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Conte de la folie ordinaire

Original title: Storie di ordinaria follia
  • 1981
  • 16
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
3.1K
YOUR RATING
Conte de la folie ordinaire (1981)
Poet/lecturer Charles Serking awakens from his alcoholic haze long enough to take a bus back to L.A. and plunge into an orgy of drink and sexual depravity.
Play trailer2:11
1 Video
28 Photos
Psychological DramaShowbiz DramaDrama

Poet/lecturer Charles Serking awakens from his alcoholic haze long enough to take a bus back to L.A. and plunge into an orgy of drink and sexual depravity.Poet/lecturer Charles Serking awakens from his alcoholic haze long enough to take a bus back to L.A. and plunge into an orgy of drink and sexual depravity.Poet/lecturer Charles Serking awakens from his alcoholic haze long enough to take a bus back to L.A. and plunge into an orgy of drink and sexual depravity.

  • Director
    • Marco Ferreri
  • Writers
    • Marco Ferreri
    • Sergio Amidei
    • Charles Bukowski
  • Stars
    • Ben Gazzara
    • Ornella Muti
    • Susan Tyrrell
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    3.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Marco Ferreri
    • Writers
      • Marco Ferreri
      • Sergio Amidei
      • Charles Bukowski
    • Stars
      • Ben Gazzara
      • Ornella Muti
      • Susan Tyrrell
    • 29User reviews
    • 30Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 9 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:11
    Trailer

    Photos28

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Ben Gazzara
    Ben Gazzara
    • Charles Serking
    Ornella Muti
    Ornella Muti
    • Cass
    Susan Tyrrell
    Susan Tyrrell
    • Vera
    Tanya Lopert
    Tanya Lopert
    • Vicky
    Roy Brocksmith
    Roy Brocksmith
    • Barman
    Katya Berger
    Katya Berger
    • Girl on Beach
    • (as Katia Berger)
    Hope Cameron
    • Hotel Proprietor
    Judith Drake
    • Widow
    Patrick Hughes
    • Pimp
    Wendy Welles
    • Runaway
    Stratton Leopold
    • Publisher
    Anthony Pitillo
    Jay Julien
    Jay Julien
    Peter Jarvis
    Jean-Paul Boucher
    Cristina Forti
    Elizabeth Long
    Carlo Monni
    Carlo Monni
      • Director
        • Marco Ferreri
      • Writers
        • Marco Ferreri
        • Sergio Amidei
        • Charles Bukowski
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews29

      6.63.1K
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      Featured reviews

      Infofreak

      An extraordinary movie with an utterly brilliant performance from Ben Gazzara. Disturbing, poetic and very beautiful.

      Just about everybody seems to hate 'Tales Of Ordinary Madness' even Charles Bukowski himself. I can't see why. For me it's an extraordinary movie just as good, if not better than, 'Barfly'. Director Marco Ferreri also made the unforgettable 'Blow-Out' ('La Grande Bouffe') another overlooked gem. Both movies are disturbing, poetic and very beautiful. Cassavetes fave Ben Gazzara is the perfect choice to play Bukowski substitute Charles Serking. He gives an utterly brilliant performance, his best along with 'The Killing Of A Chinese Bookie', another love-it-or-hate-it movie. Ornella Muti plays Cass, a self-destructive prostitute he falls in love with. Now Muti is just about the most beautiful actress I've ever seen in my life so I can see why someone would have a problem with her being cast in such a role. It may be unrealistic but she's convincing in a difficult part, and she's just mesmerizing to look at! An added bonus is cult fave Susan Tyrrell ('Fat City', 'Bad', 'Flesh & Blood', 'Cry-Baby',etc.) in the supporting cast playing a typically bent character for her. 'Tales Of Madness' is slow and meandering and anecdotal so people who prefer straightforward, simplistic Hollywood movies will hate it. But if you enjoy Bukowski's work or Hubert Selby Jr's check this movie out as I'm sure you'll be impressed.
      Crap_Connoisseur

      Brilliant Bukowski Adaptation

      Only very rarely are two artists as in sync as Charles Bukowski and Marco Ferreri. Both men devoted their careers to exploring the beauty and bleakness of society's underbelly and the disillusioned souls who call it home. It should come as no surprise then that Ferreri's adaptation of Bukowski's "Erections, Ejaculation, Exhibitions, and General Tales of Ordinary Madness" is every bit as unflinching and honest as its source material.

