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The New Pope finally meets The Young Pope in a satiating, beatific finale

TV Reviews Recap
The New Pope finally meets The Young Pope in a satiating, beatific finale

The opening titles of this episode give us the showdown we’d been expecting since the announcement that Jude Law would be in this season: They pit the two popes against each other. We cut back and forth between Brannox, walking in slow motion through the Vatican in a conscious echo of the first episode of The Young Pope, and Lenny, walking through his spiritual beach dreamscape as he returns to the world of the living. It’s a neat idea, especially since, as we realize, the sequence is edited to make it seem as if the two men are walking toward each other. Sparks are about to fly! Right?

Not so much. This final episode of The New Pope is great, and not just because it contains something like a third of the season’s plot. It bounces between tones, settings, and ideas, moving a confidence the rest of the season has seemed to lack. That is, ultimately, largely because of the chaos spark that is Pius XIII. When Lenny and Brannox finally meet, it’s not even a contest—Brannox attempts to extend his ring so that the emeritus pope might kiss it, but Lenny (clad in a classic priest’s outfit) ignores him entirely, and takes control of the room. It’s by design that this happens, since Brannox’s insecurities are such that he should shrink away from a living saint. But it still doesn’t quite make up for the energy imbalance: Lenny is the only one in the opening titles who winks at the camera. Brannox is a man, but Lenny is something more.

John Paul III does, admittedly, get a huge boost out of being the relatable, fallible, human pope. The opening titles are a fake-out: He’s heading to deliver an address, rather than confront Lenny. The photos Sofia leaked have earned him a huge following, including a group of punks who are seemingly devout Catholics now because the pope had piercings in the ’80s. In the speech, he speaks on behalf of people who have been marginalized, bullied, oppressed. He’s channeling his anger toward his parents, and it shows. This is the most fire Malkovich has shown since all the way back in episode three, and it’s truly welcome to see here. When Brannox tells the crowd “We shall no longer be forgotten,” he’s identifying himself with the millions listening to his speech, with the common mass of humanity. And his story concludes accordingly—rather than Lenny’s dramatic removal from the world, Brannox gets to live as a part of it.

The Young Pope was less a season of television than a fever dream, a bizarre exploration of the institution of the church, the personage of Lenny Belardo, and the nature of faith writ large. The New Pope is, for better and for worse, a season of television. Several plot threads are intentionally wrapped up in this episode. Faisal is released from jail, and reunited with Sister Caterina. Bauer gets sent to his next posting in Korea, and seems prepared to marry his paid companion-slash-girlfriend. None of this would have happened in The Young Pope, simply because it did not care about closure. The season even has a happy ending for The New Pope, in the form of a laicized John Brannox actually earning the affection of his parents—and winding up with a newly single Sofia Dubois, who has sent her ex-husband, Spalletta, and Guicciardini, the Italian finance minister, to prison.

When Sofia tells Voiello that she plans to resign from the Vatican, he responds with a sense of grim acceptance: “Sooner or later you all fall in love.” It’s a sentiment that helps ground Voiello, since he does his best to avoid attachments that could prevent him from doing his job. But—and I say this as one of the world’s biggest Voiello fans—it highlights one of the biggest holes in The New Pope. There’s no indication here that Voiello is still suffering the sting of heartbreak from his failed romance with Sister Mary, or even thinking about it when he discusses love with Sofia. I don’t think The New Pope needed to explicitly reference her, but I don’t think Silvio Orlando is communicating that as part of what’s motivating Voiello here, a rare thin moment in his characterization of the master manipulator.

Still, this episode is, overall, a fantastic showcase for Voiello—and for all that I’m mixed on certain parts of this episode, I’m thinking about those faults precisely because the rest of it is so good. Putting aside the ending, in which Voiello finally does accomplishment his dream and become the real new pope (with a fantastic assist from the ever-creepy Don Cavallo), there’s also Voiello’s return to being classic comic relief. Confronted with a crisis, Lenny’s first instinct is to foment revolution, dangling the prospect of an outright holy war motivated by his resurrection. And Voiello is the one who takes the brunt of that plan, in many ways: “Take notes, Voiello,” Lenny says, discussing the speech John Paul III will have to give in response. “I have to dictate what he will say.”

