
Meeting an international cast of film directors and actors, Pope Leo XIV spoke about the power of cinema to help people “contemplate and understand life, to recount its greatness and fragility and to portray the longing for infinity”. Source: CNS.
Sitting in the front row of the Vatican’s frescoed Clementine Hall on Saturday were, among others, directors Gus Van Sant and Spike Lee and actors Monica Bellucci, Cate Blanchett, Viggo Mortensen and Sergio Castellitto, who played the traditionalist Cardinal Tedesco in the 2024 film Conclave.
Pope Leo asked the directors and actors to “defend slowness when it serves a purpose, silence when it speaks and difference when evocative.”
“Beauty is not just a means of escape,” he said, “it is above all an invocation.”
“When cinema is authentic, it does not merely console, but challenges,” he said. “It articulates the questions that dwell within us, and sometimes, even provokes tears that we did not know we needed to express.”
Pope Leo acknowledged the challenges facing cinema with the closing of theatres and the increasing release of films directly to streaming services.
The theatres, like all public cultural spaces, are important to a community, he said.
But even more, the Pope said, “entering a cinema is like crossing a threshold. In the darkness and silence, vision becomes sharper, the heart opens up and the mind becomes receptive to things not yet imagined”.
At a time where people are almost constantly in front of screens, he said, cinema offers more.
“It is a sensory journey in which light pierces the darkness and words meet silence. As the plot unfolds, our mind is educated, our imagination broadens and even pain can find new meaning.”
People need “witnesses of hope, beauty and truth,” Pope Leo said, telling the directors and actors that they can be those witnesses.
“Good cinema and those who create and star in it have the power to recover the authenticity of imagery in order to safeguard and promote human dignity,” he said.
Being authentic, the Pope said, means not being afraid “to confront the world’s wounds. Violence, poverty, exile, loneliness, addiction and forgotten wars are issues that need to be acknowledged and narrated.”
“Good cinema does not exploit pain,” Pope Leo said. “It recognises and explores it.”
FULL STORY
Pope asks big names in film to continue to challenge, inspire, give hope (By Cindy Wooden, CNS)
