The New Pope

(series)
  • France The New Pope (more)
Trailer 3
Italy / France / Spain / USA, 2020, 8 h 17 min (Length: 48–61 min)

Creators:

Paolo Sorrentino

Directed by:

Paolo Sorrentino

Cinematography:

Luca Bigazzi

Composer:

Lele Marchitelli

Cast:

Jude Law, John Malkovich, Silvio Orlando, Cécile de France, Javier Cámara, Ludivine Sagnier, Maurizio Lombardi, Nora von Waldstätten, Henry Goodman (more)
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VOD (1)

Episodes(9)

Plots(1)

Pius XIII (Jude Law) is in a coma. After an unpredictable and mysterious time, the Secretary of State Voiello succeeds in the enterprise of having the charming, sophisticated and moderate English aristocrat Sir John Brannox (John Malkovich) placed on the papal throne with the name John Paul III. The new pope seems perfect, but he conceals secrets and a certain fragility. Quickly, he begins to realise that it will not be easy to replace the charismatic Pius XIII who, hanging between life and death, has become a Saint with thousands of faithful followers now idolizing him. Meanwhile, the Church is under attack from several scandals that risk irreversibly devastating the hierarchies of the Church, and the key principles of Christianity upon which they are based. As always, nothing is as it originally seems in the Vatican. Good and evil march arm in arm through this historic institution, right up until the final showdown. (Dazzler Media)

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Reviews (3)

gudaulin 

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English The New Pope is a continuation and development of the image of the postmodern Vatican born from the wild visions of the master of imagination, Paolo Sorrentino, whom viewers already encountered in the previous series about the young pope. Lenny's conservative revolution will be followed by a brief interlude - the social revolution of Francis II, to be followed by the thermidor of the French revolution in the form of the installation of a compromising candidate of the papal curia - the snobbish and weak Brenox, easily corruptible, played with gusto by John Malkovich, who is typologically precise. I have been missing out on Sorrentino's visually refined but conceptually hollow snobbish films for some time now, but his deviation into television series is a delicacy for me. It is one of the few current series that can be considered truly original and thought-provoking about the nature of power and manifestations of faith in the consumer-saturated European society of the 21st century. It is also about the tradition exposed to the erosion of three sexual revolutions and the influence of mass media. In the second season, the director added decadence, sparing no images full of erotic symbolism. However, the first series already reliably deterred bigoted Catholics, so there will not be many who would be scandalized by sensual shots of nuns. Sorrentino is traditionally strong in the soundtrack and visual aspects of the work, while the narrative aspect lags behind, but that is no surprise when it comes to him. People watch Sorrentino for the atmosphere. Overall impression: 90%. ()

3DD!3 

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English An unexpected but very well-executed continuation of Sorrentino’s look at the Church. It’s no longer so tightly wound, but it still offers interesting topics for scrutiny. The Church is heading towards conflict with Islam, Malkovich’s ambiguous pope and Lenny’s unexpected return are great for building the tension and raise many questions, to which only Sorrentino and God know the answers…maybe. Will there be another season? Cameos by Marylin Manson and Sharon Stone. ()

angel74 

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English The distinctive Italian director Paolo Sorrentino has served the audience another visual treat, with an extremely absorbing atmosphere, supported by an amazing soundtrack and spiced up with a good dose of provocation. It certainly hasn't lost any of its quality, appeal, and originality. Still, I must say that The New Pope does not have the strength of its predecessor from 2016. It's hard to say whether this was due to the initially almost non-existent presence of Jude Law, who was the alpha and omega of the series The Young Pope. Although John Malkovich did a great job as the most powerful man in the Catholic Church, it was only the last three episodes, in which Jude Law was once again in the limelight, that had the proper insight and punch. (85%) ()