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Storytelling

  • 2001
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 27 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,8/10
18.715
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Storytelling (2001)
Home Video Trailer from New Line Home Entertainment
trailer wiedergeben1:46
6 Videos
28 Fotos
Dark ComedySatireComedyDramaRomance

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuCollege and high school serve as the backdrop for two stories about dysfunction and personal turmoil.College and high school serve as the backdrop for two stories about dysfunction and personal turmoil.College and high school serve as the backdrop for two stories about dysfunction and personal turmoil.

  • Regie
    • Todd Solondz
  • Drehbuch
    • Todd Solondz
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Selma Blair
    • Leo Fitzpatrick
    • Robert Wisdom
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,8/10
    18.715
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Todd Solondz
    • Drehbuch
      • Todd Solondz
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Selma Blair
      • Leo Fitzpatrick
      • Robert Wisdom
    • 130Benutzerrezensionen
    • 93Kritische Rezensionen
    • 50Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Videos6

    Storytelling
    Trailer 1:46
    Storytelling
    Storytelling
    Trailer 1:46
    Storytelling
    Storytelling
    Trailer 1:46
    Storytelling
    Storytelling: Dinnertime Conversations
    Clip 2:24
    Storytelling: Dinnertime Conversations
    Storytelling: It Must've Been Hard Being Poor
    Clip 1:22
    Storytelling: It Must've Been Hard Being Poor
    Storytelling: In The Bar
    Clip 1:14
    Storytelling: In The Bar
    Storytelling: Class Reading
    Clip 1:25
    Storytelling: Class Reading

    Fotos28

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    + 22
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    Topbesetzung39

    Ändern
    Selma Blair
    Selma Blair
    • Vi (segment "Fiction")
    Leo Fitzpatrick
    Leo Fitzpatrick
    • Marcus (segment "Fiction")
    Robert Wisdom
    Robert Wisdom
    • Mr. Scott (segment "Fiction")
    Maria Thayer
    Maria Thayer
    • Amy (segment "Fiction")
    Angela Goethals
    Angela Goethals
    • Elli (segment "Fiction")
    Devorah Rose
    Devorah Rose
    • Lucy (segment "Fiction")
    Nancy Anne Ridder
    • Joyce (segment "Fiction")
    Steve Rosen
    Steve Rosen
    • Ethan (segment "Fiction")
    • (as Steven Rosen)
    Aleksa Palladino
    Aleksa Palladino
    • Catherine (segment "Fiction")
    Mary Lynn Rajskub
    Mary Lynn Rajskub
    • Melinda (segment "Fiction")
    Tina Holmes
    Tina Holmes
    • Sue (segment "Fiction")
    Paul Giamatti
    Paul Giamatti
    • Toby Oxman (segment "Non-Fiction")
    Mike Schank
    Mike Schank
    • Mike (segment "Non-Fiction")
    Xander Berkeley
    Xander Berkeley
    • Mr. DeMarco (segment "Non-Fiction")
    Mark Webber
    Mark Webber
    • Scooby Livingston (segment "Non-Fiction")
    John Goodman
    John Goodman
    • Marty Livingston (segment "Non-Fiction")
    Julie Hagerty
    Julie Hagerty
    • Fern Livingston (segment "Non-Fiction")
    Jonathan Osser
    Jonathan Osser
    • Mikey Livingston (segment "Non-Fiction")
    • Regie
      • Todd Solondz
    • Drehbuch
      • Todd Solondz
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen130

    6,818.7K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    8evetilly

    Solondz Does It Again

    Todd Solondz has a rare skill. He can find humor in the darkest, most depressing subject matter. In Storytelling, he answers his own critics who tell him that certain subjects should be treated with kid gloves and not made fun of. In this film, he makes fun of disabilities, race, death...all the good stuff.

    The first 30 minutes of the film focus on a creative writing student (Selma Blair) who's having a hard time finding inspiration. After breaking up with her disabled boyfriend, she had a fling with her African American professor and uses the experience as a basis for her next story.

