‘Conclave’ review: An entertaining Battle of the Cassocks

Edward Berger’s Oscar-nominated film is out in cinemas.

‘Conclave’ review: An entertaining Battle of the Cassocks

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After World War I, Edward Berger straight leaps into the Battle of the Cassocks. Conclave, by the Oscar-winning director of All Quiet on the Western Front, is the fictionalised account of a papal election seething with intrigue, betrayals and revelations of a decidedly temporal nature.

Following the Pope’s sudden death, Cardinal Thomas Lawrence (Ralph Fiennes) oversees the election for his successor. While Lawrence himself is among the candidates, the main contest to head the Catholic Church is split between the American Bellini (Stanley Tucci), the Nigerian Adeyemi (Lucian Msamati), the Canadian Tremblay (John Lithgow) and the Italian Tedesco (Sergio Castellito). The Mexican Benitez (Carlos Diehz), who is the Archbishop of Kabul, is a surprise last-minute addition.

There’s no clear winner in sight. Although the voting members have been sequestered in Vatican City, they are shielded neither from the stink of scandals of the past nor the realities of political events taking place on the outside. Every round throws up new surprises. Lawrence is tested to his limits, but the biggest shock is yet to come.

The Oscar-nominated Conclave has been released in cinemas. Like We Have a Pope (2011) and The Two Popes (2019), Conclave meshes fact with fiction, possibility with wish fulfilment, respect with sensationalism. Peter Straughan’s precisely written screenplay, closely adapted from Robert...

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