The Golden Bowl 2001

In this intricate drama, the worlds of wealth and privilege collide as an affluent American widower and his sheltered daughter navigate complex webs of love, betrayal, and deception. As they marry into seemingly perfect unions, dark secrets emerge, threatening to destroy their carefully constructed lives in a tangled dance of desire and duplicity.

In this intricate drama, the worlds of wealth and privilege collide as an affluent American widower and his sheltered daughter navigate complex webs of love, betrayal, and deception. As they marry into seemingly perfect unions, dark secrets emerge, threatening to destroy their carefully constructed lives in a tangled dance of desire and duplicity.

Does The Golden Bowl have end credit scenes?

No!

The Golden Bowl does not have end credit scenes.

Actors

Meet the cast of The Golden Bowl and learn about the talented actors who brought the characters to life. Explore their roles and career highlights.


Ratings

Discover how The Golden Bowl is rated on popular platforms like IMDb, Metacritic, and TMDb. Explore audience and critic scores to see how this movie ranks among the best.


Metacritic

62

Metascore

5.6

User Score

Rotten Tomatoes
review

%

TOMATOMETER

review

0%

User Score

IMDb

5.9 /10

IMDb Rating

TMDB

60

%

User Score

Movie Quiz

Challenge your knowledge of The Golden Bowl with an engaging quiz. Test your memory of the movie’s characters, plot twists, and unforgettable moments.


The Golden Bowl Quiz: Test your knowledge on the intricate relationships and secrets in the film The Golden Bowl.

Who is the impoverished Roman Prince in the film?

Plot Summary

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Get the full story of The Golden Bowl with a detailed plot summary. Dive into its themes, characters, and the twists that make it a must-watch.


Impoverished Roman Prince Amerigo is set to marry American socialite Maggie Verver. Maggie shares a close bond with her wealthy father Adam, a widowed tycoon in England, who is busy planning a grand museum in the United States to showcase his vast collection of art and antiquities.

What Maggie doesn’t know is that before their engagement, Amerigo had a brief, passionate affair with Maggie’s friend Charlotte. Having both started off as penniless lovers, Amerigo decides to end their relationship when he becomes engaged. Charlotte, still nurturing feelings for Amerigo, visits their mutual friend Fanny Assingham in London. In an act of goodwill, Maggie extends an invitation to Charlotte for the wedding, prompting Amerigo to take Charlotte to an antiques shop to help her choose a wedding gift. The shopkeeper Jarvis shows them a beautifully carved rock crystal bowl, which he insists is flawless. However, Amerigo notices a crack that Charlotte seems oblivious to, captivated only by the bowl’s aesthetic allure. Unsure of her decision to purchase it, Jarvis reserves the bowl for Charlotte.

The wedding between Maggie and Amerigo happens, and they eventually welcome a son into their lives. In a twist of fate, Adam and Charlotte also marry, which delights Maggie. As the years progress, the lives of both couples become closely intertwined, leading to growing tensions as Maggie and Adam’s bond begins to alienate their respective spouses. Fanny, astute in her observations, suspects that Amerigo and Charlotte have reignited their affair. When Maggie confides her suspicions to Fanny, she tries to dissuade Maggie from entertaining such notions, all while Adam remains silent on the burgeoning closeness between Charlotte and Amerigo, concerned about hurting Maggie’s feelings.

While searching for a birthday present for her father at Jarvis’s shop, Maggie decides to buy the bowl that had once been reserved for Charlotte years prior. Upon delivery, Jarvis inadvertently reveals that Amerigo and Charlotte were the couple who initially considered purchasing the bowl before Maggie and Amerigo’s marriage. This revelation starts to unravel Maggie’s assumptions about her husband’s fidelity, pushing her to confront Fanny about her feelings. In a dramatic moment, Fanny shatters the bowl, declaring it as the sole evidence of Amerigo and Charlotte’s connection, allowing her to maintain the illusion that nothing had transpired. When Maggie finally confronts Amerigo, he admits to his unfaithfulness. She expresses that the bowl symbolizes their marriage—appearing perfect but inherently flawed. Amerigo pleads with Maggie not to tell her father and not to leave him. Although she agrees to keep the secret to spare Adam’s feelings, Maggie finds herself conflicted about her feelings for Amerigo.

As tensions rise, Adam grows distant and suggests to Charlotte that they should return to the United States for the opening of his museum. Charlotte, however, is firmly against the idea. When Maggie and Amerigo arrive, the atmosphere becomes charged as Amerigo maintains his distance from Charlotte, who fears that both Maggie and Adam suspect the truth about their affair. To protect their families, Maggie and Adam come to an understanding to keep their distance from one another. As Maggie and Amerigo prepare to relocate permanently to Italy, Adam assigns Charlotte the task of packing artifacts for their move to America. Desperate, Charlotte begs Amerigo to elope with her, but he firmly rejects her plea, burdened by guilt for betraying Maggie. Eventually, Charlotte reconciles with her circumstances alongside Adam, as the film concludes with the couple arriving in an American city to a grand reception.

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