“The Assassination Of Gianni Versace” Is Riveting Television! – Canyon News

HOLLYWOOD—Ryan Murphy has a tool when it comes to storytelling. This is the guy behind the hit series “Glee,” and the FX series “American Horror Story” and the recent “American Crime Story: The People v. O.J. Simpson.” Murphy has returned with another crime story, one that people know about, but may not be 100 percent aware of all the madness that occurred behind the scenes of slain fashion designer Gianni Versace. Yes, nowadays many are aware of the household name because of his sister Donatella, who is a portrayed by Oscar-winner Penelope Cruz.

Let me say, Cruz is a stunning depiction of the fashion icon, but we got a very small slice of the character in the premiere episode. The bulk of the narrative really unfolded on the actual assassination of Gianni Versace (Edgar Ramirez), by obsessed fan and possible secret lover Andrew Cunanan portrayed with brilliance by Darren Criss. For those who haven’t done much research on the death of Gianni Versace and Andrew Cunanan, it might not be a bad idea to do so. Why? The limited series, while noted is inspired by interviews and actual events, we all know things are fictionalized to a degree to heighten the level of drama for the small screen.

I thought the opening sequence was pure brilliance. I had this fear this flick would work in chronological order similar to Murphy’s last outing with the story of O.J. Simpson. Not quite. This flick seems to be playing with the time element a bit utilizing the present and the past to convey its story. I’m never the biggest fan of any TV show or movie that alters the element of chronology unless it’s a vital element of storytelling. While we’re only one episode in on the series, at this point I’m ok with the jumps from the past and the present between the 1990 and 1997.

Now, with that notion out of the way, the bulk of this first episode really focuses on Andrew. This is a guy who is a closeted gay, who seems to be more focused on the world of dramaturgy. If you’re not aware what that means, it’s where one puts on a performance to stage an image of themselves to appease to others. We see this right off the bat, when Andrew has a conversation with a pal about meeting Gianni Versace. His pal is skeptical, and that later turns to a question about Andrew’s sexuality. The dialogue was utterly poignant as the friend revealed Andrew was free with his sexuality around gay people, but pushed his heterosexuality when he was around straight individuals. That scene transitions to an interesting set-up where the audience interacts with Andrew who is staying at the home of another friend. He is seen entering the bedroom of a husband and wife in just his underwear as he begins to fondle himself, while staring at the husband. Out of nowhere, the wife awakens, not able to fully grasp what is transpiring before Andrew immediate alters his behavior to throw off any suspicion.

The show is presenting Cunanan as a trouble individual, one who is mentally unstable, trying to explore or understand his sexuality, all while attempting to present himself in a light where he is accepted not only by his peers, but others where he hopes to become a part of the focal group. Some might ask the question rather the show is attempting to get the audience to sympathize with this serial killer who murdered a total of 5 people including Versace himself, and I’d have to argue I didn’t sense that. It’s more a testament about inviting the audience inside the mind of this troubled character.

I mean we see him walk up to Versace who is returning from picking up the local newspaper, and shot him several times in cold blood before fleeing the scene of the crime. After being chased by a member of Versace’s entourage he points a gun directly at the individual who backs away. He is not the least bit remorseful; he gets into a truck and screams in glee that he killed Versace. This is a complicated character we’re looking at here, and Criss is hands down a shoo-in for contention for awards season 2019. If this is what he has done with the character in just 1 episode, I can’t wait to see what other madness unfolds in coming episodes.

“The Assassination of Gianni Versace” is a series that has been so hyped, but it’s actually delivering on all fronts. We’ve gotten a slight glimpse of Versace’s personal life and the fact that he liked to visit gay clubs and have dalliances with young men behind closed doors. We got a very small tease into the world of his fashion empire, and what is certain to be a rivalry as Donatella aims to keep the company from going public. Oh, did I mention Ricky Martin is also part of the cast as Gianni’s lover. “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” airs Wednesdays at 10 p.m. on FX.

“The Assassination Of Gianni Versace” Is Riveting Television! – Canyon News

TV Review: Ryan Murphy Scores Another Hit With ‘Versace’

Ryan Murphy has done it again. After the critical, commercial and awards season hit “American Crime Story: The People vs. O.J. Simpson,” one wonders how Murphy could top himself for season one. Originally season two was supposed to look at Hurricane Katrina, with Annette Being at the lead. However, things fell apart and the creative team is currently going back to the drawing board. Yet, this pushed up “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story” to be the second series in the anthology. In many ways, this appears to be the story most resonate with Ryan Murphy’s brand. Luckily, Murphy delivers with a pilot that is tantalizing, engrossing, beautiful and frightening in equal measures. Upon ending, one salivates for more.

