New York Post

IT'S A KILLER PLOT

‘Leonardo’: da Vinci as a murder suspect in European thriller on The CW

- By JOEL KELLER

THE CW has imported a lot of shows to fill in its schedule, especially during the summer. Not all of them skew young, and “Leonardo,” which premiered in Europe in 2021, is an example. As the title indicates, it’s about the creative life of Leonardo da Vinci (Aidan Turner), couched in a murder mystery that ensnares him as its prime suspect.

“I was expecting a giant, lightning bolts flying out of your fingers,” says a voice as we see a scene, shot at floor level, of a man franticall­y looking for something as the authoritie­s come to arrest him for murder.

That person is Leonardo da Vinci, and he’s been arrested by authoritie­s in Milan for murdering his muse Caterina de Cremona (Matilda De Angelis). Questionin­g him is Stefano Giraldi (Freddie Highmore, “The Good Doctor”), an Officer of the Duchy of Milan. As Giraldi tries to figure out whether Leonardo actually killed Caterina, the artist starts telling the story of how they met. “An enigma like the sky, that’s what she was to me,” Leonardo says. Flash back to Florence, 16 years earlier. Caterina is being used as a model for art students of the exacting master Andrea del Verrocchio (Giancarlo Giannini). Everyone else in the class considers her just a model, but Leonardo sees something in her and examines every detail about her, from the calluses on her hands to the candle wax in her hair. He tries to tell her that she has “a quality,” but it comes out wrong and she leaves his presence insulted.

While his classmates are concerned about del Verrocchio picking his first apprentice, Leonardo sits at the pub watching his hand move in candleligh­t. He approaches Caterina to be his personal model, and they get along well; he tells her that he draws what he sees in a person, not what he thinks other people will like. She pleads with him not to include a scar on her back, but he can’t help it; that’s part of what he sees in her. At first, she’s devastated, but then she brings the painting to del Verrocchio. Between that and the anonymous sketches of a crane that was able to allow a cross to be added to the steeple of the church, del Verrocchio decides that Leonardo has “the gift” and makes him his first apprentice.

His first work for the master attracts the attention of Ludovico Sforza (James D’Arcy), the Duke of Milan, who offers Leonardo a job. He turns it down to keep working for the master. But his work with the master has cost him Caterina, who has started a relationsh­ip with his rival.

Given the fact that we’re going to be showing da Vinci in his Florence days, the series Da Vinci’s Demons comes to mind.

“Leonardo,” created by Frank Spotnitz and Steve Thompson (Turner, Highmore and D’Arcy are among the executive producers), could have gotten bogged down in the historical part of da Vinci’s early years. But by couching the flashbacks in terms of a murder mystery, the veteran showrunner­s put the story in a place to be more contemit, porary and faster-paced.

Like Da Vinci’s Demons before Leonardo is trying to show sides of the master that might be new to peoof ple who only know him from his most famous works and designs. How much of Turner’s depiction da Vinci is based on actual factual evidence is unknown, but the “Poldark” star infuses that sense of wonarchide­r that led da Vinci to be such a unique artist, alchemist, and tect/engineer.

The key to this series is the supporting cast, from Highmore to D’Arcy to De Angelis. All of them put in fine performanc­es, and it brings up the quality of the series, even when the script sometimes bogs down in speechifyi­ng, like when master del Verrocchio talks to Leonardo about the different kinds of light that an artist needs to capture in his work.

Given that the show has already been picked up for a second season, it’s not a stretch to say that Leonardo was a success in England, Italy, and the other European countries that streamed/aired the show when it debuted in 2021. Given the CW’s new initiative to make its programmin­g match its viewers’ age group, it’s also not a stretch to think it will import the second season at some point.

Joel Keller writes for Decider.com.

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 ?? ?? Matilda De Angelis and Aidan Turner in “Leonardo,” which airs on The CW. Below: co-star Flavio Parenti as Bernardo Bembo.
Matilda De Angelis and Aidan Turner in “Leonardo,” which airs on The CW. Below: co-star Flavio Parenti as Bernardo Bembo.

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