I) OP wrote (v2):
I know that $\mathcal{L}$ is a functional not a function.
Actually for local theories the Lagrangian density
$$ \mathcal{L}(\phi(x), \partial\phi(x), \partial^2\phi(x), \ldots, ;x) $$
is a function of $\phi(x)$, $\partial\phi(x)$, $\partial^2\phi(x)$, $\ldots$, and $x$. In contrast, the action $S[\phi]=\int \!d^dx~\mathcal{L}$ is a functional of $\phi$, cf. e.g. this Phys.SE post.
II) OP wrote (v2):
The Lagrangian density of a Poincare invariant theory should not depend explicitly on the space-time coordinates. Does this mean
$$\tag{1} \partial_{\mu} \mathcal{L}~=~0~? $$
If $\partial_\mu$ in OP's notation denotes explicit space-time differentiation
$ \frac{\partial}{\partial x^{\mu}}$, then the answer is Yes. Note however that there are also implicit dependence on the space-time coordinates via the fields $\phi$. The total space-time derivative becomes
$$ d_{\mu}\mathcal{L}~=~\partial_{\mu} \mathcal{L}
+ \frac{\partial\mathcal{L}}{\partial\phi}\partial_{\mu}\phi
+ \frac{\partial\mathcal{L}}{\partial(\partial_{\nu}\phi)}
\partial_{\nu}\partial_{\mu}\phi
+ \ldots .
$$
III) Translational invariance (1) implies via Noether's theorem that the corresponding energy-momentum 4-vector $P_{\mu}$ is conserved.