The Assassination of Gianni Versace episode 4 review – Dead Good

The runaway success of the maiden run of American Crime Story, The People Vs. O J Simpson, dealt with a multi-faceted crime that had everything a drama series could ever want: murder, deception, media sensationalism and a long-running court case, complete with a highly controversial verdict. It even had an extremely Hollywood live-action car chase ferchrissakes.

Such was the reception to series 1 that fans were hyped to find out which famous true crime would inspire its follow-up. And while there was little in the way of explicit criticism, plenty of murmurs before The Assassination of Gianni Versace began airing suggested that this ‘fan shoots fashion designer’ story wasn’t really enough to justify and hold its entire 450-minute running time. Thankfully, those murmurs have been proven quite wrong.

The main reason this story is more than capable of supporting a nine-part series is that Versace’s killer, Andrew Cunanan, has a story which is much deeper, darker and more grotesquely fascinating than many people realised, with most people, in fact, barely knowing who he was before this series. Another large factor is that each of his crimes is treated with time, patience and pretty much a full episode each. It’s as though each week is a separate play exploring one of the strings of the man’s diabolical murders, with Darren Criss’s Cunahan in the lead and one of his tragic victims in the supporting role.

We’re sure Signori Versace’s story will pick back up next week or the week after, but this first half of American Crime Story series 2 should really, by rights, be called ‘The Assassin of Gianni Versace’ instead, such is the emphasis so far on the gunman and his rampage.

This fourth episode, again, is stolen by the actors playing Cunahan’s victims. We’re sure Edgar Ramirez will have his chance later in the series, but last week we had the Miglins adding real pathos and emotion to events. And this week it’s his second victim, David Madson, who propels the episode – and the man playing him, newcomer Cody Fern, does truly a sterling job bringing him alive (albeit all too briefly).

Only slightly out of the closet, Madson is a young guy, an up-and-coming Minneapolis architect (what is it about that profession? Cunanan’s third victim Lee Miglin was also an architect…). He and Cunanan are former lovers and take to the road – to Cunanan’s mind – like Bonnie and Clyde, after Andrew smashes in the head of their mutual friend Jeff Trail. But, in reality, he basically kidnaps David and forces him to flee with him.

As with last week, there’s a further exploration into the idea of how shame and embarrassment work for gay people, this time via flashbacks to David’s childhood relationship with his father and how he came out to him – his main concern throughout their bizarre post-hammer time road trip being that his parents would be shamed by their homosexual son and his connection to a brutal ‘gay crime’.

While these fascinating and touching dives into the victims’ lives are welcome and provide excellent drama, they are a real juxtaposition with our spree killer Andrew Cunanan. He’s been at the crux of everything so far and will, presumably, continue to be. And yet still we know almost nothing about him and his true motives – although that is almost certain to change soon, we’re sure.

We’ve seen all of the victims come and go now, so the ‘what?’ and ‘who?’ parts of this season’s American Crime Story are out of the way. We’re really just left with the ‘why?’ – and with just over half the run left, we’re hopeful we’ll find out some of those answers…

The Assassination of Gianni Versace episode 4 review – Dead Good

The Assassination of Gianni Versace episode 3 review – Dead Good

What terrifies you more?” Andrew Cunanan asks a ‘friend’ of his midway through this week’s American Crime Story. “Death or being disgraced?” Disgrace? Disgrace isn’t so bad. You get used to it…”

And Cunahan should know. Everything he does is disgraceful. In fact, just moments after asking Chicago property tycoon Lee Miglin that question, he drops a block of concrete on his head and stabs the bound and gagged man repeatedly with a screwdriver.

This whole second series of ACS is all about disgrace and shame. The first run of the crime anthology – The People Vs. O J Simpson – was all about echoing current concerns over race using a famous murder from modern history. And this follow-up also reflects topical issues, this time the societal and psychological difficulties faced by many LGBT people – an issue close to the heart of the show’s creator, Ryan Murphy.

In episode 3 we see two very different gay men, both dipped in disgrace and shame, but for very different reasons. Lee Miglin is a successful Chicago businessman and closeted homosexual who’s spent his entire adult life suppressing his sexuality, wracked by shame and in fear of having his secret exposed and being publicly ‘disgraced’. His secret was to emerge, but only after the 72-year-old became Andrew Cunanan’s third victim.

