Los Angeles Times

A laudatory look at pope

- By Carlos Aguilar

Given the reach of Catholicis­m, with more than a billion believers worldwide, it’s safe to say Pope Francis is the most recognizab­le religious figure on the planet. An in-depth deconstruc­tion of such spiritual and diplomatic responsibi­lity in our tumultuous present, considerin­g the flaws and contradict­ions of his mortal condition, would render an absorbing film.

Yet that’s not what Oscar-nominated director Evgeny Afineevsky (“Winter on Fire: Ukraine’s Fight for Freedom”) does with “Francesco,” a documentar­y structured like a pedagogic, Vatican-approved checklist of natural catastroph­es, humanitari­an crises and geopolitic­al conflicts His Holiness has pontificat­ed on.

This globe-throttling overview, which opens with his thoughts on the ongoing pandemic and its relation to climate change, covers Trump’s under-constructi­on wall on the U.S.-Mexico border, Myanmar and the Rohingya genocide, Lampedusa’s migrant emergency, and war zones galore to reaffirm the current pope’s devotion to the poor and his bridge-building philosophy.

Each topic is featured for a few minutes before the filmmaker diverts attention to the next calamity in need of awareness. Before the one-hour mark, the format turns tiresome. Homosexual­ity

as it relates to the faith, a subject that recently made headlines, gets a brief non-confrontat­ional passage involving a same-sex couple who met with the leader personally. No further discussion arises.

The repetitive factual focus and emotional superficia­lity of “Francesco,” built mostly from official footage of public appearance­s and Pope Francis’ tweets to show his attunement to social media, come likely by virtue of being destined for the Discovery Channel’s new streaming service, Discovery+. The sole narrative thread granted substantia­l screen time deals with child sexual abuse committed within the church and is anchored on Chilean survivors.

Speakers include the pope’s official biographer­s and those who were always in his camp or who changed their minds about the charismati­c Argentine. Pushback is nonexisten­t since the intention was never exposing institutio­nal ills but assembling a favorable public relations movie.

 ?? Photograph­ic Service L’Osservator­e Romano / Discovery+ ?? SISTER NORMA PIMENTEL meets Pope Francis in Evgeny Afineevsky’s documentar­y “Francesco.”
Photograph­ic Service L’Osservator­e Romano / Discovery+ SISTER NORMA PIMENTEL meets Pope Francis in Evgeny Afineevsky’s documentar­y “Francesco.”

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