Chicago Sun-Times

Jude Law sees new plausibili­ty in HBO’s unpredicta­ble ‘ Young Pope’

- Patrick Ryan

When Jude Law first read the script for HBO’s The Young Pope, he was unsure if viewers would take to the rancorous, thin- skinned and ultra- conservati­ve leader he portrays.

“My one concern early on was, ‘ Could this be conceived as far- fetched?’ ” Law says. “But now,” with Donald Trump taking office next week, “it seems totally plausible.”

Many parallels can be drawn between the future president and Law’s character on Young Pope ( Sunday, 9 ET/ PT), a present- day American cardinal named Lenny Belardo who has been tapped to be the next pontiff. When he arrives in Vatican City at the start of the 10- episode series, Lenny — now Pope Pius XIII — is considered a blank slate onto which older cardinals can push their ideals. So it comes as a shock when he reveals himself to be the most audacious, radical pope yet: one who’s homophobic, refuses to show his face in public and may not even believe in God.

Lenny is “unpredicta­ble and unknown in that environmen­t, just as Trump is in the political world,” Law says. “And I think just the impact and the surprise in his election is perhaps relatable” to American audiences.

Pope was created by Italian filmmaker Paolo Sorrentino, whose 2013 drama The Great Beauty won an Oscar for best foreign- language film. The idea for the series — which already has aired in Europe — stemmed from his desire to explore the inner workings of the Vatican.

“On the one hand, it’s very close to ( Italians), because we live nearby and see it every day,” says Sorrentino, using a translator in a joint interview with Law. “On the other hand, it’s very far, because it’s very inaccessib­le and mysterious.” He wanted to create a Bishop of Rome who was “unpreceden­ted: a pope who would be the complete opposite from the pope we currently have,” Sorrentino says of Pope Francis, whom he considers to be more liberal than Pius.

For Law, the challenge was humanizing the caustic, chain- smoking pontiff, who still bears the emotional wounds of being orphaned as a child and now spews blistering insults at everyone in his path, including the nun ( Diane Keaton) who raised him and his former mentor ( James Cromwell).

The British actor doesn’t consider himself religious, although his mother was raised Baptist. She “brought us up in a very moral environmen­t, and I’ve always been curious about faith,” Law says. “I read about and question it in myself daily, and working on this only heightened that.”

Sorrentino says he has yet to receive any response from the Vatican or religious groups. He’s now writing a second season of the show, but jokingly insists that it hasn’t had any divine impact on his own beliefs.

“I actually would be a religious person, in terms of my inclinatio­n,” Sorrentino says. “But I attended a religious school ( growing up), which is the best way to kill any religious inclinatio­n one might have.”

 ?? ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY ?? Star Jude Law, left, and writer/ director Paolo Sorrentino bring The Young Pope to HBO this Sunday for a 10- episode season.
ROBERT DEUTSCH, USA TODAY Star Jude Law, left, and writer/ director Paolo Sorrentino bring The Young Pope to HBO this Sunday for a 10- episode season.

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