Pius XII: Under the Roman Sky
Pius XII: Under the Roman Sky (Italian: Sotto il cielo di Roma, German: Pius XII., also known just as Under the Roman Sky) is a 2010 Italian-German television film directed by Christian Duguay and starring James Cromwell, Alessandra Mastronardi and Marco Foschi. The film is set during the Nazi German occupation of Rome, between September 1943 and June 1944.[1] Plot
Cast
ControversiesThe film raised several controversies because of its portrait of Pope Pius XII and its historical inaccuracies. Chief rabbi of Rome Riccardo Di Segni described the film as "a propagandistic piece of crap, an apologetic work" which was "full of errors and inaccuracies" and "absolutory on the choices, events and silences of the papacy of Pius XII".[2] Writer Corrado Augias was among the most critical about the TV-movie, describing it as a fiction whose only purpose was "to sketch a figure as best as possible in preparation for sainthood",[3] and underling some major historical falsehoods such as a peaceful retreat of Nazi Germans thanks to Vatican pressure, ignoring several massacres such as La Storta massacre, and that Pope Pius XII personally intervened to avoid the raid on the Roman Ghetto.[4] Producer Luca Bernabei acknowledged some inaccuracies but defended the film, claiming it was not to be intended as a documentary,[2] while screenwriters Fabrizio Bettelli and Francesco Arlanch contended that "our purpose was to write a story, not to make a historical judgment".[5] References
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