The Assassination of Gianni Versace, a playlist by Malinda Kao on Spotify

The Assassination of Gianni Versace Spotify playlist | updated to episode 3

Adagio in G Minor for Strings and Organ, “Albinoni’s Adagio” • Last Night a D.J. Saved My Life  • All Around the World • Capriccio, Op.85 – Letzte Szene: “Kein andres, das mir im Herzen so loht” • Bellini: I Capuleti e i Montecchi, Act 1: “Oh! quante volte” (Giulietta) • Gloria • Easy Lover • Back to Life • You Showed Me • Giacomelli: Merope: “Sposa, son disprezzata” (Merope) • A Little Bit of Ecstasy • Be My Lover • This Is the Right Time • A Certain Sadness • It’s Magic • St. Thomas

The Assassination of Gianni Versace, a playlist by Malinda Kao on Spotify

The Most Outrageous Lies Andrew Cunanan Has Told On “American Crime Story”

Darren Criss, who plays Andrew Cunanan on The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, did a lot of press ahead of the show’s premiere, but it’s an interview with Buzzfeed’s AM to DM that I can’t stop thinking about. Watching the series back, Criss said parts of the season felt “as if we’re watching one of Andrew’s own delusions.” That’s what so much of the show is about, really. Not just the murder, but the lies that surround it, and perhaps more poignantly, the lies Cunanan told himself that got him in this position.

But that’s a little more nuanced than I’m trying to get right now. I’ll leave his psyche up to the phycologists out there, and instead focus on what’s really entertaining: the crazy, batshit lies Cunanan spouts to his friends and acquaintances in order to seem cool. It’s almost impressive how brazenly the character ignores the truth, confidently contradicting scenes we just saw happen.

I guess that’s why Criss definitely, truly deserves an Emmy (you can fight me on that). The actor so convincingly delivers these lies that you, the viewer, start questioning the truth. That’s why I’ve made sure to fact-check these claims against Cunanan’s own life story — or at least, the claims he hasn’t already contradicted himself. He has certainly had a wild life (and death), but there are some things that are too outrageous to be true, even for a killer.

Despite the 10-episode arc, I’m worried we may never know what really went on inside Cunanan’s brain, and even if the show tells us, is that just another delusion? Your guess is as good as mine, but ahead are the most outrageous things the character has said that we know for certain never happened.

Cunanan says he and Gianni Versace met before at a garden party in Italy.

He tells his friends that, contrary to what we just watched, Versace introduced himself to Cunanan at the club.

Cunanan says he picked pineapples on his father’s pineapple plantations in the Philippines — but while Cunanan was half-Filipino, he was born and raised in California.

Cunanan told Versace his father was the personal pilot for Imelda Marcos, the First Lady of the Philippines.

Cunanan also told Versace that his father runs his businesses abroad, but was just in town driving around with his boyfriend following his coming out. Actually, his father deserted his family when Cunanan was 19 to escape arrest for embezzlement.

One of Cunanan’s alias’ Kur DeMarrs, a man who was born in Nice and moved to America to become a fashion student. He tells the receptionist that he’s traveled to Miami to speak to Versace, who he claims is very excited to talk with him.

Cunanan says he dedicated his life to helping sick people in San Diego.

He also claims his best friend and his lover both died in the same year from AIDS/HIV-related complications.

He says Versace proposed to him during a romantic meal at Stars, but things didn’t work out and now they’re friends.

The Most Outrageous Lies Andrew Cunanan Has Told On “American Crime Story”

TV Review: American Crime Story S02E01 – “The Man Who Would Be Vogue” ⋆ Rogues Portal

“I tell people what they need to hear.”

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story opens in dramatic fashion. The titular Gianni Versace (Edgar Ramirez) wakes up and eats breakfast in his palatial home before leaving to pick up some magazines, politely rebuffing some autograph seekers. Meanwhile, Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss) contemplates on a beach, pukes in a public bathroom and drinks a soda. Their paths come together, in a swirling mix of music, pleasant bliss and sweaty desperation, when Cunanan walks up to Versace and shoots him.

It’s a hell of an opening and sets this season apart from the previous, impressive season. Presumably, this 9-episode season will show the manhunt for Cunanan after he killed Versace and his life leading up to the event.

