Dakota Johnson has spoken of being dragged into Johnny Depp’s court confrontation with Amber Heard, calling her “crazy.”
Dakota Johnson felt extremely uncomfortable being dragged into the legal troubles of Johnny Depp and Amber Heard due to a 2015 viral video clip.
“I said,‘ For God’s sake, why? Why am I involved in this? ‘”Johnson explained recently Vanity Fair. “I don’t remember it at all, but please get me out of this. Don’t let that go any further.”
The viral clip showed Johnson, 32, who looked worried when she did Too black The co-star placed her bandaged finger on the table next to her during a press conference for the film at the 2015 Venice Film Festival, reports the New York Post.
The Defamation Trial Depp v. Heard included the testimony of the pirates of the caribbean The actor alleges that his ex-wife cut her fingertip with a bottle of vodka during an argument in 2015.
The excerpt titled “The Exact Time Dakota Johnson Knew Amber Heard Was VIOLENT Towards Johnny Depp” garnered more than 3 million views amid the case aired live.
“Can you imagine, oh my God, if they called me at the witness bar?” Johnson continued. “I can’t believe people are watching [the trial] as if it were a spectacle. It’s like it’s a court drama and it breaks my heart. It’s so, so, so crazy. Humans are very strange. The Internet is a wild and wild place. “
Depp eventually won his defamation suit against Heard based on the publication of a 2018 Washington Post opinion article in which she said she was a victim of domestic abuse.
Both Depp and Heard have faced the possibility of being victims to cancel the culture, which Johnson also addresses in the new interview.
“What I struggle with in terms of a culture of cancellation is the term culture of cancellation – the whole concept behind canceling a human being, as if it were a date,” Johnson said. “No one will make mistakes in their life.”
He continued: “The point of being alive is to find out. Hurting others, hurting others is not good. There are consequences for these actions. But the concept of Twittervers that decides if someone suddenly no longer exists is horrible, heartbreaking and wrong. “
Johnson, however, is comforted to know that social media is not a real reflection of the world.
“I think it’s going to happen,” he said Fifty Shades of grey added the actress. “I think people want to live in a better world, after all. Also, Twitter represents how, what, 12 percent of the world? I mean, some of these people don’t even know how to spell.”
This article originally appeared in the New York Post and was reproduced with permission.