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Kidnapped

Rapito

  • Status: Released
  • 25-05-2023
  • Runtime: 134 min
  • Score: 7.316
  • Vote count: 340

The story of Edgardo Mortara, a young Jewish boy living in Bologna, Italy, who in 1858, after being secretly baptized, was forcibly taken from his family to be raised as a Christian. His parents’ struggle to free their son became part of a larger political battle that pitted the papacy against forces of democracy and Italian unification.

Enea Sala

Edgardo Mortara (child)

Leonardo Maltese

Edgardo Mortara

Paolo Pierobon

Pio IX

Fausto Russo Alesi

Momolo Mortara

Barbara Ronchi

Marianna Mortara

Andrea Gherpelli

Angelo Padovani

Samuele Teneggi

Riccardo Mortara

Corrado Invernizzi

Giudice Carboni

Filippo Timi

Giacomo Antonelli

Fabrizio Gifuni

Pier Gaetano Feletti

Paolo Calabresi

Sabatino Scazzocchio

Aurora Camatti

Anna Morisi

Bruno Cariello

Maresciallo Lucidi

Walter Lippa

Angelo Moscati

Alessandro Bandini

Padre Mariano

Leonardo Bianconi

Brigadiere Agostini

Daniele Aldrovandi

Bonaiuto Sanguinetti

Fabrizio Contri

Jussi

Giustiniano Alpi

Liberale

Orfeo Orlando

Vita

Federica Fracassi

Anziana

Giulia Quadrelli

Giovane

Renato Sarti

Rettore

Flavia Baiku

Simone

Tonino Tosto

Tagliacozzo

Christian Mudu

Elia

Riccardo Bandiera

Aronne

CinemaSerf

Based on a bizarre true story, this follows the tale of the young Edgardo Sala who was living quite happily with his Jewish parents and siblings in Bologna until an official arrives one evening to tell them he is to be removed from their care. Why? It appears that many years earlier when he was in his cradle, he has been baptised and so must therefore be looked after by the church. Despite their appeals and protestations, he is swiftly taken to Rome where he is enrolled in a Catholic school where his is pretty thoroughly indoctrinated into the ways of his new Church - even becoming of special interest to Pope Pius IX (Paolo Pierobon). The story really centres around the trial many year later of the Papal Officer Feletti (Fabrizio Gifuni) after the city had become part of the Italian Kingdom, and those proceedings are used to fill in some of the backstory and to test the theories of responsibility of actions done in the name of the State. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the young man grows up to become conflicted - his love of Jesus struggles with his love of family and of the Talmud that was so important to him as a child. What I didn't really understand was just why the Pope would ever been at all interested in the fate of a small Jewish lad when the Papal States were in permanent decline, but Marco Bellochio uses a solid cast and a sparing, but frequently impassioned, amount of dialogue to deliver a stylishly made intrigue that show the last vestiges of the once all-powerful Papacy and of the inconsequential hopes of a family and a small boy.