Music Alban Berg's "
Der Wein" (1929) is a
concert aria setting
Stefan George's translation of three poems from "Le Vin". In 1969, American composer
Ruth White released the album
Flowers of Evil. It features
electroacoustic composition with Baudelaire's poetry recited over it. The album was published by
Limelight Records. French avant-garde rock band
Etron Fou Leloublan used the poem from
Les Fleurs du Mal La Musique as lyrics for their song
La Musique from their third studio album Les Poumons Gonflés which is named after a verse from it. Rock band
Buck-Tick named their 1990 album
Aku no Hana, as well as its
title track, after
Les Fleurs du mal. Avant-Garde music group
Naked City named a track on their 1993 album
Absinthe, which is inspired by 19th Century France in general, after
Les Fleurs du Mal ''Baudelaire's Flowers Of Evil (Les Fleurs Du Mal)'' is a 1968 recording by
Yvette Mimieux and
Ali Akbar Khan originally issued on LP by Connoisseur Society. Mimeux reads excerpts of Cyril Scott's 1909 translation with original music by Khan.
Henri Dutilleux's
Tout un monde lointain... for cello and orchestra (1970) is strongly influenced by
Les Fleurs du Mal. Each of its five movements is prefaced by a quotation from the volume and the title itself comes from one of its poems, "XXIII. La Chevelure". The rock band
Mountain released an album,
Flowers of Evil, in 1971. French Black Metal band
Peste Noire used poems as lyrics for their songs "Le mort joyeux" and "Spleen" from their album
La Sanie des siècles – Panégyrique de la dégénérescence. French songwriter and musician
Neige used poems from
Les Fleurs du mal as lyrics for several songs that he wrote with different bands. "Élévation" (with
Alcest) "Recueillement" (with
Amesoeurs) "Le revenant" and "Ciel brouillé" (with Mortifera). Industrial metal band
Marilyn Manson released a song titled "The Flowers of Evil" on their 2012 album
Born Villain. Symphonic metal band
Therion released an album named
Les Fleurs du Mal in 2012. The Swedish folk singer
Sofia Karlsson (alongside Alex Landart, Negro Malick, Hugo Voy, Benjamin Coquille and Logan Pischedda) sang versions of "Le vin des amants" and "Moesta et errabunda", translated by the poet
Dan Andersson, on her 2007 album
Visor från vinden (Songs from the wind). Rapper Izaya Tiji released a song titled "les fleurs du mal" in 2019.
Film and television The 1945 film
The Picture of Dorian Gray opens with Lord Henry Wotton reading the book during a
hansom cab ride to Basil Hallward's home. A voice-over describing Lord Henry's amoral approach to life concludes: “…He diverted himself by exercising a subtle influence over the lives of others.” Telling the cabbie to wait, he tosses the book up to him. The 1947 film
Lured, starring Lucille Ball, searching for her friend, Lucy Barnard, missing and also believed to be the latest victim of the notorious "Poet Killer," who lures victims and afterwards sends poems to taunt the police. Scotland Yard believes the killer to be influenced by
The Flowers of Evil. In Jean-Luc Godard's 1965 film
Pierrot le Fou, central character Ferdinand attends a dinner party, where he ends up having a conversation with the American filmmaker
Samuel Fuller (played by himself). Fuller explains that he is there in Paris to film a movie titled "The Flowers of Evil." Ferdinand recognizes the reference to Baudelaire and goes on to engage the filmmaker on the subject of cinema. Toshio Matsumoto's 1969 film
Funeral Parade of Roses includes quotations from "Les Fleurs Du Mal" including a passage presented at the start of the film. ''
Don't Deliver Us from Evil (1971) is a French horror film in which two adolescent girls chant various poems from Les Fleurs Du Mal'' during a play before setting themselves on fire in a double suicide on stage. In a January 1997 episode of the sitcom
Friends titled "The One with All the Jealousy", Monica (Courteney Cox) asks her coworker Julio about his book. He says it's "
Flowers of Evil by Baudelaire" and when Monica asks if he enjoyed it, he replies, "I thought I would, but the translation's no good." A 2005 episode of the animated television show
The Batman was named "Fleurs du Mal" in reference to the poem. In addition to this, a florist's shop in the episode is named Baudelaire's. In episode 13 of the TV series
Saving Hopes first season (2012), a copy of
The Flowers of Evil is among the personal effects of a patient. Later in the episode a doctor briefly discusses Baudelaire and a phrase from the book with that patient. The movie
Immortal (2004, Dominique Brunner); In the scene on the
Eiffel Tower, Jill (
Linda Hardy) is reading from the book
Les Fleurs Du Mal. She recites the third stanza from the poem "XLIX. Le Poison".
Theatre Chicago-based artistic collective
Theater Oobleck produced a series of
cantastoria using Baudelaire's
Les Fleurs du Mal as text. Canadian-French musical
Don Juan (2003) includes a scene/song
Les Fleurs du Mal between the title character and his friend Don Carlo. They have an argument about the self-indulgent and vain lifestyle of Don Juan.
Poetry T.S. Eliot's poem
The Waste Land (1922) references "Au Lecteur" with the line: "You! hypocrite lecteur!—mon semblable,—mon frère!"
Prose Geographer and political economist
David Harvey includes the poem "The Eyes of the Poor" in a book chapter called "The Political Economy of Public Space". In
Roger Zelazny's book
Roadmarks the protagonist Red Dorakeen travels with a sentient speaking computer disguised as a cybernetic extension of the book
Les Fleurs du mal named "Flowers of Evil". It befriends another computer which has disguised itself as
Leaves of Grass by
Walt Whitman.
Anime and manga The 2009
manga Aku no Hana is named after
Les Fleurs du mal. The main character, Takao Kasuga, is enamored with the book and the adult depravity that it represents. In 2013, a 13 episode anime adaptation was aired.
Other The first two stanzas of the poem “Élévation” were included on the
Voyager Golden Record, read aloud by France's then UN representative
Bernadette Lefort. == List of poems ==