Review: ‘Cabrini,’ starring Cristiana Dell’Anna, David Morse, Romana Maggiora Vergano, Federico Ielapi, Virginia Bocelli, Rolando Villazón, Giancarlo Giannini and John Lithgow

March 31, 2024

by Carla Hay

Cristiana Dell’Anna in “Cabrini” (Photo courtesy of Angel Studios)

“Cabrini”

Directed by Alejandro Monteverde

Some Italian with subtitles

Culture Representation: Taking place in Italy and in New York, from 1889 to 1892, the dramatic film “Cabrini” (based on true events) features an all-white cast of characters representing the working-class, middle-class and wealthy.

Culture Clash: Roman Catholic nun Frances Xavier Cabrini (also known as Mother Cabrini) experiences many obstacles when she relocates from Italy to New York City, in order to launch missionary institutions, such as an orphanage and a hospital for underprivileged people.

Culture Audience: “Cabrini” will appeal primarily to people who are interested in faith-based biopics that are formulaic but inspirational.

David Morse and Cristiana Dell’Anna in “Cabrini” (Photo courtesy of Angel Studios)

“Cabrini” is a little too lengthy (142 minutes), but this biopic about Frances Cabrini adeptly balances themes of religion and civil rights. It’s dependably inspirational with sturdy performances, despite the film’s frequently drab look and tone. People who are interested in this subject matter will have the most patience when the movie’s pacing tends to get sluggish. Other people who might not be interested in watching a movie about a religious historical figure can at least appreciate how “Cabrini” recreates the late 19th century, without glossing over the dark and depressing aspects of this time period.

Directed by Alejandro Monteverde and written by Rod Barr, “Cabrini” takes place from 1889 to 1892, in Italy and in New York. The movie constantly pounds viewers over the head with scenes of discrimination and oppression. Some of the dialogue is a bit hokey, but the movie realistically depicts how women and certain immigrants were treated as inferior in discrimination that was legal at the time. This bigotry causes the main obstacles that Roman Catholic nun Frances Cabrini (played by Cristiana Dell’Anna) and others experience in their charitable work.

“Cabrini” (which is told in chronological order) opens with a scene in New York City in 1889. A boy who’s about 9 or 10 years old named Paolo (played by Federico Ielapi) is on a street, as he is desperately wheeling his dying, widowed mother in a cart to a hospital. Paolo can only speak Italian, so he is dismissed or ignored by most people on the street. When he gets to the hospital, he is cruelly turned away because Paolo and his mother are Italian. Paolo mother dies as a result of not getting the medical help that she needs.

Meanwhile, at a convent in Codogno, Italy, the outspoken and determined Frances Cabrini, also known as Mother Cabrini, gets a letter summoning her to the Vatican. When she gets there, a cardinal named Silvio (played by Fausto Russo Alesi) meets with her to tell her that the Vatican has received her numerous letters requesting that she lead missions for needy people in China. The cardinal haughtily tells Mother Cabrini that her requests have been denied. He also states that called her to the Vatican only to give her the rejection in person. “Stay where you belong, Mother,” he says in a condescending tone.

Just as it looks like Mother Cabrini is about to leave, she asks if the rejection was a decision that was made by the cardinal or by Pope Leo XIII (played by Giancarlo Giannini), who just happens to be in another part of the room. The cardinal replies it doesn’t make a difference, but Mother Cabrini says that if the decision is from the Pope, she wants to hear it directly from the Pope. Before anyone can stop her, Mother Cabrini boldly strides over the Pope, introduces herself, and states why she wants to lead missions around the world, beginning in China.

Pope Leo XIII is skeptical that a woman has what it takes to be a missionary leader. He also says there’s never been an independent order of nuns to take on this task. Pope Leo XIII asks her: “Why China?” Mother Cabrini replies, “Because we’ve forgotten the East.”

After a back-and-forth discussion, the Pope Leo XIII agrees to let Mother Cabrini become a missionary leader, but he tells her that she has to start in the West, not the East. He also says that if she becomes the first woman t lead an overseas mission for the Catholic Church, it will be proof of what women can accomplish. It isn’t long before Mother Cabrini and other nuns from her convent travel to New York City, where they are assigned to Five Points Orphanage, whch has fallen on hard financial time.

The orphanage is in a low-income, crime-ridden neighborhood called Five Points, which is so dangerous, a taxi driver refuses to drive the nuns there at night. The only place where the nuns can find shelter on their first night in New York City is a brothel, thanks to the generosity of a sex worker named Vittoria (played by Romana Maggiora Vergano), who found out about the nuns’ plight when Vittoria met them on the street. Vittoria later becomes a loyal ally of the nuns in their mission.