      Tales Of Ordinary Madness begins with Charles (played by Ben Gazzara) reading a poem to a group of disinterested students. After stumbling off stage in a drunken stupor, Charles meets a 12 year old girl and promptly fondles her breasts. This is the first in a long line of disturbing sexual encounters that take place during the film. Other examples include Charles' brief obsession with Vera, a woman who asks to be beaten with a belt and claims to "love being raped". Charles also sleeps with Vera's obese next door neighbour and in one of the film's most confronting scenes, pushes his head between the woman's legs in a literal attempt to return to the womb. The film reaches a turning point when Charles meets Cass (Ornella Muti), a prostitute as self-destructive as she is beautiful, and slowly begins to fall in love with her.

      Ferreri has crafted a beautifully poetic film about desperate and damaged people. Tales Of Ordinary Madness is never easy to watch but it is always enthralling. Much of the credit for this goes to the Bukowski's riveting source material and Ferreri's obvious affection for it. Marco Ferreri's distinctive use of unusual camera angles and surreal imagery are mostly missing from this film. In fact, Ferreri's direction is expertly restrained in an obvious attempt to recreate Bukowski's minimalist prose cinematically.

      This sense of restraint is shared by Ferreri's impressive cast. Ben Gazzara is striking as Charles. His brave performance captures both the torment and underlying humanity that shapes Charles' journey. Ornella Muti had some of her most memorable roles in Ferreri films and she gives another impressive performance here as Cass. The scene where she puts a safety pin through her cheek is simply unforgettable. My only qualm with her casting is that she is perhaps too beautiful to be realistic as a low class prostitute. Susan Tyrrell also shines as trashy Vera. This was just one of a string of eccentric roles that made Susan a cult favourite in the early 80s.

      Tales Of Ordinary Madness has been made with skill, care and deep empathy for its characters. This film does not quite match the brilliance of Ferreri's "La Derniere Femme" but it comes very close. This is highly recommended to both Bukowski and Ferreri fans.
      7claudio_carvalho

      Self-Destructive Souls

      After the lecture of a poem to a group of bored students, the alcoholic and sex addicted poet Charles Serking (Ben Gazzara) meets a young girl in the backstage and caresses her breasts. Then he travels to Los Angeles, and has kinky sex with bizarre women. When Charles meets the gorgeous self-destructive prostitute Cass (Ornella Muti) in a bar, he finds his soul mate and falls in love for her.

      Marco Ferreri is one of the weirdest directors that I know, and this "Storie di Ordinaria Follia" gives a perfect theme for him to make a good movie about of two self-destructive souls. I do not know the work of the underground poet Charles Bukowski, and actually I just know a little about his biography based on the movie "Factotum" that I hated. But in "Storie di Ordinaria Follia", Ornella Muti is on the top of her awesome beauty and her performance in the role of a tormented character is impressive. Ben Gazzara has also a stunning performance in the role of Charles Serking, a man near to madness that survives drinking booze and having dirty sex. However, this movie is only recommended for very specific audiences. My vote is seven.

      Title (Brazil): "Crônicas de um Amor Louco" ("Chronicles of a Crazy Love")
      9fertilecelluloid

      Masterful vision of a man enslaved by sexual and alcoholic gluttony

      Spectacularly sleazy, beautiful, boisterous and sexy, this is the real Bukowski deal, a booze-fueled erotic odyssey by the adventurous Ferreri with the perfectly cast Ben Gazzara as Charles Serking (Bukowski).

      Ornella Muti, as Serking's sexual muse, is Venus incarnate and turns in a powerhouse performance as Cass, an emotionally damaged whore with a penchant for pain. The scenes of Gazzara swaggering in and out of LA's fleapit bars, apartments and hotel rooms convey a filthy, delirious ambiance that is vividly captured by Tonino Delli Colli's superb cinematography and Dante Ferretti's exquisitely oily production design. This is such an amazing looking film with a thick, steamy, anything-goes atmosphere of lust-ridden anarchy.

