The finale of is one of the most audacious in television history. Without spoiling too much, the episode takes place largely in Venice, where the Pope goes to confront a mystical, bed-ridden priest named Father Cheyenne. What follows is a hallucinatory sequence involving a turtle, a confession, and a miracle. The final shot—Lenny addressing a massive crowd in St. Peter’s Square—is ambiguous. Does he finally believe? Does God answer? The camera holds on Law’s face, and the answer is written in terror and grace. Why You Should Watch The Young Pope Season 1 In an era of streaming content designed to be consumed as background noise, The Young Pope Season 1 demands attention. It is slow, liturgical, and deliberate. It rewards patience with profound emotional payoffs.
But the season is not nihilistic. Through flashbacks and slow revelations, we realize that Lenny’s fierce conservatism is a form of prayer. He demands perfection from the Church because he demands perfection from a God who failed him. He forbids sex and pleasure because pleasure was what took his parents away. Music supervisor Lele Marchitelli makes radical choices. The score mixes classical sacred music with tracks by Aphex Twin, Devendra Banhart, and Jónsi. The recurring use of “Lullaby” by The Cure becomes Lenny’s unofficial anthem—a song about sleep, motherhood, and the desire to be held.
Then watch it again to catch the prayers hidden in the silence.