And it is absolutely an event. When news of Versace’s death quickly spreads people pop out of the woodwork to become part of the story. A man quickly runs to his car, grabs his Polaroid and snaps a pic of Versace’s body being taken to the hospital. A couple that tried to get Versace’s signature earlier drenches a magazine ad in his blood and seal it in a bag to sell later. A woman walks through the throngs of news cameras wearing a Versace bathing suit. Post-O.J. Simpson every crime involving a celebrity could bring money or fame.

Is that why Cunanan did it?

We don’t really know. We don’t even get a hint of why the murder happened during “The Man Who Would Be Vogue.” In any other show, it would be easy to follow the breadcrumbs. Cunanan mets Versace at a club, then invited to the Opera with him and went on a date. They had some falling out, and Cunanan snapped and killed him. Except… I’m pretty sure most of that didn’t happen.

Cunanan definitely shot Versace. He maybe, possibly, ran into him in a club. Everything else we see from his perspective is pretty comfortably a fiction. Criss’s performance is fantastic. He’s a proto-Patrick Bateman, pretending and striving to be the perfect “whatever” he has to be. When he’s spinning the yarn about meeting Versace to his friends he pretends he isn’t gay. When he “meets” Versace, he pretends to be born with a silver spoon in his mouth. He’s whatever anyone needs him to be, and whatever makes it easier for him to get by. It seems like his ability to blend in will become a major aspect of the series. The FBI even had fliers made up — that they didn’t distribute until way too late — which showed his ability to transform his look with ease.

It will be interesting to see the Versace family drama alongside the actual crime stuff. As much as this seems centered around Cunanan, and rightfully so, it’s hard to deny the pull of the Versace empire. We get a bit of Edgar Ramirez’s performance as the titular assassinee, and he’s great if nebulous, but the other members of the family make just as strong an impression. Donatella Versace (Penelope Cruz) stomps into the show from a private jet and completely takes over, caring only for her brother’s legacy and the legacy of the company.

The true surprise of the episode is Ricky Martin as Versace’s live-in partner, Antonio D’Amico. He gets a few scenes in this episode that are packed full of drama. He discovers Versace’s body. D’Amico has to deal with an interview from a cop who has no idea how to handle a gay relationship. He has to come face-to-face with Donatella. Martin easily wins the “David Schwimmer Award” for Most Impressive American Crime Story Performance, and I’m excited to see him in the weeks to come.

As the episode ends, we get a clear picture of how easily Cunanan was able to avoid detection and how incompetent the FBI was during the manhunt. They had fliers with his picture on it and knew he had killed before but didn’t distribute them. A pawnshop owner sent in forms that had his exact name and address. They were never flagged. He was able to evade detection and head back to his hotel after killing Versace.

The scene that sticks with me is Cunanan in the hotel bar, watching the news. The woman in front of him learns about Versace’s death and holds her hand over her mouth in shock. Cunanan examines her, like a lizard or a Terminator, and copies her body language. It’s a creepy little performance by Criss, and it’s a big part of the reason I’ll continue tuning in.

Verdict: Keep watching. It’s a very solid opening that promises some great and surprising performances. It seems to be a departure from the first season, which makes it way more interesting than if they had just done another popular trial. I plan to keep watching for a few reasons: the development of the Versace family, to keep seeing what Ricky Martin has to offer and Darren Criss’s star-making performance.

TV Review: American Crime Story S02E01 – “The Man Who Would Be Vogue” ⋆ Rogues Portal

‘Assassination of Gianni Versace’ posts solid gains in cable Live +7 ratings for Jan. 15-21

The premiere of the second “American Crime Story” on FX put up pretty good delayed-viewing numbers for the week of Jan. 15.

“The Assassination of Gianni Versace” added 0.6 points to its adults 18-49 rating (0.7 to 1.3) with seven days of catchup viewing. That ties for the second-largest gain of the week in the demographic, behind “Teen Mom’s” 0.8-point boost.

“ACS: Versace” added the most viewers of any show, growing by 1.76 million people for a seven-day total of just under 4 million.

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*Mod edit for clarification:

Live+Same Day: 2.22 mil viewers with 0.7 in the key demo

Live+3: 3.6 mil viewers

Live+7: 3.99 mil viewers with 1.3 in the key demo

Live+3 + Three encores + digital platforms (3 days? unclear in the press release): 5.5 mil viewers

‘Assassination of Gianni Versace’ posts solid gains in cable Live +7 ratings for Jan. 15-21

How “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” Uses Dance Pop to Craft a Gay American Psycho | Pitchfork

Note: This article contains light spoilers.

