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The Ribald Tales Of Canterbury -1985- -classic- 【2027】

The first tale belongs to the Carpenter, a nervous, sweaty man played by a character actor who would later find fame as a mortician on a daytime soap. His story, “The Milled Key,” is a slapstick disaster about a locksmith’s wife and a traveling juggler that devolves into a custard pie fight and an accidental nudist parade. It is shot with the grace of a public access show and the audio quality of a drive-thru speaker. Yet, it is strangely charming. When the juggler drops his flaming batons into the locksmith’s trousers, the resulting chase scene is pure, unadulterated Looney Tunes with nudity.

And we do. We get it.

“Right, you sinful lot!” Harry shouts, wiping ale from his beard. “The rules are simple. Tell a tale. Make it funny. Make it filthy. And if you can’t make ’em laugh… make ’em blush!” The Ribald Tales Of Canterbury -1985- -Classic-

The Ribald Tales of Canterbury was not a hit. It played for three days at a drive-in in Bakersfield and vanished. But the VHS tape lived on, passed from hand to grimy hand, bootlegged and beloved. It became a rite of passage for a certain kind of teenager in the late ‘80s: the kid who wanted to see nudity but stayed for the jokes. It was a relic of a time when adult entertainment still had a sense of humor, when production values were an afterthought, and when a group of broke, happy weirdos could dress up like medieval pilgrims and make something that was, against all odds, genuinely charming. The first tale belongs to the Carpenter, a

The film’s reputation, however, rests entirely on the second tale: “The Wife of Bath’s Remedy.” The Wife herself, played by the magnificent Dusty “Red Velvet” Caine (a veteran of over forty “nunsploitation” films), is a force of nature. She is not merely sexual; she is tactical. Her story is a long, rambling, outrageously lewd monologue about her five husbands, intercut with flashbacks that look like they were filmed in someone’s shag-carpeted living room. In one scene, she explains the “secret virtue” of a particular herb while a chubby, confused actor dressed as a monk tries to look aroused. In another, she defeats a suitor in a wrestling match that ends with him declaring, “By Saint Radegund, woman, you have broken my spirit and my coccyx!” Yet, it is strangely charming

The final scene finds the pilgrims arriving at Canterbury Cathedral, only to find it closed for renovations. Harry Bailly shrugs, pulls out a flask, and says, “Well, lads and lasses, the destination is a lie. The journey… the journey is the foreplay.” The screen fades to black over a freeze-frame of the Miller chasing a sheep, the synthesizer playing one last mournful chord.

To call it a “Classic” is to use the term loosely. To call it “Ribald” is an understatement. And to call it a product of 1985 is to understand that 1985 was a very, very weird year. But for those who have seen it—who have heard the Pardoner’s fart joke or watched the Wife of Bath pin a knight to a hay bale—it remains a dirty, beautiful, and oddly sacred text. The tape is probably moldering in a landfill now. But in the hearts of a few dozen Gen-Xers, the pilgrims still ride, telling their filthy tales, laughing all the way to a cathedral that was never there.