found: Work cat.: Atame! = Tie me up, tie me down, 2000.
found: Il Decameron, 2002.
found: The bawdy adventures of Tom Jones, c1987.
found: Nastasi, A. 10 bawdy international sex comedies, 2012, via Flavorwire website, viewed on Apr. 25, 2014(bawdy sex comedies; list includes Tie me up! Tie me down!; The Decameron; Boccaccio '70; Turn me on, dammit!; Jamón, jamón; Swept away; Going places; Così fan tutte; Picnic on the grass; Casanova '70)
found: Merriam-Webster online, Apr. 25, 2014(bawdy: dealing with sex in a way that is meant to be funny. Full definitions: 1: obscene, lewd 2: boisterously or humorously indecent. Examples: a bawdy film that is not appropriate for children)
found: The American heritage dict. of the English language, via TheFreeDictionary.com, Apr. 25, 2014(bawdy 1. Humorously coarse; risqué. 2. Vulgar; lewd.)
found: Collins English dictionary, ©2003, via TheFreeDictionary.com, Apr. 25, 2014(bawdy: 1. (of language, plays, etc) containing references to sex, esp to be humorous. 2. obscenity or eroticism, esp in writing or drama)
found: Wikipedia, Apr. 25, 2014(The Decameron (Italian: Il Decameron) is a 1971 film by Italian director Pier Paolo Pasolini, based on the novel Il Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio. It is the first movie of Pasolini's Trilogy of life, the others being The Canterbury Tales and Arabian Nights. The tales contain abundant nudity, sex, slapstick and scatological humor)
found: Wikipedia, Apr. 25, 2014:Ribaldry (Ribaldry is humorous entertainment that ranges from bordering on indelicacy to gross indecency. It is also referred to as "bawdiness", "gaminess" or "bawdry". Sex is presented in ribald material more for the purpose of poking fun at the foibles and weaknesses that manifest themselves in human sexuality, rather than to present sexual stimulation either excitingly or artistically. Also, ribaldry may use sex as a metaphor to illustrate some non-sexual concern, in which case ribaldry may verge on the territory of satire. Like any humour, ribaldry may be read as conventional or subversive. Ribaldry typically depends on a shared background of sexual conventions and values, and its comedy generally depends on seeing those conventions broken. More recent works like Candy, Barbarella, L'Infermiera, the comedic works of Russ Meyer, Little Annie Fanny and John Barth's The Sot-Weed Factor are probably better classified as ribaldry than as either pornography or erotica. Blue comedy is comedy that is off-color, risqué, indecent or profane, largely about sex. It often contains profanity and/or sexual imagery that may shock and offend some audience members.)
found: Heller, S. The anatomy of design, c2007, via Google books, viewed Apr. 25, 2014:p. 12 ("The unbridled debauchery during the famous eating scene in Stanley Kubrick's bawdy film Barry Lyndon ...")
found: Bacon, A.L. Building leaders, living traditions, c2009, via Google books, viewed Apr. 25, 2014:p. 55 ("The Pink Flamingos, a raucous, bawdy film many thought bordered on being pornographic")
found: Lopez, D. Films by genre, c1993(Sex comedy (Comedy of sexual manners, Sexual comedy). The sex comedy has been around for a long time, and it ranges from the timid bedroom farce or boudoir comedy to the more explicit sex romp. Bedroom farce puts its emphasis on the sexual activities of its players; sex romps go for merriment and diversity in partners; sex comedies started to proliferate in the sixties, and they showed what previously had been considered taboo subject matter. Former forbidden aspects of sexual relationships were increasingly portrayed on film. Two major types of sex comedy evolved: the marriage comedy and the stud comedy)
found: McGoldrick, A. Have you seen my gender? : how teen sex comedies form and reinforce ideas about masculinity in teenage males, 2011.
found: Lubitsch in Berlin [VR] : fairy-tales, melodramas, and sex comedies, c2010.
found: Knots [VR] : a sex comedy with a twist, 2004.
found: OCLC, Apr. 25, 2014(#34857322: Diary of forbidden dreams [VR], 198-?, summary note: Ribald comedy about a beautiful young American hitchhiker who seeks refuge at the Italian Rivera villa of an eccentric millionaire and is besieged and trapped into bizarre incidents before making her way out; #173697825: One, two, three [MP], 1961, summary note: The ribald comedy about an American Coca-Cola executive getting involved with love and twisted international politics in war-torn Berlin; #10665890: Get out your handkerchiefs, 1983?, summary note: Ribald comedy in which Freud's question "What is it that women want?" is elaborated until the answer--she knows it when she finds it--is discovered.)