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Marco Ferreri: The Collection (contains La Grande Bouffe, El Cochecito, The Seed of Man, Don't Touch the White Woman, Bye Bye Monkey, Seeking Asylum, Tales of Ordinary Madness, The House of Smiles)
 
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Marco Ferreri: The Collection (contains La Grande Bouffe, El Cochecito, The Seed of Man, Don't Touch the White Woman, Bye Bye Monkey, Seeking Asylum, Tales of Ordinary Madness, The House of Smiles)

Starring: Marcello Mastroianni, Roberto Benigni Director: Marco Ferreri Rating: Unrated   Format: DVD
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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  • This item: Marco Ferreri: The Collection (contains La Grande Bouffe, El Cochecito, The Seed of Man, Don't Touch the White Woman, Bye Bye Monkey, Seeking Asylum, Tales of Ordinary Madness, The House of Smiles) DVD ~ Marcello Mastroianni

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Product Details

  • Actors: Marcello Mastroianni, Roberto Benigni, Catherine Deneuve, Gérard Depardieu, Ben Gazzara
  • Directors: Marco Ferreri
  • Format: Box set, Black & White, Color, Dolby, DVD, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Language: English, French, Italian, Spanish
  • Subtitles: English
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.77:1
  • Number of discs: 8
  • Rating: Unrated
  • Studio: Koch Lorber Films
  • DVD Release Date: August 19, 2008
  • Run Time: 101 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00199PPBU
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #23,440 in Movies & TV (See Bestsellers in Movies & TV)

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    #61 in  Movies & TV > Boxed Sets > Art House & International
  • For more information about "Marco Ferreri: The Collection (contains La Grande Bouffe, El Cochecito, The Seed of Man, Don't Touch the White Woman, Bye Bye Monkey, Seeking Asylum, Tales of Ordinary Madness, The House of Smiles)" visit the Internet Movie Database (IMDb)

Editorial Reviews

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"Style is the answer to everything," intones skid row poet Charles Serking, played by the suitably grizzled and worn Ben Gazarra, to his somnambulistic audience. Serking is, of course, a not-at-all veiled stand-in for beat legend Charles Bukowksi, whose autobiographical short stories were the basis for this film. But Serking, in many ways, comes off more like a gin-soaked fantasy of a skid row Hemingway whose sports of choice are alcohol, women, and sex. Behind the salt-and-pepper beard and rummy eyes lies an actor too poised to allow himself to fully sink into the alcoholic sloppiness that Mickey Rourke so easily brought to the screen in the less pretentious and more concise Barfly, which Bukowski himself scripted. But if Italian-born director Marco Ferreri stumbles over the self-conscious dialogue, he's right at home capturing the seedy atmosphere of dim, run-down apartments and underlit bars in the real Hollywood Serking calls home. When Serking's fling with the stunning, self-mutilating Italian hooker Cass (Ornella Muti, who puts her oversized safety pin to some rather startling uses) becomes too emotional, he takes the anonymous safety of the streets--crashing in a flophouse, passing around a bottle with a listless knot of derelicts. Serking melds right in with the littered streets and lost souls, a real man of the people. Suddenly you see it: he's got style. --Sean Axmaker

Product Description

Marco Ferreri's satirical and often surreal films embody a unique vision of humanity borne of exasperation and nihilism. Through these genre-bending masterpieces, the controversial director crafted a fiercely contemporary cinematic language of his own, delving deep into the alienation of men, women and children.

Includes the films:
El Cochecito (1960; B&W; Spanish with English subtitles)
The Seed of Man (1969; Italian with English subtitles)
La Grande Bouffe (1973; French with English subtitles)
Don’t Touch the White Woman (1974; French with English subtitles)
Bye Bye Monkey (1978; English)
Seeking Asylum (1979; Italian with English subtitles)
Tales of Ordinary Madness (1981; English)
The House of Smiles (1988; Italian with English subtitles)

ALSO INCLUDES:
Bonus Documentary "Marco Ferreri: The Director Who Came From the Future"
Marco Ferreri Interview with Ed Grant
16-page booklet featuring critical essay by Italian film scholar Jacqueline Reich


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13 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Long overdue tribute to Ferreri, September 12, 2008
While it's long overdue for Marco Ferreri to receive the prestige treatment of a major box set - especially in America where his films are less known - it's unfortunate that five of the eight films are already available in English subtitled dvds released just a few years ago. But for Ferreri completists, the purchase of this set is mandatory due to the inclusion of THE SEED OF MAN and THE HOUSE OF SMILES - both making their U.S. DVD debut, as well as the first time these two films have been available with English subtitles ANYWHERE. And the black and white feature THE LITTLE COACH will be new for most viewers, since it's only previous U.S. release came over 10 years ago in a marginally released video edition. Also the film's bonus documentary MARCO FERRERI - THE DIRECTOR FROM ANOTHER PLANET - is authoritative and surprisingly comprehensive - with rare tidbits like Ferreri's lifelong diabetes and the attempted (and unsuccessful) suicide of actor David Warner during the shooting of Ferreri's film THE AUDIENCE.

