Medieval erotic comedy in which a young man, played by Manolo Otero, comes to a town where he pretends to be a tooth-puller and physician. This man claims to be able to invent any potion to quench the sexual thirst of locals.
In the year 1571, Sacedón del Río is a very important town, with its castle, its sheriff and its market on Thursdays in the Plaza Mayor. Life passes peacefully with its troubles, its loves and heartbreaks. For example, the pottery shop owner is in love with the girl at the inn, but she rejects his proposal because he is married. So he tries to set up his wife for adultery. Melisa, the rich widow, is infatuated with the mayor bailiff, but he is more concerned with lace and perfumes than with women. The Duke is married to a beautiful woman, but his advanced age does not allow him to father children and if he does not have a son soon he will lose his dukedom, castle and land. All these characters will be advised by an ingenious toothpuller who, in his own way, will try to help them.
Cheating Notes
The pottery shop owner is in love with the girl at the inn, but she rejects his proposal because he is married. So he tries to set up his wife for adultery. The wife's cheating scenes with the guy that her husband set her up with are at:
38:35 - Wife is fucked by the guy in the bathtub.
51:07 - Wife and guy fuck in the bedroom as soon as her husband gets out of the door.
55:39 - Continuation of the wife and the guy's bedroom scene. This time, her husband brings in two men of authority to catch them in the act.
1:13:50 - Wife and guy in an inn, this time with a little pumping action. The husband enters their room through the window.
I'm not sure if the other women who had sex in the film were cheating as I didn't quite get their relationship status. The duke's wife didn't cheat. Too bad, because she has a rockin' body, which the duke showed to the toothpuller while she was sleeping naked in bed (28:56).
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