Unlike the O.J. season, we know who the killer is. The episode begins with Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss) gunning down Gianni Versace (Edgar Ramirez) on the steps of his Florida mansion. The show jumps back and forth to Andrew and Gianni’s first meeting seven years earlier in San Francisco to the aftermath of the murder. The FBI, led by Agent Evans (Jay R. Ferguson) and Detective Lori Wieder (Dascha Polanco), begins a manhunt after it is confirmed Cunanan is the killer. Meanwhile, Donatella Versace (Penelope Cruz) jets in to mourn her brother and dictate the direction his company will go in.

The show rests squarely on the crown jewel performance from Darren Criss as Andrew Cunanan. There’s something madly brilliant about his performance that makes it complete Emmy bait. Small moments, such as a horrifically joyous celebration in his car following Versace’s murder, unravel the sociopathic tendencies of Cunanan. Criss doesn’t rest on easy explanations for his character, which makes him even more upsetting. Future episodes promise to examine his murder spree that ended in Versace. As someone who “tells gay men than he’s gay and straight men that he’s straight,” it will be interesting to peer into the lies that led to the incident. Cunanan feels like a cross between Tom Ripley and a modern day social media influencer.

The rest of the cast delivers as well. From the moment she makes her grand entrance, Penelope Cruz reminds us why she’s an Oscar winner. Her Donatella expresses grief but doesn’t let that get in the way of her decision making. This marks a nice contrast between the more ethereal passion exuded by Edgar Ramirez as Gianni Versace. He makes him a figure easy to fall in love with and sidesteps making him a caricature. Ricky Martin reeks of stunt casting as Gianni’s lover Antonio D’Amica. However, he equips himself better than expected. Future episodes promise to delve into the battle of coming out for Gianni and how that impacts his company. Much like how O.J. dramatized racial and sexist tensions, this show will excel the more it contextualizes homophobia during this time.

The episode radiates with visual splendor. Gianni Versace regales Andrew with the story of how he fell in love with a sculpture of Medusa. Just as this sculpture influenced Versace’s brand, Versace’s brand influenced the production design and costume design of the show. Versace’s mansion bursts with color and splendor. This contrasts well with the apartment of Andrew’s friend, Elizabeth Cote (Annaleigh Ashford), which is well put together but grey and modern. Who wouldn’t be attracted to the glamorous lifestyle of Versace? Even his gruesome murder, which includes shots of bullet wounds in his head, retains some beauty. One tourist takes a page out of Vogue and dips it in his blood at the scene of the crime. Andrew’s wardrobe also exemplifies his contradictions. He dresses well put together to attract people to him. His clothes are equally unhinged, such as his baggy T-shirt and hat following his murder.

“The People vs O.J. Simpson” ushered in a new era of exploring famous murder cases from the past. Documentaries like “Casting JonBenet” and series such as “Law and Order True Crime: Menendez Brothers” reek of copycat syndrome. Yet, the story of Gianni Versace feels fresh. That’s because its a different approach. We aren’t solving a murder. We’re entering the mind of a sociopath. Combining the psychology that makes “Mindhunter” a success and the soapy entertainment value of Murphy’s other work will pay off in dividends for the show.

GRADE: (★★★1/2)

TV Review: Ryan Murphy Scores Another Hit With ‘Versace’

American Crime Story’s second season underwhelms | The Journal

I truly hope the second season of American Crime Story will serve as a successful follow-up to the first season’s success. But after seeing this first episode, I find myself left with more questions than answers.

I’ll admit I was already skeptical before watching the second season premiere of Ryan Murphy’s American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace.

The show’s debut season People v. OJ was a cultural phenomena, retelling the infamous story of OJ Simpson’s trial and completely changing the public’s perspectives of several key figures in the case. As a worried fan, I wasn’t sure if Ryan Murphy could replicate that success.

Murphy is notorious for producing phenomenal inaugural seasons of television, only for their follow-ups to leave something to be desired. He coupled two stellar seasons of American Horror Story with four subsequent seasons that could only be described as a hot mess.

He famously took his early critical darling Glee from a heartwarming show about high school outcasts belting out their feelings to Journey songs to a still unclear mess with a new cast talk-singing “What Does the Fox Say?” Murphy’s quality downfalls are usually a result of his ability to push the boundaries of television to the point of illogicality.

