I Love Serial Killer Stories And Worry What That Says About Me

This past weekend, I binge-watched Mindhunter, Netflix’ new, dramatized-but-based-on-true-events series about the origin of the FBI’s Behavioral Sciences Unit. It’s set in the 70s, when profiling serial killers was just beginning to be a thing and despite thinking the main character had about as much charisma as stale break (it’s ok, the show does, too), I could not get enough.

“One more episode,” was the refrain. “C’mon.” And then, of course, we’d watch another, with protagonist Holden Ford finding a way to create rapport with serial killer Edmund Kemper. Agent Tench, the cop-ass-cop of the duo, starting to see value in it. Dr. Carr—a professor and consultant on the project— finding ways to reign in these two and actually make their research viable and scientific and therefore useful in predicting violent behavior.

Eventually finishing up in spectacularly dramatic fashion, we were both shocked to realize that it was over. Season one: finished.

We immediately rolled into season two of American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace. This is another dramatized but based-on-true-events story of a serial killer, the stylish, compulsive-lying Andrew Cunanan, who killed a whole bunch of people on a spree that included famed fashion designer Gianni Versace at his Miami Beach palace in 1997.

He preyed especially on gay men, using his good looks and erudite air to get men to trust him. Then, he robbed or killed them. Sometimes both.

Where Mindhunter is sometimes clinical, showing its characters meticulously interviewing serial killers in scenes that almost border the mundane, this show is passionate. It delves deeply into Cunanan’s victims’ lives, and cares deeply about their interior selves: struggles, passions, heartbreak.

I’m halfway through the season so far, but I already “know” Versace to some degree. I know Lee Miglan, a successful but closeted elderly man who, in one scene, tearfully prays at an alter, telling Jesus he “tried” not to be gay. I know David, a young man who dated Andrew and took him in, only to watch him brutally murder another friend, then hold him hostage and eventually kill him, too. I know about David’s relationship to his dad, an outdoorsman who wasn’t exactly pro-gay, but loved his son enough to accept him, despite his own leanings.

Both are valid approaches to the genre, as is the ridiculous, sexy Hannibal, which didn’t so much humanize a serial killer and cannibal, but made him so hot that it was impossible to resist his allure.

God, it all just makes me want to watch Hannibal again.

But all of this has got me thinking: why, exactly, is the serial killer genre so popular in our culture? Why is it so compelling to watch other human beings be broken down, terrified, brutally murdered? Why do we want to understand why that happens? What drives this morbid fascination with a particular psychological extreme?

I don’t really have any answers. If I had to wager a guess, I imagine that it’s fun on some level to play armchair detective, and comforting on a deeper level to have a safe (fictionalized) space to contend with the dark side of human nature.

I Love Serial Killer Stories And Worry What That Says About Me

Don’t miss these March TV premieres

March 21
“Inside Look: The Assassination of Gianni Versace” finale, FX

Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss) will be hiding out on a houseboat in the explosive finish to this tragic true-life American crime story. Versace’s (Edgar Ramírez) death was another crime the FBI might have prevented had they acted sooner on overwhelming evidence that Cunanan was in Miami after killing four men and making the 10 Most Wanted List.

Don’t miss these March TV premieres

Must Watch: “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” | Valley Magazine

Sex, money, murder and fashion—the underlying themes of ‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story.” The story behind the assassination of one of the most iconic fashion designers of the ’90s titillates its audience with scenes of opulence and glamour.

The shows stellar cast includes a bevy of Hispanic actors like Édgar Ramirez as Gianni Versace, Penelope Cruz as Donatella Versace and Ricky Martin as Antonio D’Amico, Versace’s partner. Darren Criss also stars as the psychopathic killer, Andrew Cunanan.

The show is set in South Beach, Miami in the ’90s and recalls debauchery and luxury. The show features an assortment of iconic vintage Versace pieces, colorful and skin-baring. Chainmail dresses (which made an appearance modeled by a cast of supermodels at the spring 2018 Versace show) and pin dresses might as well be cast members in the show.

The show also provides a look into Versace’s Casa Casuarina on Ocean Drive, a representation of who Versace was in life, Italian-made and dripping in gold. From working for his mother’s small boutique in Calabria to a multi-millionaire with a company worth millions at his death.

Versace’s premature and tragic death on the steps of his home caused a worldwide uproar. Perhaps people didn’t know Versace before his death, but they did know of him later. The show provides a look at how slinky dresses, pretty houses, sexuality and fame are important themes in Versace’s life. Versace lacked support as a gay man in the ’90s from an Italian family. He had many rumored lovers and a steady partner, controversial to the mainstream during that time.