In New York City, Mother Cabrini and her team of nuns get constant discrimination and harassment because they are women and because they are Italian. On the way to visit the Five Points Orphanage for the first time, a male stranger on the street tells the nuns to go back to where they came from, and he calls Mother Cabrini a “pig.” The nuns also quickly find out that Italians and many other people in Five Points are considered “undesirables” by the bigoted snobs in the New York area.

While in New York, Mother Cabrini has to report to Archbishop Corrigan (played by David Morse), who immediately tells her that he wants her to go back to Italy. Even though Mother Cabrini shows him a letter from Pope Leo XIII that gives her the authority to lead this mission, Archbishop Corrigan isn’t easily swayed by this letter from the Pope. “If you are to remain in New York, it’s only because I allow it,” the archbishop tells her.

Needless to say, Archbishop Corrigan and Mother Cabrini clash on several occasions over various issues. He is required by the Catholic Church to give some financial support to Mother Cabrini’s mission. But one of the ways he makes it difficult for her to raise money is he tells her that she can only solicit funds from Italians in the area. However, the Italians are among the area’s poorest residents.

Another sexist and xenophobic person in power who tries to get in Mother Cabrini’s way is New York City’s Mayor Gould (played by John Lithgow), a pompous and corrupt blowhard. At one point Mayor Gould angrily scolds Archbishop Corrigan by saying: “You let a woman push you around—an Italian woman. Is that the way you run your church?” Mayor Gould abuses his power by threatening to arrest her or by saying that he can withhold permits that Mother Cabrini needs when she has plans to build a hospital that will accept low-income immigrants and other underprivileged people.

Are there any men in this movie who aren’t sexist or mean-spirited to Mother Cabrini? Yes, but only one really gets significant screen time and dialogue: Theodore Calloway (played by Jeremy Bobb), a reporter for The New York Times, who is the first person to spread major public awareness of Mother Cabrini’s mission. When he interviews her for a New York Times article, she talks about the dismal living conditions of children in Five Points and says to him: “Even rats have it better than the children.” It’s a quote that becomes the article’s headline. It’s also an example of how Mother Cabrini is astute at winning people over to her cause and understanding the power of the media.

“Cabrini” has subplots about Vittoria and Paolo that are intended to show the brutal and violent sides of a rough neighborhood such as Five Points. Vittoria is being abused by the brothel’s pimp Geno (played by Giacomo Rocchini), who hates that she is spending time helping Mother Cabrini and the other nuns when he wants her to make money for him. Paolo goes to live in the orphanage after his mother dies, but he is emotionally troubled by the deaths of his parents. It’s later revealed that Paolo’s father committed suicide by shooting himself.

Curiously, none of the other nuns in “Cabrini” get much attention in the movie, in terms of telling viewers more about who they are. The other nuns are Sister Aurora (played by Chelsea Feltman), Sister Serafina (played by Soraïa Scicchitano), Sister Margherita (played by Sarah Santizo), and Sister Umilia (played by Eugenia Forteza), but most “Cabrini” viewers probably won’t remember their names or anything about them. These other nuns are very generic and have blank personalities. That’s probably because the “Cabrini” filmmakers wanted to make sure that Mother Cabrini remains the star attraction in this movie. Virginia Bocelli (daughter of singer Andrea Bocelli) has a small role as choir girl named Aria.

Cristiana Dell’Anna gives an admirable performance in a role that makes Mother Cabrini look gritty and resourceful when she needs to be, but never really flawed in a realistic way. And if Mother Cabrini seems to be too saintly in this movie, that’s because she became the first U.S. citizen to become a saint in the Catholic Church. Still, the movie tends to go a little overboard by not showing her having any personality imperfections like a real human being.

“Cabrini” has some pacing issues that could have been prevented with better film editing. And after a while, the movie becomes a checklist of obstacles that Mother Cabrini has to overcome, rather than showing her as a well-rounded person. Some of the characters are written as extreme contrasts of “heroes” and “villains,” and it sometimes comes across as almost like being caricatures. A little more nuance was needed for these characters’ personalities.

There’s also an earnest effort for “Cabrini” to be a female empowerment film. However, some of the dialogue is very corny in this intention. There’s a scene where Mayor Gould tells Mother Cabrini: “It’s a shame you were born a woman. You would’ve made an excellent man.” Mother Cabrini replies, “Oh no, Mr. Mayor. Men could never do what we do.”

Even though some of “Cabrini” gets bogged down by cloying mush, the movie overall serves as a good tribute to the real Mother Cabrini. She and the other characters in the movie might have some cringeworthy lines of dialogue and overly simplistic personality depictions, but these mawkish moments are overshadowed by the movie succeeding in showing her compassionate courage. And if anyone is inspired by it, that’s what matters most.

Angel Studios released “Cabrini” in U.S. cinemas on March 8, 2024.

