Johnny Depp's performance in "The Libertine" was accurate and culminating in a breakthrough in his acting career.
The film is sometimes interesting, sometimes vulgar, until the end of the film is moved. When Rochester began to show the appearance of the disease after the ravages of the disease and marched toward death, Johnny Depp finally got what he wanted-to play a person with the same abomination in character and appearance, his appearance was so mutilated and scarred that he was so scarred. People can barely recognize it. For those who behave indiscriminately and excessively, this is an excellent example and a wake-up call. This film is not suitable for people with weakened hearts or cynics, because it represents the most unclean, dirty and corrupt side of England in the mid-17th century. Crude language and a large number of nude symbols run through the film, even throughout the film. I have never seen the undressed scenes in Rochester, and the sensory stimulation it brings is by no means inferior to the erotic movies. However, in the emotional drama, the attraction between Rochester and his wife played by Johnny Depp seems to be far more attractive than with Elizabeth Barry, perhaps because Samantha Morton's Elizabeth Barry did not meet everyone's expectations. degree. Compared to emotional dramas, the erotic images in the film are mostly non-emotional, even the expression of desire between Wilmert and Barry is very rough.
The film is an excellent work used by Johnny Depp to improve himself and show his acting skills and potential. The role of Rochester is undoubtedly another crowning in his acting career.
However, there are some controversies in the film. The biggest problem with this drama is that Rochester in the film seems to spend half of his time on the road to death. He has always been on the verge of death. He has delivered three bedside death speeches, and every time people think he is about to leave the world, but he just doesn't. This makes the plot a bit tedious and boring, as if stepping in place. So that when the scene of Rochester making a death speech on the bed, there was a line of dialogue that said "I have been (stay) too long", and the guy behind immediately took the conversation and said, "Let's go!" It's not a bad movie, but it feels like it's not finished yet. Perhaps it is too ambitious, but it makes the director exceed his due load
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