The Assassination of Gianni Versace episode 9 review – Dead Good

The ninth and final episode of the second series of American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace was a tidy if somewhat underwhelming 55 minutes of television. Slowly, over the past eight-odd hours, this true crime tale has built and built, peaking over its last few instalments as it benefits from a reverse storytelling plot device. As such, it was always going to be difficult to wring too much tension out of the story’s crescendo, given that it’s an ending that the viewing public is mostly familiar with.

We kick off with the eponymous murder. As it’s pretty well detailed and shown in the first episode, we quickly skip to the aftermath of events. But instead of focusing on the manhunt and how police captured Versace’s killer, Andrew Cunanan, we again end up dwelling on the man himself. And when he spends the entire post-Versace slaying part of his life holed in an apartment watching television before blowing his brains out, it doesn’t exactly make for gripping television.

We see minor glimpses of the cops’ efforts, including an interview with the criminally underused Max Greenfield. His character Ronnie may not have been pivotal to the story these past nine weeks, but the New Girl star lit up the screen every time he popped up with his handlebar moustache and baggy vests.

It was good to see a return for Judith Light to this final slice of The Assassination of Gianni Versace too. Along with Jon Jon Briones as Modesto Cunanan, Light – as Marilyn Miglin – came very close to stealing the entire series away from the main players of the piece. Almost, but not quite…

Whether he’s preppy and cocky, sad and alone, angry and gun-toting or shaven-headed and suicidal, Darren Criss, as Andrew Cunanan, utterly convinces at all times. Anyone hoping for a Gianni Versace biopic will have been disappointed by this series, but anyone hoping for a fascinating portrait of a social-climbing serial killer who’s equal parts sociopathic and vulnerable will have been elated. Criss runs away with the series and surely has Hollywood at his fingertips after this incredible performance.

So this last episode may have disappointed us a little. But that’s really only because of the high standard set by the rest of the series. All in all this follow-up to The People Vs O J Simpson was excellent. Gripping, intelligent, gorgeous looking, fantastically acted and subtle and mature in its subtexts and allegory, we’d be extremely surprised to see The Assassination of Gianni Versace not walk off with at least a few Emmys or Golden Globes come awards season.

The jewel in this anthology’s crown – and what we hope will lend it some real longevity as a television drama – is that it’s about more than just its story. Sure, we learned about the murder of Versace here – but we discovered more about the man responsible and his twisted motives. And even better? This was about more than Cunanan and his gun. It was about the 1990s. It was about the struggles of the gay community. It was about HIV. It was about conflict. Family. Parenting. The weight of parental expectation and how twisted the ‘American Dream’ can get.

It’s not often a TV crime drama ends and we immediately think about the next series – but with this, we can’t help ourselves. Which famous US crime can they use as a framework for the follow-up series…? We can’t wait to find out.

The Assassination of Gianni Versace episode 9 review – Dead Good

Jon Jon Briones (‘Assassination of Gianni Versace’) on ‘dark sides’ of serial killer’s father

Jon Jon Briones (‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’) chats with Gold Derby’s Tony Ruiz about ‘the dark sides’ of playing a serial killer’s ‘delusional’ father. In “Versace” he portrays a family man obsessed with two things– success and his youngest son Andrew. Those obsessions drive Modesto inflate his own sense of self-worth while lavishing attention on Andrew at the expense of the rest of the family. | 25 April 2018

Five reasons why ‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’ is so compelling

I’m hooked on crime series on television, and I’m not ashamed to admit it. I shamelessly analyze each crime and its evidence as if I’m a qualified crime scene investigator. I love the suspense created in the courtroom as a wise-looking actor playing a judge announces the fate of the allegedly guilty party. And, of course, I enjoy seeing justice being served.

Unfortunately, most of crime shows coming out these days are rather one dimensional as they combine flat, stereotypical characters with bleak plotlines and dull set design. Thankfully, “American Crime Story” kicked off in 2016 with “The People v. O.J. Simpson,” giving audiences a refreshing new take on crime television. This season of “American Crime Story” focuses on Gianni Versace’s murder. It dives into the minds and personal lives of Andrew Cunanan (played by the exceptional actor Darren Criss), Donatella and Gianni Versace, among many others involved in Cunanan’s murder spree.

