Johnny Depp and Amber Heard’s ‘troubled’ marriage, trials focus of ‘Unreal’ e-book
The acrimonious relationship between Johnny Depp and Amber Heard might be revisited in a brand new e-book by journalist Nick Wallis.
“Depp v Heard: The Unreal Story,” due out Could 17, covers the 2 jaw-dropping trials that unfolded within the wake of the couple’s beautiful 2016 cut up.
“I assumed they have been two troubled, however fascinating human beings, looking for their means on this planet,” Wallis told the Daily Mail.
“They went by means of a rare course of, performed out on a worldwide stage. I by no means thought it was sordid or grim.”
The Put up reached out to Wallis for remark.
A freelance journalist and broadcaster who has labored for the BBC, Non-public Eye, and ITN, Wallis says he’s the one journalist to cowl each trials extensively.
Wallis claims to have attended London court docket almost day-after-day in 2020 to look at Depp lose his libel case in opposition to The Solar, which had referred to as him a “wife-beater.”
He reported attending day-after-day of final yr’s Virginia trial, the place the “Pirates of the Caribbean” star gained his defamation case in opposition to the “Aquaman” actress over a 2018 op-ed Heard wrote for the Washington Put up, claiming to be “a public determine representing home abuse.”
“The Unreal Story” is alleged to supply perception into the sexual politics, tradition wars, and intense social media consideration surrounding the trials.
Chapter titles are a nod to a number of the Virginia trial’s largest headlines, together with “The Tattoo Incident,” “The Disco Massacre,” “The Aircraft Kick,” “The Bottle Rape,” and “The Closed Fist Punch.”

A rep for Depp declined to remark when contacted by The Put up on Friday.
The Put up additionally reached out to a rep for Heard.
The previous lovers met in 2009 on the set of the Bruce Robinson-directed movie “The Rum Diary.”
After two years of courting, they got engaged in 2014 and married on Depp’s personal island in 2015.
Heard filed for divorce simply 15 months later, and it was finalized in 2016.

In 2018, Heard penned her op-ed — which resulted in Depp filing a $50 million defamation lawsuit in opposition to her.
Heard filed her personal $100 million countersuit in 2020.

In 2022, Virginia jurors awarded Depp $5 million in punitive damages and $10 million in compensatory damages.
The jury additionally awarded Heard $2 million in compensatory damages in her counterclaim, however no punitive damages.