Review: ‘The Virtuoso’ (2021), starring Anson Mount, Abbie Cornish and Anthony Hopkins

May 25, 2021

by Carla Hay

Anson Mount in “The Virtuoso” (Photo by Jessica Kourkounis/Lionsgate)

“The Virtuoso” (2021)

Directed by Nick Stagliano

Culture Representation: Taking place in Ohio and unnamed parts of the United States, the crime drama “The Virtuoso” features an all-white cast of characters representing the middle-class and criminal underground.

Culture Clash: An assassin finds out one of his hit jobs might be his most dangerous assignment when he has problems finding his murder target.

Culture Audience: “The Virtuoso” will appeal primarily to people who don’t mind watching badly written and tedious movies about assassinations.

Anthony Hopkins in “The Virtuoso” (Photo by Lance Skundrich/Lionsgate)

The first clue that “The Virtuoso” will be an annoying, witless bore is within the first five minutes, when the main character starts droning on in voiceover narration about what’s happening on screen. It’s never a good sign when movies over-explain things that don’t need to be explained, but it’s even worse when the explaining is for things that don’t even make sense and no amount of explaining will help. The lead character is supposed to be an expert assassin, who thinks so highly of himself that he calls himself a “virtuoso,” but he makes so many dumb mistakes, viewers will be left with the impression that this drama is really an unintentionally bad comedy.

However, there’s nothing really funny about “The Virtuoso,” unless you consider it a cruel joke that Oscar-winning actor Sir Anthony Hopkins ended up in this bottom-of-the barrel dud. Viewers will be more intrigued by speculating how Hopkins found himself in this embarrassing mess of a movie than intrigued by the dull, so-called mystery that’s supposed to be the film’s main plot. “The Virtuoso” director Nick Stagliano (who co-wrote the movie’s atrocious screenplay with James Wolf) was extremely lucky to get a talented actor on the caliber of Hopkins to be in this forgettable garbage.

“The Virtuoso” is one of those pretentiously conceived films where all of the main characters are supposed to be so mysterious that they don’t have any names. The movie’s locations are mostly unnamed, but “The Virtuoso” was actually filmed in New York and Pennsylvania. Anson Mount is the lead character, a loner assassin who is seen doing a hit job in the movie’s opening scene. This character is credited as The Virtuoso in the movie’s end credits, but he’s such an idiotic bungler, that calling him a “virtuoso” is too generous.

In the movie’s opening scene, the assassin is staked out in a hotel room, where he shoots a middle-aged man in another hotel room across the street. And just to make this movie look “edgy” (when it’s actually very unimaginative), the shooting takes place while the targeted man (played by Blaise Corrigan) is having sex with a much younger woman (played by Estelle Girard Parks), who is not his wife. In this hit job, the assassin is so precise in his shooting that he is able to shoot off several bullets at his target, starting with the groin area, without any bullets hitting the woman.

She screams in terror and then quickly leaves the room, but not before robbing the dead guy of whatever cash was in his wallet. She doesn’t call for help because she knows that the murdered man is the type of person who wouldn’t want the cops around. And she doesn’t want to stick around to answer any questions.

In a voiceover, the assassin predicts all of these actions because he knows exactly who was in that room when he did the hit job. He also predicts how long it will take before the police arrive, so he can make his getaway. What he doesn’t explain is how he had the good luck of the murder victim having his hotel window curtains wide open so the assassin could clearly see where to shoot in the room.

Get used to this assassin over-explaining every single thing he does, as if he’s dictating an instruction manual called “Assassinations for Dummies,” because this constant narration plagues almost the entire movie. Here’s a sample of what he says in voiceover narration about this particular hit job: “With this employer, you rarely get more than a name—sometimes not even that. It adds to the risk, and it adds to the fear.”

When he calmly walks out of his hotel room after murdering his target, the assassin continues to drone on about how to be a top assassin: “It’s vital that you show no urgency. You trust your planning, your accuracy. You’re a professional, an expert devoted to timing and precision—a virtuoso.”

The assassin lives with his dog in a remote, unnamed wooded area, because as he over-explains in the narration, a “virtuoso” assassin is supposed “live off the grid as much as possible.” He get his mail by renting a box at an independent, privately owned mail service, not the U.S. Postal Service. And he never uses his real name.

The assassin has a mentor (played by Hopkins), who oversees the hit jobs that the assassin does. The next assignment that the assassin has is to murder a corrupt CEO, who was indicted on an unnamed charge, but the indictment was recently dropped by a judge. The assassin travels to Ohio to complete this mission.

It’s another murder where he shoots at his target from a nearby building. This time, the scene of the murder is on a street that looks like it’s in a business district of the city. And the target gets shot while driving in his car, which crashes into a reacreational vehicle camper that’s parked on the street. The CEO’s car and the camper explode. And something happens that the assassin could not predict: A woman, who was an innocent bystander, happened to be standing on a sidewalk next to the camper when it exploded, so she caught on fire and died.