So after watching the premiere of ACS, airing on FX, I can confidently say Ryan Murphy has followed his own trend, albeit with a significantly larger budget than ever before.

There’s no denying Murphy has crafted a visually stunning premiere episode of television, so it’s a shame the caliber of writing has paled in comparison to both the episode’s aesthetics and the writing of the first season.

Murphy chose to take creative risks with the season, telling the story of serial killer Andrew Cunnanan in reverse, starting the season with Cunnanan’s final murder of fashion mogul Gianni Versace. The episode works backwards to show how Cunnanan’s life led him to such lows. However, within the first episode alone, several timelines are introduced and it becomes unclear how the rest of the season can coherently progress.

While at the very least this will probably be an entertaining — if not entirely historically accurate — season of television, Murphy uses narrative cop-outs that can typically be found in the most generic of CBS procedurals.

An example of these typical plot conventions includes a police chase of Cunnanan that ends in a takedown of the suspect, only for it to be an unrelated man wearing the same coloured shirt as the killer.

Another example is when Versace’s lover, played by Ricky Martin, remains covered in his boyfriend’s blood twelve hours after finding his body, because his lavish lifestyle apparently doesn’t afford him with a shower or a towel. These moments stand out as events that would never happen in the real world upon which this is all supposedly based.

Despite these shortcomings, the decision to film the show in Versace’s actual house gives viewers a connection to the fashion designer that’s necessary for such a one-note character. The architecture, clothing and decor of the home tells us all we need to know about his lavish life. The contrast of having Versace leave his home in a simple black t-shirt with white shorts to walk to the local newsstand in what would be his final outing humanizes him in a way that allows viewers to properly sympathize with his untimely end.

I don’t know that the time-hopping storytelling device used will portray a coherent narrative, but I still find myself eagerly anticipating the next episode — if not for a well written show, then at least for a visually pleasant one.

American Crime Story’s second season underwhelms | The Journal

American Crime Story Producers Talk Versace, Hurricane Katrina and More

Brad Simpson and Nina Jacobson are executive producers on American Crime Story. After the captivating and award winning first season, The People Vs. O.J. Simpson, there were some hold-ups. The next season was supposed to be about Hurricane Katrina, followed by the Gianni Versace murder. The Assassination of Gianni Versace became the second season, but Hurricane Katrina is still up next. Then they are developing a season about the Linda Tripp and Monica Lewinsky sex scandals of President Bill Clinton.

/Film spoke with Jacobson and Simpson at an FX party for the Television Critics Association. They described how each season has a different tone and therefore needs a different writer, and what we can expect from future seasons.

Since Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski weren’t available, how did you find new writers to tackle Versace?

Simpson: Ryan [Murphy] had Maureen [Orth]’s book and Nina and I had to think about who would be the perfect writer for this. It was tonally going to be different. O.J. was a drama. It had a sort of Sidney Lumet/Paddy Chayefsky inserted into it. This needed to be something out of the vein of Silence of the Lambs or David Fincher with a political bent. Tom Rob Smith is a writer we love. I tried to option his book, Child 44. When it came out, I lost the option battle for that. I think he’s one of the premier thriller writers as a novelist. We loved his series London Spy. He writes about all these things: Ripley-like characters, mysteries, people who are liars and also sexuality. It felt like his voice was the right voice for this. We knew we needed somebody who had as strong a reputation as Scott and Larry. He got the book and loved it and signed on instantly. Except for cowriting one episode, he’s written every episode of the season.

Do you think you’ll have a different writer for each season?

Simpson: I would love to stumble upon a writer who’d do a couple seasons with us. It’s tough because I love Scott and Larry. This wouldn’t have been a show that would’ve been right for them to write. Tom’s voice was perfect for this. It’d be easier for me if we could find somebody who would stay on, but somebody said earlier today, “We’re doing genres within genre.” True crime can mean many different things. If we did a kidnapping story, I guess we won’t because FX has their kidnapping story [Trust], but if we did a bank robbery story, we would probably find a very different type of writer.

Jacobson: The truth is that Tom wrote some amazing scripts early on. So we had a lot of very strong scripts while we were still struggling with Katrina, so we had plenty to get started because he was on a tear. He knew exactly what he wanted. We had the usual dramaturgical process of the back and forth, but he was writing great material and had a lot of them. At a point we were like, “Very clearly, we should be doing this first. It’s ready and we’re not ready on Katrina.” Better to get it right and do justice to your stories than to try to hit a deadline. Even though you wish you could hit a deadline, you’d rather not screw it up.