    The rest of the film is about a failed actor (Paul Giametti) turned documentarian who decides to make a high school slacker and his family the focus of his next project. It becomes obvious that the documentarian is the stand in for Solondz himself and he gets to answer the critics who call his work mean spirited or like a freak show where he's making fun of his subjects.

    In classic Solondz tradition, there are tons of moments you'll feel bad for laughing at, but you won't feel too bad, because this is one of his best works and it's not as if he's not telling the truth.
    surenm

    Setting yourself up for depression...

    Watching anything by Todd Solondz is going to make you awfully depressed. Not because his films are bad, but because they are so good, and there is hardly anything like them out there today. Watching Storytelling in the theater was a blessing, but afterwards, my friends and I could only feel completely depressed! If you've never experienced Solondz's magic, this film can leave you a bit more uplifted, as you have Welcome to the Dollhouse and Happiness still left to explore. But if you've already seen these films, watching Storytelling can only make you feel bad, like a quickie, it's so good then when it's over, poof, you're bored and you want something else just like it, but different. I wish Todd Solondz made more films, but sadly after you watch those three, you're done, and it's back to putting up with dumpsters of celluloid garbage for the next year or two until his next film. I mean let's face it; where else are you going to find a great performance from John freakin' Goodman!

    Sadly though, I find it hard to convince certain TYPES of people as to why Solondz's work is so good. I try to tell them the writing is award-winning and beyond most failed attempts at culture critique. I try and tell them how good the performances are. I even try and point out some fantastic themes out of the multitude available in his work. But these certain types, they just can't seem to get it.

    But on the bright side, the one thing that does give me a boast about Storytelling is Conan O'Brien. Now, it's not the fact that he's here, but how he fits in, it's like there are people out there that do NOT understand Conan or his humor at all, they just don't get HIM altogether. Then there are those, such as myself, that completely understand Conan and all his self-deprecation. How can you not love a character like Scooby that wants to be Conan's sidekick??? Is this NOT the dream of every self-deprecating teenager and college student?!? Being able to simple make that point in a film, as Solondz does so perfectly during that scene with Scooby and Conan, right after the proverbial gay pseudo blow-job, is something most auteur's can't ever GET AT. This is why it's depressing watching the film, you see how brilliant this man is and how clearly he can speak his mind and say to you: "I hear YOU, I feel this way, and I know you do too, and this is here for US to enjoy, not just something for everyone." Some people say Art is something everyone can universally appreciate. Others say it is completely subjective. I think it can in fact be both ways. You can look at Storytelling or actually Happiness is better for this as formulaic, or formal art, the technical way the film is put together is brilliant, that's its universal art. The thematics, the way the auteur says what's directly on his mind in a way that a certain kind of person is immediately able to grasp a hold of firmly, that's the other kind, the subjective kind. This man understands communication, let alone life, like very very VERY few writers and directors ever have and ever will.
    10addicott

    Some of the best writing you will ever see.

    Writer/director Todd Solondz last rocked my world with Happiness, which was the sharpest, most unflinching black comedy I'd ever seen. He does it again with Storytelling, keeping his impeccable edge while exploring some intriguing new turf. No doubt wary after his previous ventures, Solondz attempts to circumvent some of the criticisms that less savvy viewers are bound to make. Sure enough, they go ahead and make them; the reviews are polarized. But the film is a masterpiece.

    The film has two parts. The first part, titled Fiction, focuses on a creative writing student Vi (Selma Blair), her Cerebral Palsy-stricken boyfriend Marcus (Leo Fitzpatrick) and their professor Mr. Scott (Robert Wisdom).

    The classroom setting provides an unusual venue: a story writing workshop within a story. Solondz puts one of the characters through a perversely traumatic experience, which we witness as viewers of the movie. Before we have a chance to pass judgment on Solondz, his character writes about the event in the 3rd person and reads the story in class. All accusations one might level against Solondz (namely: bad taste, plus every "ism" in the book) get made by the fellow students, who detest the story. But in the context of the movie, they're condemning an account of an event that actually happened! Very clever...

