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Film: L'Inchiesta (The Final Inquiry)
Studio: Italian International Film; distributed by
FoxFaith
Director: Giulio Base
Principal
Actors: Daniele Liotti; Monica Cruz;
Dolph Lundgren; Hristo Shopov; Max von Sydow;
Release: 2006; On DVD released February 19, 2008
Film
length: 112 minutes
Rating:
PG-13 (for violence)
3 Stars
Reviewer: Deborah Ground Buckner
The Final Inquiry has an exciting beginning. There are reports that in "the ninth hour" of
a day, the sky blackened to darkness, and earthquakes were felt throughout the Roman Empire. Emperor Tiberius (Max von Sydow) summons an
exiled general, one of his best investigators, Tito Valerio Tauro (Daniele
Liotti), to determine whether the execution of a Judean rabbi, Jesus of
Nazareth, is related to these strange phenomena.
Taking
his barbarian servant, Brixos (Dolph Lundgren), Tauro travels to Jerusalem. Governor Pontius Pilate (Hristo Shopov, who
also played the role in Mel Gibson's The
Passion of the Christ, in 2004), with an ear in every wall, quickly learns
an incognito investigator has been sent by the emperor, and he is prepared to
do whatever is necessary to thwart the investigation. Shopov's Pilate is a smooth and scheming
bureaucrat, played like Alan Rickman's Sheriff of Nottingham in Robin Hood:
Prince of Thieves. If Pilate
is troubled by a guilty conscience, it is well hidden; his only concern seems
to be making certain nothing happens to cost him his governorship.
Tauro
encounters some of the followers of Jesus, such as the imprisoned Stephen
(Christo Jivkov) and Mary, the mother of
Jesus (Maria Pia Calzone). He also
observes the harsh tactics of Saul of Tarsus, one of the primary persecutors of
the followers.
A
far-fetched and biblically confusing romance develops between Tauro and Tabitha
(Monica Cruz, sister of Penelope), a young woman who becomes a follower of
Jesus. When Tabitha's father, a
Pharisee, beats her for her love of the Roman, she is near death. She asks Tauro to go to the followers of
Jesus and bring them to pray for her.
Although a physician advises she has only hours to live, Tauro and
Brixos set out on a journey to Galilee, a distance that
requires at least the two campfires we see them beside. Tauro asks Mary for help, and she leads him
to the apostle Simon Peter (Enrico Lo Verso).
Peter refuses to return to Jerusalem, however, citing the
harsh persecution of Christians there.
Tauro returns to Tabitha and learns she has died. But Peter appears and sends everyone out of
the room. By a miracle, Tabitha is
brought back to life. (This is, roughly,
the story of Tabitha, a disciple known for her works of charity, who fell ill
and died. "But Peter put them all forth,
and kneeled down, and prayed; and turning him to the body said, 'Tabitha,
arise'. And she opened her eyes: and when she saw Peter, she sat up.
41 And he gave her his hand, and lifted her up, and when he had called the
saints and widows, presented her alive." Acts
9:40-42).
Tauro,
convinced of the resurrection of Jesus, writes of his findings in a letter to
Tiberius. The emperor, ill and in bed,
prepares an order to accept Christianity as the official religion of the
empire, but his nephew, Caligula (Vincenzo Bocciarelli), objects and suffocates
his uncle, claiming the empire as his own.
His first act is to destroy the order and all correspondence from Tauro,
then order Tauro's execution. But Tauro,
now with his wife, Tabitha, has disappeared, living among the followers of
Jesus.
There
are some nice performances. Liotti
clearly presents the fine mind of a military leader and investigator, one who
is used to dealing with facts, taking on the question of faith. Lundgren plays well the faithful servant and
friend, and the moments they share on screen, particularly their final scene
together, demonstration a closeness between them. Cruz is lovely, but is given little to do;
the same may be said for Max von Sydow and F. Murray Abraham.
The film's messages of the resurrection of Jesus and
the power of faith are thwarted by the monkeying with history, the unbelievable
romance between Tauro and Tabitha, and the too obviously choreographed fight
scenes throughout the film. Further, the
score is overpowering, making certain we realize any powerful or mystical
moment on screen. What began as an interesting
premise and a useful method of presenting its message becomes bogged down by
its efforts to drive its point home at the expense of history and the Bible
itself.
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