There are plenty of murders in FX’s “American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace,” but no one dies in the most terrifying scene that has aired so far. Midway through the second episode, gay-hustler-turned-serial-killer Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss) picks up an older man at the beach. As they enter the john’s spacious hotel room, Andrew asks how many people he employs. “Five thousand, globally,” the guy admits, but hastens to add, “I can be submissive.” So Andrew covers his face in duct tape, hissing, “You’re helpless. Accept it.” Then he turns up the stereo and dances in his orange bikini-cut swimsuit to “Easy Lover” by Phil Collins and Philip Bailey until his mark stops struggling. At the last second, he pokes a hole in the tape.

The scene is chilling for many reasons. There’s the painful suspense of waiting to find out if Andrew will let the john die. (Because the season unfolds in reverse-chronological order, we’ve already seen him kill Gianni Versace (Édgar Ramírez) in the premier; we know he’s capable of it.) There’s the sadistic pleasure Andrew, who spends his days smoking crack in a $29.99-a-night Miami Beach motel room, takes in dominating a powerful businessman. And creepiest of all is Criss’ body language as he gyrates, his face frozen in determination while his arms flail. This is the moment we realize exactly how unhinged Andrew Cunanan is.

“Easy Lover” is a brilliant sync: a disconcertingly upbeat soundtrack to a man’s suffocation, with a touch of lyrical irony given Andrew’s line of work. But perhaps the most striking thing about using a Phil Collins song in this context is what the reference brings to mind: American Psycho, the Mary Harron film based on Bret Easton Ellis’ novel. Set in the 1980s, American Psycho finds yuppie serial killer Patrick Bateman frequently extolling the virtues of his favorite soft rock hits. He turns on the stereo when he’s feeling great, which is mostly when he’s toying with a victim. In one scene, he plays Genesis’ “In Too Deep” and extemporizes on Collins’ career before he fucks and slaughters two prostitutes. Andrew’s encounter inverts the roles of sex worker and john, adding another layer of queerness to this tale of a gay man who preys on other gay men. “Versace” is using music to frame its subject as an explicitly gay variation on the American Psycho archetype.

Thankfully, for those of us who have no desire to revisit “If You Don’t Know Me By Now” or “Walking on Sunshine,” the show doesn’t overstate its case by cutting in additional Bateman murder jams. While the music of American Psycho captures the banality of Reagan-era capitalist evil, it’s the female-fronted house and dance-pop tracks that would’ve played in a typical ‘90s gay bar that suffuse this season of “American Crime Story.” Released the same year Cunanan turned violent, 1997, Jocelyn Enriquez’s egregiously overplayed “A Little Bit of Ecstasy” blasts as Gianni and his partner, Antonio (Ricky Martin), arrive at the club for yet another hedonistic night out, and soon decide to leave because they’d rather be alone together. Later, Andrew dances to La Bouche’s “Be My Lover” and Lisa Stansfield’s “This Is the Right Time” at the same venue as he prowls for victims, clients, hookups, or all of the above.

Like the disco that soundtracked the sexually fluid nightlife of the 1970s, the songs selected by music supervisor Amanda Krieg Thomas layer mantras of pleasure over beats that thump like an overexerted heart. Their appeal in the context of a gay club in the mid-‘90s isn’t hard to grasp: This is the only public place where queer men can express their desires without fear, and the music heightens that temporary sense of invincibility. The only threat in a room like this is AIDS—until Andrew appears. As soon as he enters the frame, all you can hear in these otherwise liberating hits is artifice, recklessness, and caprice.

Outside the club, the pop songs Andrew loves can sound even darker. In a flashback from the premiere, Stansfield’s “All Around the World” plays as a younger Andrew tries on expensive suits owned by his rich friend Lizzie’s (Annaleigh Ashford) husband. While she scolds him for raiding the closet and he reminds her, “I have nothing,” the song emphasizes the disconnect between his worldly pretensions and his parasitic lifestyle. The first time we see him in episode two, Andrew is a fugitive speeding toward Versace’s part-time home, Miami Beach, in a stolen truck. After catching a radio news report about himself, he finds a station playing Laura Branigan’s “Gloria,”cranks up the volume, and screams along with abandon. As high on his own notoriety as Patrick Bateman was on frivolous bloodshed, Andrew is celebrating the murders of men—three of them gay—with an iconic gay disco anthem.

