Da Vinci-s Demons -
However, by Season 3, the wheels come off. Due to budget cuts and a rushed finale, the grand conspiracy pivots from historical fiction into full-blown sci-fi/fantasy. We get immortal alchemists, psychic dreams, and a literal “Man in the Wall” made of molten gold. The final season is rushed, fractured, and clearly compressed from a planned five-season arc into eight episodes. It leaves a sour taste, but it doesn’t erase the genius of what came before. Rewatching Da Vinci’s Demons in 2026, it feels prophetic. It paved the way for shows like The Great (anachronistic historical dramedy) and Foundation (visualizing abstract thought). It was one of the first shows to treat a historical intellectual not as a dusty relic, but as an action hero .
If you love historical fiction that isn’t afraid to lie to you; if you want to see a hero solve problems by drawing them in mid-air; if you have ever looked at a bird and wished you could follow it into the sky— Da Vinci’s Demons is for you.
In the golden age of “prestige television,” we were spoiled with anti-heroes, dragons, and methamphetamine. But nestled between the political machinations of Game of Thrones and the gritty realism of Breaking Bad was a strange, swashbuckling gem that tried to answer a question nobody else was asking: What if Leonardo da Vinci was actually the world’s first superhero?
Created by David S. Goyer (the mind behind The Dark Knight trilogy and Blade ) and aired on Starz from 2013 to 2015, Da Vinci’s Demons is not a historical biopic. It is a gonzo, glorious, and gloriously messy historical fantasy. It is Assassin’s Creed by way of Sherlock —a fever dream of clockwork ornithopters, labyrinthine conspiracies, and a Florentine genius who fights the Pope with a tank built out of church bells. Da Vinci-s Demons
It is a visceral experience. It is a show that believes, with every fiber of its being, that a man with a quill can change the world faster than a man with a sword.
Watch it for the flying machines. Stay for the scream in the Sistine Chapel. Forgive it for the rushed ending. Because for 30 glorious hours, you will believe that one man’s imagination is the only revolution that matters.
“The secret of the universe is not a secret. It is a door. And I have the key.” – Leonardo da Vinci (probably) However, by Season 3, the wheels come off
Da Vinci’s Demons : The Maddening, Brilliant Blueprint for a Renaissance Superhero
But Leo has a ghost: his mother, Caterina, who vanished when he was a child. This personal quest for the truth collides with a global conspiracy known as the and the “Book of Leaves” —a mythical repository of all knowledge (a stand-in for the actual Codex Atlanticus ). To find his mother and the Book, Leo must battle the ruthless Pope Sixtus IV, navigate the political snake pit of the Medici bank, and invent the future one impossible gadget at a time. The Character: Not Your Old Master’s Da Vinci Tom Riley’s performance is the anchor of the storm. His Leonardo is a whirlwind of ADHD-fueled mania. He talks too fast, fights like a brawler, and sees the world in exploded diagrams. When he looks at a wall, he sees the scaffolding behind it. When he looks at a bird, he sees the torque and lift of a flying machine.
8/10 (Perfect first two seasons, messy final act). The final season is rushed, fractured, and clearly
For the first two seasons, the mystery of the Book of Leaves —a pre-flood archive of ancient science—drives a thrilling global chase. Leo travels from the sewers of Rome to the temples of the Incas (yes, really) and the caves of the Middle East. The show argues, rather beautifully, that the Church suppressed science not out of malice, but out of fear that knowledge would make man equal to God.
Three seasons. Thirty episodes. One perfect, chaotic vision. Here is why Da Vinci’s Demons deserves your attention, even a decade later. The year is 1477. A young, arrogant, and impossibly handsome Leonardo da Vinci (Tom Riley) is at the height of his creative powers in Florence. He is not yet the old master of the Mona Lisa ; he is a rock star. He is a heretic, a brawler, a lover, and a genius who is bored by the slow pace of human progress.