Pope John Paul II (TV miniseries)
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| Pope John Paul II | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | John Kent Harrison |
| Written by | John Kent Harrison |
| Starring | Jon Voight Cary Elwes James Cromwell Ben Gazzara Christopher Lee |
| Distributed by | CBS |
| Release date(s) | December 4 & 7, 2005 (USA) |
| Running time | 200 min (2 parts) |
| Language | English |
Pope John Paul II is a 2005 television miniseries dramatizing the life of Pope John Paul II (Karol Józef Wojtyła) from his early adult years in Poland to his death on April 2, 2005 at age 84.
The film was written and directed by John Kent Harrison and aired in the United States on the CBS network on December 4, 2005. It was first released in Vatican City on November 17, 2005 and ten days later throughout Italy.
Cary Elwes portrays Karol Wojtyla from the second scene (September, 1939) of the film up to his election to the papacy on October 16, 1978 after the sudden death of Pope John Paul I, whose pontificate lasted just 33 days. After accepting the nomination of the Cardinalate, Elwes is seen being escorted to be fitted in papal vestments, at which point Academy Award-winner Jon Voight takes over the role. Voight was nominated for an Emmy Award for his performance.
Pope John Paul II co-stars James Cromwell, as Archbishop Sapieha, Ben Gazzara, as Agostino Casaroli, and Christopher Lee as Cardinal Wyszynski. Polish actor Mikolaj Grabowski is twice seen playing Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger of Germany, who succeeded Pope John Paul II as pope on April 19, 2005
[edit] Plot
Pope John Paul II, begins with flashbacks to the young Karol "Lolek" Wojtyla whose faith and values are initially fostered by his loving, devout parents, who, along with Karol's elder brother, die of natural causes by the time Karol is 20 years old.
Despite being on his own at a young age and enduring the effects of the Nazi occupation in Poland, the philosophical Karol remains optimistic that he can and must make a difference. Along with his university friends, Karol initially embraces the world of theatre, acting in clandestine plays as a means of retaining his Polish culture in spite of the risks involved. In the midst of the chaos surrounding him as ongoing atrocities are suffered by Polish Jews, academics, religious leaders and others, Karol accepts a calling to become a priest. Karol's training takes place in an underground seminary run by the Archbishop Sapieha, a defiant force for the people of Krakow under the Nazi occupation, who becomes Karol's mentor and involves the young man in the resistance movement.
After being ordained a priest by Sapieha, now a Cardinal, Karol completes his graduate studies in Rome and returns to Poland, where he is assigned to become a student chaplain at St. Florian's parish in Krakow. The athletic 28-year-old Fr. Karol Wojtyla immediately bonds with the university students who savor his relaxed approach and join him to kayak to his inspiring Masses in the wilderness away from the watchful eyes of the Communist authorities. He was then appointed Professor of Social Ethics at Catholic University of Lublin, Poland and then when Karol is only 38-years-old, the Holy See appoints him Auxiliary Bishop of Krakow. Continuing to cultivate faith with the people, despite the restrictions imposed by the Communist leaders, Karol chooses to hold Mass in an open area in the Communists' new Polish church-free city, Nowa Huta. Although he repeatedly enrages the Communist authorities, he impresses influential foreign cardinals with his views, his charisma and his knowledge of multiple languages.
At 47, Karol is made a cardinal by Pope Paul VI. On October 16, 1978, following the brief reign of Pope John Paul I and after 455 years of Italian popes, Karol is elected Pope and takes the name John Paul II at the age of 58. During his extremely active papal years, most of which take place after he survives a 1981 assassination attempt, John Paul II takes part in international negotiations and presses Soviet leadership to remove obstacles to freedom of religion in the countries under their control. He travels across the globe to promote faith, values, peace, forgiveness, and, especially in regions lacking it, freedom of religion. He confronts constitutional anti-clericalism in Mexico. He asks for forgiveness and brotherhood with the Jewish people and reaches out to the world's Catholic youth.
During John Paul II's first pilgrimage to Poland in June 1979, he ushers in an era of hope that motivates the Polish people and their Solidarity leadership to eventually bring a hard-fought end to Communist rule there. This passion ultimately spreads throughout the rest of the East bloc as well.
Despite health obstacles in later years, John Paul II refuses to curtail his busy schedule. He continues to challenge and inspire millions of people throughout his lengthy illness and during his last days.
[edit] Notes
Soviet politicians are jarringly played by Italian actors, rather than Slavs.
When "the Devil" attacks the World Trade Center on 11 September 2001, the death toll is immediately reported as 3000, rather than the correct initial figure of 10,000.
[edit] External links
- Pope John Paul II Official Site
- Pope John Paul II DVD Ignatius Press Website
- Pope John Paul II at the Internet Movie Database