Conte de la folie ordinaire

  • Italie Storie di ordinaria follia (plus)

Résumés(1)

Charles Serking (Ben Gazzara) - a poet exploring L.A.'s seedy depths and dealing with the elusiveness of love. After falling for both the lascivious Vera (Susan Tyrell) and the masochistic prostitute Cass (Ornella Muti), Charles spirals downward into the world of the defeated, the demented and the damned. (texte officiel du distributeur)

Critiques (2)

gudaulin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais The writer Serkin as an alter ego of Charles Bukowski, who meets the ideas of nonconformist, provocative, and free-minded artist in abundance, is an immensely grateful character that offers great potential and an attractive spectacle with a philosophical subtext. The opening scene, where Serkin introduces his fans to his view on "style" as a way of life, is also truly stylish and entices film fans. If Ferreri had focused more on the dialogue and increased the pace, if he had let more of Bukowski's thoughts be heard in the film, and if he had managed to create fully-fledged characters out of the characters that surround his protagonist, whom Serkin and his value ladder must confront and that influence each other in the form of dramatic conflict, an exceptional film could have been created. Unfortunately, the chosen pace is extremely slow, the camera lazily glides here over a naked female body, there over the seashore. The dramatic storyline is weak, albeit embellished with a very bold portrayal of human sexuality for its time. The view of naked Ornellia and her self-torment was undoubtedly on the very edge of what was acceptable in the early 1980s. Today, this work is only a part of film history, intended for film enthusiasts, and perfect for screening in film clubs. Overall impression: 60%. ()

kaylin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Considering the theme, I would have expected everything to be a bit dirtier, but actually, there are only a few scenes that really get to you. Especially the ones where Ornella Muti hurts herself. And those are the scenes that really ground you. But then suddenly nothing, and you don't get what you'd expect from something based on Bukowski. ()