The Versace name demands grandeur, still a prominent fashion house proclaimed in rap music. The notable and inimitable Versace style, along with its Medusa head logo, is central to fashion history.

Even though there is a certain and obvious sadness to Versace’s story, the glamorous party scenes and overall ’90s vibes will inspire that same carefree, go-big-or-go-home attitude.

Must Watch: “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” | Valley Magazine

Looking Back On ‘American Horror Story’s School Shooting Episode

[…]

Likewise, American Crime Story has created a whole critically-praised brand for taking exploitative stories and turning them into powerful and reflective works of art. The O.J. case was one of the most overly covered and circus-like trials in American history, but under the hand of Murphy’s team, The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story stands as a thoughtful and sad reflection about the clash of racism, sexism, and the power of celebrity in America. The currently running Versace season of American Crime Story is an even better example of the creator’s contextualizing gift. Over the course of a handful of episodes, The Assassination of Gianni Versace has transformed Andrew Cunanan’s victims from forgotten names in an article to fully fleshed out, tragic victims taken before their time. “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell” took Jeff Trail, a murdered man whose death was largely ignored, and portrayed him as an outstanding naval hero. “House by the Lake”, the series’ episode on the death of David Madson, may be one of the saddest and most emotionally charged episodes of the year.

There have been many projects for Murphy and many years between the first season of American Horror Story and the Versace season of American Crime Story. When American Horror Story first premiered, Murphy was still only really known for Nip/Tuck and Glee. He wasn’t known as a horror-focused creator at all, so it wouldn’t be surprising if he and his team felt like they had to be as shocking as possible to cement the anthology series’ place on television. It’s more difficult to overlook the misstep of Glee, a show known for painting a candy coating on even the deepest of issues. Glee‘s attempt to address the complicated emotions of Sandy Hook was too much, too soon. Of course Murphy wasn’t totally new to the game when either AHS or the Glee episode dropped; but his previous projects erred on the side of shocking broadness, instead of real depth. Murphy is nearly a decade older now, wiser, and with more seasons of television under his belt. Add in that he, and others on his team, have had time to understand the impact of the O.J. case, Andrew Cunanan’s murders, and — unfortunately — the repeated cost of mass shootings, and you start to see why more recent Murphy projects have a more nuanced approached than Tate’s skull-faced attack.

There may be a way to depict school shooting on television. These stories are part of our societal narrative, whether we like them or not, and depicting the horrors of the world is something that art should do. As proven by the American Crime Story franchise, there’s even a chance that Murphy can be the creator to figure out this complicated and somber topic successfully. But at the moment, arguably one of the best remembered examples of school shootings in modern TV history still falls short.

Looking Back On ‘American Horror Story’s School Shooting Episode

The Assassination of Gianni Versace Recap: ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’

The most recent episode of The Assassination of Gianni Versace takes us deeper into the mind of Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss) through an interesting turn of events. As you may recall, we last left Andrew at the lake house where he took David Madson’s (Cody Fern) life. A flashback takes us to April 1997 where we see Cunanan trying to convince American Express to give him a credit line increase so he can buy a one-way ticket to Minneapolis. What’s there you ask? According to him two of his “best friends”, David and Jeff (Finn Wittrock).

This episode is interesting because it focuses on homosexuality from a personal and political standpoint. At the time, Clinton passed a “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy concerning gay individuals in the military. This policy comes to light when the story dives deeper into understanding Cunanan’s first victim, Jeff Trail. Being a homosexual in the military, Trail faces the harsh reality of the resistance against it. The episode unravels his journey of discovering and facing his sexuality which ultimately leads him to discuss it in the darkened shadows of an interview.

Simultaneously, we see Versace (Edgar Ramirez) decide to be open about his sexuality to the world through an interview. It was interesting to see the different perspectives of two individuals coming out of the closet, one behind the curtain and one out in the open. This aspect of the plot spoke volumes about the political and societal culture of the 90s.

After being cured of his “sickness,” he is ready to take on the world which leads to his decision of revealing that he is gay. He shares this with Donatella (Penelope Cruz), who does not share the same sentiments as her brother. She believes it will ruin the company name and prevent other companies and countries from doing business with them. Donatella blames Antonio for Versace’s sudden desire to tell the world he is gay.

