Caetlin Benson-Allott, director of Film and Media Studies at Georgetown University, noted the interesting positioning of those two women characters.
“What I really liked about that is you see both sides, you see the possibility for the nuns to take a more active role, as Cardinal Bellini suggests that they should, and you also see the history of sexual abuse and also the exploitation of women in the Catholic Church,” Benson-Allott said.
At the end of Conclave, Cardinal Benitez reveals that he is intersex, furthering the film’s commentary on gender roles in the Church.
“The way Benitez talked about finding out that he is intersex affirms both the normality and the beauty of intersex identity and harkens back to things that both Lawrence and Bellini were saying earlier in the film about the needs for progress,” Benson-Allott said.
A more progressive Church is championed by Cardinal Lawrence, played by Ralph Fiennes, and Cardinal Bellini, played by Stanley Tucci. Though each of them, at some point, are strong contenders for the papacy, neither is elected in the end.
Sister Susan Francois is the assistant congregation leader in New Jersey for the Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace. She said the human elements of the election process rang most true for her in the film.