Borgia |
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Title: | Borgia |
Genre: | Drama |
Length: | 38 x one hour minutes |
Cat.No.: | A 035 11529 0000 |
NEWS/Daily Kos: A Tale of Two Borgia TV Shows: As Usual, Americans Get the Inferior Basically, there are two premium cable TV shows currently on air about the Borgias.... |
Beta Film delivers in Cannes the best from and to the world with “Velvet”, “Mammon” and “Wonderland” At this year's MIP TV, Beta Film is delivering the best from and to the world... |
Shooting start for second season of international hit series BORGIA Munich, 26 March 2012. After history-making viewer ratings across Europe and abroad, BORGIA, created by Tom Fontana, has been picked up for a second season. |
BORGIA boasts top ratings in Germany Tom Fontana's BORGIA scored top ratings in Germany and Austria |
BORGIA with record ratings in France and Italy Munich, 11 October 2011. The TV series BORGIA about the notorious Renaissance-era papal clan has beaten all ratings records in France and Italy. |
Netflix secures rights to U.S. premiere of Beta Film’s BORGIA Munich, 28 September 2011. Netflix, the world’s largest Internet subscription service for TV shows and movies, has secured the rights for the North-American premiere of Tom Fontana’s BORGIA series. |
Tom Fontana’s BORGIA sold to Sky Italia Tom Fontana’s BORGIA will be broadcast in Italy by the pay channel Sky... |
Beta Film spotlights six big events in Cannes Munich, 24 March 2011. At this spring’s MIP TV in Cannes, Beta Film is showcasing international top series such as Tom Fontana’s event production Borgia, King with Amy Price-Francis (“24,” “Californication”) and the Mankell adaptation The Chinese Man. |
ZDF and ORF pick up rights for BORGIA series Munich, 20 Dez 2010. Germany’s and Austria’s public broadcaster ZDF and ORF have acquired the rights for Borgia (12 x 1h), one of the most ambitious TV-series ever produced in Europe. |
Renaissance-clan BORGIA heads for TV - Shooting of the costliest European series to date beginns in Prague Cannes, 4 October 2010. The Borgia family, which gave the world two Popes, embodies more than practically any other family the spirit of the Renaissance with its now nearly inconceivable conflicts and contradictions. |