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The Libertine [2005]

The Libertine [2005]
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List Price: £19.99
Our Price: £3.98
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1 to 3 weeks
Manufacturer: Entertainment in Video
Starring: Johnny Depp, John Malkovich, Samantha Morton, Johnny Vegas, Shane MacGowan
Directed By: Laurence Dunmore
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5Average rating of 3.5/5

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Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Audience Rating: Suitable for 18 years and over
Binding: DVD
EAN: 5017239192890
Format: Anamorphic
Label: Entertainment in Video
Manufacturer: Entertainment in Video
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Entertainment in Video
Region Code: 2
Release Date: 2006-05-08
Running Time: 114
Studio: Entertainment in Video
Theatrical Release Date: 2005

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Editorial Reviews: The beautifully sculpted face of Johnny Depp fits right in with this masterpiece of design. The Libertine--filmed in a grainy, color-muted chiaroscuro--captures the lush costumes, extravagant decor, and remarkable filth of Restoration England. John Wilmot, the Earl of Rochester (Depp), warns the audience at the very beginning of the film that they will not like him. From there, he treats his wife cruelly, drinks to relentless excess, abuses his friendships, and generally wallows in dissipation, much to the dismay of King Charles II (John Malkovich, Dangerous Liaisons), who hopes that Rochester will write a play glorifying his reign.

But Rochester finds his true inspiration (and the movie comes to life) when he sees a young actress named Lizzie Barry (Samantha Morton, Minority Report, Morvern Callar). Rochester sets out to make her the greatest actress of their time--and she, with some reluctance, submits to his teaching. The weakness of The Libertine is not that Rochester is unlikable; it's that he doesn't want to do anything. Barry galvanizes the movie because she burns with ambition, but Rochester's only apparent aim in life is an agonizingly slow self-destruction.

Still, The Libertine has lurid Saturnalian visions, Morton is superb, Malkovich gives a typically insidious turn, and Depp, as always, finds moments of sad poetry in the bitterest of speeches. --Bret Fetzer


Spotlight customer reviews:
Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: A Drink Too Far
Comment: This film has much to recommend it: the performances are uniformly good, especially those of Depp and Morton; the script is wry and intelligent; the depiction of 17th century England is uncompromising; and the music by Michael Nyman is as rhythmically haunting as ever. Why then does this movie not quite work?

Perhaps because The Libertine fails to engage on an emotional level. The movie is concerned primarily with an intellectual, rather than a personal, analysis of morality, and thus leaves the viewer feeling cold and unmoved. It is difficult to sympathise with any of the characters, even those who clearly deserve our sympathy.

If the rating system allowed I would give four stars for the performances and the production design. But overall, due to the film's somewhat sterile heart, I can only give it three.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: fans of ye foul debauched....look no further!
Comment: Great film with flamboyance, camp dress design and witty repartee aplenty with Depp once again proving that he is the most versitile and talented actor of his generation.
If you like debauched and rakish behaviour (but don't have the courage to carry these foul attributes out) then watch this film and enjoy the fun from the sofa with a bottle of wine, brandy, ale......

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Fine acting weighed down by directorial baggage
Comment: At the beginning of this lusty Restoration romp (aren't all Restoration plays lusty romps?), John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester, bearing more than a passing resemblance to a sultry, bewigged Johnny Depp, launches into a prologue in which he declares that we will not like him. Women will loathe his debauchery and men will be envious - a sure sign that this anti-hero will leave us all gagging for more!

Rochester ultimately pays for his philandering with his nose, half his face literally eaten away by the ravages of syphillis - though you might argue that this price is bestowed upon him for the sin of shocking the nation and his patron, the King, to his and its moral core through the production of A Satyr on Charles II. Worse still, the implication that his religious sin of being atheistic is ultimately to blame. A crude weapon in the scriptwriter's armoury, to be sure.

Alas, while I found Depp's character feisty and cynical, the same can not really be said for the film as a whole. The romp becomes weighed down with its own portentiousness, dull where it should sparkle, and rambling where its plotline should fizz. And forgive me if I missed the point, but the greenish tinge and grainy footage achieved precisely....what? Laurence Dunmore has sabotaged his own film by trying to be too clever. A simpler and more light-hearted approach would have been so much more effective.

Struggling against the directorial baggage, Depp does a fine job. Credit also to Morton, who is first rate as the feeble actor honed to perfection by Rochester, who falls in love with her but is finally rejected. Pike is as ravishing as ever, though Malkovitch looks decidedly uncomfortable, as indeed does Johnny Vegas, perhaps less surprisingly so. Anyone recognise Jack Davenport and Richard Coyle, both of Coupling fame?

So four stars for the cast, not many for the director, screenwriter or cinematographer. An opportunity missed, more's the pity.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Overwhelming performance by johnny depp
Comment: The Libertine?, the best film i have ever seen. Johnny's outstanding performance had me in tears. The opening prolouge says for me the standard of the film, "You will not like me", the first lines had me hooked.

A deep passionate story of the Earl of Rochester, we follow him through a patch in his life where he goes from bad to worse, a man caught up in a life of drink and sex, not bothered about the outcome, but falling in love.

Amazing acting, being a huge fan of johnny depp i can assure you that you will love this film quite possibly the best performance i have seen him do.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: De-centred film with some fabulous performances
Comment: Firstly Johnny Depp is amazing in this film: from self-loathing poet/aristocrat to sylphilis-ravaged almost-dead he is brilliant. The intensity of his performance burns on screen so that despite his cynicism, nihilism and hatred for himself and the world which loves him, we completely understand the self-destructive hold he has over everyone.

Unfortunately the film as a whole (or perhaps the script) doesn't do justice to such a searing performance, which is ably supported by the other actors. Perhaps the problem is that it is too rambling, with too many issues and not enough tightness to concentrate on what is, or ought to be, some kind of centre. Is it about the self-destructiveness of Rochester? Is it about his relationship with the actress Lizzy Barry? Is it about the debaucheries of the Restoration court? Is it a moral story in the end? Or not?

Some narratives resist these kinds of questions: this one, I think, is not trying to be post-modern, just loses its way. Which is an enormous shame.

So overall, a ravishingly beautiful film cinematically (despite the mud, debauchery, disease) with fabulous performances, but a lack of heart or emotion at the centre to pull it all together. Well worth a watch for Depp alone, but temper your expectations...



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