Padre Pio: Tra cielo e terra (TV Movie 2000) Poster

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Hagiography has its place
leif-3820 October 2019
'Padre Pio: between heaven and earth (English title)' draws an adulatory portrait of the saint. The first part follows Pio (Michele Placido) as a young man- entering the Capuchin monastery at San Giovanni Rotondo, developing stigmata, and describing his grandiose vision of a 'home for the relief of suffering'. The second part portrays him in later years, building the hospital and enduring Church investigation (which included bugging his cell).

Uniting both parts is his friendship with Guglielmo Sanguinetti (Fabio Camilli), an idealistic doctor who becomes the director of the Home for the Relief of Suffering. Sanguinetti begins as an atheist- when his wife Emilia (Barbora Bobulova) insists on meeting Pio he declares: 'I'll come with you, but only as your driver.' His gradual conversion is one of the film's major themes.

'Pio' is made in the years leading up Pio's canonization, and appears an argument for sainthood. Director Giulio Base gives us a Pio who fits our expectations of a typical saint (as if such a thing can exist!) Pio suffers through endless investigation, but the very real reasons for doubt are glossed over or ignored.

'Pio' sometimes works as a narrative, but sometimes looks more like a series of vignettes- as if the director could not decide what kind of movie he wanted to make. It lacks cohesion and is painfully slow at times.

Pio's miracles are of course an important part of the movie. Stigmata and supernatural knowledge are emphasized, but bilocation is only shown once- and then only by implication.

While Michele Placido gives a strong performance I somehow doubt we are seeing the real St. Pio- a contradictory and sometimes difficult man who surrounded himself with an entourage that blurred the line between mysticism and fanaticism. The DVD contains an afterward showing Pope Jean-Paul at Pio's canonization.

The movie is Catholic propaganda- depicting canonization as in inevitability. It paints a picture of the Catholic vision of suffering and spirituality, and its best moments are completely moving.

Pio lead a life which gives both Christians and atheists reason for doubt. This piece of hagiography has its place, but I'm waiting for a film which gives a fuller portrait of this complex man.
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