Cinematic Releases: Cabrini (2024) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Angel StudiosThe last time the film world saw Mexican writer-director Alejandro Gómez Monteverde on the silver screen was in 2023 with the controversial Angel Studios produced faith-based film Sound of Freedom.  A film that seemed to split filmgoers and Christians down the middle, the film was a marked return to productivity for the director whose prior film Little Boy came out all the way back in 2015.  While I didn’t see Sound of Freedom which stoked QAnon conspiracy theories and a wide variety of other controversies including but not limited to trivializing child sex trafficking, the film did well enough for its writer-director Monteverde and co-writer Rod Barr to reunite just a year later for another more user-friendly and broadly appealing feature: a period-piece biopic based on the life and accomplishments of Italian Catholic missionary Mother Francesca Xavier Cabrini in her mission in the slums of New York City aptly named Cabrini. An expensive and elongated period endeavor spoken of the same breath as Fatima or Paul, Apostle of Christ, Cabrini follows the Italian Mother played brilliantly by Cristiana Dell’Anna who despite ongoing battles with lung disease and sexist rebuffs from her male colleagues in the Vatican pushes ahead to found her own missionary.  After visiting Pope Leo XIII (Giancarlo Giannini) and Archbishop Corrigan (David Morse), her is granted with the help of fellow Sisters to set up a missionary in New York City.  Going as far as rooming in a brothel incognito overnight to helping to establish a hospital for poor children, Cabrini remains steadfast in her goals despite ongoing setbacks from a mercenary Mayor Gould (John Lithgow) who will stop at nothing to thwart her actions and maintain power over the city. Running around 145 minutes, though Cabrini tends to be a bit redundant and on the long side the film nevertheless succeeds in conveying the late American Saint’s Mother Francesca Cabrini a strong yet vulnerable and determined woman willing to fearlessly venture into the mouth of Hell itself in the hopes she might pull an innocent child out of its bottomless depths.  Scenes of the titular Cabrini venturing through an underground lair where children and adults lay in rot waiting to die interspersed with scenes of her requests from the Vatican being repeatedly denied with sexism aplenty dumped on her by her patriarchal superiors tend to hit heavily and we find ourselves further identifying with her personal as well as spiritual struggle. An expensive production at about $50 million, the New York and Rome based shoot lensed beautifully in 2.35:1 panoramic widescreen by Gorka Gómez Andreu shows off all of the New York City slums in their ugly inglory, a Hellscape shone upon with a ray of light emanating from the loving and selfless Cabrini.  The orchestral soundtrack by Gene Back is fine if not unremarkable, ushering in the necessary emotional power beats to further exemplify Cabrini’s ongoing uphill battles.  The Italian cast interspersed with a few American actors does a strong job in a film that’s largely subtitled though occasionally Cristiana Dell’Anna drifts in and out of Italian or English sometimes mid-sentence.  She carries the film on her shoulders and isn’t intimidated by the presence of veteran actors she ultimately ends up going toe-to-toe with. Despite underperforming at the box office, Cabrini was a success with both critics and audiences as opposed to the director’s still-divisive last picture and shows the faith-based company Angel Studios is getting read to play ball in the big leagues.  One of the more scenic and set-piece heavy Christian financed films in recent memory outside of Risen which is still the pinnacle of movies made with faith-based money, Cabrini though on the long and at times repetitious side has a good heart and strong message and points to America’s first canonized saint in maybe the most complete testament to the late Mother’s life’s work.  While neither bold nor spectacular, it means and does well enough onscreen for it to be taken seriously as more than just another Christian financed movie.--Andrew Kotwicki

Jun 6, 2024 - 11:56
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Cinematic Releases: Cabrini (2024) - Reviewed
Images courtesy of Angel Studios

The last time the film world saw Mexican writer-director Alejandro Gómez Monteverde on the silver screen was in 2023 with the controversial Angel Studios produced faith-based film Sound of Freedom.  A film that seemed to split filmgoers and Christians down the middle, the film was a marked return to productivity for the director whose prior film Little Boy came out all the way back in 2015.  While I didn’t see Sound of Freedom which stoked QAnon conspiracy theories and a wide variety of other controversies including but not limited to trivializing child sex trafficking, the film did well enough for its writer-director Monteverde and co-writer Rod Barr to reunite just a year later for another more user-friendly and broadly appealing feature: a period-piece biopic based on the life and accomplishments of Italian Catholic missionary Mother Francesca Xavier Cabrini in her mission in the slums of New York City aptly named Cabrini.

 
An expensive and elongated period endeavor spoken of the same breath as Fatima or Paul, Apostle of Christ, Cabrini follows the Italian Mother played brilliantly by Cristiana Dell’Anna who despite ongoing battles with lung disease and sexist rebuffs from her male colleagues in the Vatican pushes ahead to found her own missionary.  After visiting Pope Leo XIII (Giancarlo Giannini) and Archbishop Corrigan (David Morse), her is granted with the help of fellow Sisters to set up a missionary in New York City.  Going as far as rooming in a brothel incognito overnight to helping to establish a hospital for poor children, Cabrini remains steadfast in her goals despite ongoing setbacks from a mercenary Mayor Gould (John Lithgow) who will stop at nothing to thwart her actions and maintain power over the city.


 
Running around 145 minutes, though Cabrini tends to be a bit redundant and on the long side the film nevertheless succeeds in conveying the late American Saint’s Mother Francesca Cabrini a strong yet vulnerable and determined woman willing to fearlessly venture into the mouth of Hell itself in the hopes she might pull an innocent child out of its bottomless depths.  Scenes of the titular Cabrini venturing through an underground lair where children and adults lay in rot waiting to die interspersed with scenes of her requests from the Vatican being repeatedly denied with sexism aplenty dumped on her by her patriarchal superiors tend to hit heavily and we find ourselves further identifying with her personal as well as spiritual struggle.


 
An expensive production at about $50 million, the New York and Rome based shoot lensed beautifully in 2.35:1 panoramic widescreen by Gorka Gómez Andreu shows off all of the New York City slums in their ugly inglory, a Hellscape shone upon with a ray of light emanating from the loving and selfless Cabrini.  The orchestral soundtrack by Gene Back is fine if not unremarkable, ushering in the necessary emotional power beats to further exemplify Cabrini’s ongoing uphill battles.  The Italian cast interspersed with a few American actors does a strong job in a film that’s largely subtitled though occasionally Cristiana Dell’Anna drifts in and out of Italian or English sometimes mid-sentence.  She carries the film on her shoulders and isn’t intimidated by the presence of veteran actors she ultimately ends up going toe-to-toe with.


 
Despite underperforming at the box office, Cabrini was a success with both critics and audiences as opposed to the director’s still-divisive last picture and shows the faith-based company Angel Studios is getting read to play ball in the big leagues.  One of the more scenic and set-piece heavy Christian financed films in recent memory outside of Risen which is still the pinnacle of movies made with faith-based money, Cabrini though on the long and at times repetitious side has a good heart and strong message and points to America’s first canonized saint in maybe the most complete testament to the late Mother’s life’s work.  While neither bold nor spectacular, it means and does well enough onscreen for it to be taken seriously as more than just another Christian financed movie.


--Andrew Kotwicki

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