There is a crucial difference between the American Psycho approach to music and the way “Versace” uses it, though. Bateman is a caricature of vain, ruthless, materialistic finance bros—a monster brought to life by a dominant culture that elevated those destructive traits. His affinity for Phil Collins and Huey Lewis and the News is an indictment of those artists. (Ellis agreed: “I ended up feeling bad for Bateman’s loving attention toward the band [Huey Lewis], which, in itself is this kind of criticism of the culture,” he told* Billboard.) Their songs are just another blandly sinister accessory to Bateman’s vapid existence, like his tanning bed and his embossed, bone-colored business cards.

As interpreted by this season’s writer, Tom Rob Smith, Andrew Cunanan is less a reflection of gay culture than a plague on it. If the john he nearly kills before going after Versace hadn’t been closeted, it’s quite possible Andrew would have been caught before he killed the fashion icon. When Andrew leaves the hotel room, the traumatized businessman slips on a wedding ring, calls 911, then thinks better of it and hangs up. Andrew’s earlier victims, who we’ll meet later in the season, are also casualties of the closet. In that sense, Andrew is the personification of society’s homophobia, which he uses to isolate and manipulate his targets, as well as HIV, which can turn sex deadly. In Miami Beach, he hides from the FBI in plain sight, buying neon tank tops and Speedos to blend in with the throngs of innocent gay vacationers. Music is one more layer of camouflage. Andrew’s grotesque enjoyment of “Gloria” isn’t a criticism of the song—it’s a perversion of its liberating meaning, and a threat to the culture that cherishes it.

How “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” Uses Dance Pop to Craft a Gay American Psycho | Pitchfork

American Crime Story: The Assassination of Versace season 2 premiere

He wanted to be famous… so he killed a man who was. Join us on examining the shocking 1997 murder of legendary fashion designer, Gianni Versace.

The premiere of American Crime Story: The Assassination of Versace centers around serial killer Andrew Cananan. With the series, we get to explore the motives behind such a memorable and tragic death. The inspiration behind this exciting new series was Vulgar Favors: Andrew Cunanan, Gianni Versace, and the Largest Failed Manhunt in US History — a book that journalist Maureen Orth published in 1999.

Ryan Murphy took the first episode in a whole new direction, in which we witness the murder of Gianni Versace within the first ten minutes, and then we go back in time to 1990 where flashbacks are given to show how these two men were connected to one another. We also see Versace’s sister, Donatella, dealing with the loss of her brother and making sure that his legacy lives on. The episode ends with the police on a manhunt to find Andrew and failing. However, Andrew is an extremely clever man and I cannot wait to follow the rest of this hunt.

Check out the 5 best moments of American Crime Story: The Assassination of Versace season 2 premiere:

1. Aesthetically pleasing

Although the story is tragic and all in all devastating, Ryan Murphy shows such beauty within this episode. It starts off so blissfully over Versace’s breathtaking villa, the sun-kissed 90’s Miami beach and genuinely good looking people with their tanned and glorious bodies out on what should have been a normal and joyful day. It shows such a flawed beauty throughout and you can’t help falling in love with every moment of it, until Murphy turns our bliss in to shock within seconds.

Oh and you know, the faces of Darren Criss and Penelope Cruz may have also played a role in us falling in love.

2. Versace and Cunanan’s first meeting

As it is well recognised, Andrew Cunanan was known to create extraordinary tales in order to impress others. He fed on the wealthy and famous lifestyles and who better to make his victim than pop culture icon and billionaire, Gianni Versace? The episode showed us that the two had met in 1990 (seven years before Versace’s death) in a San Francisco night club. Andrew approaches Versace, where at first, Versace is quite ignorant and is too fascinated in telling his stories to pay attention to Andrew. Soon enough, Versace remembers him from a previous event in his own villa and Andrew is honored that he would remember such a brief moment. Versace eventually invites Andrew to attend the opera with him, where the two bond over Versace’s love for fashion and how he can have an input in to Andrew’s novel that he hopes will one day become a movie where Versace can design the looks.

3. Versace’s death

We all know when it comes to Ryan Murphy he has absolutely no chill on how much gore and realism he will put in to his shows, and he once again showed no signs of toning this one down with the in depth glance of Versace’s death. It is clear in the beginning that Andrew has aimed for Versace’s face, but at this point, we don’t know for sure.