In fact, it feels like The New Pope worked backward from this ending, in which the church has to come together to deal with the crisis: a hostage situation, in which the caliphate seemingly takes several children, along with the priest serving as their teacher, hostage on the small Italian island of Ventotene—a situation we learn about in a lengthy shot of Voiello delivering exposition to Girolamo’s grave. The hostage situation completely diverts any potential crucifix-measuring conflict the two popes might have had, instead subsuming it into a pressure cooker situation.

This apparent conflict—between the Islamic fundamentalists and the supposed Catholic moderate, between Lenny and Brannox, between prayer and action—becomes a synecdoche for the broader themes that have animated the rest of the season. If I had to distill those themes down, I’d say they congeal into a lesson roughly along these lines: fundamentalism emerges from doubt and insecurity, motivating both the caliphate and, more importantly, the Lenny cult. Being able to live in that doubt and mystery, and continue to live anyway, is a virtue. Certainly, it’s what Lenny preaches during his final speech to the faithful, in which he raises, then promptly dismisses, the questions surrounding his own existence. He asks the crowd in St. Peter’s Square, and us the viewers, to let the mystery be. That mystery is the object of worship for the church, and, in a sense, for us.

I suppose The New Pope has to embrace this type of ambiguity in some ways. But isn’t it more fun when the characters have to respond to certainty? After chastising Lenny effectively (because the kidnappers have murdered the priest), Brannox essentially bails on Rome, leaving Lenny to become the one and only pope again. Eventually, Lenny takes the one, decisive action of his second papacy: He shows up on the island, and his presence gets the terrorists to stand down and reveal themselves as the Lenny cult, pretending to be Islamic terrorists in order to draw Lenny out of hiding. I have mixed feelings about this development—I’m delighted that the season did not boil down to “scary Muslim terrorists,” which would have been quite rough, and it’s genuinely interesting to see The New Pope pull off a sort of twist. And though it would have been nice to have some payoff to Esther’s spiritual emptiness, there’s something honest and tragic in her not getting that closure. The forever-unnamed leader of the cult compares Lenny’s body to a “body of Christ,” something she’s constantly looking for but can never quite get, an intangible challenge to faith that mirrors Esther’s season-long dark night of the soul. Is their glimpse of Lenny enough? Where do they go from here? We’ll likely never find out.

Sorrentino isn’t obligated to give answers to any of the questions he’s raised, but he is great at providing them. Compare the entire Ventotene scene to the finale’s highlight, an absolutely masterful sequence in which Lenny brings the cardinals to heel. It’s not where he ends up by the conclusion of the episode, and it’s a bit odd to see Pius XIII go through his entire Young Pope arc in half an hour or so, but it’s still a joy to watch carried in on his palanquin as he was in the fifth (and best) episode of The Young Pope. In this speech, Lenny uses his full saintliness, asserting that the fact his return demands fealty from the other cardinals. What would you do if you were in their position? We’re simply watching Lenny crush everyone, up to and including the current pontiff—and it scratched an itch I’d forgotten I had.

This finale gives at least some answers. Lenny confirms he was present when Brannox stood at Adam’s grave, which seems to prove beyond a shadow of a doubt, again, that Lenny’s spiritual appearances were not simply metaphorical. “Did you think you were alone?” (On the other hand, his initial response to the kidnapping is to assume it was the caliphate, and to double down on this belief once an emissary of the caliph tells Voiello in person that they were not responsible.) He appears to confirm, in his final speech, the basic decency of the Middle Way, which Brannox has succeeding in preaching to the church even if it was never his doctrine to begin with. Having done that, he can, as he puts it, “return to [him]self,” and give in to his desire to make a life with Sofia. All is calm in the world.

