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Holy scripts, sacred sets: Pope culture in cinema
Holy scripts, sacred sets: Pope culture in cinema

Time of India

time13-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

Holy scripts, sacred sets: Pope culture in cinema

Filmmakers continue to turn to the papacy for stories soaked in mystery, power, and profound humanity. Filmmakers continue to turn to the papacy for stories soaked in mystery, power, and profound humanity Filmmakers continue to turn to the papacy for stories soaked in mystery, power, and profound humanity. Filmmakers continue to turn to the papacy for stories soaked in mystery, power, and profound humanity Filmmakers continue to turn to the papacy for stories soaked in mystery, power, and profound humanity. 1 2 All eyes were on Vatican as the conclave commenced on May 7, shrouded in secrecy and mystery. The recently concluded papal election renewed curiosity among cinephiles to get a glimpse of the Vatican's age-old rituals, even if fictional, and Pope Francis , who passed away at 88. The pope wasn't merely the head of the Roman Catholic Church – he was a reformer, a humanist, a cinema lover. He had 10.3 million followers on Instagram, loved Fellini's film La Strada and was once quoted telling the Italian Film Foundation to 'reawaken wonder' in an increasingly artificial world. From the recent Oscar-winning Conclave to Fernando Meirelles' The Two Popes, cinema has often looked to the Vatican not just for drama, but to understand how men of faith wrestle with doubt, politics, and the weight of centuries. And in Pope Francis, they found a character unlike any other – approachable, self-aware, even funny. 'To paint the pope as some sort of Superman is offensive,' said Pope Francis, 'The pope is a man who laughs, cries… A normal person.' VATICAN INTRIGUE IN FILMS For decades, filmmakers' intrigue has gone beyond the Pope himself, delving into the institution of the papacy, which offers a treasure trove of visual symbolism with its exquisite robes, ornate rings, the grandeur of Vatican interiors, and old rituals. We Have A Pope (2011) Nanni Moretti's comedy-drama We Have a Pope humanised the papal figure, asking what might happen if a newly elected Pope didn't want the role. A still from We Have a Pope. I wanted to show the Vatican as I see it and not to make a film denouncing the place Nani Moretti, director of We Have A Pope, said at the Cannes Film Festival in 2011 Angels and Demons (2009) Angels and Demons, directed by Ron Howard, explored the Vatican's secrecy and internal politics, much to the Church's disapproval. On the other end of the spectrum, dark-comedy The Pope Must Die satirised the Church's power structures, depicting a mafia-run Vatican. The poster of Ron Howard's Angels and Demons. Conclave (2024) Ralph Fiennes-starrer Conclave, set in the Vatican, has people craving power. For the film, the makers interviewed real Cardinals and hired a religious adviser, as the director Edward Berger found it 'senseless' to seek help from the Vatican. Conclave is directed by Edward Berger. It could take place in Washington, DC, in Downing Street... a vacant position... and whenever that power vacuum exists, there's going to be people striving for it... and stabbing each other in the back and trying to manipulate their way into power Director Edward Berger told Reuters about the political nature of Conclave The Young Pope (2016) Paolo Sorrentino's satirical TV series took a stylised look at the emotional solitude and peculiar life inside the Vatican. The Shoes of the Fisherman, released in the late 60s, dramatised the secretive process of papal election. In The Young Pope, director Paolo Sorrentino crafts a stylised portrayal of the Vatican. I wanted to explore the loneliness of power, the peculiarities of life in the Vatican and the power of solitude Paolo Sorrentino, director of The Young Pope, told TVDrama The Pope's Exorcist (2023) The film's poster declared, 'Inspired by the actual files of Father Gabriele Amorth, Chief Exorcist of the Vatican.' Director Julius Avery combined realistic moments with fantasy-style horror to create a thrilling experience. A poster of The Pope's Exorcist. Filmmaker Martin Scorsese is producing a documentary titled Aldeas — A New Story, made in collaboration with Pope Francis. The film will chronicle the late pontiff's work with cinema and his role in the global educational movement he founded before his death. Before his passing, Pope Francis described Aldeas as 'an extremely poetic and very constructive project because it goes to the roots of what human life is .' Martin Scorsese is producing a documentary titled Aldeas — A New Story. Films on Pope Francis' life and work The Two Popes (2019) Pope Francis: A Man of His Word (2018) Francesco (2021) The Letter: A Message for Our Earth (2022) In Viaggio: The Travels of Pope Francis (2023) — Compiled by Arushi Jain Check out our list of the latest Hindi , English , Tamil , Telugu , Malayalam , and Kannada movies . And don't miss our picks for the best Hindi movies , best Tamil movies, and best Telugu films .