Later on when Versace is rushed to the hospital, we see him with two gunshot holes in his face as he lays dying amongst all of the doctors trying to keep him alive. They pronounce him dead at 9:12am on July 15th, 1997 at the University of Miami’s Jackson Memorial Hospital. Gianni’s death really did tug at my heart strings, and being that I knew little of his death before watching this, I was so enthralled by his story and his legacy that this just wasn’t fair. This man deserved a whole lot better than was given. Will my opinion change as the story unravels? Who knows!

4. The focus on LGBT and homophobia

The main focus was the underlying theme of homophobia circulating Cunanan’s murders. The murder happened 20 years ago, and to say the way we respect and look at the LGBT community today as of then, has come an extremely long way. Andrew was an openly-gay male prostitute who drew himself into the wealthy and glamorous lives of older gay men before killing them. He killed four in total before adding Versace to his list, and the significance of his death goes beyond the moment of tragedy, in which the show highlights important issues that were undiscussed at the time of his death. For instance, his partner Antonio D’Amico, who was with Gianni for 15 years. The police didn’t want to accept this and instead suggested that they were ‘business partners’. Versace’s death finally goes public and the police finally pay attention to Cunanan’s identity.

5. Darren Criss

There were many magnificent actors in the debut episode of season 2, however I think all applause should head in Darren Criss’ direction, as he portrayed Andrew Cunanan spot on. Reading more into Andrew’s life, his father left him and his family to avoid arrest for embezzlement and he and his mother got into an argument about his sexuality. Andrew’s aggressive behavior was shown in this argument when he threw his mother against a wall, dislocating her shoulder. Due to this, he had examinations for his behavior and reports later recognized that he possibly suffered from antisocial personality disorder and a personality disorder characterized by lack of empathy.

What I really loved about Darren’s portrayal of Andrew is when he comes face to face with a TV broadcasting the events of Versace’s murder, he watched the TV with no sign of emotion, until he sees a woman’s reaction where she covers her mouth in horror and shock. He then covers his own mouth up to convince people he was also in shock and managed to fill his eyes with emotion. That just showed so evidently how unaffected Andrew is to his murders. I can’t wait to see how this murder starts to affect Andrew — whether it fills him with guilt or pride, Darren is going to be outstanding as always at telling us the story!

American Crime Story: The Assassination of Versace season 2 premiere

Paste’s TV Power Rankings

4. The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story
Network: FX
Last Week’s Ranking: Ineligible

On the morning of his 1997 murder, the Italian fashion designer (Edgar Ramirez) strolls through his Miami Beach palace in a flowing, fluorescent robe, the camera retreating skyward as he breakfasts by the pool; the corresponding image of his killer, Andrew Cunanan (the magnetic, frightening Darren Criss), peers in on the con man as he tosses off his matching pink cap and vomits into a toilet, then pauses for a glimpse of the message etched into the bathroom stall: a rough drawing of two dicks, with the caption “Filthy faggots.” From here, The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, which premieres tonight on FX, unspools in reverse, tracing the lives of its two main characters back to their childhoods—and among its constants is that unutterable word, that unforgivable commonplace, that useful descriptor, that reclamation. The “crime” in this season of American Crime Story is the assassination of Gianni Versace, certainly, but it’s also, doubtless, homophobia itself, socialized and self-inflicted, individual and internecine: At the heart of the anthology’s magnificent second act is a potent, political, possibly even dangerous reconsideration of what it means to be called a faggot, and then what it means to become one. —Matt Brennan

Paste’s TV Power Rankings

https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/384236660/stream?client_id=N2eHz8D7GtXSl6fTtcGHdSJiS74xqOUI?plead=please-dont-download-this-or-our-lawyers-wont-let-us-host-audio

‘Breaking Bad’s’ 10-Year Anniversary, Plus New Shows From David Letterman and ‘American Crime Story’

The Ringer’s Chris Ryan and Andy Greenwald review David Letterman’s new Netflix show, ‘My Next Guest Needs No Introduction’ (3:00), and go “In or Out” on ‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story’ (15:00). Later they celebrate the 10-year anniversary of the premiere of ‘Breaking Bad’ (25:00).

