
Which Conclave Character Is New Pope Robert Prevost Most Like?
It only took roughly 24 hours for Robert Prevost, the first American-born pope in the Catholic Churchâs 2,000-year history, to be named Pope Francisâs successor. That suggests the real papal conclave was a lot less dramatic than the Oscar-winning Conclave, the 2024 film that got non-Catholics newly engaged with this yearâs selection process. Itâs also been reported that some cardinals even watched the movie for tips on how to navigate their own sequestered voting period.
And all that alleged research led 133 red-robed cardinals to 69-year-old Prevost, who took the name papal name Leo XIV from the balcony of St. Peterâs Basilica about an hour after white smoke billowed from the Sistine Chapelâs chimney. Prevost hails from Chicago, graduated from Villanova University, and served as a longtime missionary in Peru. Given those scant biographical details, it is totally plausible that Prevost can quote Ferris Buellerâs Day Off by heart or has accidentally walked by filming of The Bear.
But there is an even more pressing pop cultural question to ask in light of Prevostâs selection: which character from Conclave is the new pope most like? Before any sacrilegious objections can be made, an actual BuzzFeed quiz to determine which cardinal best matches your character already exists. (Iâm Stanley Tucciâs Bellini, a character BuzzFeed brands âa spineless American liberalâ whom God will âprobably forgive.â) And if every single woman of legal age must ask herself if sheâs a Carrie, Samantha, Miranda, or Charlotte, then this question is only fair to ask of the man set to lead the Catholic Church.
In truth, Prevost isnât a perfect match for any of the filmâs fictional contendersâbut there are similarities for those who choose to look for them. (Or are asked by their editor to do so.)
Given his American background, Prevost was considered a total dark horse candidate and labeled an âoutside insiderâ by Time magazine. That brings to mind Lucian Msamatiâs Cardinal Adeyemi from Nigeria, the Conclave character who would have become the first African pope in historyâhad his messy personal life not interfered. As Time reported, Prevost has been called âthe least American of the Americansâ for his international ties, particularly to South America, where he did missionary work for a decade in Trujillo, Peru. He was later designated bishop of the Peruvian city of Chiclayo, where he served from 2014 to 2023, as reported by CNN. Prevost also holds a Peruvian passport and has been a Peruvian citizen since 2015.
Like Tucciâs Cardinal Bellini, Prevost served as a trusted confidant of his predecessor: Pope Francis, who appointed him head of the Vatican office that picks and manages new bishops across the globe. According to CBS News, Prevost âis considered a centrist, but on many social issues heâs seen as progressive, embracing marginalized groups like Francis, who championed migrants and the poor.â Prevost has also been critical on social media of another American who lobbied for the job of pope: President Donald Trump.
But while Belliniâs liberal views proved too polarizing for the fictional papacy, Prevost is viewed as more of a bridge between Francisâs more liberal ideologies and those of conservative cardinalsârepresented in the film by John Lithgowâs Cardinal Tremblay and Sergio Castellittoâs Cardinal Tedesco. Described as âa balanced alternativeâ by The New York Times, in a 2012 speech before bishops, Prevost lambasted Western news media for promoting âsympathy for beliefs and practices that are at odds with the gospel,â citing the âhomosexual lifestyleâ and âalternative families comprised of same-sex partners and their adopted children.â
As for why front-runner Cardinal Pietro Parolin (the rough equivalent of Ralph Fiennesâs Cardinal Lawrence in this dream scenario) wasnât chosen, Daniel Rober, associate professor and chair of Catholic studies at Sacred Heart University in Connecticut, told Newsweek that Prevost may have been seen as âless kind of tainted by the Vatican bureaucracy.â
Taking all of that into account, as well as Prevostâs reportedly âreserved and discreetâ nature, one can only conclude that, as luck would have it, our new pope is most like the fictional pope who comes out on top in Conclave: Carlos Diehzâs Cardinal Benitez, a dark horse who was secretly appointed to his position of power in Kabul by the movieâs late pope before his death.
Both men were long shots for the title but had the faith of their leaders. Each spent long periods serving in areas far from where they were born (in the film, Benitez gives a moving speech about leading his ministry during wartime in Congo) and symbolize unity for an institution that can be ideologically divided.
Conclave director Edward Berger previously told Vanity Fair that Benitez ultimately wins because âeveryone seems to have seven agendas, egotistical agendas, except him. He comes to it from a place of purity and clarity and faith and love, and all these wonderful elements that a lot of the others have lostâincluding Ralphâs character.â
Perhaps this spirit is best illustrated by Prevostâs own words, given to the Vaticanâs official news site, per The New York Times, last year: âThe bishop is not supposed to be a little prince sitting in his kingdom,â but is âcalled authentically to be humble, to be close to the people he serves, to walk with them, to suffer with them.â