The Borgias

2012 • Showtime
4.6
457 reviews
TV-MA
Rating
Eligible
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Season 3 episodes (10)

1 The Face of Death
4/14/13
As Pope Alexander (Jeremy Irons) fights for his life after being poisoned, the Cardinals jockey for position to take over the Papacy. Cesare (Francois Arnaud) and Micheletto (Sean Harris) trace the assassination plot back to its source, but Della Rovere (Colm Feore) is ready to make his move -- and his is not the only conspiracy. Catherina Sforza (Gina McKee) has dispatched her own personal assassin Rufio (Thure Lindhart) to dethrone the Borgia family. However, thanks to Lucrezia's quick thinking (Holliday Grainger), the family's grip on power may not be lost.
2 The Purge
4/21/13
Now fully recovered, Alexander tasks Cardinal Sforza (Peter Sullivan) with instigating an "inquisition" among the Cardinals who were politicking against him when his life lay in the balance. With the "evidence" he needs, Alexander dismisses and banishes all the Cardinals he does not trust. But one of them - Cardinal Orsini (David Dencik) - does not leave quietly, forcing Alexander to handle it with his bare hands. Meanwhile, Catherina Sforza (Gina McKee) orders Rufio (Thure Lindhart) to seek support from the mercenary warlords of the Romagna families - Orsini, Vitelli and Colonna. Lucrezia (Holliday Grainger) is annoyed that her in-laws to be - the royal family of Naples - will not welcome her son Giovanni at court; plus she is realizing her feelings for Cesare (Francois Arnaud) are becoming more than sexual than sisterly.
3 Siblings
4/28/13
As the purged Cardinals are dismissed and stripped of their titles and wealth, one of them - Cardinal Versucci (Vernon Dobtcheff) - angrily sets the Vatican Treasury ablaze after stealing a large sum. Incensed by the new King Ferdinand's (Matias Varela) arrogant refusal to accept Giovanni as Lucrezia's (Holliday Grainger) child, Cesare (Francois Arnaud) travels to Naples to fix the problem. Later, Cesare begins to consider an alliance with the old enemy France while Alexander doggedly sticks to his plan of allying with Naples, and therefore, Spain. After Lucrezia and Alfonso's wedding, Alfonso (Sebastian De Souza) realizes that the political sands are shifting - and not in his favour. Upset, he leaves Lucrezia alone on her wedding night, driving her into the arms of her own brother at last.
4 The Banquet of Chestnuts
5/5/13
Newly appointed Cardinal Farnese (Cyron Melville) - promoted at the request of his sister Giulia (Lotte Verbeek) - is placed in the Treasury and quickly discovers Versucci's theft. Micheletto (Sean Harris) is sent to find the wayward Cardinal. Meanwhile, upon hearing of Venice's request for help against Turkish pirates, Alexander (Jeremy Irons), seeing this as an opportunity to replenish the coffers, dramatically calls for a Crusade. Concerned about the loyalty of his new Cardinals, Giulia arranges an orgy for them - the "banquet of chestnuts" - but it is a trap and details of the Cardinals' sexual activities are recorded to extort their future loyalty. Elsewhere, King Ferdinand (Matias Varela) learns that Lucrezia (Holliday Grainger) and Alfonso's (Sebastian De Souza) marriage has not been consummated and demands a public display of their love-making. Lucrezia is humiliated, but the experience seems to increase the incestuous attraction between her and her brother.
5 The Wolf and the Lamb
5/12/13
Cesare's (Francois Arnaud) diplomatic mission to France is a success: guided through the complexities of the French court by his old advisor Machiavelli (Julian Bleach), Cesare makes an ally of Archbishop d'Amboise, a noble wife - Charlotte d'Albert - as well as a pledge of a military alliance against Milan and the Borgias' enemies. Back in Rome, the seductive and dangerously insane Bianca (Melia Kreiling) takes her own life, prompting Alexander and Cardinal Sforza (Peter Sullivan) to conspire to repay Gonzaga's cruel plot. Lucrezia travels to Naples accompanied by her husband, with Micheletto offering protection. King Ferdinand (Matias Varela) remains steadfast in his determination that little Giovanni will not be recognised at court. Upon learning this, Lucrezia plots against him with a recipe of poisonous mushrooms, but Micheletto will handle the matter on his own.
6 Relics
5/19/13
When Cesare lands in northern Italy with a French army, Alexander is furious at what he sees as a challenge to his authority, but reluctantly accedes to Cesare's plan to destroy the Sforza dynasty, starting with Ludovico, Duke of Milan. Catherina (Gina McKee), meanwhile, has come up with a plot of her own: biological warfare. With the help of Rufio (Thure Lindhart) she sends a plague-infected cloth, wrapped around a false message of peace, to Alexander. Cesare orders it destroyed unopened, but ambitious new Cardinal Constanzo disobeys and keeps the message for his own purposes, and soon, his household is in the grip of the plague. Concerned about the lack of funds for his Crusade, Alexander imposes punitive taxes on the newly arrived Jewish community. However one clever member of the community, Mattai (Brendan Cowell) claims to be able to procure a holy relic, the long lost Spear of Longinus. Cardinals Farnese and Petrucci vie to provide the Pope with the "real" relic, but Mattai gains the Pope's respect and an unlikely alliance is born.
7 Lucrezia's Gambit
5/26/13
Cesare burns Constanzo's palace - and the Cardinal with it - in order to contain the plague, while Micheletto is love struck with the beautiful young Pascal. Lucrezia, aware that the political wind has changed towards France and away from Naples, seeks a Neapolitan power base for herself and her family. There are two candidates to replace Ferdinand as King: arrogant and hostile Prince Raphael and kind and friendly Prince Frederigo. When Frederigo is apparently poisoned and almost dies, Lucrezia finds "evidence" of Raphael's guilt and blackmails Raphael into giving up his claim. Her ally, Frederigo, is crowned King. But has she made the right choice?
8 Tears of Blood
6/2/13
Pilgrims are flooding to Rome for the Jubilee year celebrations, and the Spear of Longinus is the centerpiece of the show. However Catherina Sforza has a plan to frustrate Alexander's lucrative festival. Across the sea in Kefalonia, the Turkish fleet is destroyed by Mattai's (Brendan Cowell) Jewish contacts - Alexander shows his gratitude with a Bull exempting the community from taxes. Meanwhile, Lucrezia senses a change in newly crowned Frederigo, and realizes that she is under constant watch from the royal guard. The Borgias have walked into a trap: Lucrezia learns that Frederigo faked his near death to get Raphael out of the way, while at the same time in Rome, Cesare and Micheletto discover that the latter's lover Pascal is a spy working for Rufio (Thure Lindhart), reporting to a conspiracy of Catherina Sforza and King Frederigo of Naples. Lucrezia is not an honored princess in Naples, she is a hostage against any military moves against the Sforza family.
9 The Gunpowder Plot
6/9/13
Devastated by his betrayal by Pascal, Micheletto kills his lover and subsequently disappears. Devastated by the loss of his loyal lieutenant, Cesare races to Naples to rescue Lucrezia, but she has already escaped her captors - with the aid of a sleeping potion. Brother and sister are reunited on the road back to Rome, and are so overjoyed to see one another that Alfonso (Sebastian De Souza) begins to suspect that their relationship seems more than that of ordinary siblings. Back in Rome, Alfonso becomes sullen and almost abusive, drinking heavily. Alexander, meanwhile, has come up with another plan with his friend Mattai (Brendan Cowell): they scheme to corner the market in Italian sulphur, thus denying anyone else the ability to manufacture gunpowder. Still, Alexander does not trust Cesare, who quickly uncovers his father's plot, but it is Mattai who persuades father and son to reconcile.
10 The Prince
6/16/13
Alexander and Cesare are reconciled at last, and the Pope reveals that the Papal Armies have been strengthened and re-equipped with the money saved from the Crusade and the proceeds of the Jubilee. Now, the Borgias are ready to move against their enemies the Sforzas and are ready to take their first step towards their ultimate goal: to carve out a hereditary kingdom across the heart of Italy. Cesare marches his fearsome army to lay siege to Catherina Sforza's castle at Forli. Catherina is determined to resist despite the artillery bombardment and the danger of starvation in the bitter winter. Micheletto (Sean Harris) reappears from the shadows - his broken heart will not yet let him return to Cesare's service, but he does advise Cesare of weak spots in Forli's defences. Back in Rome, Cesare finds that Alfonso (Sebastian De Souza) has become even more aggressive and Cesare plans to murder him. But circumstances become deadly when a scuffle breas out between Cesare and a drunk Alfonso. The doctor reports that Alfonso will certainly die, slowly and painfully over several days. Devastated, Lucrezia turns to her potions to end his life painlessly with Cesare vowing that now she will be his for good.