One thing, however, isn’t a mystery: Eventually, Lenny goes back into the ocean, returning to the sea from which he came. In a startling sequence, he fulfills the promise he made back in Venice and embraces everyone in the crowd, showing a level of basic human connection that might have been unthinkable even a few minutes earlier in the episode. And, looking up into the stars at God’s house (one of many, many more callbacks to the first episodes of The Young Pope), everything goes quiet. Lenny dies for real. It’s an evocative, calm, poignant depiction of having fulfilled his purpose, and a surprising level of closure to his story. I’m glad we got that, even if I didn’t expect it. And really, after all this time, I’m glad the church got the pope it really deserved all along: Voiello, who we leave fighting with Esther’s son Pius. Are all Pius’ a pain in the ass in this world? Maybe, but we love them all the same

Stray observations

  • Brannox tells Gutierrez: “When I want, Gutierrez, I know how to take the stage.” I wonder what he was waiting for?
  • “A good idea is one that minimizes damages and maximizes profits. Outside of here they call it capitalism.” Gutierrez, no! Or maybe, yes? (Capitalism is bad.)
  • Lenny says that the heart is “an organ that beats,” which is an incredible jumping-off point for a dance album.
  • “I don’t understand. Who is the pope now?” I’m so glad Aguirre got one more chance to make me laugh.
  • Thanks for hanging out! I think this season is pretty clearly a touch less magical than The Young Pope, but it’s still so, so much better than almost anything else on TV, and it’s miraculous that it exists at all. See you all when we return in 2023 for The Fresh Pope.

26 Comments

  • dabow--av says:

    An overall fantastic season that suffered a little too much of ‘When are they going to get to the fireworks factory’ in the first half.I did not see the twist regarding the terrorists coming at all and I love the fact that Sorrentino has enough faith in his audience to draw their own truths about what he does and does not show us.

  • haodraws-av says:

    Is this a super late review or did they just air this episode in the US? I’m pretty sure my Ma watched this episode like a month ago. I remember her exclaiming “Did they just kill him again? JUST LIKE THAT?”.

    • iwontlosethisone-av says:

      Just aired in the US.

      • haodraws-av says:

        I would’ve thought the show was “prestige” enough to air simultaneously. That’s weird. Thanks.

        • roboj-av says:

          This show wasn’t 100% produced by HBO. Canal and SkyAtlantic did most of the heavy lifting and aired it first in Europe. HBO just merely redistributed it in North America.

        • nilus-av says:

          You would think but just like you guys getting US shows months later we still get international shows days, weeks, months and even years later sometimes. Given the fact that we have a high speed global communication network now, it seems odd that this still happens but I figure its mostly a problem for non-tech savy boomers.For a while the Syfy channel(god that name is so stupid) would play Doctor Who Christmas specials in like April.  BBC America finally got the rights around series four of New Who and started airing new episodes just a few hours after the BBC release. 

          • antononymous-av says:

            I think the move to BBC America happened with Matt Smith’s first episode, and thank Rassilon for that because it was pretty much impossible to avoid spoilers for the Eccleston and Tennant years. Of course, BBC America edited down the longer episodes (the 60 minute with commercials version of The Eleventh Hour is a travesty). Fortunately that seems to have stopped.

          • roboj-av says:

            Its not odd for the reasons that you mention: they have to work out rights, distribution, and commercial/legal/marketing and it sometimes takes days, weeks, months and even years. BBC America/BBC is the same company, so its a lot easier. Its different for HBO, and Canal, Pathe, etc, etc.

    • 9evermind-av says:

      Maybe she was referring to the first season?

  • zorrocat310-av says:

    To absorb this episode, I had to watch a second time. It took so many turns in addressing fanaticism, what constitutes the Church, and the power of an institution. The cult that pretended to be an Islamic terror organization, but instead became a terror organization to insist the Church reveal that Pius XII lives….whew was that a bridge too far? Maybe, but all I know, even more so on second viewing is that Jude Law was phenomenal in this finale and the sheer audacity of coming to embrace the throng of faithful and to die during their crowd surfing devotional mirroring the Pieta was sublime.But did it happen? The Basilica was blown up. Ehh, who cares? The New Pope ended with so much gorgeous resolution and a brilliant homage to THE SHINING………this show was a goddamn miracle.

  • iwontlosethisone-av says:

    I think this season is pretty clearly a touch less magical than The Young PopeI beg to differ. Last season was novel and fun; this season was magical and among the most stylish television I have ever seen. It may not be as tight but it’s so much more ambitious and almost always successful at dialing up the ideas from last season. It was so well written, shot, acted, and soundtracked. I’m glad we got a glimpse at Vioello as The Next Pope—he’s one of the best characters ever.

    • kumagorok-av says:

      It may not be as tightI agree with the rest of your sentiment, but The Young Pope wasn’t tight at all. It was a rambling hodge-podge of ideas, with characters suddenly appearing front and center and then being forgotten two episodes later. As the reviewer said, The Young Pope was a happening, The New Pope was a TV show.

