Spoilers! Spoilers for all three seasons of The Borgias.
The Borgias isn’t an easy show to watch, but it’s an easy show to love. Or hate. It marches out a slew of historical figures and twists their lives and events into a fictitious plot barely resembling historical accounts. It’s the gossip rags of the sixteen hundreds brought to alive. There’s sex and corruption, murder and mayhem, and it’s all centred around one family. The original crime family as I’ve seen some say.
| The real portrait of Rodrigo Borgia |
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| The Pope and all his ladies... |
Cesare in particular is the nexus of people and alliances. He yearns for a career in the military but his father has other plans for him and this fuels Cesare’s troubled relationship with his brother. Their mutual jealousy that dominates the familiar interactions just as Cesare’s incestuous love for his sister provides the long plot for the show. Neil Jordan and co. take the time to build that delicate relationship showing care guiding the characters to where the story must take them. There are no justifications, just reasons that make it understandable.
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| The real Lucrezia Borgia |
Even with all these delicious connections and the underlying political machinations Cesare operates for his father, the most interesting character in the series is Micheletto played by Sean Harris. He is Cesare’s henchman, his loyal assassin, and a man who kills even himself for his Lord.
From the beginning where Cesare turns his would be killer into a loyal servant, the chemistry between François Arnaud and Sean Harris is what kept me riveted to the show. Seemingly for no other reason than that he feels like it, Micheletto decides to make Cesare the focus of his life. Thus everything that is important to Cesare becomes important to Micheletto and he’s willing to suffer tremendous pain to keep his master’s secrets.
It’s love at first sight. Quite literally. The show never says it explicitly, but considering Micheletto’s background revealed in the second season (which differs greatly from the historical accounts) and his short love affair with one of Leonardo da Vinci’s models, Pascal (Charlie Carrick), it’s quite obvious that Cesare is the love of Micheletto’s life. And certain scenes after Micheletto’s departure make me think that love isn’t quite as one sided as Micheletto believes.
Although, I’m fixating on Cesare as the catalyst for the relationships and the political intrigue of the show, I have very little to say about his character. Almost as little as I had to say about his father. Maybe that is because after Juan’s death, Cesare becomes somewhat an aloof figure. He starts his long journey down to the pits of hell and step by step he’s determined to reach his destination.
Only we never get to see him get there. The ending of The Prince leaves many questions unanswered, but I have to wonder if it’s not for the best. If not only implying to the imminent doom is a more powerful closure to this story that began from the middle than witnessing a rushed montage of characters succumbing to their deaths in faraway lands and absent from Rome. It might even be a better ending than Pope Alexander IV being denied absolution on his deathbed.
I’m going to miss this show.







I watched 1 ep, sex bores me so it was goodbye :/
ReplyDeleteI was really surprised that, more or less, I liked the show. It was fun to compare the fictional Borgias to the real ones and don't let me start about Micheletto ;p.
ReplyDeleteI don't blame you ;)
ReplyDeleteIt was uneven in places, but the assassin kept me interested. Jordan really created a beautiful character and Harris gave him just enough edges to make him truly interesting. And I can't emphasise enough how much I loved the fact that they left some thins unsaid. They didn't feel the need to hammer it down to the stupid viewers, but they took their time to tell the story they wanted to tell.
Yeah. There was that, but I managed to ignore it. Mostly.
ReplyDeleteHave you watched Da Vinci's Demons? You'd probably like that show.
ReplyDeleteI have. I think The Borgias was better. Some epis of Da Vinci's were really more like a slapstick comedy e.g. the one in which Leo was fighting Dracula.
ReplyDeleteIt was easy to ignore - ESP with a glass of wine standing near you.
ReplyDeleteVery true. They treated the viewers like intelligent human beings, not like apes.
ReplyDeleteI have not. A trusted friend called the show boring, so I never bothered.
ReplyDeleteIt's rare enough to deserve a special commendation in this day and age.
ReplyDeleteNo wine, just the internet. And later, nail polish.
ReplyDeleteWhere is the will there is the way lol!
ReplyDeleteThanks for this review! I never even read about this before, and I think I would enjoy watching it. I used to read Jean Plaidy as a child, and really loved her book about Lucrezia Borgia.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome. Now that the show is finished you can make your own schedule for it. Should I look up Jean Plaidy, because this is the first time I've heard of her?
ReplyDelete