Canterbury -1985- -classic- - The Ribald Tales Of
The film opens not with a fanfare, but with a crackle of static and the warble of a cheap synthesizer attempting to sound like a lute. The year is 1387, or at least, a version of 1387 that only existed in the minds of Los Angeles filmmakers who had never left the San Fernando Valley. The Canterbury Road is a painted backdrop of rolling hills and cardboard trees. The Tabard Inn is a soundstage decorated with plastic barrels and a stuffed boar’s head that winks.
The clerk, a bored philosophy dropout named Lenny, always told customers the same thing: “It’s not porn. I mean, it is porn, but it’s also… Shakespeare for perverts. With tits.” And for the faithful few who rented it, he wasn’t wrong. The Ribald Tales Of Canterbury -1985- -Classic-
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. The film opens not with a fanfare, but
It was the summer of 1985, and the world was caught between two eras. The polished synth-pop of MTV was wrestling with the gritty, untamed spirit of midnight cable. In a small, dusty video rental store called "The Reel Joint," nestled between a laundromat and a pawn shop in Schenectady, New York, a single VHS tape sat on the top shelf of the "Adult Classics" section. Its box was worn, its cardboard edges softened by countless sweaty palms. The cover art was a masterpiece of low-budget ambition: a crude but colorful painting of Geoffrey Chaucer—looking suspiciously like a bloated, lecherous Brian Blessed—lifting the skirts of a buxom, modernized Wife of Bath who held a neon-pink boom box. The title arched above them in golden, faux-illuminated manuscript letters: . Below that, in stark white block print: 1985 - CLASSIC - . The Tabard Inn is a soundstage decorated with
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.