      • iwontlosethisone-av says:

        That probably wasn’t the best word choice from a narrative standpoint. I guess I meant it was more contained in scope and consistent in treatment. Media attention and novelty aside, I feel the opposite of your last sentence about the actual content.

    • stuartsaysstop-av says:

      Hands down better than the first season, whose inscrutability actually saw me dropping off for several months before returning to finish the last few episodes. I loved it, of course, but this season seemed tighter, more focused, while still maintaining the mystery that made me love it in the first place. Any my GOD was it stylish, visually, aurally, everything. I actually made it a point to get stoned before every episode — something I almost never do with narrative dramas — because it all coalesced into an absolute feast for the senses (only downside was I overcooked a pork roast because I was so enthralled and didn’t hear the timer go off). Clearly there’s an opening to keep it going, but I’m going to miss everything about this season so much.

  • dobuspr13-av says:

    What was the point of him coming back? Why did he die? Ugh.

  • uselessbeauty1987-av says:

    I really loved this and the final scene, replete with its Shining gag and Voiello as Pope was brilliant. 

  • dgstan2-av says:

    > it’s miraculous that it exists at allThis.  

  • seotinwdolrtes-av says:

    Wait, these two shows are related!?!?!  I thought it was just a weird coincidence that “Shows About Popes” were popular now.

  • windshowling-av says:

    Brilliant end to a brilliant series. Lenny’s arc from TYP finally feels complete. One of Jude Law’s best roles of all time, Silvio Orlando and Malkovich also did really amazing work here and all 3 deserve nominations. It’s also just a staggeringly well shot show, as TYP was. TYP was the best show of 2016 and this will likely be the best of 2020. I’ve heard Sorrentino has ideas for a third and finals series, which I’d be all for as Voiello has become a pretty amazing character, though Lenny would of course be missed greatly. 

    • NeverDauntedRadioNetwork-av says:

      Sorrentino’s idea for the closing chapter in the Trilogy is a prequel, and Lenny would be there for it. In the Young Pope, Lenny was the Father. In the New Pope, Lenny was the Son. It stands to reason that in the closing chapter…he would be the Holy Spirit?

  • cosmiccow4ever-av says:

    I haven’t watched this show and didn’t realize the popes didn’t share scenes. This is the Billions model, with two huge stars that only meet in the finale, so 90% of the show can be filmed around the stars’ schedules.

  • nilus-av says:

    So no super powered Pope fight? I want to see John Malakovich say “The Power of Christ compels you” and shoot lasers out his hand while Jude Law begins to float, his hair turns white and he goes SUPER SAint-YAN

  • hunderscorex-av says:

    There are a handful of things I’ve watched in the last decade or so of “prestige TV” that are as inextricably someone’s singular Creative Vision as TYP/TNP – Atlanta comes to mind, as does LEGION, and that’s about the highest praise I can give.

    What a weird, beautiful, show. I’d be down for a third season, but I’m not sure what they’d even DO beyond The Adventures of Pope Voiello (did we get his Papal Name?)

  • pius-xiii-av says:

    I find it so fulfilling and fascinating that the terrorists turn out to be Catholics. The show does something theologically profound, if only by accident, in having Lenny’s apparent “resurrection” forcing him to come to terms with the consequences of his own original sin – his discompassionate sense of righteousness that led him to desire a church of pure fanatics in the first season leads to some pretty horrible consequences in this season that he has to contend with and clean up and repent of. We just don’t realize until the last few minutes how messed up his view of the world in the beginning truly was.As a Christian, it’s a profound echo of the idea of Resurrection before final judgment – maybe we’ll all be faced with the consequences of our own lack of love when we come face to face with the God of Love.

  • tsoakley93-av says:

    Am i the only one who felt repeatedly gutpunched in the way this season gradually— inevitably— broke Esther’s spirit and dragged her into tragic depths of depravity? The moment it became clear her ‘pimp’ had likely broken other women just like her… made me feel sick for what was likely to follow. I really hoped she’d get a redemption arc, but alas, she’s destined to serve as a tragic martyr for the moral abhorrences this show seeks so earnestly to root out and highlight to viewers.

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