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Wondrous Boccaccio 2015

In 1348, as the plague ravages Florence, a group of young people—seven women and three men—escape the city's grip. They seek refuge in a secluded villa nestled within the Tuscan hills. To combat the pervasive sense of dread and pass the time, the group shares a diverse collection of stories, ranging from tragic and bizarre to humorous and erotic. These narratives explore a variety of themes, with the female perspective consistently at the forefront, until the group ultimately chooses to return.

In 1348, as the plague ravages Florence, a group of young people—seven women and three men—escape the city's grip. They seek refuge in a secluded villa nestled within the Tuscan hills. To combat the pervasive sense of dread and pass the time, the group shares a diverse collection of stories, ranging from tragic and bizarre to humorous and erotic. These narratives explore a variety of themes, with the female perspective consistently at the forefront, until the group ultimately chooses to return.

Does Wondrous Boccaccio have end credit scenes?

No!

Wondrous Boccaccio does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.

Take the Ultimate Wondrous Boccaccio Movie Quiz

Challenge your knowledge of Wondrous Boccaccio with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.


Wondrous Boccaccio Quiz: Test your knowledge of the five tales presented in the 2015 film *Wondrous Boccaccio*.

In the first tale, who is the woman that Gentile falls in love with?

Full Plot Summary and Ending Explained for Wondrous Boccaccio

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Read the complete plot summary of Wondrous Boccaccio, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.


During the mid-14th century, in Florence, a group of young, well-off youths flee the city haunted by the plague and seek refuge in a sprawling country house, where they pass the time by spinning and listening to stories.

First tale: Modena — Messer Gentile Garisendi is in love with Catalina, the wife of Nicoluccio. Catalina falls gravely ill, and Nicoluccio’s mother fears the household will be infected by the plague if she stays. She urges that Catalina be moved to the countryside to be cared for far from others, a plan her husband reluctantly accepts. On the journey, Catalina dies, and the carriage driver leaves her body in a crypt beneath an abandoned church. Meanwhile, Gentile, who has followed the wagon, discovers her body in the crypt, kisses it, and feels a heartbeat. He takes Catalina to his mother’s villa, where she is nursed back to health. He announces his desire to marry her and gathers a group of friends, including Nicoluccio, to witness the moment. He poses a morally provocative question to the assembled: if a loyal servant falls ill and his patron abandons him, and another man steps in to nurse him back to health, should that second man be free to keep the servant? Nicoluccio responds that the original patron forfeits the servant, who rightly belongs to the second man. At that point, Gentile reveals Catalina to the group and lets her choose between him and Nicoluccio. Nicoluccio, horrified, declares that she has come from hell, but Catalina looks to him and declares she has come from paradise. She rejects Nicoluccio, remembering how he abandoned her in illness, and she accepts Gentile’s proposal.

Second tale: Florence — In the workshop of a famous painter, Calandrino is an eager, somewhat simple apprentice. Two fellow apprentices tease him with a legend about a stone that grants invisibility. They accompany him to the riverside to search for such a stone, and Calandrino finds one. They trick their neighbors into believing he is invisible, and the prank spirals: he robs his neighbors, leers at a girl, and disrupts the painter’s studio. When he returns home, his wife — unaware of the ruse — greets him with a simple meal. Calandrino, terrified that the stone’s power might be slipping away, accuses his wife of witchcraft and beatings follow. The tale closes with his wife holding the supposed stone aloft as he eats, leaving him exposed and humiliated.

Third tale: Salerno — Duke Tancredi arranges a marriage between his daughter Ghismunda and a wealthy, older husband. The husband dies soon after, and Ghismunda falls for a handsome young metalworker who works for her father. When the Duke learns of the affair, he murders the lover and serves Ghismunda a goblet containing the heart of her beloved. Grief-stricken, Ghismunda melts the heart, adds poison, and drinks it herself, dying in the wake of her forbidden love.

Fourth tale: Certaldo — One night, the nuns discover a sister with a man in her cell and rush to reveal the affair to the mother superior. Unknown to them, the mother superior herself hides a lover in her own chamber. In the rush to dress, she mistakes her headgear for her lover’s long johns, drawing the other sisters into the farcical sight. As the mother superior contends with the transgression, her own secret is uncovered. In the end, she pardons the sisters and offers a reflective, almost pragmatic view: God has given everyone elements of both sin and sainthood within their souls, so people can both entertain and conceal their lovers as long as the scandal never leaves the convent.

Fifth tale: A villa near the country estate — The knight Federico degli Alberighi is in love with Giovanna, but she does not return his feelings. He spends all his money courting her and ends up with nothing but a falcon. She marries another man, with whom she has a son. Years later, when that husband dies, she moves to a villa near Federico’s property. Her son befriends Federico and learns falconry from him. When the boy falls ill and asks for the falcon as a gift, Giovanna travels to Federico’s home to discuss it. There, Federico realizes he has nothing to serve for dinner and, in a cruel twist, kills the beloved falcon to prepare a meal for Giovanna. Horrified, Giovanna understands the depth of his deception. The boy dies soon after, and Giovanna relocates. Later, her brothers return to tell Federico that Giovanna is ready to remarry him, and he accepts.

The film weaves these four tales into a reflective meditation on love, loyalty, deception, and the fragile boundaries between virtue and appetite, told through a chorus of vivid characters whose fates intertwine with humor, tragedy, and moral ambiguity.

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Wondrous Boccaccio Other Names and Titles

Explore the various alternative titles, translations, and other names used for Wondrous Boccaccio across different regions and languages. Understand how the film is marketed and recognized worldwide.


Θαυμάσιος Βοκάκιος Das Dekameron 了不起的薄伽丘 Contes italiens Декамерон Maravilhoso Boccaccio Maravilloso Boccaccio Чудният Бокачо 十日談.愛與慾 Muhteşem Boccaccio Csodálatos Boccaccio Úžasný Boccaccio 素晴らしきボッカッチョ

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