Borgia 1x03 Access
His solution is Borgia elegance: he baptizes Djem in a private ceremony... with water, not oil. The sacrament is invalid. Djem realizes he has been used as a prop. His rage is silent. He looks at Rodrigo and whispers: “You will die surrounded by the corpses of your children.”
Unlike the glossy melodrama of The Borgias (Showtime), Tom Fontana’s Borgia (Canal+/ZDF) is a gritty, political, and psychological horror show dressed in Renaissance robes. Episode 3 is where the series stops introducing characters and starts vivisecting them. The Price of the Papal Chair Logline: As Rodrigo Borgia settles into the papacy, his first diplomatic crisis—welcoming a deposed Moorish prince into Rome—becomes a crucible that tests his family's loyalty, his mistress's ambition, and his own nascent tyranny. borgia 1x03
Rodrigo’s solution is pure Borgia: leverage. He invites (the eponymous "Moor"), the exiled brother of Sultan Bayezid II, to Rome. Djem is a golden hostage—Bayezid will pay 40,000 ducats per year for his captivity. It’s extortion as statecraft. His solution is Borgia elegance: he baptizes Djem
It is the first time Rodrigo is silent.
Moral clarity, happy endings, or characters who bathe regularly. Next episode preview: 1x04 – “The Confession” — Lucrezia makes her first true friend. Rodrigo makes his first true enemy. And Cesare discovers that poison is quieter than the sword. Djem realizes he has been used as a prop
The episode opens not in Vatican splendor, but in the muddy streets of Rome. A leper approaches the Vatican gates. While guards recoil, Cardinal Borgia (now Pope Alexander VI, played with reptilian weariness by John Doman) dismounts and kisses the man’s stumps. It is a calculated act of humilitas . The camera lingers on Cesare’s face—fascinated, disgusted, learning. This is power as performance. Act One: The Viper’s Nest The New Pope, The Old Problems Rodrigo has been Pope for three weeks. The Vatican is bankrupt. The College of Cardinals, led by the venomous Giuliano della Rovere (Colm Feore, chewing marble), refuses to fund his crusade against the Ottoman Turks. Della Rovere’s logic is icy: “You bought the chair, Alexander. Now sit in it and starve.”




