This Andrés Pajares comedy is set in Medieval Spain where local girls are accused of being witches, and the Inquisition is brought in. Lots of nudity, lots of silliness and some really cool looking sets and visuals.
The village girls all want a piece of Diego (Andrés Pajares)
The girls fight over him and rip each other's clothes off. Diego holds back Rosa.
The nudity from these three ladies in this film is beyond expectation.
The cat fight and clamor over Diego makes its way to the pile of flour. They're caught by Cándida (Paloma Hurtado)
Once she shoos the girls away, Cándida takes Diego for herself.
Backed into a corner, Cándida makes up a lie to her husband Don Lope (Ángel de Andrés) that the three girls are witches.
Cándida and Don Lope's daughter is Julisa (Azucena Hernández), Diego's girlfriend.
Word spreads through the village that the three girls are witches. Don Lope looks at Rosa and can't believe she could be a witch - but it must be true.
Diego and Julisa want to be married, but they're told by Don Lope that they cannot - they are actually brother and sister, separated at birth!
Fray Vicentino (Antonio Ozores) is passing through town and is mistaken by Don Lope as an Inquisitor. The friar isn't exactly the saintly sort, and is more than happy to go along with it, as it will get him fine treatment during his stay.
While the three girls may not be witches, there are indeed three true witches in town. The hag Agripina (Trini Alonso) and her two hot daughters Mara (Adriana Ozores) and her sister (María Casal).
Don Lope brings the three accused before Vicentino to determine if they are witches. The friar plans to take full advantage of the situation.
They have to undress for inspection. [L to R: Matilde (Sally Sitton), Florencia (Pilar Alcón) and Rosa (Alexia Loreto)]
Diego tries to speak on their behalf.
L to R: Rosa, Matilde and Florencia
What follows is an extremely long nude scene where the "inquisitors" have to test and inspect the ladies, which basically means manhandling them for ten minutes.
Julisa (Azucena Hernández) cries with the two witch sisters over the tragedy that she can't be with her one true love, Diego, as he is her brother.
Agripina (Trini Alonso) may have a solution, but it comes at grave risk.
Julisa and Diego are led down a dark and foreboding cavern.
It starts to get really hot. You know what that means.
Siblings or not, they can't resist.
Full frontal from Azucena Hernández
The friar continues to milk his mistaken identity for all its worth. But his gig is about up...
Roquemada condemns Diego, the girls and Vicentino
The two witch sister are there in disguise. They play magic tricks to disrupt the proceedings.
The ceiling caves in, wind blows, etc.
Roquemada's chair levitates.
It was really all Agripina's doing. In the end, no one is condemned and the two lovers (not actually siblings) are together at last. THE END

Triple Feature: If you're in the mood for a triple feature of Inquisition films, include this with The Pit and the Pendulum (1991) and Inquisition (1978).
★★★★★★★★☆☆
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