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      • Slightly pretentious, but original enough to be a bit interesting, and buoyed by strong performances from Depp and Morton, The Libertine is a decent telling of a historical footnote, most interesting because of its strong feminist message.
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  2. Nov 25, 2005 · Rated: 2/5 Apr 1, 2006 Full Review Debbie Lynn Elias Behind The Lens Despite its many flaws, The Libertine is a film worth watching, if only for the restorative talents of [Johnny] Depp and...

    • The Libertine

      Reviews 63% Audience Score 500+ Ratings French philosopher...

  3. Slightly pretentious, but original enough to be a bit interesting, and buoyed by strong performances from Depp and Morton, The Libertine is a decent telling of a historical footnote, most...

  4. Mar 9, 2006 · Roger Ebert March 09, 2006. Tweet. Elizabeth Malet (Rosamund Pike) stands by her philandering, verbally abusive and much despised husband the Second Earl of Rochester (Johnny Depp) in "The Libertine." Now streaming on: Powered by JustWatch. "You will not like me," the Earl of Rochester assures us, staring fiercely out of darkness.

  5. Mar 15, 2000 · Reviews 63% Audience Score 500+ Ratings French philosopher Denis Diderot (Vincent Perez) produces the first encyclopedia while indulging in 18th-century decadence. Read More Read Less Watch on ...

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    • Gabriel Aghion
    • Drama
    • Vincent Perez
  6. Aug 31, 2017 · As the reviews of a given film accumulate, the Rotten Tomatoes score measures the percentage that are more positive than negative, and assigns an overall fresh or rotten rating to...

  7. Film review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported that 33% of 122 sampled critics gave the film positive reviews and that it got a rating average of 4.8/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Despite Johnny Depp's zealous performance, muddled direction and murky cinematography hinder The Libertine."

  8. Mar 8, 2006 · It’s a mess of — toward its end — almost epic proportions, and it’s nowhere near as vulgar and shocking as it would like to think it is, but The Libertine is riveting nevertheless. Right from its opening monologue: Johnny Depp, as the debauched 17th-century English poet and notorious rake John Wilmot, second Earl of Rochester, growls ...

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