While Versace grapples with his decision, the rest of the episode reveals the events that lead to Cunanan murdering Trail. We learn that Cunanan met Trail two years prior in a gay club when Trail was trying to embrace his homosexuality. However, over the course of the time he comes to know Cunanan, Trail realizes Andrew isn’t who he claims to be. Darren Criss’ portrayal of Cunanan shines so brightly once again as we see him face rejection and isolation from two guys he believes to be his best friends.

Ultimately, we know where this story ends and that Trail’s brutal demise is inevitable. Wittrock’s version of Trail was extremely phenomenal to follow during this episode. He not only represents an important societal issue of the time but embodies everything that makes Cunanan snap.

This episode of The Assassination of Gianni Versace stands strong over the ones that precede it for multiple reasons. While the episode itself played out relatively slow and uneventful, it was the underlying issues that made it stand out. Tackling the topic of homosexuality in the 90s from different perspectives was a feat they beautifully achieved during the episode. Temporarily we are taken away from Versace’s story to understand a deeper issue that existed at the time. However, incorporating Versace’s reveal adds to the story and brought it full circle.

As we reach the midpoint of the season, it will be interesting to see how the story develops from here and how it will all come together. We have spent a lot of time in the past but will we see the events that unfold following Versace’s murder? We sure hope so because that is where things are going to get interesting.

The Assassination of Gianni Versace Recap: ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’

The week’s best TV: Assassination Of Gianni Versace; Pets — The True Cost; Dispatches; Sunset Boulevard

PICK OF THE WEEK
Assassination Of Gianni Versace

Wednesday, BBC2, 9pm
Following the success of the Bafta-winning The People v OJ Simpson, the second season of Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski’s American Crime Story strand zones in on the events surrounding the 1997 murder of the Italian fashion designer and the subsequent bungled hunt for his killer, the Californian escort, fantasist and multiple murderer Andrew Cunanan. While The People v OJ dealt with America’s changing attitudes to race, played out as a pitch-black soap opera, Assassination — written by Child 44 and London Spy’s Tom Rob Smith — deals with issues of fame, class and gay lives in modern America and unfolds at a chilly pace. So, while the performances are uniformly excellent, with Edgar Ramirez and Penelope Cruz both haunting and commanding as Gianni and Donatella, there is a desolate despair to almost every scene, especially those dominated by Glee’s Darren Criss, whose depiction of Cunanan succeeds almost too well at capturing the killer’s fame-obsessed sociopathy. It’s a bleak watch, but stick with it. It gets bleaker.
Andrew Male

The week’s best TV: Assassination Of Gianni Versace; Pets — The True Cost; Dispatches; Sunset Boulevard

The 4 Best Moments Of ‘American Crime Story: The Assassination of Versace’ 2×05

This week we are welcomed back by the Versace family, in which Versace is considering coming out with Antonio. We also follow the story of Jeff Trail (Finn Wittrock), Navy sailor and Andrew Cunanan’s first victim. Be prepared to relive the most heart-breaking episode of American Crime Story: The Assassination of Versace so far.

Here are the 4 best moments from the episode:

Versace and Antonio’s Coming Out Interview

Gianni Versace arranges an interview with an LGBTQ magazine, in which he has intentions on coming out publicly with Antonio. Donatella is incredibly against her brother’s idea and she believes this will only lead to a negative impact on Versace’s career. She tells Versace that this isn’t just about him and he needs to think about how his company can be affected by such decisions. She reminds him of the time when people stopped purchasing Perry Ellis’ clothes after he appeared on a runway, currently dealing with AIDS, and how his models had to help keep him on his feet. She also reminds him that there are multiple countries who believe gay relationships to be a crime, therefore, many businesses would want to stop working with him. Versace has none of it though and says he is done hiding and he intends to live his life being who he truly is.

Later on in the episode, Gianni and Antonio head off to a hotel, in which their interview will be orchestrated. To start off with, Gianni intends on facing the interview alone, however, with a quick change of heart, he asks the journalist if Antonio could also join the interview, in which he replies “absolutely.”

Sexuality in the Navy

Jeff Trail is a Navy Officer with a good recording a bright future; that is, until he essentially outs himself by comforting another officer who he saved from being beat to death for his sexuality. Jeff receives subtle and not-so subtle threats; leading him to attempt removing a tattoo off of his leg and attempt suicide. Eventually, Jeff embraces who he is and finds himself in a gay bar, in which he meets Andrew.

