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Storytelling

  • 2001
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 27m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
19K
YOUR RATING
Storytelling (2001)
Home Video Trailer from New Line Home Entertainment
Play trailer1:46
6 Videos
28 Photos
Dark ComedySatireComedyDramaRomance

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.College and high school serve as the backdrop for two stories about dysfunction and personal turmoil.

  • Director
    • Todd Solondz
  • Writer
    • Todd Solondz
  • Stars
    • Selma Blair
    • Leo Fitzpatrick
    • Robert Wisdom
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    19K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Todd Solondz
    • Writer
      • Todd Solondz
    • Stars
      • Selma Blair
      • Leo Fitzpatrick
      • Robert Wisdom
    • 130User reviews
    • 93Critic reviews
    • 50Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    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

    Photos28

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    + 22
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    Top cast39

    Edit
    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")
    • Director
      • Todd Solondz
    • Writer
      • Todd Solondz
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews130

    6.818.7K
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    Featured reviews

    6stefan-144

    The "Non-fiction" story is the superior fiction.

    I was fascinated by Todd Solondz's HAPPINESS, a spell-binding drama every minute of it - sometimes terribly naked. There are such tendencies also in STORYTELLING, but only in the second of the two independent parts.

    The first part, called "Fiction", is significantly shorter than part two, "Non-fiction". This is as it should be, but the best would be to exclude it completely. The story about emotional tension between a college girl with ambition to become a writer, her frustrated CP boyfriend and their impressive/monstrous teacher, the successful writer, is just as conventional as the stories the students write in the film. This may be intentional, to cause multiple layers of meta-effects, but it doesn't save this part of the movie from being pretty predictable and boring.

    And the story ends before it should. A sort of coitus interruptus (if the term is allowed), which demands some kind of return or closing-up later on in the movie - but there is none. I got the strong impression that this part was only included to make the movie full-time.

    The second story, "Non-fiction", is clearly stronger, and told with much more passion from the writer/director. Here, many facets are explored, the characters are complex, the drama intricate - and the tension builds, right below the drab suburban surface. It is impressive how elements common in just about any family life, here add to the suspense and the sense of doom. The thrill of trivial life, but not at all trivially portrayed.

    This might be the reason for the title "Non-fiction", since the lives and fates shown in the story feel so real - contrary to what happens in "Fiction".

    Still, this story, too, has been told insufficiently, as if abbreviated, or halted at points where it was about to erupt into infernal drama. Pity. Did Solondz retreat from his own vision? Did he censor himself to get more of a general audience?

    I hope that it's not the case. His portrayal of human life, although unpleasant indeed, is fascinating and uniquely his. So he must be true to it.
    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.
    Gjutarn

    not much of a story really.

    Just another movie that strives for well, nothing. It seems like the will to actually tell something was replaced by the will to get another award. For me this is just another Robert Altman wannabe at work. But he just can't get the story straight. Deconstructivism sometimes seems, as well as irony, to be used when you are to insecure to tell the whole story. It takes courage to make a straight story (like Lynch), based on really good storytelling. By making the movie a bit arty and confusing you're not putting your ass on the line. You only put the responsibility in the hands of the audience. Sometimes it works, sometimes it don't. This time didn't work, for me at least.

    Furthermore I didn't really see how the two parts interacted in a interesting way. But maybe I've forgotten my Derrida...
    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
    8Chris_Docker

    Accurate and scathing attack on various forms of political correctness

    Probably Director Todd Solondz' most mature work to date, Storytelling is split into two parts `Fiction' and `Non-Fiction' - yet similar themes underlie both and pose questions about what we call reality when it comes to prejudice and taboo subjects. Whilst in previous attempts (such as `Happiness') Solondz' work has merely been controversial, in this film he berates political correctness more accurately and more entertainingly. It exposes ridiculous attitudes in the name of political correctness, whether it is the student with an awful essay who almost escapes criticism because he has cerebral palsy, or a black teacher who gets away with being a pervert because his victim doesn't want to entertain thoughts of racism. Nothing is sacred: Jews and the Holocaust also come in for merciless examination. But part of the film involves the story of a `documentary' being made within the main story, by an exploitative screwed up filmmaker who wants to do his own thing in the name of art, so in this sense, Storytelling even turns on itself and questions the validity of using the subject matter that it does. A controversial, worthy, and very entertaining film that stretches your ability to make moral judgements within a convincingly coherent framework.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      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.
    • Goofs
      The positions of Scooby's hands when he is holding the gun change between shots.
    • Quotes

      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.

    • Alternate versions
      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.
    • Connections
      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

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 28, 2001 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Diaphania -French site(fr)
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Storytelling: Historias de ironía y perversión
    • Filming locations
      • New Jersey, USA
    • Production companies
      • New Line Cinema
      • Killer Films
      • Good Machine
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $921,445
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $73,688
      • Jan 27, 2002
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,318,945
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 27m(87 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital

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