If Scott and Larry wouldn’t be right for Versace, how is the tone different from People Vs. O.J. Simpson?

Jacobson: It’s a different kind of story because of the fact that so many of the episodes cover different people. So you have all of the victims to explore. I don’t think people knew these people to begin with so they don’t have a lot of predetermined ideas because they didn’t know who these figures were. For me, I was impressed and surprised by what a cutting edge figure Versace was. I don’t think I realized that. You think of Versace clothes, Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous kind of signifier of wealth. I didn’t realize what a visionary he was, how courageous his coming out was, the fact that he was really one of the first designers to come out. The others who had been forced out by having AIDS, all of that stuff really surprised me and the degree to which his work came from the inside, from his background and his history, his family, childhood. I really feel like I didn’t understand who he was until we dove into the research.

Did you think you could at first?

Simpson: O.J. took us a year and a half to write that. What we learned is with a new writer and new subject, you really have to put the time in and O.J. set a high bar. We didn’t expect to ever achieve what O.J. achieved which was this amazing universal acclaim, awards, ratings and everyone talking about it. We want each show to have integrity and exist and work on its own merits and bring something different to people. We’re never going to try to repeat O.J. That’s the reason this season is very different. If you’re showing up thinking it’s going to be O.J., you’re getting something very different this season. I hope it’s pleasurable. It’s scarier. It’s more intense but it’s also I think an important story.

American Crime Story Producers Talk Versace, Hurricane Katrina and More

Gianni Versace Is the Beating Heart of the Show About His Death

It was always going to be hard for Ryan Murphy to top American Crime Story: The People v. O.J. Simpson. The first installment of his true-crime anthology benefited from singularly compelling source material and a talented ensemble cast, weaving them into a season that deftly retold the story of Simpson’s trial and recreated the complicated racial dynamics that informed both the public’s perception of the proceeding and the relationships between its key players. Murphy’s campy aesthetic perfectly lent itself to the tabloid nature of the case, something that goes ditto for the second season, The Assassination of Gianni Versace. But stylistic similarities aside, this new edition is quite a different season of television.

In the opening scenes of People v. O.J., the crime had already been committed, and the ensuing narrative focused on the courtroom drama that unfolded after. Versace begins with the crime, but then moves backward, showing the viewer in more or less reverse chronology the events that led to that moment over a period of days and years. While the late designer’s name is the one in the title, the series is really the story of two men presented in contrast to each other. Édgar Ramírez plays the late Versace as an industrious man consumed by great compassion for his family and life after contracting and recovering from HIV (a diagnosis never confirmed by the Versace family and a point of contention for them with the series). Conversely, Versace’s killer, Andrew Cunanan (Glee’s Darren Criss, in what will likely be a breakout role) is in love with the idea of a particular kind of life—the opulent, seemingly “perfect” variety Versace embodies—but disappointed by his own reality, lusting after what he believes is his entitlement rather than working to achieve it.

That theme—of doing the work—is what separates the series’ titular victim from his killer. The former is shown laboring over his designs, hoping to leave a legacy larger than himself; the latter is an intelligent but indolent loafer who constantly lies to and leaches from the people in his life until they tire of his charm offenses and cut him out. Absent any real-life explanation for his killings, the series presents Cunanan as increasingly isolated by his own actions, obsessed with Versace, and frenzied as he realizes he will never have the life he’s always envisioned for himself. He eventually snaps, setting in motion the cross country killing spree that would end in both Versace’s death and Cunanan’s by his own hand.

Structurally, this dual presentation is undermined by the fact that Cunanan killed four other people before he got to Versace, and so the narrative spends long stretches of time (and one entire episode) without checking in on the designer at all. Tonally, that also means that despite Criss’s exhilarating performance, things get pretty dark, and borderline dour, during a middle stretch of episodes focused almost entirely on the sociopathic murderer. Versace, and especially the characters who inhabit his storyline—his sister Donatella (played robustly, but with great affection, by Penélope Cruz) and long-time partner Antonio D’Amico (Ricky Martin, who lends a good deal of emotional heft to an underdeveloped role)—are sorely missed in these sections, as they provide the series with an essential bit of altruism Cunanan inherently lacks.

