An antidote to the sunny period pieces adopted from Jane Austen, which feature impeccably coiffed aristocracy engage in the witty banter of drawing room dramas and culminate in a most delightful denouement, 'The Libertine' highlights the underbelly of the Britocracy of centuries past. Adapted from the play by Stephen Jeffreys, .. Read more
| Starring | Johnny Depp, John Malkovich, Samantha Morton, Johnny Vegas |
|---|---|
| Director | Laurence Dunmore |
| Genres | Drama |
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An antidote to the sunny period pieces adopted from Jane Austen, which feature impeccably coiffed aristocracy engage in the witty banter of drawing room dramas and culminate in a most delightful denouement, 'The Libertine' highlights the underbelly of the Britocracy of centuries past. Adapted from the play by Stephen Jeffreys, the plot follows the dastardly debauchery of the Earl of Rochester (a mischievous Johnny Depp). A hedonist who makes Oscar Wilde seem moralistic, the Earl spent his days and nights in beds, brothels, and bars, awakening from drunken blackouts only to stumble to the nearest whorehouse. Yet this ravishing rake was also possessed of a predilection for poetry, and turned his escapades into acid-tongued witticisms that pepper this frisky film. Directed by first-timer Laurence Dunmore, the historical film picks up in 1678, when the Earl returns to London at the behest of King Charles II (magnetically played by John Malkovich, who starred in the play when it was staged at Chicago's Steppenwolf Theatre). With his young wife in tow, our rake immediately immerses himself into a litany of transgressions. When he meets a prostitute and burgeoning actress named Elizabeth Barry (Samantha Morton), he obsessively takes her under his wing, crafting her into an acclaimed stage starlet and eventually bedding her. What follows is a spiral upward, downward, and sideways through the city's pleasure palaces, culminating in a quasi-tragic, quasi-relieving denouement. Melding the naughty energy of his 'Pirates Of The Caribbean' character with the brooding darkness of his wearied detective in 'From Hell', Depp gives a pitch-perfect performance that carries the film, eliciting strange sympathy for such a despicable devil. The score, by the award-winning composer Michael Nyman, adds even further moodiness and dramatic edge to the story.
| Starring | Johnny Depp, John Malkovich, Samantha Morton, Johnny Vegas, Shane MacGowan, Rupert Friend, Tom Hollander, Rosamund Pike |
|---|---|
| Director | Laurence Dunmore |
| Studio | ENTERTAINMENT IN VIDEO |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 54 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Released | DVD: 02 May 2006 Production year: 2005 |
| Format | DVD |
3.5 stars out of 4 -- This one-of-a-kind spellbinder from first-time director Laurence Dunmore is not afraid to shock. Depp is a raunchy wonder
You will hate me, proclaims Johnny Depps seventeenth-century rake the Earl of Rochester in the... read more on Time Out
Quite a strong portrayal of an individual's refusal to be tied to responsibility and constructive contribution. The main character,The Earl of Rochester, manages by chance to have some small positive influence on others, in spite of himself.
This film is a fascinating and blunt portrayal which explores the part of human beings that many try desperately to avoid or challenge.
The main character played by Johnny Depp, would have been furious at the thought of having to be forced to watch trailers for other movies on this DVD.
I rarely switch off films of any type and will suffer a bad film to judge the whole piece. But this on lasted 5 minutes. If your into periodic porn flicks it might be your style! But J Depp I suppose never picks anything but the unusual!
Johnny Depp falls ill after every film he makes - because he puts so much effort into creating his characters. The Pirates of the Caribbean star never gets sick while he is working, but as soon as he finishes each job he comes down with a mystery ailment which keeps him in bed for weeks at a time. And Depp is convinced he over-exerts himself while he is acting. He says, "There is a period once you finish a guy - a character - when you're looking to go back to yourself and sometimes it can... Read more