HBO's 'The New Pope' serves up lots of sinful sizzle, but no substance worth discussing

There is often a Hollywood fascination with all that’s morbid about religion. This has traditionally included a profane approach when it comes to the Catholic church — dramatizing reality into what can sometimes be an ugly trope.

This is exactly what we get with HBO’s new TV mini-series The New Pope. As is often the case, it’s also easy to see this entertainment as a form of semi-journalistic commentary about the state of the church.

As always, Bill Donohue of the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights spoke up:

“We have been tracking what The New York Times and The Washington Post have been saying about the Catholic Church for decades, and it will shock no one to learn that they are not exactly our biggest fans. More proof was offered today with the reviews of the first episode of ‘The New Pope.’ What they said tells us as much about them as it does HBO, another media outlet that likes to stick it to the Church.”

This new series picks up from “The Young Pope,” starring Jude Law as the fictional (and very conservative) Pius XIII, that ran in 2016. That series ended with the young fictional pontiff deep in a coma. The second series, which premiered on January 13, gets even crazier — and more sacrilegious — with the introduction of a new pope, played in over-the-top form by John Malkovich as John Paul III.

The biggest issue with this new mini-series — coming on the heels of the fictionalized Netflix movie “The Two Popes” — is the total lack of respect there is for the church and faith. The Vatican and the men who run it appear to be more into power and greed than saving souls.

The first episode did pack plenty of drama and intrigue, but that ultimately isn’t enough in this case to sustain a meaningful series.

What “The New Pope is able to do is serve up drama and intrigue purposely meant to shock and be outrageous. It’s ultimately meant as a blasphemous satire and one that paints the Vatican curia in a very bad light.

Written and directed by Paolo Sorrentino (an Oscar winner for the film “The Great Beauty”), regular church-goers won’t take too kindly to this “Game of Thrones version of the Vatican. How’s this for shock value: nuns gyrating in their nightgowns under a giant glowing crucifix. The provocative scene, as expected, has already incurred the wrath of the Catholic church.

While Sorrentino and HBO have a right to make any series they want, the church and Catholics also have the right to condemn it. They also don’t have to watch,  which is something many will ultimately opt to do. That Sorrentino is a great director is not in question. What is, regarding this series, is taste. Sorrentino appears to be battling his own inner demons — he all but said that in interviews ahead of the series’ premiere — when it comes to his faith.

“My interest was in breaking the taboos in the portrayal of priests and nuns, in the representation of the clergy in general, because they are always painted as saints or scoundrels,” Sorrentino said in a recent interview. “I wanted to paint them for that they are — human beings, strange human beings who have to relate with God, this invisible entity, as well as having a normal life.”

That the secular press largely gave the series rave reviews (while Catholic media largely ignored it) tells you a little something about the content of this series.

Continue readingHBO's 'The New Pope' Serves Up Plenty Of Sin, But No Substance” by Clemente Lisi, at Religion UnPlugged.


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