I Racconti di Canterbury AKA The Canterbury Talesseeders: 4
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I Racconti di Canterbury AKA The Canterbury Tales (Size: 1.46 GB)
DescriptionTitle: The Canterbury Tales AKA: Year: 1972. Original title: I Racconti di Canterbury Runtime: 1 hour, 50 minutes Country: Italy | France. Language: Italian | English. Subtitles: English (.srt format). Genre: Comedy | Drama. Director: Pier Paolo Pasolini. Cast Hugh Griffith ... Sir January Laura Betti ... The Wife from Bath Ninetto Davoli ... Perkin Franco Citti ... The Devil Josephine Chaplin ... May Alan Webb ... Old Man Pier Paolo Pasolini ... Geoffrey Chaucer J.P. Van Dyne ... The Cook Vernon Dobtcheff ... The Franklin Adrian Street ... Fighter O.T. ... Chief Witch-Hunter (as OT) Derek Deadman ... The Pardoner (as Derek Deadmin) Nicholas Smith ... Friar George Bethell Datch ... Host of the Tabard (as George B. Datch) Dan Thomas ... Nicholas Michael Balfour ... John the carpenter Jenny Runacre ... Alison Peter Cain ... Absalom Daniele Buckler ... Witch Hunter (as Daniel Buckler) John Francis Lane ... Greedy friar Settimo Castagna ... Angel (as Settimio Castagna) Athol Coats ... Rich homosexual Judy Stewart-Murray ... Alice Tom Baker ... Jenkin Oscar Fochetti ... Damian Willoughby Goddard ... Placebo Peter Stephens ... Justinus Giuseppe Arrigio ... Pluto (as Giuseppe Arrigo) Elisabetta Genovese ... Prosperine Gordon King ... Chancellor Patrick Duffett ... Alan Eamann Howell ... John Tiziano Longo ... Simkin the miller (as Albert King) Eileen King ... Simkin's wife Heather Johnson ... Molly Robin Askwith ... Rufus (as Robin Asquith) Martin Whelar ... Jack the Justice John McLaren ... Johnny the Grace Edward Monteith ... Dick the Sparrow Kervin Breen Franca Sciutto Vittorio Fanfoni Leonard S. Brooks ... Businessman (uncredited) Stephen Calcutt ... The Groom (uncredited) Philip Davis ... 2nd homosexual lover (uncredited) Charles De la Tour ... Inn-keeper (uncredited) Francis De Wolff ... The Bride's father (uncredited) Michael Derrek ... Robin (uncredited) Andrew Dymock ... Bill (uncredited) V. Edwards ... The Old Woman (uncredited) Dorothy Everall ... Perkin's mother (uncredited) Diana Fisher ... The Bride (uncredited) Chris Greener ... Sir Elephant (uncredited) David Hatton ... Poor homosexual (uncredited) Judo Al Hayes ... Fighter (uncredited) Terry Hooper ... L'allodoliere (uncredited) Robert Brook Howard ... Vicar of the Monestary (uncredited) Karl Howman ... 1st homosexual lover (uncredited) Richard Hughes ... Administrator (uncredited) Laurie Inch ... Mary (uncredited) Charlotte Kell ... The Prioress (uncredited) Pinky Martin ... The Nun (uncredited) Alan McConnell ... Master Gervaso (uncredited) Norman McGlen ... Perkin's father (uncredited) Peter McGregor ... The Merchant (uncredited) Hugh McKenzie-Bailey ... Thomas (uncredited) Roderick McLeod ... Knight's Attendant (uncredited) Anthony Moore ... The Spy (uncredited) Ken Muggleston ... Doctor (uncredited) Patrick Newell ... Prior (uncredited) Ray Parks ... Sergeant (uncredited) Martin Philips ... Martin (uncredited) Selwyn Roberts ... The Knight (uncredited) Anita Sanders ... Thomas' wife (uncredited) Mary Stuart ... Priest (uncredited) Reg Stuart ... 4th Husband (uncredited) Steve Whitton ... Youth Without Name (uncredited) Plot / Synopsis From sun-sparkled Naples to muddy medieval England for chapter two of Pier Paolo Pasolini's Trilogy of Life -- and with all the corn-holing, golden showers, and silent-movie mugging Chaucer left out. The most amorphously anecdotal of the three, it's also the one where the discrepancy between the movies' notional life-affirmation and the brackish despairing of their execution emerges most grotesquely, every stab at "joyous" sexuality followed by the self-reflex of grotty degradation. The catalogue of romping, cuckolding, trickery and flatulence is X-rated Monty Python, scribbled by Chaucer (Pasolini, of course) while chortling at a copy of The Decameron -- indeed, the Merchant's Tale concludes with the husband's (Hugh Griffith, in full, cawing Tom Jones mode) sight restored by the porchside lovebirds from the Boccaccio adaptation, just in time to see his wife (Josephine Chaplin) being felt up. Pasolini pays tedious tribute to Josephine's dad by turning the Cook's Tale into a one-reeler with Ninetto Davoli in Little Tramp bowler; Dan Thomas is interrupted mid-grope with Jenny Runacre and resumes praying with his pants bulging, before the Miller's Tale wraps with her giving her young suitor a face-full of fart and him getting a smoldering iron up his ass. Later, the Wife from Bath (Laura Betti), here a hennish nympho, gives Tom Baker a picnic hand job, while the Pardoner's Tale is delayed long enough for a tavern interlude for some blithe buggering and water sports. Not all is fun and games, though, and the Friar's Tale spots a found sodomite, not rich enough to bribe his way out, publicly roasted as the Devil (Franco Citti) hawks bagels for the crowd -- that the sequence remains the most vivid episode points to the desolation behind Pasolini's own self-portrait of happy serenity. Souls shooting out of Satan's rectum in a mock-Bosch coda? Tales "told for the mere pleasure of their telling," indeed. Cinematography by Tonino Delli Colli. Sharing WidgetTrailerScreenshots |
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