Conclave to elect new pope: Wait for Vatican white smoke fires up social media
Conclave to elect new pope: Wait for Vatican white smoke fires up social media

Al Etihad

time06-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Al Etihad

Conclave to elect new pope: Wait for Vatican white smoke fires up social media

6 May 2025 08:47 Paris (AFP) Hype has been building on social media around the Catholic Church's secretive, centuries-old tradition of conclaves to elect a new President Donald Trump on Saturday posted an apparently AI-generated image of himself wearing papal vestments and sitting on a throne, one finger directed to the striking picture was the most notorious among thousands that have bubbled up since the death of Pope Francis on April 21 and ahead of the cardinals' gathering from than 1.3 million tweets have been published on X about the conclave, according to monitoring platform Visibrain, while TikTok videos on the topic have been viewed over 363 million times on the network with unparallelled reach among the passionate pope-watchers can fire up online game "Mantapa" to pick their favourite cardinals and make predictions for the next pontiff. Pomp and secrecy The mystery, pomp and ritual around the conclave -- from the opulent Sistine Chapel surroundings to the ethereal black or white smoke signalling ballot results -- "lends itself to the narrative formats of social networks" said Refka Payssan, a researcher in information and communication noted that the conclave fires up the "curiosity of seeing history happen live", marking a rare event -- the first in 12 years -- with potential global consequences. Digital turn Conclave fever is also a reflection of the Vatican's successful turn to digital communications in recent years to build bonds with younger by Benedict XVI in 2012 but mostly used by Francis, the papal X account @pontifex reaches 50 million followers across its nine languages. And Francis's own Instagram account had more than 10 million Church has backed many cardinals' own ventures into the digital realm, with some becoming bona fide internet York prelate Timothy Dolan has been publishing videos about the run-up to the conclave to his almost 300,000 X followers and 55,000 on Instagram -- without giving away any sensitive Philippine cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle has made his mark online with karaoke videos, tallying 600,000 Facebook snapshots are in the mix, with Tokyo's archbishop Tarcisio Isao Kikuchi posting a photo with colleagues from the bus on the way to pray at Francis's grave. This fascination has been stoked by pop culture blockbusters like Dan Brown's novel "Angels and Demons", adapted for film in 2009, or the acclaimed thriller "Conclave" released this year, based on a book by novelist Robert Harris.

From ‘Conclave' To ‘Angels and Demons': What Fiction Gets Right And Wrong About The Papal Elections
From ‘Conclave' To ‘Angels and Demons': What Fiction Gets Right And Wrong About The Papal Elections

News18

time21-04-2025

  • Politics
  • News18

From ‘Conclave' To ‘Angels and Demons': What Fiction Gets Right And Wrong About The Papal Elections

