All Consuming
Somehow, this Ismail Merchant-James Ivory
interpretation of The Golden Bowl, one of Henry
James' most unwieldy novels, manages to be
simultaneously magisterial and dull. Much like the
story, the composition appears to be about acquisition
-- as the characters seek to satisfy their rapacious
appetites, the film delivers scene after scene of
exquisite particulars, to the point that you might
feel vaguely overwhelmed by the time the two
hours-plus running time is done. Repeated wide-screen
images of grand gardens and fabulous artwork, Italian
palazzos and British manors are magnificent and the
filmmakers's attention to period (1903-1909) detail in
costumes, food, furniture, and even transportation
(sublime trains, quaint buggies, putt-putting cars)
would make Martin Scorsese proud.
All these visual perfections also intimate The Golden Bowl's weakness, however, which is its lack of
perspective, or perhaps more precisely, its narrow
perspective. Working from James is always something of
a bear, of course -- his characters obsess over
nuances and innuendoes that readers hopefully
recognize as trivial, or at least deleterious as
obsessions. Merchant and Ivory, and their regular
screenwriter Ruth Prawler Jhabvala, have experience
with translating James to the screen, having worked
together on The Europeans (1979) and The Bostonians (1984). But their latest adaptation, while
laced through with graceful moments, translates much
of the novel's coy phrasing into literal
representations and its characters into awkward
embodiments of era-bound sentiments. The Ververs and
their consorts are all four turned into indelicate
types, constrained by cumbrous dialogue (much of it
lifted directly from the novel), fussy performances,
bad wigs and facial hair, and episodic plotting.
Set at the turn of the century, The Golden Bowl
takes up one of James' favorite topics -- the
vulgarity of Americans in Europe. Here, American
expatriate Charlotte (Uma Thurman) is anxious about
her status (as are most all of James' heroines), for
compared to the folks she runs with, she's positively
"poor." She's also in love with an Italian prince
named Amerigo (Jeremy Northam with an unconvincing
Italian accent), and as the film opens, their affair
is ending (for the time being), because he is also
relatively "poor." Though he's inherited the Palazzo
Ugolini, he can't afford to maintain the place. To
make ends meet, he's dumping Charlotte (who's very
distraught at his decision) and marrying the
fabulously wealthy Maggie Verver (Kate Beckinsale),
who also happens to be a childhood friend of
Charlotte. As soon as you see the reputation-obsessed
Amerigo and the Amerigo-obsessed Charlotte, you know
trouble will brew. The film ensures that you know
this, by matching their betrayal to come with a story
that Amerigo is telling Charlotte, of some ancestors
who engaged in an affair -- a wife and her son-in-law,
discovered in bed together and punished severely by
her husband/his father.
But where the Italian story is about sexual lust, the
vulgar Americans tend to be more interested in
material lust -- they want to own everything: art,
houses, people, information. And so it happens that
Charlotte exhibits (again and again) a melodramatic
possessiveness toward Amerigo. At the time of his
wedding to Maggie, Charlotte is all atwitter with
ostensible love and devotion, but really, she's
scheming to "have" him, as she once did. They agree to
pretend they never knew one another. The precise
reason for this decision is never clear, though a
meddlesome family friend named Fanny (Anjelica Huston)
-- there are a lot of Fannys in James novels, usually
social boors and bad news for the folks they think
they to want to help -- suggests that it's because
Maggie is naive and pure and needs to be protected.
Charlotte and Amerigo adopt this rationale and repeat
it to one another like a mantra, whenever they worry
they're doing the wrong thing. This is, of course, one
of those Jamesian contortions of motive that will
inevitably be revealed and ruin everything.
And so, when Maggie dispatches Amerigo to fetch
Charlotte, ignorant of their past liaison, she has no
idea that she's aiding and abetting in the rekindling
of their passion; or perhaps better, of their habit,
for Charlotte, as played by Thurman, appears to have
very little passion in her, just increasingly mannered
behaviors. Upon being fetched, Charlotte convinces
Amerigo take her shopping for a wedding gift for
Maggie. At a small shop they find the titular bowl
(made of crystal and gold), which Amerigo discourages
his companion from buying because he spots the flaw in
it immediately. Charlotte, being the American, misses
the crack, and it follows that she can't see the
trouble she will be stirring with her next move, which
is to hook up with Maggie's father, the significantly
named Adam Verver (Nick Nolte).
Adam is introduced on screen with the title,
"America's First Billionaire" (this is the level of
overstatement to which the film resorts repeatedly,
not trusting its audience to follow even the simplest
plot points). Maggie is initially pleased with the
match, for it ostensibly frees her up to spend more
time with her husband and baby boy (a prop here,
nothing else). But it turns out that the pairs break
off in other ways: cut to a few years later, the
camera opening on an opulent party at some
mucky-muck's palace, where Amerigo and Charlotte are
keeping one another company, while Maggie is at home
taking care of her reportedly ailing father.
Tongues wag, as they must, but if everyone in their
circle knows Charlotte and Adam's marriage is one of
convenience, gossips are left guessing about whose
convenience. Obviously, Charlotte gets to be rich,
well-dressed, and admired by many, and Adam gets a
pretty young thing to adorn his arm as he globetrots
in search of the finest art treasures, which he's
collecting in order to bestow on the world as his
great legacy (he's planning his "great work," a museum
built to house his collection in "American City" --
James-speak for the Vulgar Urbanworld that is the
U.S.). Yet the willfully naive Maggie also benefits
from the union, for once she and Adam figure out that
they really do like one another's company more than
anyone else's, they feel less guilty when abandoning
their spouses together. So crass, so willful, so
artless are the Ververs that they just can't abide by
the old world rules. This allows them to resist
knowing anything about Amerigo and Charlotte's
relationship: they prefer to think it's as platonic as
their own.
The film offers up their ignorance as exquisite pain
-- they're so beautifully appointed, that their
emotional shenanigans don't seem nearly so rough and
tumble as those on, say, Jerry Springer. But they're
playing the same games, wanting to possess each other
and the spotlight that comes with recognized and
successful power-tripping. And so the four of them
gather occasionally in sitting rooms, posing for each
other, going on about how fortunate they all are that
they get along so well. Eventually, such
self-congratulatory chatter gets tedious, and that's
when the drama kicks in, repressed and prolonged and
very meaningful.
Charlotte and the prince probably come off worst, but
that's only because they try too hard to be
manipulative, and they're so bad at it. Maggie, the
much-protected naif, ends up making the meanest and
most effective manipulation, and she gets what she
wants. This makes her perhaps the most European of the
Americans, because she leaves Charlotte dangling in a
very discomfitted state. Dreading her return to the
States as one of Adam Verver's "treasures," Charlotte
has a nightmare vision composed of old-timey movie
clips of workers and miners and traffic. She wakes in
a sweat, hand to her forehead. By this time, you are
likely to be feeling her pain. And oh my dear, it's
just too much.