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The Canterbury Tales (1971)

Sobre o filme

Based on the book “The Canterbury Tales” by English writer Geoffrey Chaucer (app. 1343-1400), this film by Pasolini is the second of that which he himself defined as the “Trilogy of Life”, consisting also of The Decameron (1971) and Flower of the Arabian Nights (1974). “ ‘The Canterbury Tales ’ were written forty years after ‘The Decameron’; however the relationship between realism and a fantastic dimension are the same. Chaucer was not refined as was Boccaccio, but was more modern, for in England there was already a bourgeoisie. This made for a contradiction: on the one hand, the epic aspect of the medieval heroes, and on the other, irony and auto-irony, characteristics that are essentially bourgeois”, said Pasolini. Just as in the case of The Decameron, the prevailing themes in the Tales are sex, love, and death, with a predominance of the latter, in that in all of the episodes there is invariably a funeral, a murder, one who is sentenced to die, or on a deathbed.

Título original: I Racconti Di Canterbury

Ano: 1971

Duração: 110 minutos

País: Italy

Cor: Col

Direção: PIER PAOLO PASOLINI

Roteiro: PIER PAOLO PASOLINI

Fotografia: TONINO DELLI COLLI

Montagem: NINO BARAGLI

Elenco: PIER PAOLO PASOLINI, HUGH GRIFFITH, JOSEPHINE CHAPLIN, LAURA BETTI, JOHN FRANCIS LANE, FRANCO CITTI, NINETTO DAVOLI

Produtor: ALBERTO GRIMALDI