Conclave
The Hollywood Ending
There is a new big-budget film with an "A" list cast that will soon be released, but is it just another big-budget bash at the Catholic Church from the mainstream media? So what is the film all about? Well, it seems to me that this is Hollywood's attempt to influence the choosing of the next pope. For, of course, all the teachings, morality, and theology of the Catholic Church are intrinsically evil! Here is the film's blurb from IMDb:
When Cardinal Lawrence is tasked with leading
one of the world's most secretive and ancient events, selecting a new Pope, he
finds himself at the center of a conspiracy that could shake the very
foundation of the Catholic Church.
The pope is dead. Behind the locked doors of
the Sistine Chapel, 118 Cardinals from all over the globe will cast their votes
in the world's most secretive election. They are holy men. But they have
ambition. And they have rivals. Over the next 72 hours, one of them will become
the most powerful spiritual figure in the world.
High end production values |
No apology spoilers:
The film revolves around Fr
Lawrence the Camerlengo (the Cardinal Chamberlain who runs the Conclave).
Described as a thriller, the film consists mainly of a number of conversations
and the jostling for power of the various cardinals. The writing is powerful.
The cinematography and sets are fantastic, the production values are of the
highest quality. This, by all accounts, is a gripping entertaining thriller.
However, once again, we have the dichotomy that everything that is well made,
well put together, and fantastic fun-filled entertainment is actually good;
it's certainly not good for Christianity and therefore it is, in fact, evil.
Will the sheer brilliance of this film do the damage to what's left of the
traditional Catholic Church that the filmmakers hope and make them a load of
money on the way?
The
battle is between a Traditionalist Latin Mass-saying Cardinal who is depicted
as a nasty fundamentalist and the kinder liberal-minded Cardinals, who listen
to nuns even, Sr Agnes, played by Isabella Rossellini, is given some
"great" lines to undermine traditional male roles. However, the film
appears to end with the liberals well on top with the election of a last-minute
Cardinal creation by the last pope before he died, who is in fact, a biological
woman. Traditional Catholic morals are then thrown out the window as the Church
presses forward into a new liberated progressive wonderland.
Must be based on Robert Harris's book of the same title, which came out in 2016. I recognise the plot.
ReplyDeleteYes it is, does the book also follow the same storyline?
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