The Versace family has voiced their disapproval of the series, largely because it is based on journalist Maureen Orth’s book Vulgar Favors: Andrew Cunanan, Gianni Versace, and the Largest Failed Manhunt in U. S. History, which they’ve called “full of gossip and speculation.” But while there are no doubt scenes in the series that have been fictionalized for dramatic purposes, its treatment of its titular subject and his family is extremely tender. Both Versaces could have easily become caricatures, but on screen, Ramírez and Cruz turn in much more than mere impersonations.

The Versace siblings’ relationship is complex. They have strong disagreements about how to run their company (his sister’s suggestion that they produce a less-daring line of dresses for the masses results in Gianni taking a pair of shears to a design they made together) as well as their personal lives (Donatella and Antonio are not fans of each other, and in real-life she cut him out of her brother’s will). But despite their arguments, Gianni and Donatella are extremely loyal to each other, with the designer constantly encouraging his sister to pursue a higher role in the company and take it over once he has passed away. The total devotion, integrity, and realness inherent to these characters’ interactions with each other make them a joy to watch, and a necessary polarity to Cunanan’s self-absorption.

In the absence of the Versace family, any humanity missing from Cunanan is left to be provided by his other victims. While Finn Wittrock, Cody Fern, and Mike Farrell turn in empathetic performances as victims Jeff Trail, David Madson, and Lee Miglin, respectively, their characters here are mostly explored in relation to only two things: Cunanan and their sexuality. Just as racial dynamics informed People v. O.J., so too does the pervasive homophobia of the ’90s act as a lingering presence over this second season. Trail is a veteran who left the Navy because of the oppressiveness of “don’t ask don’t tell.” Madson is briefly considered a suspect in Trail’s murder at least in part because of his gayness. Cunanan’s third victim, the successful Chicago developer Lee Miglin, is portrayed as a closeted man who employed Cunanan as an escort (Miglin’s family has always maintained the killing was random), and the series implies that had Miglin been able to live openly, he and his killer may have never even crossed paths.

In contrast to O.J., however, these sorts of details rarely directly influence the action on screen. Race was ingrained in the O.J. Simpson case, with Los Angeles’ contentious history of black and white relations affecting the location of the trial, the public’s perception of Simpson’s innocence or guilt, and the appointment of defense attorneys and prosecutors. Versace’s source material isn’t as rich, and as such anyone hoping future iterations of the show will be able to examine larger themes on a micro level the way O.J. did may have to temper their expectations. Homophobia’s omnipresence certainly isn’t seen as a motivating factor for Cunanan, whose sexuality seems to be the one thing he was never very concerned with, or adept at, lying about. Instead, Murphy employs anti-gay bigotry largely for tonal purposes—as a looming, threatening force in the characters’ lives, adding to a sense of inevitable doom that presides over everything.

The Assassination of Gianni Versace is a worthy, if often grim, successor to American Crime Story’s first season. If nothing else, in its divergent examinations of Versace and Cunanan, it aptly seizes upon what makes glamour so captivating in the first place. It’s not just the ritz and wealth—it’s the sense that there are people out there, surrounded by friends and family, who are living big, loud, exciting lives. It’s the series’ contention that Versace had achieved this—but it was not the “perfect” existence as Cunanan envisioned it. It was messy. There were complications, arguments, and illnesses Versace had to deal with. But that’s just life. Cunanan thought he was being denied what he wanted, but he was actually always avoiding it.

Gianni Versace Is the Beating Heart of the Show About His Death

‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’ – A Pauper Slays an Emperor – Awards Daily

Do not go into The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story and expect another incarnation like The People v. O.J. Simpson. While both seasons of the limited series focus on crimes from the 1990’s, the incidents are approached so differently that it almost feels like they come from entirely separate shows. What is clear, however, is that Murphy wanted to tackle the epidemic of homophobia, and Versace features a performance from Darren Criss that we will be talking about this entire awards season.

I remember when Italian designer Gianni Versace was gunned down on the steps of his Miami Beach villa in 1997. It was the summer before I started middle school, and I became embroiled in the manhunt for killer Andrew Cunanan because he was known to be gay. As a closeted seventh grader, it was kind of unsettling to see a lot of media outlets continually mention that the authorities were looking for a gay man involved in the murder of this well-known, out gay figured.

Unlike the first season, this Crime Story starts with the violence and then works its way backwards, volleying back and forth between the lives of Gianni Versace (played by Edgar Ramirez) and killer Andrew Cunanan (a calculated Darren Criss). While Versace’s name is in the title, the namesake of this season is a bit misleading.

