The Guardian (USA)

Kidnapped review – Marco Bellocchio’s antisemiti­sm drama is a classic in the making

- Peter Bradshaw

Cannes is this year becoming a counterbla­st to ageism. Italian director Marco Bellocchio, at the age of 83 – and almost 60 years after he first came to prominence with his 1965 movie Fists in the Pocket – has created a gripping, heartbreak­ing true-political crime story from the pages of history. It is a full-tilt melodrama with the passionate vehemence of Victor Hugo or Charles Dickens, which lays bare an ugly formative episode of Europe’s Catholic church: an affair of antisemiti­sm and child abuse.

It is based on the true story of Edgardo Mortara, a young Jewish child in Bologna who, in 1858, when he was six, was taken away from his family by the papal authoritie­s. This was done because Edgardo’s doting Catholic nursemaid had claimed that when Edgardo was a baby, and apparently in dire sickness, she had presumed to carry out an emergency baptism, because she feared Edgardo would die and go to limbo. The fanatical Inquisitio­n authoritie­s affected to believe that the Jewish family would therefore “sacrifice” the now-Catholic child, and jumped at the chance to punish the Jewish community and inflate their own missionary self-importance. Edgardo, extensivel­y brainwashe­d, grew up to be a priest and vehement partisan of the church.

Enea Sala and Leonardo Maltese play Edgardo as a child and then an adult, and Fausto Russi Alesi and Barbara Ronchi play the boy’s stricken, desperate parents. Fabrizio Gifuni is the ice-cold Bologna inquisitor Father Feletti, and Paolo Pierobon is Pope Pius IX who makes Edgardo his pet and turns the case into a trial of strength between the church and anti-papal nationalis­ts, foreign journalist­s and of course the Jews, expressing his antisemiti­sm partly though his paranoid distaste for his Rothschild creditor.

Bellocchio shows us a brutal convulsion of tyranny, power and bigotry with echoes of the Dreyfus affair in France, and later, horrific events. When the chilling Feletti finally tells a judge that in taking the Jewish child he was merely executing a command from the Vatican, that is a familiar courtroom defence. The kidnapping of young Ed

gardo is a round-up in miniature, and the pope’s heartlessn­ess a forerunner of Pius XII’s apparent wartime indifferen­ce to Nazi atrocities.

I thrilled to this movie: the moment when the pope playfully hides Edgardo in his cloak while he plays hide-andseek is an extraordin­ary parallel to when he first hid in his mother’s skirts. My heart was in my mouth when Edgardo

is carried off by the brutal authoritie­s. And at the end, when the older, agonised Edgardo comes to see his mother on her deathbed, Bellocchio creates a denouement that made me gasp. This already looks like a classic.

• Kidnapped screened at the Cannes film festival

 ?? Photograph: Anna Camerlingo/Kavac Film & IBCmovie ?? Political pet … Paolo Pierobon (as Pope Pius IX) and Enea Sala (as Edgardo) in Kidnapped.
Photograph: Anna Camerlingo/Kavac Film & IBCmovie Political pet … Paolo Pierobon (as Pope Pius IX) and Enea Sala (as Edgardo) in Kidnapped.

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