in January 2017.