St. Giuseppe Moscati: Doctor to the Poor Review

St. Giuseppe Moscati: Doctor to the Poor
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If you are looking for a biography of St. Moscati, as I was, then you'll likely be disappointed, as this is a fictionalized account of his life. The story line in the movie adds a love interest and an intention to marry that Moscati never had rather than showing that he took a private vow of chastity, wanted to enter a religious order, and embraced a vocation to the single life when it was discerned that he was called to remain in the world as a physician. While it shows another doctor conscripted into the army, it doesn't show that Moscati volunteered to serve and that he treated many wounded soldiers. The movie has him reject teaching in favor of caring for patients, but in actuality, he did both. Until the very end of the movie, it doesn't mention his belief that a doctor must treat the soul as well as (in fact, before) the body, when that was his foundational philosophy of medicine. The movie shows his writing prescriptions for food and medicine, but not for the sacraments (confession, Eucharist), as he was known for doing. It also never showed him going to Mass, as he did every day. Nor, did it show any priests or religious patients, whom he also treated for free. The movie depicted Moscati as being unpopular, ridiculed and looked down upon by his peers when, in fact, he was greatly admired and respected. The movie does a good job of showing his love and charity for the poor, giving his time, money and assets for them, but sometimes his character comes off as uncaring toward the other people in his life. In short, while the movie is well made and compelling, it is not an accurate portrayal of the life of St. Moscati.

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