But those with an appetite for more Ferreri after completing this set might want to check out the English subtitled editions of HAREM, LA CAGNA and DILLINGER IS DEAD available at amazon.co.uk. Also, dvd.it provides Italian dvds (without English subtitles) of rarer Ferreri films like THE CONJUGAL BED, THE APE WOMAN, WEDDING MARCH, and DIARY OF A VICE. And the Spanish site dvd.es is a source for Ferreri's STORY OF PIERRA, THE FUTURE IS WOMAN, and his final film NITRATE BASE.
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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Tales Of Ordinary Madness, March 20, 2005
This review is from: Tales of Ordinary Madness (DVD)
`Some people never go crazy, what truly horrible lives they must live'-Charles Bukowski

To understand Bukowski, one cannot separate his life from his writings, you must understand that they both depended on each other and created an insane, incestuous bond that drove his writings to such an incredible level of contained madness. Ferreri understands that, a poet of the excesses of human nature, just as Bukowski was the poet of his own excesses, he is the gutter anarchistic artist, the People's symbolist, whose films are ventures into the darkest parts of man's existence (and eventual self-destruction). His films all have a single theme: man's inability to make the world in harmony with his desires. Bukowski's eternal theme was to live with art, and he argued that banality was the most depressing thing that could happen to someone. In `Tales Of Ordinary Madness' Ferreri does not make a film in the conventional sense but a drunken poem in the form of a film, a venture into complete insanity. Something happens in a Ferreri film, something a little uncertain and inexplicable but ultimately moving, just as something happens in Bukowski's writings, which carry the whole universe with them in unpretentious attempts to describe futile things, the words break through the page, and suddenly art is there, an insane god-like feeling of immortality is present and nothing else matters, it is with the power of a genius that Bukowski can contain nirvana with such simplicity, such straight-forwardness. Just as Ferreri can make important philosophical statements in such un-stylized context. `Tales Of Ordinary Madness' is a masterpiece and the greatest film about the actual process of art ever made because it does not separate the art from the reality, in fact, it unites them, and argues that one depends on the other. Bukowski could not have written what he has written if he had not lived what he had lived, Ferreri understands that true art is born out of despair, demystified and separated of all its futile banalities. When the character inspired by Bukowski, in one of the film's most moving passages, is recruited by an organization to write for them and more or less sentenced to bourgeois acceptance if he settles into the conformity that they offer him, he declines, gets drunk and throws beer bottles at them, forever the anarchist, that scene alone is perhaps the greatest comment anyone has ever made on Bukowski. The film ends, tragically and hauntingly, in an act of utter desperation and eventual rebirth and Ferreri once again uses the sea as a metaphor for man's ultimate destiny, ending so quietly on that deserted beach, dirtied by the universe and carried away to die, forever alone but not dead, not yet, and not forgotten.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars To each his own, July 12, 1999
If you like Bukowski, you'll love this movie. If you don't like him, you won't like this movie at all. It's just that simple, folks.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Doing Things in Style
A talented aged Russian-Jewish American writer lives as he wishes changing women and drinking vine, unspeakably attractive to females.

A title says it all.
Published 18 months ago by Michael Kerjman

5.0 out of 5 stars Must we - dear friends - die in our sleep ?

Marco Ferreri made a devastatingly lyrical, sinister and cruel portrait about the existence of Charles Bukowski, the poet of hopeless, the excesses, the alcohol; the... Read more
Published on December 26, 2006 by Hiram Gomez Pardo

3.0 out of 5 stars SAD, FASCINATING,POETIC,SPELLBINDING
I just first saw 'Tales Of Ordinary Madness' yesterday. I like this film. At times living through the eyes of Charlie seems gluemy and useless, but I'm constantly fascinated and... Read more
Published on April 14, 2003 by Vanessa Ryan

5.0 out of 5 stars strange, disturbed, frightening and facinating
This movie works only if you let your imagination sulk to the very Id of one's being. This is not commonplace material and is only for a limited audience. Read more
Published on December 14, 2001

3.0 out of 5 stars Better than "Barfly"
"Tales..." actually makes Bukowski sympathetic as he tries to find love and sex in the L.A. underground. Read more
Published on March 2, 2001 by abdoe

3.0 out of 5 stars not a superb film
Actually it's not as good as the other ornella muti's films.But if you like ornella you should check this one. Read more
Published on June 11, 2000 by Gülten Şanlığ

4.0 out of 5 stars Not As Good As Barfly, but Worth Watching
The best films showcasing the world of Charles Bukowski were Barfly, Love Is A Dog From Hell (Crazy Love), and Tales of Ordinary Madness. Read more
Published on June 2, 1999

4.0 out of 5 stars Provocative, intense, thought-provoking.
One of the better offerings of the arthouse genre. From my reading, I have noticed that critics have been quite divided in their assessment of this film. Good! Read more
Published on March 17, 1999

1.0 out of 5 stars BOREEEEE........DOM!! ( Blah! )
A cinematic composite of two Charles Bukowski novels (Tales Of Ordinary Madness and The Most Beautiful Girl In Town) that chronicles the life of a drunken deadpan poet/writer... Read more
Published on March 7, 1999

4.0 out of 5 stars Mesmerising, thought-provoking film making.
This film tends to sit on the sharp edge between pulp fiction and high art. In this way, it is similar to the experiences of the protagonist Charles Serking who, whilst being... Read more
Published on December 29, 1998

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