      Much grittier than the accomplished "Barfly" and more watchable than "Love Is A Dog From Hell", the entire affair has an emotional, raw resonance that slavishly captures the Bukowski sensibility and remains consistently perverse in its singular vision of a man enslaved by alcoholic and sexual gluttony.

      Phillipe Sarde's score is moody and rich, as is Gazzara's breathy voice-over.

      A masterpiece.
      Mattydee74

      An exploration of the passions of flesh

      Marco Ferreri is a challenging film artist. His films are powered by an

      insistent, intense focus on the passions of flesh - the human response

      to, need for, and meditation on our bodily bounds and desires. In his

      other films he's explored the excesses which bind our mortality from

      hunger to sex to suicide. Here he zeroes in on the texts of the poet

      Charles Bukowski, whose poetic life of booze and sexual conquest has him

      teetering on the brink of annihilation but remaining firmly in the realm

      of fierce, soulful expression. The main character in Tales of Ordinary

      Madness is a poet whose relationships with women range from the

      infantile to the sadomasochistic while he continues to binge on a diet

      of alcohol. What he doesn't expect is to fall in love. Being a poetic

      film (that is based around symbols and evocative imagery rather than

      plot) this is a beautiful, estranged experience. Its a fascinating

      glimpse of America from the outside. Vividly powered by Ben Gazzara's

      performance as the outsider poet in the shadows of society, this is a

      film to be explored with a roving eye. Its a film where the sex scenes

      are not choreographed and sensual but brutal and unflinching in their

      approach to the passions of flesh. Its a rough film but one which takes

      us into the dark corners of love.

      More like this

      L'amour est un chien de l'enfer
      6.7
      L'amour est un chien de l'enfer
      Factotum
      6.6
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      Rêve de singe
      6.3
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      La dernière femme
      6.4
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      Pipicacadodo
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      Dillinger est mort
      6.9
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      Barfly
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      6.5
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      Liza
      6.3
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      Porcherie
      6.6
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      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        In one of several of Charles Bukowski's book of letters, he noted that, before production began, Ben Gazarra had great eyes. After the movie came out, however, he didn't have much good to say about it.
      • Quotes

        Charles Serking: [First lines. Off-camera from a theater lecture stage] Well, here I am.

        [Jeers are heard from the unseen audience and an unseen voice yells out, "Fuck you, turkey"]

        Charles Serking: Ayyyyy... watch it. I've been working out with weights.

        [More jeers and another unseen voice yells out, "Are you drunk?"]

        Charles Serking: Ill just drink my wine and leave. Right...

        [More jeering]

        Charles Serking: Okay, let's begin. Forget the bullshit and get into the so-called art... Style...

        [Audience is restless and an unseen voice yells out, "We love you, Charlie!" as he guzzles wine from a brown bag]

        Charles Serking: Style is the answer to everything... a fresh way to approach a dull or dangerous thing. To do a dull thing with style is preferable to doing a dangerous thing without style. To do a dangerous thing with style is what I call art. Bullfighting can be an art. Boxing can be an art. Loving can be an art. Opening a can of sardines can be an art.

        [the audience bcimes restless again and an unseen voice cries, "Come on!"]

        Charles Serking: Not many have style. Not many can keep style. I have seen dogs with more style than men - though not many dogs have style. Cats have it in abundance.

        [He guzzles more wine from his brown bag]

      • Crazy credits
        'Copyright' is spelt as 'copyrigth'.
      • Connections
        Featured in Les films de Marco Ferreri (2008)
      • Soundtracks
        Smile Away The Rain
        Written by R. & M. Berardi

        (r) Mureo Music Pub

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      FAQ14

      • How long is Tales of Ordinary Madness?Powered by Alexa

      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • January 3, 1982 (France)
      • Countries of origin
        • Italy
        • France
      • Language
        • English
      • Also known as
        • Tales of Ordinary Madness
      • Filming locations
        • Atlanta, Georgia, USA(Closing beach scenes.)
      • Production companies
        • 23 Giugno
        • Ginis Films
        • Alpes International Paris
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        1 hour 41 minutes
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.66 : 1

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