Pope John Paul II (miniseries)


Pope John Paul II is a 2005 television miniseries dramatizing the life of Pope John Paul II from his early adult years in Poland to his death at age 84.
The miniseries was written and directed by John Kent Harrison and aired in the United States on the CBS network on 4 and 7 December 2005. It was first released in Vatican City on 17 November 2005 and ten days later throughout Italy on Rai 1
Jon Voight portrays an older Karol Wojtyła, while Cary Elwes portrays Wojtyła in his earlier life from 1939 to 1978. Voight was nominated for an Emmy Award for his performance.
Pope John Paul II co-stars James Cromwell as Archbishop Adam Stefan Cardinal Sapieha, Ben Gazzara as Agostino Cardinal Casaroli, and Christopher Lee as Stefan Cardinal Wyszyński. Polish actor Mikolaj Grabowski is seen twice playing Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger of Germany, who would succeed John Paul II as Pope Benedict XVI.

Cast

The film opens with Part 1's Pope John Paul II assassination attempt on May 13, 1981, then while he is being taken to Agostino Gemelli University Polyclinic, flashes back to his pre-World War II childhood with his mother and older brother, then flashes to 1939, just before and at the start of World War II when Wojtyla was 19. Wojtyla watches university professors and many more of Poland's talented people being rounded up by Nazi troops for slave labor and to further liquidate Polish culture and is told by his father to get a work permit to avoid deportation to Germany as slave labor himself. The following year, he is working in a Nazi quarry while secretly embracing the closed Rhapsody Theatre to keep Polish culture alive. Karol's father dies in 1941. In 1942, he leaves the Rhapsody Theatre to join Archbishop's Adam Sapieha's secret seminary to study for the priesthood. In 1945, World War II ends with the Soviet Union's occupation that afterwards becomes a Communist takeover. Wojtyla is ordained to the priesthood in 1946, performing his required priestly duties, then travels to Rome for graduate studies at its Pontifical International Athenaeum Angelicum while Poland's Communist Party conducts its own deadly purges of the Polish Home Army as its suspected future enemies. In 1949, Wojtyla is transferred to Krakow's Jagiellonian University as a student counselor. Sapieha dies in 1951, Wojtyla becomes professor of social ethics at Catholic University of Lublin in 1956 and in 1958, become Krakow's bishop. In 1959, he ends the decade by holding Nowa Huta's first ever Mass-Midnight Mass-on Christmas Eve, then leads a public religious procession of the Black Madonna's empty picture frame through Krakow, attends all Vatican II sessions and becomes Krakow's archbishop before the sessions end. In 1967, he becomes a cardinal by Pope Paul VI, returns to Poland and heals a friend from the Polish Home Army of bone marrow cancer by praying to Padre Pio. Pope Paul VI dies in August 1978 and Albino Luciani succeeds him as Pope John Paul I, only to die late the following month after only 33 days as pope. Wojtyla is told by fellow cardinal Stefan Wyszynski than if he is elected to accept the position for Poland's sake.
Part 2 opens with Wojtyla's election as Pope John Paul II, them shows his papal inauguration, domestic travels in Italy, appointment of Agostino Casaroli as Cardinal Secretary of State, writing of his first encyclical, Redemptor hominis, receiving Soviet foreign minister Andrei Gromyko at the Vatican, then starts his foreign travels to Mexico for 1979's Latin American Episcopal Conference, then to Poland that June and the United States that October. Solidarity trade union is formed in 1980 and John Paul II blesses and prays for it, writes to Soviet leader Brezhnev about the need for its formation and receives Lech Walesa and a delegation from Solidarity at the Vatican in January 1981, almost four months before the 1981 assassination attempt occurs with him asking and proclaiming his own forgiveness for Agca, while in Poland, Stefan Wyszynski dies. Afterwards, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger is appointed Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, he receives U.S. President Reagan and First Lady, Nancy, at the Vatican in 1982, returns to Poland in 1983 for another papal visit and to speak personally with Lech Walesa and in December of the same year, meets with Agca inside Rebibbia's prison to personally forgive him. Later that decade, he appoints Joaquin Navarro-Valls as Director of the Holy See Press Office, proclaims the first World Youth Day, has dinner with several friends, ex. Jerzy Kluger, who he saw arrested by the Nazis during World War II and again at 1964's Vatican II sessions and in 1979 when Poland's Communists reluctantly approved his first papal visit, discussing Gorbachev's glasnost and perestroika possibilities for Poland and ends the decade by watching Poland's first free election in 50 years, the 1989 Polish legislative election. The 1990s start with Iraq invasion of Kuwait, then moves to his writing of his Letter to Women encyclical, his visit to Denver for 1993's World Youth Day, his book Crossing the Threshold of Hope becoming a best seller and him suffering the first symptoms of Parkinson's disease. Later in the 1990s, his Parkinson's advances but he still refuses to slow down his schedule and, after his 1995 Evangelium vitae encyclical, preaches a need for a "gospel of suffering". He helps open the Holy door of St. Peter's Basilica on Christmas Eve 1999 for the upcoming Great Jubilee of 2000, makes his first papal visit to Israel in March, 2000, watches the following year's 9-11 attacks with horror, then addresses another kind of horror in 2002-the Catholic sex abuse scandal-and has his last Easter and public appearances in late March 2005 before dying on April 2 amid his voiceover of his last requests and film's score.