If you haven’t begun watching the show yet, let me persuade you. Here are five reasons why “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” is so compelling:

It highlights the complexities of each of its characters

This season of “American Crime Story” explores the psychology of the characters on screen, and allows the viewers to actually feel empathy for Cunanan. How is this possible? How could viewers actually relate and feel sympathetic towards a murderer? It’s because the show highlights Cunanan’s childhood and adolescence, which were full of pitfalls and chaos. Viewers also have a look at the Cunanan family as a whole, and the complex relationships between his mother, father, and siblings.

It makes a commentary on the social climate of the 1990s

This show delves into the social climate of the 1990s, particularly the HIV/AIDS epidemic and the LGBTQ community. It emphasizes the turmoil that gay men in America faced in this decade, as well as the nightlife that accepted them and made them feel at home. On the opposite end of the spectrum, the show focuses on Versace’s AIDS diagnosis, as well as his longtime partner Antonio D’Amico. It shows how much America has changed within the past two decades, while also (and unfortunately) focusing on how it has remained the same. I definitely think that executive producer Ryan Murphy’s making important social commentary here.

The production design draws you into the world

I am a huge fan of the set design in all of Murphy’s productions, but this one has to be my favorite. The sets and locations take the viewers on journeys to Miami, Minnesota, Chicago and New Jersey. The production filmed many of its scenes at Casa Casuarina, the  Miami mansion where Gianni Versace lived for most of his life. It’s also where Versace was assassinated. The beautiful site juxtaposes the turmoil of Donatella and D’Amico as well as the complete chaos that Cunanan created.

It thoroughly illustrates Gianni Versace’s love of fashion and feminism

The show captures the special relationship between Gianni and his sister Donatella, who later takes on the role as the chief designer of his brand. After being diagnosed with AIDS, Gianni began teaching Donatella how to design clothes, and put her in the spotlight long before his death. His passion for creating clothes for all women shines through the entire series, and his support of Donatella is special. The theme of feminism is stronger than the more dramatic moments of the season.

It tells a real story

While FX admits that many of the scenes between the characters (private conversations, etc.) are fictionalized, the majority of the series is based on the actual evidence and events that took place during this time. Cunanan’s murders are visualized exactly how they happened, and details about Versace’s life ring true. I am fascinating by stories about real people, and when the series ended, I felt like I understood the social climate, characters and the horrible murders that occurred. This story emphasizes the fragility of life, and how important it is to live and love to the fullest extent each and every day.

Five reasons why ‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’ is so compelling

Bisexual lighting: A new cinema trend?

What is ‘bisexual lighting’?

An early use of the term comes from a 2014 post on the blogging site Tumblr, which discusses a pink-and-blue-washed scene in the BBC’s Sherlock and speculates about the hidden desires of Dr John Watson.

A more recent, and commonly discussed, example of bisexual lighting can be seen in the San Junipero episode of the Netflix show Black Mirror.

The Emmy Award-winning episode follows the development of a relationship between two bisexual female characters.

Many point out that these colours mirror those of the bisexual pride flag, and suggest the lighting design is a direct reference to the symbol.

[…] Joanna Robinson, a senior writer for entertainment site Vanity Fair, responded with images of Ricky Martin and Penelope Cruz from the show The Assassination of Gianni Versace.

The show features a number of same-sex couples, but not specifically bisexual relationships.

Bisexual lighting: A new cinema trend?

Move Over Prestige TV, God of War and Other Prestige Games are Taking Over Now

Prestige television, similarly, has started feeling formulaic. For every “prestige” show that breaks the mold, like this year’s The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story or last year’s The Young Pope, there’s a True Detective or Westworld ready to dive into expected territory again.

Move Over Prestige TV, God of War and Other Prestige Games are Taking Over Now

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: Darren Criss explains how he succeeded in ‘humanising’ killer Andrew Cunanan

While the second season of Ryan Murphy’s American Crime Story may not have had the same water-cooler success in the UK as its predecessor The People vs OJ Simpson, it could go on to have a greater cultural impact – if nothing else, as the springboard for Darren Criss, the magnetic young actor who stars as serial killer Andrew Cunanan.

Before the series aired, promo photos for the drama featured dazzling, pink-hued shots of Edgar Ramirez and Penelope Cruz as legendary designer Versace and his sister Donatella, but they turned out to be little more than bit part players. The real story is the corruption of Cunanan’s soul that led him to embark on a five-person killing spree, ending with the murder of Versace on the front steps of his Miami mansion in July 1997.

