
Remember her name.
Italian immigrant Francesca Cabrini arrives in 1889 New York City and is greeted by disease, crime, and impoverished children. Cabrini sets off on a daring mission to convince the hostile mayor to secure housing and healthcare for society's most vulnerable. With broken English and poor health, Cabrini uses her entrepreneurial mind to build an empire of hope unlike anything the world had ever seen.
- 7.9
- 2024
- Released
- 2h 22m

Cristiana Dell'Anna
Francesca Cabrini
David Morse
Archbishop Corrigan
Giancarlo Giannini
Pope Leo XIII
John Lithgow
Mayor Gould
Romana Maggiora Vergano
Vittoria
Federico Ielapi
Paolo
Virginia Bocelli
Aria
Rolando Villazón
Disalvo
Jeremy Bobb
Calloway
Federico Castelluccio
Senator Bodio
Patch Darragh
Dr. Murphy
Seán Cullen
Peterson
Andrew Polk
Deputy Mayor Jenkins
Allen Lewis Rickman
Jacob Abrams
Giampiero Judica
Father Morelli
Kevin Tanski
Officer Rentschler
Fausto Russo Alesi
Cardinale
Sam Bond
Mr. Merton
Montserrat Espadalé
Sister Concetta
Peter Lojacono
Vincenzo
Sarah Santizo
Sister Lucille
Brian Ceponis
Cabbie
Eugenia Forteza
Sister Umilia




Released
en
$50,000,000.00
$20,592,796.00
- #new york city
- #immigrant
- #based on true story
- #19th century
- #somber
- #1900s
- #impoverished
- #italian immigrant
- #christian faith
- #1890s
- #1880s
- #hopeful
Reviews
Providing care, comfort and compassion to the world’s downtrodden is undoubtedly a noble, if exhausting and often-frustrating, cause, especially when pleas for help go ignored or fall on deaf ears. Yet, every so often, someone comes along who tirelessly keeps on fighting for those less fortunate, as was the case with Italian immigrant Mother Francesca Cabrini (Cristiana Dell’Anna). Upon her arriva

A cracking movie! I can't say I was expecting much from <em>'Cabrini'</em>, given I hadn't heard anything about it online or in real life - no trailers or anything of ilk. I was also <em><a href="https://letterboxd.com/r96sk/list/watched-in-an-empty-cinema/" rel="nofollow">alone in the cinema</a></em>, which is pleasing personally but is possibly a bad sign for a movie. In actuality, though, it

Cristiana Dell'Anna delivers strongly here as the eponymous nun determined to set up a network of orphanages in China to help the sick and impoverished children there. Her persistent hassling of the Vatican for permission - and funds - has finally wound them up to the point where she is invited to Rome to be finally told no. Even there, though, she's sticking to her guns and after a persuasive aud