About this show

Oscar® winner Jeremy Irons stars in the epic Showtime Original Series THE BORGIAS, the explosive story of history's original crime family. Conspiring with his ruthless sons Cesare and Juan, and poisonously seductive daughter Lucrezia, the charismatic Rodrigo Borgia's reign as Pope Alexander VI embroils the Catholic Church -- and all of Europe -- in scandal. From Academy Award® winner Neil Jordan comes the compelling drama of the world's most powerful and notorious family.

Ratings and reviews

4.6
457 reviews
Gabriel Giella - AmalfiFlavors
May 15, 2020
I was in a Roman Catholic seminary in the early 2000s and I am struck by how closely the patterns of thought and in some cases behavior rampant in the church at the time is still very much alive and well, according to my experience and observation. In that sense, viewers should be very much aware that they've captured a certain ethos behind the cloth in the church. Well done. Just remember, this just as much a story of the present as of the past...
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Betty Cosgrove
December 27, 2012
I watched all 9 episodes and was hoping the plot and dialogue would become more meaningful or create more suspense & intrigue. While the costumes are fantastic and the cast excellent, this production suffers unfortunately from uninspired script writing. I'm disappointed overall, but maybe because "The Tudors" has now "set the bar" for Showtime excellence. Sorry to conclude that this drama series pales greatly by comparison.
16 people found this review helpful
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John Sohn
March 8, 2014
This was probably the best semi-historical series I had seen since HBO's Rome. There were obviously certain parts a little lacking in acting ability but this was not the majority. The fact that they will not conclude the history or the series and left it with such a cliff hanger is more than just a little bit annoying.
15 people found this review helpful
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