It represented a huge challenge for actor Criss, who is best known for his role in musical sitcom Glee. How could he humanise the killer without exonerating him? How could he entertain without glamourising his atrocities?

To put it mildly, he succeeded. Criss is at turns terrifying, charming and downright pathetic as the murderer, and is quite rightly tipped to be a force to be reckoned with come awards season. When RadioTimes.com met him in London a couple of weeks ahead of the show’s heartbreaking finale, he spoke openly about the empathy he felt for Cunanan, and the reasons why, he thinks, he went down such a dark path.

“There we were in Miami, in front of the steps [of Gianni Versace’s mansion] recreating this infamous murder,” Criss says, only his immaculately trimmed beard and multi-coloured nail polish betraying him as a different entity to Cunanan.

“This isn’t on a soundstage. This is in broad daylight in a very public place, in the same exact spot. That was just a tsunami of gravitas and weight that really… I haven’t found the proper adjectives for it yet, but it really gave me pause. Yes, you’re telling a story and there are cameras on, but I felt really bizarre to be doing this where it really happened.”

The actor is warm and thoughtful in person, taking each question down a series of meandering paths towards a thorough, considered answer. He doesn’t shy away from speculation about the drama’s wider conclusions about the murders, and has his own thoughts about the implications of Wednesday’s finale.

“It’s a very complex thing,” he says of the possible causes of Cunanan’s killing spree. “There’s this cocktail of a lot of really unhealthy things that were already in place. Things like homophobia in the world around him were just the catalyst to make it all blow up.”

As with the OJ verdict in season one, The Assassination of Gianni Versace contextualises Versace’s murder as a product of the era. Ricky Martin, who plays the designer’s lover Antonio D’Amico, said recently that “homophobia killed Gianni Versace”, suggesting that the FBI’s misunderstanding of the gay community was one of the primary reasons Cunanan was able to evade capture for as long as he did (he was wanted by the FBI for two months prior to shooting the designer).

Criss agrees with Martin to an extent, though he adds that Cunanan’s past played a major role, too: “You know, a lot of these investigative bodies not wanting to go into gay clubs to post flyers [was] not necessarily because they didn’t like gay people, so much as they weren’t sure if that’s something they could do. Maybe they were scared that they’d be perceived as homophobic.”

He continues: “There’s a history of mental health [issues] in his family, and there’s his own social economic situation, which has nothing to do with his sexual identity but his identity as a person in a social context: wanting to be wealthier than he was, and coming from such a poor area and having a delusional father.”

Criss says that while he believed it was his responsibility as an actor to empathise with Cunanan, he doesn’t expect the same from viewers.

“There’s no need to exonerate or forgive – these are horrible things that just break my heart,” he says. “But with someone like Andrew, it doesn’t boil down to just the most horrible things he’s ever done. The pallet of the human experience is so many colours and so many things, and the great thing about our show is that I’m not just playing ‘The Killer’: I’m playing a real person, who had wonderful moments, and we see him at his best, and he was loved, and had really lovely moments with people.”

Criss couldn’t escape Andrew’s humanity, even if he had wanted to. He says that friends and acquaintances of Versace’s killer approach him regularly and regale him – for the most part – with fond stories of their time with him.

“Everybody has an Andrew story. You know, ‘My friend’s boyfriend went out with him one night’, or had a roommate that spent time with him. Everybody tells me these stories, and I would say the majority of them are quite lovely.”

He adds: “You just go, ‘Oh my god, I don’t want to hear that’. I mean, I do, but it’s so sad. It’s just so sad that these people have nice things to say about him because, again, to put [the conflicting ideas of Andrew as a friend and a murderer] together is a hard thing to marry, I guess.”

The star is aware too of the ethical dilemmas for which the series has been criticised since it was announced last year. Among these are the emotional distress it has caused families of victims – the Versace family has voiced their disapproval on multiple occasions, while D’Amico told Radio Times that it was an inaccurate portrayal of his relationship with the designer –  but Criss is happy in the belief that the drama was created to serve a greater purpose than exploiting a tragedy.

“I mean, gosh, If any of these things had happened to somebody that I loved would be equally as vocal about it,” he says. “And, if I had the public platform that the Versace family did I would say the exact same thing. I think they’ve every right and every reason to feel the way they do.