Cunanan himself is less concerned with covering up his homosexuality. And even less concerned with covering up his murders. The real shame and disgrace here are reserved for him. And rightly so. He is, after all, a pathological liar who tortures and kills people he knows, has been in relationships with and even greatly admires.

But is it admiration…? Miglin was planning on building the world’s tallest structure. Gianni Versace was the world’s most famous fashion designer. Cunanan was drawn to – and killed – both. Perhaps his motivation was more unbridled and untamed jealousy more than adulation.

We saw both his third and fourth victim this week. Miglin’s murder, with its elements of sexual sadism, was hideous and dangerously close to being gratuitous. But there was something somehow even more shocking in the dead-eyed way Cunanan later rather unnecessarily puts a bullet through the head of a man begging for his life, just so he could steal his truck. Darren Criss has a chillingly bored look on his face as he coldy dispatches the man. It’s so cold in fact that the brief scene leaves you with chills.

This instalment of The Assassination of Gianni Versace, ‘A Random Killing’, is the first not to feature the eponymous Italian. And while that may seem a little odd for a show about him, it’s really not an issue. There are 9 episodes in total, so there’s still plenty of time to dive back into Versace’s pool and swim around. And no doubt we’ll all be back in some nice tight Speedos again next week.

In fact, it’s almost quite nice to get away from the searing heat of Miami Beach and spend the fifty minutes up in chilly Chicago. While, of course, this episode still heavily features the crazed spree killer that dominates the series, it’s really about the marriage of Lee Miglin and his loving but ultimately rejected wife, Marilyn. While their union may technically be a sham, the fact is never acknowledged formally and the thin veneer of deniability is played with such poised delicacy by Mike Farrell and Judith Light here that it’s genuinely touching and often quite heartbreaking. Their love isn’t a romantic one, but it’s strong enough and respectful enough to almost have made it all worthwhile. Almost.

When Lee’s body is discovered bound, gagged and surrounded by gay porno magazines, an unfazed Marilyn demands the police treat and report the case as a break-in gone wrong. A ‘random killing’. She doesn’t want Lee’s shame revealed. And she doesn’t want her sham revealed, either. Light’s performance here is fantastically subtle. But Farrell steals the show as the sweet and tragic figure of Miglin.

It’s just a bit of a shame we won’t be seeing either of them again.

The Assassination of Gianni Versace episode 3 review – Dead Good

TV review: The Assassination of Gianni Versace; The Secret Life of the Zoo

The Assassination of Gianni Versace
BBC Two
★★★★☆

The title The Assassination of Gianni Versace has turned out to be something of a misnomer. It isn’t about Versace’s killing, it is about his killer. Versace is a bit character fussing over dog-collar dresses (and, lest we forget, that safety-pin frock that introduced us to Liz Hurley’s breasts). As a portrait of a fantasist serial murderer it has been mesmerically done, mostly thanks to Darren Criss. His portrayal of Andrew Cunanan, who killed five people before putting a bullet through his head, has been consistently outstanding.

However, recently the show has become flabby. Like many dramas, it has suffered mid-series spread, using more filler than a meal-deal supermarket sandwich (part seven last week being a case in point). Last night’s penultimate episode also went round the houses, but in showing us Cunanan’s childhood and his abusive weirdo father who hero-worshipped his youngest son and kissed his feet when he got into the “right” school it at least brought us closer to the nub: what made Cunanan a monster. It’s a cautionary tale for anyone who repeatedly tells their child that they are “special”.

These were helpful retrospectives, with Cunanan’s broker father being caught for fraud and bolting to his native Philippines, leaving his family homeless and penniless, then telling his son to be a man for once and stab him. The timeline has been messed with far too much, but here, at last, we saw the making of the narcissist as Andrew, aged 11, was given the master bedroom while his older, unfavoured siblings shared. “If you’re a lie, then I’m a lie,” the young Cunanan told his fugitive father. And a lie is what his entire life went on to be, with him hiring himself out to men for sex under pseudonyms while pretending Daddy was a high-flyer.

Running in parallel was a mini version of Versace’s childhood in Italy, with his mother supporting his dream of being a dress designer even as his teacher called him a pervert. The stage is fully set now for the finale and although I’m very queasy about TV shows immortalising serial killers, thereby giving them what they always craved — notoriety — I think our patience will be rewarded. It’s just a shame it’s been about three episodes too long.

TV review: The Assassination of Gianni Versace; The Secret Life of the Zoo

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