Versace is the victim and object of Cunanan’s obsession, but The Assassination of Gianni Versace truly characterizes how Cunanan was able to burrow into people’s lives. The opening sequence is stunning. Versace lazily eats breakfast and says goodbye to his morning staff as he casually leaves to stroll down Ocean Drive to buy some magazines. We see a clearly distraught Cunanan wade chest deep in the ocean and then feverishly fumble to accost his idol on the street.

As the police begin to look for Cunanan, the series flashes further and further back to revisit Cunanan’s lesser known murders. His spree ended with his most famous victim, but Versace gives respectful time to the more unknown people who came into Cunanan’s life. Full episodes are devoted to Lee Miglin (Mike Farrell), David Madson (Cody Fern), and Jeffrey Trail (Finn Wittrock). By the penultimate episode of the season, we are even seeing Versace and Cunanan as young boys.

When they announced that the new season of American Crime Story was going to focus on this particular story, I was vocally concerned on the Water Cooler Podcast about how this was going to be handled. I was mainly concerned that they were going to overly sexualize Andrew Cunanan and that was going to overshadow what he had done. I was wrong. Sure, Darren Criss is perpetually shirtless and we get glimpses of him naked from behind, but how Cunanan presents himself is so important to the character and how he was able to mentally seduce people. Versace doesn’t ask us to feel bad for Andrew Cunanan as much as it invites us to witness what he has done.

Darren Criss channels Tom Ripley as Andrew Cunanan. He is both the most confident person in the room and the most insecure baby you will ever meet. It was always reported that Cunanan was the life of the party, and he always made you feel good when you were around him. He spouts off lies faster than his audience can keep up. All he wants to do is impress you and even make him seem better than you.

Criss makes his voice higher and his smile is warm and comforting at times, but when that warmth disappears, there is a level of malevolence to Criss’ performance that is haunting and chilling. Criss’ Andrew Cunanan is charismatic but dangerously unpredictable. It’s the performance of his career.

As the series delves deeper into the life of Andrew Cunanan, the less it focuses on Gianni Versace. Embodied by Edgar Ramirez, Versace is a beacon of love and light. Whenever you see him with his staff or even walking down the street, he is gently touching people on the face or saying hello. He’s very loving and passionate. Penelope Cruz’s Donatella Versace is given the difficult task of trying to hold the Versace brand together after her brother’s death as she spars with Gianni’s lover, Antonio D’Amico (Ricky Martin). She gets to play a fashion icon, but she’s more of a grieving businesswoman. It’s a shame that the Television Academy doesn’t allow guest performers from limited series to compete, because the incomparable Judith Light (as Home Shopping Network icon Marilyn Miglin) would be a a brilliant choice. Cody Fern delivers a quiet and guarded performance as David Madson.

This season captures a particular moment in time with homophobia in America. President Bill Clinton put forth Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, and a lot of straight people were still scared of gay people from the AIDS epidemic from the 1980’s. There are many moments when heterosexual characters look at gay characters and hint that the “gay lifestyle” is different or seems foreign. Looking through a modern lens, those moments will make you flinch.

The Assassination of Gianni Versace is different from The People v. O.J. Simpson in almost every way. While O.J. Simpson was a tightly wound courtroom drama, this season is a wild manhunt. It’s a tale of how a young boy was told he was the center of attention, but not told how to do the work to become a good man. It’s a tale of how wanting to take the easy path can make you desperate and isolated. Gianni Versace wanted to create beauty and Andrew Cunanan wanted that beauty to be his.

‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’ – A Pauper Slays an Emperor – Awards Daily

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story episode 2, Manhunt, advanced preview

Ryan Murphy’s The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story continues this Wednesday. Searching for a spoilery advanced preview of what to expect in episode 2? You came to the right place!

We have binged-watched the first eight episodes of the second season of American Crime Story to bring you an advanced preview each week of what to expect! Avoiding all spoilers? Turn away now!

The second episode of Versace: ACS takes us back three years before Gianni Versace’s assassination. Then, we flash-forward to the aftermath of the senseless killing, before the series settles back in the past again. It’s certainly a whiplash of a timeline, but an entertaining one nonetheless.

Here’s what else you can expect…

If the first episode wasn’t clear Donatella (Penelope Cruz) and Antonio (Ricky Martin) do not get along, episode 2, “Manhunt,” will do it. The two can’t be in the same room without bickering. And even though Antonio tries his best, Donatella is not here for it.