Andrew inevitably wins Jeff over with his charming persona, treating him to rounds after rounds of drinks and maneuvering himself in to Jeff’s world. Jeff is the complete opposite of Andrew; he is genuine, kind, handsome, good-hearted and what he doesn’t know, is that being with Andrew is also the same as being on deaths doorstep. Andrew tries to convince Jeff to not go ahead with the interview about being a gay man in the Navy, however, just like Versace, Jeff is done hiding.

“So humiliating! Your face shadowed, your voice altered like a criminal!”

We see Jeff drive to a motel for his interview at the same time Versace is about to do his coming out interview; one famous, one an invisible sailor, one in the spotlight, one in the shadows, one is comfortable, one is asking for reassurance of not being seen on camera. Two complete opposites, yet they both want their identity to be accepted, they want to feel self-acceptance and they want their sexuality to be destigmatized and not looked upon as controversial. They also have one more thing in common; they will both be murdered by Andrew.

At the beginning of the episode, we see Jeff and his sister having a heart to heart about Jeff coming out to his parents, although Jeff insists on not going ahead with that idea. He then kisses his sister’s baby bump and expresses how excited he is to be an Uncle. Fast forward to Jeff’s death; whilst Jeff has now just been beat to death in the head with a hammer – at home, his family are trying to get in contact with him to inform him that his sister is in labour and she has had a baby girl.

“No one wants your love”

We return to the day of Jeff’s murder in Minneapolis; Jeff enters his apartment and finds his Navy uniform in a wrinkled mess on the bed, Andrew sitting on the living room floor. Andrew consistently tries to convince Jeff that the military don’t care about him and don’t want him. However, Jeff has had enough of his manipulative ways and confronts him for the man he truly is.

“You’re a liar. You have no honour.”

Andrew still tries to manipulate Jeff by telling him how much he loves him, in which Jeff replies with an explosive “No-one wants your love!”. By the look of Andrew’s face, that is the moment where Jeff has officially knocked on Death’s door and sealed his extremely short future. Andrew walks out of the room with Jeff’s gun zipped away in his bag and head’s over to David’s apartment.

Jeff presses and puts away his Navy uniform, seconds later receiving a phone call from Andrew saying, “I have your gun”. This is Andrew’s way of luring Jeff to David’s important, ready to commit his first murder. The murder that is about to change his life forever.

Finn Wittrock

The last time I watched Finn Wittrock in a TV show was his debut appearance on American Horror Story: Freakshow, as Dandy. This was a character I absolutely despised to the point in which I really couldn’t appreciate how incredible Finn is… American Crime Story has allowed me to fall completely head over heels in love with Finn and his portrayal of Jeff.

He made this episode, the most heart-breaking episode of American Crime Story: The Assassination of Versace so far. Being reminded of how homophobia used to be, and how parts of it still exist today will ache your heart, however, it is indeed a crucial piece of the story for television to see and allows us to relive America’s history of homophobia being an unforgivable crime.

Darren Criss has stolen the spotlight the entire series so far, but this time he took a step back and let Finn take the spotlight. I was completely in awe of Finn’s acting and I hope this isn’t the end of Jeff’s story, as he has become my favourite one so far!

The 4 Best Moments Of ‘American Crime Story: The Assassination of Versace’ 2×05

20 years on, why are there so many unanswered questions about Gianni Versace’s murder?

On the morning of July 15 1997, Gianni Versace was shot on the steps of his Miami mansion. The 50-year-old fashion designer was returning home with a selection of magazines bought from his local news café on Ocean Drive when he was twice hit in the head. Rushed to hospital with a faint pulse, his injuries proved too severe. At 9.20am, he was declared dead.

It sparked an international media sensation, a nationwide search for a killer – and one of the largest failed FBI manhunts of all time.

Two decades on, the shooting is the starting point for the latest outing of American Crime Story, the critically acclaimed television series that launched in 2016 with the ten-parter, The People vs OJ Simpson.

Like most people, that brief summary of Versace’s murder was more or less all that I knew when I was approached by Brad Simpson and Nina Jacobson, producers of American Crime Story, to write a mini-series about the events leading up to it.

They had responded to my novel Child 44, loosely based on the Russian serial killer Andrei Chikatilo, and my scripts for the BBC drama, London Spy. But the original idea for The Assassination of Gianni Versace had come from Ryan Murphy, the king of American television and creator of hit shows including Nip/Tuck and Glee.

