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The Libertine (2004)
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Johnny Depp gives one of his most remarkable performances as John Wilmot, Second Earl of Rochester, the 17th-century poet who drank and debauched his way to an early grave. First-time director Laurence Dunmore places Wilmot in the context of his time, away from the gadzooks-egad stereotypes of the Restoration setting and squarely in the forefront of the era's revolt against puritanism. Samantha Morton is marvellous as the would-be actress embroiled in the Earl's life, while John Malkovich makes an intriguingly ambiguous King Charles II. There are many other high spots, particularly Wilmot's address to Parliament, and the whole film has a simplicity of mood that's enhanced by the music of Michael Nyman. But this is Depp's movie. He eloquently and emotionally portrays this immoral yet fascinating man who died at the age of 33 having exhausted what there was of life. TH
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| Contains swearing, nudity, sex scenes. |
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Tell us what you think
Email us at rtfilmcomments@bbc.co.uk to tell us what you think of this film. Your comments may appear in Radio Times magazine.
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Running time
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109min
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Country of origin
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UK / US
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Genre
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Period Biographical Drama
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Original language
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English
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Screenplay
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Stephen Jeffreys, from his play
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Theatrical distributor
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Entertainment
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UK cinema certificate
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18
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UK cinema release date
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November 2005
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Film certification logos reproduced by kind permission of BBFC |
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