Dascha Polanco returns as Detective Lori aka the only one in her department who cares (and is doing something) to find Andrew Cunanan. Also back for more is Max Greenfield as Ronnie. We’ll see how he and Cunanan meet. And if you believe you can’t see Greenfield and not think of New Girl‘s Schmidt, you’re wrong. Greenfield completely transforms himself and is almost unrecognizable as Ronnie.

More spoilery bits:

  • Fan of Darren Criss? Then you’ll love all the dancing and singing that goes on in this episode.
  • There’s a scene that will give you serious American Horror Story vibes. This is definitely Ryan Murphy’s work.

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story episode 2, Manhunt, advanced preview

A Closer Look at Two Key Relationships That Influence FX’s ‘Versace’

Wednesday’s second episode of FX’s The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, “Manhunt,” tells the story of the hunt for Versace’s killer, Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss). But it also shines a light on the loving relationship between the fashion designer (Edgar Ramirez) and his sister, Donatella Versace (Penelope Cruz), the one between Versace and his partner, Antonio D’Amico (Ricky Martin) and the final friendship Cunanan formed before Versace’s murder, with an HIV-positive Miami junkie named Ronnie (Max Greenfield of New Girl fame).

While many of the people Cunanan was close with in the final months of his life wound up victims of his killing spree, Ronnie had a different relationship with the serial killer.

“Andrew is a friend to him — or at least he really wants him to be,” Greenfield tells The Hollywood Reporter of his character. “It starts to dawn on him that something is off, and he really doesn’t want to believe it because he values the friendship more than what he feels like this might end up being.”

Although the Versace family has continued to deny that Versace was diagnosed with HIV before his death, the Ryan Murphy’s FX anthology (and Maureen Orth’s book Vulgar Favors, on which it is based) posits that he was — and contrasts Versace’s illness with Ronnie’s positive status. Greenfield said that meeting Ronnie, who had also recovered from his sickest days, helps bring context to the new lease on life many HIV-positive people faced at the time.

“Two years before, they had just come up with the medication that treated HIV, and you had these people who had accepted their own fate and had all of a sudden been given this new lease on life,” Greenfield said. “I’m sure a lot of them were lost, and had lost so many people, and didn’t understand why they, all of a sudden, were spared.”

The series jumps back and forth in time to depict Versace in the throes of his alleged illness, which caused him to lean heavily on his sister and on D’Amico. Ramirez told THR that though he and Cruz are Latinx and the Versaces are Italian, their cultures have two very important factors in common: their deep Catholic roots, and the fact that they’re comfortable with expressing emotion.

“That was something that was key to Gianni’s relationships in general, especially within his family, and that’s something that, based on all the accounts that I had access to — people who were close to him would tell me — he was very respectful; he was a generous guy; but passionate, and in touch with his emotions. So was Donatella, and so was the relationship. Penelope and I, we connected to that. We understood that well. Gianni used to say that the beautiful thing about working with family is that you would fight in the morning and then you would have dinner at night as if nothing had happened.”

As for Versace’s relationship with D’Amico, “they were very much in love … and we really wanted to pay tribute to what we think was a beautiful love story,” Ramirez said. “They were very close and they were real partners, not only in love but also in business and in creativity and in the enjoyment of life, and that was very important to them.”

But the relationship between Donatella and D’Amico was not nearly as close — their battle for Versace’s estate played out in newspapers and courts in the years following the designer’s death, and plays out on screen in Wednesday’s episode.

“You have to think of Gianni as an emperor, like the sun of a universe that would swirl an orbit around him,” he said. “So, of course when he was gone in such a horrible way and drastic way, no one was prepared for that and that whole universe collapsed. Without the sun, everyone spun out of control.”

A Closer Look at Two Key Relationships That Influence FX’s ‘Versace’

‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’ Is FX’s Top Limited Series Premiere Since Legion

“The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story” posted FX’s top limited series premiere in the key 18-49 demographic since “Legion.”

The latest installment of the anthology show drew 1.5 million viewers in that age range and 5.5 million overall when it debuted on Jan. 17. Both Nielsen numbers include three days-worth of delayed viewing.

For reference, the Dan Stevens-led sci-fi series pulled in 1.8 million viewers in the key demo when it hit the network last February.

The night of the premiere, “Versace” came in as the No. 1 show on basic cable in both the key demo and total viewers. These ratings put the Ryan Murphy series at No. 4 in ranked cable series premieres in the 18-49 demo since last January and No. 7 among all cable series premieres since 2016 in that group.

