The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, episode 8, review – a killer resolution is all this series needs

★★★☆☆

It all comes down to the sins of the father. That’s what the penultimate episode of The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story (BBC Two) seemed to suggest regarding Versace’s killer, Andrew Cunanan.

The series started with Cunanan (Darren Criss) gunning down the designer on the steps of his Miami mansion in 1997. Over eight stately but gruesome episodes we tracked back through Cunanan’s life (and to a lesser extent Versace’s) and the string of earlier murders he committed. To the point where, this week, we finally arrived at the origin story.

We met Gianni (as a boy in 1957, encouraged by his dressmaker mother to be a designer even if that meant being called “pervert” by his teacher and “pansy” by his six-year-old classmates. (The dialogue had all the subtlety of one of Cunanan’s speciality hammer blows to the head.) But attention soon turned back to the killer and how he, too, had been an intelligent child with an effeminate streak; the spoilt favourite not of a saintly Italian mamma but of an obsessive Filipino immigrant father – Modesto “Pete” Cunanan (Jon Jon Briones) – who made the mistake of believing he could make it in America and got pulped.

As critiques of the American dream go, Modesto’s story – for all its flag worship and materialism – was not the most convincing. Because this particular member of the huddled masses was also a wife-beating delusional fraudster who robbed grannies of their life savings to send Andrew to a top-flight school. And who may, as one scene suggested briefly before fading to black, have sexually abused him.

In the climactic scene Andrew confronted Modesto, who had fled to Manilla to evade the FBI, only to be spat on and humiliated for being a “sissy” by the father who’d always purported to adore him. Well, it’s no wonder Andrew became a serial killer, appeared to be suggestion. But, as we know, plenty of people have been through a lot worse than that and avoided taking up killing as a hobby.

With just one more episode to go there’s still no knowing whether this American Crime Story will yet pull a dramatically satisfying resolution out of the bag. Let’s hope it won’t leave us feeling all we’ve done is spend too many hours in the company of a vicious multiple-murderer whose motives will never be fully pinned down.

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, episode 8, review – a killer resolution is all this series needs

dcriss-archive:

jonjonbriones: To my UK friends! This episode of @americancrimestoryfx #TheAssassinationOfGianniVersace is tonight! With the amazing @darrencriss Exquisitely directed by @mattbomer and written by the excellent Brit Tom Rob Smith. Hope you’re enjoying the whole series! The cast is just insane!
@edgarramirez25 @penelopecruzoficial @ricky_martin @judithlight @codyfern @edouardholdener #JoannaAdler @mrrpmurphy

What the Strategist Editors Are Gifting This Mother’s Day

Vulgar Favors: The Hunt for Andrew Cunanan by Maureen Orth

My mom binged The Assassination of Gianni Versace on FX, so I think she’ll enjoy the book the series was based on, which delves deeper into the story. The Versace family slammed the book for being “full of gossip and speculation” and for its author’s “lurid claims,” which I’m sure means it will make for an enticing beach read.

$8 at Amazon

What the Strategist Editors Are Gifting This Mother’s Day


https://acsversace-news.tumblr.com/post/173067450694/audio_player_iframe/acsversace-news/tumblr_p7e595NvgA1wcyxsb?audio_file=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tumblr.com%2Faudio_file%2Facsversace-news%2F173067450694%2Ftumblr_p7e595NvgA1wcyxsb

Darren Criss on The Assassination of Gianni Versace: “It’s a Shakespearean tragedy that you can’t believe is a real story.”

Darren discusses playing the serial killer Andrew Cunanan, who murdered Versace in 1997. | 18 April 2018

Variety, PBS SoCal Announce Lineup for Eighth Season of ‘Variety Studio: Actors on Actors’

Variety and PBS SoCal KOCE have announced the lineup for the eighth season of “Variety Studio: Actors on Actors.”

The Emmy Award-winning series will air in two episodes on PBS SoCal KOCE, the first on Tuesday, June 19 at 7 p.m. and the second on Thursday, June 21 at 7 p.m. Both episodes will stream on pbssocal.org following their premieres.

This year’s lineup of pairings includes: Issa Rae (“Insecure”) with Michael B. Jordan(“Fahrenheit 451”); Laura Dern (“The Tale”) with Angela Bassett (“9-1-1”); Tiffany Haddish (“The Last O.G.”) with John Legend (“Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert”); Benedict Cumberbatch (“Patrick Melrose”) with Claire Foy (“The Crown”); Jason Bateman (“Ozark”) with Bill Hader (“Barry”); Debra Messing (“Will & Grace”) with Sharon Stone (“Mosaic”); J.K. Simmons (“Counterpart”) with Edie Falco (“Law & Order True Crime: The Menendez Murders”); Alison Brie (“GLOW”) with Jessica Biel (“The Sinner”); Maggie Gyllenhaal (“The Deuce”) with Jonathan Groff (“Mindhunter”);  Frankie Shaw (“SMILF”) with Sara Gilbert (“Roseanne”); Jeff Daniels (“The Looming Tower”) with Laura Linney (“Ozark”); Darren Criss (“American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace”) with Mandy Moore (“This is Us”); David Harbour (“Stranger Things”) with Kyle MacLachlan (“Twin Peaks”); and Dakota Fanning (“The Alienist”) with Freddie Highmore (“The Good Doctor”).

“There’s no better way to celebrate another groundbreaking season of television than with our ‘Actors on Actors’ franchise,” said Debra Birnbaum, Variety’s executive TV editor. “We’re proud to shine a light on this year’s most remarkable performances with this series of revealing, one-on-one conversations. And we’re thrilled as always to partner with PBS SoCal to share this content with their audience.”

Variety’s “Actors on Actors” issue will hit newsstands June 5 with clips appearing on Variety.com starting at the beginning of June.

