The Ribald Tales Of Canterbury 1985 Classic Best _hot_ Direct
This film looks like a Renaissance Faire exploded. The costumes are elaborate, colorful, and historically inspired (when they aren't being creatively removed). Rather than shooting in a dingy Los Angeles apartment, the filmmakers utilized sprawling outdoor locations and soundstages dressed to look like a medieval tavern. This visual authenticity allows the absurdity of the dialogue to land harder.
In the sprawling, often murky landscape of 1980s adult cinema, most titles have faded into obscurity, remembered only by niche collectors and film historians. Yet, every so often, a film emerges that transcends the limitations of its genre. "The Ribald Tales of Canterbury" (1985) is precisely that anomaly. For decades, fans of erotic comedy and vintage exploitation have whispered its name with a reverent chuckle, hailing it as the "classic best" of its kind. the ribald tales of canterbury 1985 classic best
★★★★☆ (Four out of five stars – loses one point only for the synthesizer lute, which is either genius or insanity). Have you seen The Ribald Tales of Canterbury? Do you agree that the 1985 version is the definitive classic best? Share your thoughts in the comments below. This film looks like a Renaissance Faire exploded
Unlike the stuffy, academic version you dreaded in high school English class, this 1985 adaptation understands the source material's core soul: that medieval society was just as horny, conniving, and hilarious as modern society. The film retains the "story-within-a-story" structure, but each tale is an excuse for elaborate, comedic set-pieces that blend slapstick with eroticism. To call this the "best" of the 1985 crop is a specific claim, but one easily defended. Compare it to its contemporaries. Most 1985 adult films had budgets smaller than a used car and acting that would make a soap opera star blush. The Ribald Tales of Canterbury benefited from a surge in "Golden Age of Porn" production values. Here is why it stands out: This visual authenticity allows the absurdity of the
But what is it about this loose adaptation of Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales that has allowed it to endure? In an era before the internet democratized adult content, this film stood out not just for its skin, but for its sheer, unapologetic wit. This article explores why the 1985 classic remains the gold standard for period-piece parodies and why you should seek out this hidden gem. Most adult films of the early 80s relied on wafer-thin plots involving pizza delivery men or stranded coeds. The Ribald Tales of Canterbury dared to do something different: it stole from the classics. Directed by the legendary Bud Lee (under his frequent alias, "R. B. Lee"), the film takes Chaucer’s 14th-century framing device—a group of pilgrims traveling to the shrine of Thomas Becket—and turns the bawdy humor up to eleven.