An adaptation of six of Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales in a modern setting.An adaptation of six of Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales in a modern setting.An adaptation of six of Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales in a modern setting.
- Won 1 BAFTA Award
- 4 wins & 5 nominations total
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- ConnectionsFeatured in Julie Walters: A Life on Screen (2014)
Featured review
All the adaptations of the tales in this series are good, but for me it was the Miller's Tale that was the best. A saucy, sexy story about a smooth-talking conman who breezes into town one day and turns everyone's lives upside down. James Nesbitt positively sizzles in this sexy role as the intelligent and charismatic Nick Zakian who wastes no time at all in setting about seducing the beautiful Alison Crosby (Billie Piper). Nesbitt turns in an utterly convincing performance as Nick, a man who'll stop at nothing and is prepared to stoop to any level to get what he wants - the scene where he corners Alison in the hall or the scene where he stalks across the village square towards Alison with such determination in his eyes when he knows her husband is out of the way for an hour, is enough to drive any woman wild, believe me!
What the audience are supposed to construe from this tale of love, lust, sex, jealousy, deceit and ultimate betrayal is certainly open to debate. There are some who are prepared to claim that Nick is the devil incarnate or the personification of fate in this story. However, I for one refuse to believe that the character of Nick is some kind of tempting devil or fate. Rather that he is an opportunist, a conman, slippery and deceitful.
Yet, watching the Miller's Tale you can't help finding yourself empathising not with poor old John, but with Nick - virtually rooting for him, considering the effort that he is going to in order to secure a few precious minutes alone with Alison.
A sexy, sleazy, bawdy story that is much in keeping with the original tale. I loved it!
What the audience are supposed to construe from this tale of love, lust, sex, jealousy, deceit and ultimate betrayal is certainly open to debate. There are some who are prepared to claim that Nick is the devil incarnate or the personification of fate in this story. However, I for one refuse to believe that the character of Nick is some kind of tempting devil or fate. Rather that he is an opportunist, a conman, slippery and deceitful.
Yet, watching the Miller's Tale you can't help finding yourself empathising not with poor old John, but with Nick - virtually rooting for him, considering the effort that he is going to in order to secure a few precious minutes alone with Alison.
A sexy, sleazy, bawdy story that is much in keeping with the original tale. I loved it!
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- Canterbury Tales (Miniserie de TV)
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- Chalfont St. Giles, Buckinghamshire, England, UK(The Miller's Tale)
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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