“But, I hope they understand that we’re not exploiting a story for commercial value. There’s a larger story at play here that isn’t necessarily about this one horrible thing, which is the Versace murder, but an investigation and exploration of the time and the tragedies which that entails.”

Wednesday’s finale sees Cunanan at the end of his spree, holed up in a houseboat knowing that his days of walking around free in public are numbered. He’s at the end of his tether; members of his victims’ families including Marilyn Miglin and David Madson’s father  haunt him through the multiple TV screens dotted throughout the house. he eats dog food to sustain himself, as entering a shop to purchase food would likely see him caught.

Whichever way you look at it, it’s distressing to see a human in such dire straits.

“The real tragedy to me is just the complete and utter loss of promise and potential,” Criss says, “and that someone who was clearly gifted, who could have used his gifts to make something, decided to use them to destroy. That’s the real heartbreak in the American crime, and how that was allowed by a series of circumstances that were sort of out of his control.”

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: Darren Criss explains how he succeeded in ‘humanising’ killer Andrew Cunanan

Darren Criss responds to American Crime Story backlash

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story has proven a hit with a critics, who have called the show “dark and complex and tragic” (The Guardian) and the lead performance from Darren Criss “electrifying” (Newsday).

But the positive buzz around the true crime series has been marred by criticism from the Versace family itself, which called Ryan Murphy’s dramatisation of Andrew Cunanan’s killings (with fashion designer Gianni Versace his final victim) “a sensational story” based on “second-hand hearsay”.

Former Glee star Criss, who has won universal acclaim for his portrayal of Cunanan, had the opportunity to respond to these criticisms while in conversation with Digital Spyand other press.

“If any of these things had happened to somebody that I loved, I would be equally as vocal about it,” Criss insisted. “If I had the public platform that they have, then I would say the exact same thing. I think they have every right and every reason to feel the way they do. Who doesn’t understand that?”

In a message to the Versace family, Criss said that he and the team who worked on The Assassination of Gianni Versace were “not exploiting a story for commercial value”.

“There’s a larger story at play here, one that isn’t necessarily about this one horrible thing, which is the Versace murder. It’s an investigation and exploration of the time, and of course, the other victims that, until now, haven’t really had a whole lot of voice – at least in popular culture. I think it’s important, talking about them.

"If I’d ever had the chance to meet Gianni Versace, I would have hoped that he would understand that we’re trying to create some kind of light out of this darkness. It’s not exploitative. Like all good storytelling, it’s meant to beg questions and really have us think about things beyond what’s right in front of us.”

Gianni Versace’s long-time partner, model and designer Antonio D’Amico (played by Ricky Martin in the series) has also hit out at American Crime Story’s accuracy, arguing that “significant parts… do not reflect the reality of the events that took place”.

But for Criss, it was more important to reflect “the emotional truths” of the story, since so much of “what really happened behind closed doors” remains a mystery. “We don’t know [the facts],” he said. “And I can never deign to say that we’re the moral authority on that.

"I understand how people would be worried about how these things are portrayed. Again, we have the luxury of not having been involved directly in something so traumatic. So I just hope that anybody who had anything to do with… again, I hope that we’re creating light from the dark, and not the other way around.”

Criss went on to dismiss the idea that the TV series in any way “glamourises” the path that Cunanan took, adding that it portrays his actions as “obviously deplorable”.

“It’s pretty clear-cut on the moral spectrum where we stand. So I don’t think it glamorises it. If anything, it just sort of begs the question: how do we get here? And how does this happen?”

Reflecting on writer Tom Rob Smith’s adaptation, which is based on Maureen Orth’s book Vulgar Favors, Criss called it “a Shakespearean tragedy” about a young man “constantly at war with himself”.

“It’s the fall from grace of somebody with enormous potential,” he said. “Other than the obvious heartbreaking tragedy of these homicides, the real tragedy to me is just the complete and utter loss of promise and potential, where somebody – who was clearly gifted – could have really used said gifts to create and make something, but decided to use it to destroy

"That’s the real heartbreak…. and the American crime, really – how that was allowed by a series of circumstances that were outside of his control.”

Darren Criss responds to American Crime Story backlash


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My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark: 117 – Reality’s Canceled

Karen and Georgia cover the survival of Teka Adams and the West Mesa Bone Collector. | 18 April 2018