    In spite of some of the grotesque twists, I found myself laughing out loud fairly often. Solondz has a gift for rendering subtle ironies that become overwhelmingly funny.

    The lead characters are fascinating and multi-layered. Vi seems innocent, but if you pay close attention, you'll notice she's not particularly sincere. One would like to root for Marcus, but his condition doesn't excuse him for being a lousy writer and a self-absorbed a**hole. The professor may be a monster, but he is also very frank.

    The second part Nonfiction is also highly self-aware. It covers the making of a two-bit documentary. In the process, the dialog once again anticipates many of the charges some will make against Solondz (that he exploits his subjects and creates a sensational freak show for us to snicker at). There's a cameo role with Mike Schank, who was featured in real life in American Movie. The similarities between the documentary American Movie, the fiction Storytelling and the documentary within a fiction (tentatively titled American Scooby) are uncanny.

    Scooby (Mark Weber) is the ultimate apathetic suburban slacker teen. While very much spoiled and sheltered, he is also alienated from, and resentful of, his elders. He perks up a bit when there are no grownups around, but most of the time the "stupid" barrier is up and his eyes are half-closed and red from smoking pot. He's such a lost cause, he attracts the attention of an aspiring documentarian (Paul Giamatti).

    As you might expect, the rest of Scooby's family is a real piece of work. Scooby's dad (John Goodman) is loud and domineering. His mom (Julie Hagerty) is idiotic. His younger brother Brady (Noah Fleiss) is a jock, perhaps the closest to what we'd like to consider "normal".

    The brainy youngest brother, Mikey (Jonathan Osser) is a real standout. He tags around with the overworked El Salvadorian housemaid Consuelo (Lupe Ontiveros) and asks her lots of questions. His curiosity is cute, but his conceited insensitivity truly boggles the mind.

    Solondz definitely favors the sordid, but I'm not sure he does so gratuitously. I think he simply refuses to pretend, as so many other do, that the world is a tidy, simple place. (Those who seek to preserve such a notion are guaranteed to abhor his work.) But is it fair to berate Solondz just because he dares to present what others systematically avoid? Whose vision is more skewed: Solondz for pointing out the dog***t on our shoes, or the mainstream for ignoring it?

    I wish I could agree that his writings are contrived and distorted, but I don't think they are. Through the media, through the grapevine and sometimes with my own eyes, I've seen events that are every bit as twisted and "wrong" as those Solondz creates. Everywhere I look, I encounter people who could easily be incorporated into a Solondz script.

    Every storyteller recreates the world according to his/her own vision. Todd Solondz just happens to be vastly more perceptive and talented than most. Storytelling is one of the most insightful, clever and thought-provoking films I've ever seen. Watch it multiple times for maximum yield.
    8loganx-2

    Like That Thing On Your Neck, It's Grown On Me

    At first viewing I though this was the weakest of director Todd Solondz films, however like all of his works, it's impossible to forget once seen. Todd Solondze absorbed criticisms about exploitation, showing misery for misery's sake, and just generally being a "meanie", and turned them into the cinematic equivalent of a "dis song"(rap term for song made specifically as an attack or "beef" with another rapper), with Solondz against critics, carefully trying to explain the notions of "Storytelling". Our first story deals with sex, political correctness, race, and fiction writing, as a young liberal college girl has unpleasant and ironic sexual experience with her Black writing professor. Our second well...with the same subjects just this time with non-fiction in place of fiction. Here Solondz shows us yet another dysfunctional upper middle class Jewish family in chaos, but this time as a "documentary", which shows us the pathetic film maker, the cruel or otherwise ignorant family, and the audience who laughs and scoffs, at it all.