“Southern California’s creative industry inspires and excites our PBS audiences like few others. And this season of ‘Actors on Actors’ is sure to please, with compelling conversations between some of today’s most popular protagonists,” said Andrew Russell, president and CEO of PBS SoCal. “It’s terrific to team with Variety to produce and share ‘Variety Studio: Actors on Actors.’”

Variety, PBS SoCal Announce Lineup for Eighth Season of ‘Variety Studio: Actors on Actors’

American Crime Story: Versace has a dark problem

A sweaty Darren Criss in nothing but white y-fronts jigging around a millennial-pink motel room to Phil Collins’ ‘Easy Lover’: it’s a cheery prospect, pretty much designed for re-posts on Tumblr.

Yet Criss’s manic energy is the product of his American Crime Story character, Andrew Cunanan, torturing an older man.

With every languid hop Cunanan takes, his victim drifts closer to death. There’s not been such a sadistic visual set to a lurid 1980s banger since Christian Bale went to town on Jared Leto with an axe to a soundtrack of Huey Lewis and the News in 1999’s American Psycho.

Whether the pink motel room encounter, in episode two of The Assassination of Gianni Versace, actually happened has been questioned in plenty of fact-checking blogs. The Versace family, who branded the miniseries “a work of fiction” and criticised its basis in Maureen Orth’s book Vulgar Favours, must be pleased such blogs exist. But there is a bigger problem.

Though the title character, played by Edgar Ramirez, is portrayed as a sweet, loyal and hard-working man, the series follows the serial killer far more closely than the person whose name the series trades off.

Cunanan is the show’s most exciting character. Casting-wise, it’s a double win – Criss’s Filipino-Caucasian heritage matches Cunanan’s, and in the role he charms and frightens in equal measure.

That charm isn’t played up for telly: Cunanan was known to many as a slick operator who decorated his humdrum background with lies, pretended to be anyone but himself and, as an avid social climber, meticulously researched his suitors/victims so he knew exactly how to win them over.

His chutzpah isn’t only endearing to the characters he encounters as the series unfolds chronologically backwards, though: to the viewer, there’s something enviably daring about Cunanan lying his way into a life of luxury. When he does break for a second to tell the truth, admitting to a random guy in a noisy club that he’s a “serial killer”, it neatly mirrors American Psycho’s Patrick Bateman hiding in plain sight as he tells a woman in a noisy VIP room that he works “in murders and executions”.

After so many lies, that boldness, that “Come and get me if you think you’re hard enough” tone is refreshing. But any viewer unimpressed by that – coming off the back of four murders – might still be won over by the series’ depiction of Cunanan’s naivety and fragility.

When we discover his annoying mum and the struggles he had growing up in relative poverty, it’s – though we hate to say it – easy to sympathise with Cunanan. He simply wants the good life sold to him by the glossy Versace-adorned magazines he sneakily reads instead of doing his deadbeat retail job. But is it acceptable to invite us to sympathise with a monster?

It’s true we see the domestic abuse Cunanan meted out against his own mother (important, because it both happened in real life and is a sad and often silent forebear of many real-life mass-killings). But the camera lingers on his tears, not hers, and because the incident arrives far too late in the series it’s simply not as shocking as it should be.

On a point of indisputable artistic licence, The Assassination of Gianni Versace shows Cunanan as far more beautiful than he actually was. Cunanan wasn’t ugly and certainly used his beauty to disarm, but Criss is prettier, and harder-bodied. Even when he’s meant to be on crack he looks gorgeous.

Though the clothes Cunanan wears were considered uncool even just a few years ago, the cyclical nature of fashion – this is a series apparently about a fashion designer, after all – means that his thin-wire frame glasses, high-waisted jeans, tucked-in polo shirts, high socks, practical white sneakers and even the aforementioned Y-fronts, are pretty on-trend in 2018.

But condemning the show for glamorising a killer is perhaps simplistic.

Putting Cunanan front and centre might actually have a positive impact beyond salacious titillation, reminding the audience that this story is about so much more than Versace himself. Audiences were drawn in by the promise of Penelope Cruz as Donatella Versace and Ricky Martin as Gianni’s lover Antonio D’Amico, after all, not the impending layers of analysis of what it meant to be a gay man in post-AIDS America.

Though we get peeks into Versace’s life, they’re smartly tethered to the other characters. We see how coming out in fashion isn’t unlike coming out in the military. We see Donatella, encouraged by her brother to dress up in bondage-like leather and chains to sell herself, figuratively, to the fashion world, while Cunanan begins selling himself, literally, to older men.

By following Cunanan’s story, we get to see the lives of all his victims, who were destroyed not only by him, but by the homophobia festering within the police, government and American society at large. The story, as the producers have framed it, is as much about the ridiculous social framework that Cunanan was allowed to operate within, as it is the ridiculousness of Cunanan himself.

Darren Criss told Digital Spy exclusively: “It’s pretty clear cut on the moral spectrum where we stand, so I don’t think it glamourises [him]. If anything, it just begs the question of, ‘How do we get here? How does this happen?’ I don’t think it’s glamourising so much as investigating. You know how the story goes, but it’s the why and the how that makes us rethink what we see in front of us.”

So it’s for the best The Assassination of Gianni Versace took artistic licence with the image of the man who killed a bunch of people – rather than the man whose most outlandish move was to shock and awe the world of fashion with his beautiful designs.

With each episode, we are drawn more under Cunanan’s spell, courtesy of Criss’s stellar performance. That, the show is telling us, is why Versace died in the first place: because Cunanan managed to charm – and harm – so many others before him. What it’s also telling us – under the radar – is how he got away with it for so long.

American Crime Story: Versace has a dark problem