The Assassination Of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story Sends Chills Down Our Spines In Its Premiere

Ever since it was announced that the next American Crime Story season would be about the murder of fashion legend Gianni Versace, the world has been on pins and needles waiting for it to premiere. With a powerhouse cast featuring Édgar Ramírez as Versace, Ricky Martin as his lover/partner of 15 years Antonio D’Amico, Penélope Cruz as Donatella Versace, and Darren Criss as his killer Andrew Cunanan, the hype surrounding this series has been huge.

The wait for this series ended Wednesday as Versace finally premiered, and the wait was definitely well worth it. Versace wasted no time getting down to the thick of things and setting up a series that will rock us to the core. For those expecting Criss to be anything like his Glee persona, prepare to be in shock as from the moment he is shown as Cunanan, you cease to see Criss and forget that he was ever America’s Teenage Dream. He’s that good.

So what went down during its premiere episode “The Man Who Would be Vogue”? Let’s discuss!

A Cold Opening: The series dives right into the last day of Gianni Versace. Versace starts his day off by having breakfast, taking a stroll around his gorgeous house, saying goodbye to his partner Antonio D’Amico as he heads off to play tennis, and getting his favorite magazines from his local newsstand. Andrew Cunanan, on the other hand, starts his day off sitting by the beach, contemplating life before walking into the ocean, screaming out into the void. Shortly afterwards, the would be killer is then seen throwing up as he braces himself to do what we now know to be one unspeakable act of horror. Cunanan then makes his way to Versace’s house, where he spots the designer opening his gate to return home. Cunanan then takes out a gun from his backpack and shoots Versace down.

We’re Going Back To Start: We are then taken back to the year Cunanan first met Versace at a gay club in San Francisco in October 1990. With this particular flashback, we get to know quite a bit about Cunanan, the wannabe social climber. He immediately gives you the impression that he’s “that guy” at the party — the one who shows up uninvited, then proceeds to inject himself into strangers’ conversations, which in this case was Versace’s but to his luck and credit, his boyish charm works on Versace, earning him a date to the opera. Cunanan presented a completely fictitious backstory, one that made him approximately 100 percent more Italian than he actually was, which totally appealed to the famed designer.

After scoring his date, Cunanan shares his luck (with greatly exaggerated and made up details) with several of his friends the next day, which make us question what exactly went down since we are seeing all of this through his eyes, giving us a glimpse inside of his crazy brain. While sharing his story with Elizabeth and Phil Cote, a straight married couple, he calls Versace the F-word but later on while talking to a fellow gay, Cunanan refers to his meeting with Versace at the opera as a date. “You tell gay people you’re gay and straight people you’re straight,” the friend states. Cunanan goes on his date with Versace (still trying to figure out whether this was real or not), and the two share a moment, which no doubt will go back to haunt him later.

Back To The Future: Flashing forward to the day of Versace’s murder, Antonio, while washing his hands, hears the gunshot and races towards the sound to find Gianni bleeding to death. After what seems ages, the police finally show up, without an ambulance though, which comes much later. Versace is then very slowly taken to the hospital, where he flatlines and is pronounced dead at 9:21am. The hunt for his killer begins, and the world is told of his death. D’Amico is questioned later on that same day about his relationship with Versace by an apparently homophobic cop, who doesn’t hold much respect for Versace’s and D’Amico’s relationship. The police seemed far more interested in details about Versace’s sexual behavior than the details surrounding his untimely demise.

After D’Amico’s questioning, the spotlight then turns to Donatella’s arrival and reaction to her brother’s death, which was shocking in itself. Most of her mourning breath was spent belittling her brother’s lover. When Antonio broke down in tears, her response was, “That’s not what I need from you right now.” Donatella later berated him for not protecting her brother, which she called his one job (ouch, low blow, too soon).

The episode finishes up with Cunanan still on the loose, buying newspapers with the headlines all about Versace’s murder and his involvement in it.

Instant Reactions/Questions:

Darren Criss must have watched American Psycho while preparing for this role. His Cunanan gave me some serious Christian Bale as Patrick Bateman vibes.

Not really digging Donatella’s treatment of Antonio at the moment.

Speaking of Antonio, Ricky Martin is doing a beautiful job showing his grief and pain.

The music in this episode is A+.

Did anyone else feel a stabbing pain in their hearts when one of the magazines Gianni picked out had a picture of Princess Diana, who would later die less than a month after Versace?

Quote of the Night:

“I tell people what they need to hear.” – Andrew Cunanan.

The Assassination Of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story Sends Chills Down Our Spines In Its Premiere