Author Robert Harris on 'Conclave' success ahead of Sunday's Oscars
[February 28, 2025]
By HILARY FOX
LONDON (AP) — “Conclave” author Robert Harris isn’t planning to stay up
and watch the Oscars.
The British writer will be in a different time zone. Plus, Harris would
rather wait to see how the movie, which is up for eight Academy Awards
including best picture, does Sunday night.
“These things are a bit of a strain anyway, and I don’t want to sit up
all night and hear them say and the winner is... ‘Anora’ at four in the
morning,” he said, laughing. “I hope that ‘Conclave’ wins and it’s
certainly in with a chance. It’s not the favorite, but it’s probably
started to creep up to become a second favorite. So who knows.”
Sitting in his study — a converted church office at his home in
southeast England — Harris writes in the morning and tinkers in the
afternoon, surrounded by books. He's in the early stages of a new novel.
These days it’s his 2016 papal thriller that everyone wants to talk
about.
“I’ve always written about politics and power. It greatly interests me
what it does to people, the kind of people who seek it and so on,”
explains Harris. “This is in many ways the ultimate election, for God’s
representative on Earth, the spiritual leader of one and a third billion
people. It doesn’t get much bigger than that, quite frankly.”
Inspired by the conclave of 2005, which elected Pope Benedict XVI, the
novel was adapted into a screenplay by Peter Straughan, and brought to
life by director Edward Berger, starring Ralph Fiennes, Stanley Tucci
and Isabella Rossellini.
Harris talked The Associated Press about Fiennes' portrayal of inner
turmoil on screen, visiting a fake Sistine Chapel set and that twist.
Remarks have been edited for clarity and brevity.

AP: How have you felt about all the love that the film has had during
the awards season?
HARRIS: Obviously I’m absolutely delighted. I think that they did a
brilliant job, in every department. The direction, the production, the
acting, the whole thing and music. The screenplay is very, very fine.
Very closely follows the book, which of course makes me pleased. But I
think that’s a sign of Peter Straughan’s talent. It makes a bit of a
change of the quiet life of the novelist.
AP: Does it mean that you get a boost as well, sales wise?
HARRIS: Yes, it has sold quite a lot actually since October and got a
particular boost after the BAFTAs last week. It has done well in America
as well where it got into the top 20 on Amazon, which is surprising for
a book that old.
AP: Do you think in general that people should read the book first
before they see a film?
HARRIS: Yes, I think that that is the way to approach it. But I’m quite
happy if lots of people are doing it the other way around. I’ve always
had a particular fondness for this novel and I’d like people to read it.
There’s a lot more about the cardinal’s crisis of faith, for instance,
and the details of other members of the College of Cardinals and the
story of past conclaves. So I think if you enjoyed the film, then this
is like further reading and will fill in, maybe, some questions people
have.
AP: You talk about his crisis of faith. When you’re reading the book,
you know the inner turmoil the lead character is going through. (Lomeli
in the novel, Lawrence in the movie.) What was it like for you seeing
Ralph portray that just with his face?
HARRIS: That’s why he’s so brilliant. The great difference between a
novel and the film is what we would call, technically, interior
monologue, that you have the character’s thoughts. A lot of films
actually fail, from books, because they can’t convey that. But when
you’ve got an actor of Ralph’s quality, then his face does register
every twist and turn. You can feel his pain and his anguish and his
humor and his humility and intelligence. It all flits across his face.
He’s on screen pretty well, nonstop for two hours. It’s an extraordinary
feat.
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John Lithgow, from left, Ralph Fiennes, Sergio Castellitto, and
Isabella Rossellini accepts the award for outstanding performance by
a cast in a motion picture for "Conclave" during the 31st annual
Screen Actors Guild Awards on Sunday, Feb. 23, 2025, at the Shrine
Auditorium in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)
 AP: Did you visit? Did you see this
happening in real life?
HARRIS: I went to once to Rome to see them when they were in the
studios there, Cinecitta. They’d got a set of the Sistine Chapel.
And it was staggering, actually, to walk in and then suddenly see
this and with all the rows of cardinals, it was just like you’d
stepped into the real thing. It was astonishing.
AP: What was your relationship with the production? Did you have any
say at all?
HARRIS: I was certainly very much involved early on. I met (Straughan).
Ralph Fiennes and Edward Berger came down here to lunch to tell me
they wanted to change the nationality of the central character,
which I thought, well, if that’s the price of having Ralph Fiennes
play him, then I’m willing to pay it, quite frankly. I kept in touch
in particular with the screenwriter. We got on very well and we had
a couple of very nice long lunches.
AP: You’re not going to the Oscars?
HARRIS: Not invited (laughs.) But I don’t mind that, I can’t say
that I would have particularly wanted to go.
AP: More people know the ending now. Has the response to the twist
changed at all?
HARRIS: It’s always divided opinion. I didn’t just sort of tag it on
at the end, the whole book leads up to it and it’s embedded in the
themes of the story. I knew when I came up with it that it was a
risk. I wanted to really do something startling and ask a big
question of the church.
I should think the reaction to the twist in the film is roughly the
same as the reaction to the twist in the book. Some people say, I
really love this book until I got to the final 20 pages and I threw
it across the room. But a lot of other people really like it. I
mean, they gasp, they’re startled. It makes them talk. It
challenges. And that’s what I want to do.
I write with some sympathy for the Catholic Church, but I want to
question some of its assumptions.
AP: Many people’s knowledge of what happens in a conclave is now
down to your storytelling.
HARRIS: I tried to be accurate. I’m a sort of slave to facts really.
All the processes of a conclave are laid out like canon law. What
happens every day and what the rules are, how many votes have to be
achieved and how they’re counted and then burned and so on. I read a
lot of accounts of past conclaves. It’s all supposed to be secret.
But of course, people gossip and things leak out. So one knows
roughly how the politics of it work, and I hope it is a fairly
accurate portrayal.

AP: Have you been following the news of Pope Francis' health this
week?
HARRIS: Yes, I have. I feel very sorry to hear it. I’ve been
refusing all requests to talk about it and a future conclave because
I think that’s in extreme bad taste. I don’t want to get any
publicity or to be seen to be trying to get anything out of it. The
death of anyone is a tragedy and I really hope he’s got some more
years yet.
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