The assassin makes a hasty exit back to his remote home. And because he prides himself on not killing innocent victims, this mistake has left him shaken to the core. He screams out in emotional pain and guilt. Although this screaming scene is supposed to be serious, it’s done in such an over-the-top way that viewers might laugh when they see it. Throughout the movie, the assassin has guilt-ridden flashbacks and nightmares of seeing the woman screaming in agony while engulfed in flames.

Viewers will find out a little bit more about the assassin and his mentor in a scene that takes place in a graveyard during the day. The assassin is there to visit the grave of his father. And then, the mentor suddenly shows up unannounced, almost as if he had been following the assassin (or hired someone to follow him), so he knew exactly where his protégé would be at that exact moment. The mentor has followed the assassin there because the assassin hasn’t been answering the mentor’s phone calls.

During their conversation, it’s mentioned that the assassin, his late father and the mentor all served in the military. The assassin’s father and the mentor were soldiers together during the Vietnam War. And in the movie’s best and most harrowing scene, the mentor delivers a monologue that only a few actors such as Hopkins would be able to deliver with credibility and gravitas. The monologue describes in vivid and horrific details a Vietnam War experience that the mentor had with the assassin’s father, when they were ordered to massacre all the people and animals in a Vietnam village, and what happened to a toddler boy who tried to escape.

The assassin’s mentor gives this monologue as a way to tell the assassin to “get over it” when the assassin seems to be mentally cracking under the guilt of accidentally killing an innocent bystander during a hit job. The mentor says that the dead bystander was just “collateral damage,” and that when these things happen, assassins just need to be professional and move on. “We humans are homicidal killing machines,” the mentor coldly tells the assassin. Privately, the assassin vows to himself to never allow this mistake to happen to him again.

And that’s why the assassin’s next assignment exposes the idiocy of this story. He takes an assignment where he doesn’t really know who his target is except that it’s someone whose identity is somehow connected to the words “white rivers.” Knowing full well that he could kill the wrong person due to mistaken identity, the assassin takes the assignment anyway.

The rest of the movie is a silly slog of the assassin going to a small town, where he encounters people who might or might now know who his target is, and one of them might be the actual target. All of the possible targets are people who spend time at a local diner called Rosie’s Cafe. They include:

  • A cop named Deputy Myers (played by David Morse), who’s immediately suspicious of the assassin when he sees him in the diner.
  • A waitress who calls herself Dixy (played by Abbie Cornish), who works at Rosie’s Cafe.
  • A sleazeball named Handsome Johnnie (played by Richard Brake), who has a criminal record and a gun.
  • A timid woman (played by Diora Baird), who is Handsome Johnnie’s new girlfriend.
  • A quiet loner (played by Eddie Marsan), who carries a gun with him.

And so, in this empty-headed story, the assassin who’s supposed to be as discreet and undercover as possible, shows up and starts asking people if they know anything about “white rivers.” He might as well have just worn a sign that said, “I’m a Stupid Assassin and I’m Here to Let People Know I’m Looking for My Target With My Biggest Clue About My Target’s Identity.” He acts more like a bumbling detective than a “virtuoso” assassin. What was that lecture he was saying in the beginning of the movie about “planning” and “accuracy”? Pure crap.

And since this is a small town, and the assassin hangs out at the diner acting like he’s looking for someone, it doesn’t take long before the word gets out that this stranger is probably up to no good. Needless to say, “The Virtuoso” is so sloppily written that the assassin’s process of elimination in figuring out the identity of his target makes absolutely no sense and contradicts the vow that he made to himself about not killing the wrong people.

“The Virtuoso” tries very hard to be like a neo-noir thriller, but the washed-out and dreary cinematography and monotonous editing just drag down this already sluggishly paced and nonsensical film. Fortunately for Hopkins, his screen time in “The Virtuoso” is no more than 20 minutes. His graveyard monologue really is the best thing about this terrible film. The rest of the cast members are serviceable in their roles. However, even the best acting in the world couldn’t save this very clumsy and vapid movie.

And because “The Virtuoso” recycles as many tired stereotypes as possible, the waitress and the assassin find themselves attracted to each other. Too bad Mount and Cornish have very little believable chemistry together. And since “The Virtuoso” is a very “male gaze” movie, only the women have nudity in the sex scenes. The only thing to say about the big “reveal” at the end is that it’s another very predictable cliché that’s a big yawn, assuming that any viewers who make it that far in this mind-numbing and plodding movie haven’t fallen asleep by then.

Lionsgate released “The Virtuoso” in select U.S. cinemas, on digital and VOD on April 30, 2021, and on Blu-ray and DVD on May 4, 2021.

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