The drama centers around the story of legendary fashion designer Gianni Versace’s (Edgar Ramirez) murder at the hands of serial killer Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss), with both the aftermath and events leading up to the assassination included in the tale. The story plays out in reverse chronological order.

All Nielsen numbers cited are based on three days of delayed viewing.

‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’ Is FX’s Top Limited Series Premiere Since Legion

‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’ uses opera mindfully | Daily Trojan

A few days ago, while watching the premiere of The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, one of my favorite arias began playing in the middle of the episode. During a sequence that pans throughout different reaction shots following the shooting of Versace, “O quante volte” from Vincenzo Bellini’s I Capuleti e i Montecchi sounds over the foreboding footage. Normally, I hate when popular media samples classical music. Chances are, the worst recording was chosen from an ample catalogue of fine artists. Surprisingly, Ryan Murphy, creator of The Assassination of Gianni Versace, got it right.

Opera has a long history of being placed in dramatic moments in movies or TV series, but having studied the art in depth, I realize that the pieces or arias that are chosen never relate to the scene itself. The thing about opera, like music in general, is that the text may be somewhat disconnected with the feeling or emotion of the melody. For example, a melancholy mood could be set to passionate texts. On the other hand, upbeat tempos may be accompanied by arduous moments. So even though an aria may sound sad, the meaning could (and probably does) have an entirely different context.

But it’s clear that Murphy, or whoever is in charge of choosing music, did his or her homework. I’ll try my best not to give away spoilers of the episode (though in my opinion, you can’t really spoil a biopic), but the use of opera throughout is brilliant. The episode, titled “The Man Who Would be Vogue,” flashes between 1990 and 1997, the former set in San Francisco while Gianni Versace designed costumes for San Francisco Opera’s production of Richard Strauss’ Capriccio. This moment is less ominous, but deserves recognition for aesthetic accuracy. However, it’s the Bellini aria, sung by Natalie Dessay with Concerto Köln in 2007, that is the real showstopper.

“O quante volte,” which translates literally to, “O, how much time?” comes in the second half of the first act of the Bellini masterpiece, which is based loosely on Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. Giullietta (Juliet) looks at herself in the mirror in anticipation for her upcoming nuptials to another man. She dreadfully awaits the moment in which she is passed off, wishing for Romeo to visit. She begs the question: how much time until she’s saved? I’m not much of a Ryan Murphy fan, but something in the way this scene was done had me questioning my own worth. Like Giulietta, I’m getting impatient waiting to be saved. Or rather, waiting to be saved from apathy and pessimism.

When I was a young teen, my mother told me a story about when she went to a palm reader with her friends when she was in her 30s. She took everything the psychic said with a grain of salt, but she remembers vividly that the psychic told her that both her children would be very successful, especially her son (me!). Whether the palm reader actually relayed this information or my mother just told me this in an effort to get me to do my homework is unknown, but I hold the premonition close to my heart. In times of hardship or woe, my light at the end of the tunnel is actually a sound, and that sound is my mother’s voice saying, “You’re destined for success.”

But I’m still waiting. And as I keep waiting, as I have for the last 26 years, I’m beginning to lose hope. What if that big moment has already come, but I was too busy waiting for it to pay attention? What if I’m already in my prime, and this is the best it’s ever going to get? Maybe it’s more beneficial to come to accept my accomplishments as they are, and not as a precursor for destiny.

I’m probably just being melodramatic — but I’m just taking my cues from Giulietta. She romantizes her anguish; her “sky weeps” with the “passion of desire,” and “the air that winds around” is her “longing.” Meanwhile, whenever I’m not waiting for my big break, I consume myself with fantasies of life imagined in what I consider my prime. What that even is, I’m not sure, and I don’t think I’ll be completely happy until that happens. But I’ll try to come to terms with it. Though my world revolves around realism (some would say pessimism), I’ve always been uncharacteristically optimistic about my professional life. It’s the only thing that keeps me from falling into an unmentionable abyss of regret and remorse.

If the rest of The Assassination of Gianni Versace is anything like the first episode, I’ll be watching from beginning to end. As an Italophile, I knew I’d find reasons to tune in regularly. Maybe it’s Penelope Cruz’s spot-on interpretation of fashion legend Donatella Versace. Or maybe the opportunity to see Darren Criss’ bare ass over nine weeks. Either way, it was the show’s use of music that has me inspired.

‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’ uses opera mindfully | Daily Trojan