    This is a rare film, because it's a film maker addressing his critiques, himself, and his audience all at once. And it has plenty of Solondz trade mark cringe scenes, that veer drastically from comic to dramatic in a matter of breaths. The results are absorbing but like all Solondz it leaves a bad taste in your mouth, and makes you honestly question your own moral compass. They say satire is dead if the audience cannot be shocked, but it's also dead if the audience cannot be shamed, in the days where South Park and Family Guy, are on non cable TV any afternoon (l love both shows), shock and shame are concepts so familiar they've lost some of their power. Thankfully just when we've seen it all and were sure that nothing matters and nothing can surprise, startle, or offend us, Todd Solondz will be there to show things can always get worse.
    8TBJCSKCNRRQTreviews

    An unpleasant, unsettling, and most importantly, necessary film

    After reading about Palindromes and finding myself oddly attracted to the subject matter of several of Todd Solondz's features, I bought this film. It would seem that it has a reputation as being his worst work to date(at least as far as theatrically released movies go)... I must say, if the rest of what he's done is this powerful, I will have to keep my eyes open for it. You seldom see movies that are this unpleasant. There are films that are far, far harder to watch... but this is still not one you put on to enjoy yourself. As many other viewers, I didn't care much for the first half(well, part... it's a third of the projects full length, with a running time of about 25 minutes), "Fiction". I felt I had gained little after it was over, though I will say that the concept and themes explored are quite interesting. "Non-Fiction" proved to be far more worth-while, in my opinion. The writing and direction is excellent in both. The pacing works well... I was never bored, and while it wasn't exactly a "good" time, it moved along as it should, never really too slow or too fast. The characters were incredible... the sheer amount of development, through so little time spent on each... that's talent. As its title indicates, Storytelling goes into different methods of telling a story... and displays some of the most impressive storytelling that I've seen to date. There is some humor, but it's quite black, and throughout the film, I was unsure of whether I should laugh out loud... or cry my eyes out. The film is strongly satirical, very direct and seemingly almost aggressively anti-PC. Dealing with several subjects of taboo, Solondz pulls few punches, if any. Certainly not a film for everyone. Both parts seem to end somewhat abruptly, but that may be intentional. I will say that my rating would almost certainly have been higher had the first part been improved upon... or removed entirely. It's difficult to say who I'd recommend this to... cynics or realists with a strong threshold for the some of the ugliest sides of human nature, I suppose. From what I understand, though, it's less provocative than the other films of Todd Solondz. 8/10

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    • Wissenswertes
      There was a third story, with James Van Der Beek as a college student realizing his sexuality, which was subsequently cut out of the film.
    • Patzer
      The positions of Scooby's hands when he is holding the gun change between shots.
    • Zitate

      Catherine: It was confessional, yet dishonest. Jane pretends to be horrified by the sexuality that she in fact fetishizes. She subsumes herself to the myth of black male potency, but then doesn't follow through. She thinks she 'respects Afro-Americans,' she thinks they're 'cool,' 'exotic,' what a notch he 'd make in her belt, but, of course, it all comes down to mandingo cliché, and he calls her on it. In classic racist tradition she demonizes, then runs for cover. But then, how could she behave otherwise? She's just a spoiled suburban white girl with a Benneton rainbow complex. It's just my opinion, and what do I know... but I think it's a callow piece of writing.

    • Alternative Versionen
      The original version of the film featured a third story entitled "Autobiography", concerning, among other things, a closeted football player (James van der Beek). The main character has an explicit gay sex scene with a male partner (Steven Rosen); the entire story was cut from the final version.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in This Film Is Not Yet Rated (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      Fiction
      Performed by Nathan Larson and Nina Persson

      Written by Nathan Larson and Nina Persson

      Published by The Music Of NATO and Stockholm Songs

      Nathan Larson appears courtesy of Artemis Records

      Nina Persson appears courtesy of Stockholm Records

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    FAQ19

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    • What are the differences between the R-Rated and Unrated Version?

    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 8. November 2001 (Russland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Offizieller Standort
      • Diaphania -French site(fr)
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Spanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Storytelling: Historias de ironía y perversión
    • Drehorte
      • New Jersey, USA
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • New Line Cinema
      • Killer Films
      • Good Machine
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

    Ändern
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 921.445 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 73.688 $
      • 27. Jan. 2002
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 1.318.945 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 27 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital

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