Last Updated: Centuries-old Vatican rituals resurface after Pope Francis' death with fiction like 'Conclave' and 'Angels and Demons' shaping popular understanding. With the death of Pope Francis, the Vatican's centuries-old rituals will once again take centre stage as the world turns its gaze toward the secretive papal conclave. People across the globe will be looking closely as cardinals from across the world gather in Rome for the Conclave. 138 cardinals out of the current 252 are eligible to vote. The Financial Times in a report called it 'the world's most powerful electorate". As Pope Francis' death triggers the 1,000-year-old ritual behind locked doors and billowing smoke, movies like 2024 Oscar-nominated 'Conclave" and books like Dan Brown's 'Angels and Demons" are bound to resurface in the public's mind. Both works of art have shaped public imagination about how a Pope is chosen. What is a Papal Conclave and How Does It Work? When a Pope dies or resigns, the Vatican initiates a time-honored and secretive process to elect a new leader of the Catholic Church — the papal conclave. Rooted in centuries-old traditions, this process brings together cardinals from across the globe to decide who will take on the mantle of Saint Peter. The conclave takes place in the Sistine Chapel and only cardinals below the age of 80 are eligible to vote. The voting is conducted in secrecy, and a two-thirds majority is needed to elect a new pope. The world watches for the color of the smoke. Black smoke means no decision while white smoke signals a new pope has been chosen. The death of a Pope triggers a series of solemn rituals rooted in centuries of tradition. Black smoke, known as fumata nera, will rise from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel to signal the end of a papacy. The Ring of the Fisherman is taken off, crushed, and burned by the camerlengo who also seals the papal apartment, locks the desk, and disconnects the phone lines. This begins the Sede Vacante or the vacant seat. The Pope's funeral is usually held between the fourth and sixth day followed by a nine-day mourning period. Only after that do the cardinals begin preparations for the next Conclave. The voting still takes place inside the Sistine Chapel though the cardinals now reside in the Domus Sanctae Marthae, a guesthouse built by John Paul II. Until 2005 they were kept in cramped makeshift rooms with hard beds and chamber pots. Silence is not just sacred but mandatory. Any attempt to communicate with the outside world during the Conclave results in immediate excommunication. Why It Matters The Pope is not just a spiritual figure — he influences geopolitics, interfaith dialogue, and even social movements. The process to elect him is steeped in symbolism and reflects the Church's desire for continuity, unity, and divine guidance. The movie 'Conclave", starring Ralph Fiennes, shows ambitious cardinals scheming and manipulating their way toward the papacy, their secret ballots shadowed by blackmail and betrayal and there is a looming terrorist bomb threat nearly shattering the conclave within Vatican walls. Dan Brown's Angels and Demons features a papal conclave, but it's used more as a dramatic plot device than a faithful representation of the real process, with the action revolving around his signature protagonist, Robert Langdon. Speaking on the Ralph Fiennes-starrer, Susan Hanssen, PhD, associate professor of history at the University of Dallas, told The New York Post: 'It was drenched with banal leftist jargon. It's essentially a form of propaganda to influence the way the papal conclave is perceived at this moment. No one should mistake the Hollywood movie for the 'inside scoop' on historical reality". The most recent papal vacancy occurred in 2013 when Pope Benedict XVI, then 85, became the first pope in 600 years to resign from the position. It took two weeks for Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, the archbishop of Buenos Aires, to be elected and take the name Francis. 'Two weeks is not a long time by Vatican standards," John Thavis, a papal expert and author of The Vatican Diaries: A Behind-the-Scenes Look at the Power, Personalities, and Politics at the Heart of the Catholic Church was quoted as saying by the New York Post. 'One reason is that the cardinals are very much aware that the world is watching and waiting. A drawn-out conclave lasting a week or more would inevitably invite speculation about division at the highest levels of the church". The movie and Brown's book got a few things right, like, location, the fact that the process is shrouded in mystery and secrecy and the voting system. The novel shows multiple rounds of balloting, which reflects how conclaves can take time. The movie shows that because papal elections require a two-thirds majority, there's always a possibility of a deadlocked conclave. The novel gave the camerlengo, the character of Carlo Ventresca has enormous influence in the story, far beyond what a real camerlengo would typically exercise. In reality, the camerlengo manages day-to-day Vatican operations between popes but does not oversee or direct the conclave. The conclave in the novel is fast-paced, filled with intrigue, and deeply theatrical — real conclaves are solemn, slow, and deeply ritualistic. First Published:

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