I was sent a copy of Vulgar Favors, Vanity Fair journalist Maureen Orth’s book chronicling the months and years preceding the Versace murder. It was remarkable not least because it showed how little I knew about the complexity and heartbreak of the story. I was a crime writer, a reader of true crime, and this was one of America’s biggest murder investigations of all time – so why had it passed me by?

My first impulse as a scriptwriter when starting on a new project is to try and read everything written on the subject. In some cases, that is impossible; there’s simply too much. In this instance, it was with surprise and some dismay that I discovered how little material there was, both about the crime itself, but also about Versace as a man.

In terms of public profile, it was the very opposite to the OJ Simpson case. With that trial, most people knew its various twists and turns, the names of the lawyers, even actual lines of courtroom dialogue. With Versace, I didn’t even know there had been four other murders leading up to his. I didn’t know the names of these victims, nor their stories. What, if anything, connected them to Versace?

Far from being asked to dramatise a famous moment of history, the challenge felt closer to being asked to solve an untold mystery.

And so it was that, three years ago, I heard the name Andrew Cunanan for the first time, the young man with an IQ of 147, once full of promise and potential, who was ultimately responsible for five savage murders. ​Did he know Versace? It seems that they’d met in San Francisco four years before the murder. But what had happened between them?

When I asked Orth what had drawn her to the case in the first place, she answered that she’d seen a photograph of Cunanan, a handsome young man, wearing black tie, and it struck her that he seemed such an unlikely killer. This is the question at the centre of The Assassination of Gianni Versace: not who did it – there’s no doubt about that – but why he did.

Many killers display disturbing patterns of behaviour that go back many years. They’re violent, abusive, cruel to animals. Arson is a repeating indicator for a troubled psychology. If you had told Cunanan or his friends that, at the age of 18, he was going to be a notorious and despised killer, they would have found the idea impossible to believe.

Cunanan was a gentle boy with a high-pitch voice, mocked for being gay, an effete Oscar Wilde-like figure at his school, who used his wit to deflect the homophobic taunts he regularly received. His father, Modesto, had been born in the Philippines, joined the US Navy, earned US citizenship, came to America to live the immigrant dream of success, joining Merrill Lynch and using his handsome salary to send Andrew to one of the finest schools in the country: Bishop’s in La Jolla, San Diego.

Cunanan read widely, delighted in art and literature. He liked to laugh; even more, he liked to make other people laugh. He recited Robin William’s monologues to his friends and family. He wanted to impress people. He wanted to be happy. He wanted to be loved.

The series we set out to make was never going to be simply the life story of Versace, though we contrast his success with Cunanan’s failures.

But Versace’s was a vibrant success story, about the particular nature of an individual’s brilliance, not a crime story; those are about the nature of society – in this case, the destruction wrought on so many by homophobia. How do you survive in a society where many consider your existence to be a crime?

The Assassination of Gianni Versace was my first experience of dramatising real events. Yet there wasn’t an inordinate amount of detail to go on. There had been no murder trial, there were gaps in understanding the timeline of the killer, and the police investigations were never held up to much scrutiny.

We were trying to build a picture of events from a series of fragments, all that remained from the wreckage of lives destroyed by Cunanan.

So what was the connection between his five victims, who were killed during a three-month period in 1997: an aspiring young architect in Minneapolis, a former US Navy sailor, a Chicago real estate tycoon, a devoted national parks employee and a globally renowned fashion icon?

Cunanan had been on the FBI’s Most Wanted list for more than a month before the designer’s death, and was believed to be on the loose in the Miami Beach area. Why was the local community not warned? Why did it take his suicide, eight days after he shot Versace, to put an end to the killings?  

By dramatising the Versace story, my hope was that while I might make mistakes in the detail – for example, conflating characters for clarity, or giving characters lines of dialogue when we have no transcripts to guide us – such inventions would service the central themes and a larger truth. I raise this because The Assassination of Gianni Versace has come in for criticism from several quarters, in particular our decision to portray Versace (played by Venezuelan actor Édgar Ramírez) as having been HIV-positive.

Though his status was never made public in his lifetime, nor confirmed after his death, the suggestion that he was positive is prominent in Orth’s book, the primary resource for the show; to erase mention of it felt like removing part of the period’s history.

In many ways, the Aids crisis offers a parallel to Cunanan’s killings: gay men had been left to die while the world looked the other way, and it was only once a celebrity died that the world took action.

Part of what inspired me about Versace, in contrast to what appalled me about Cunanan (played by Glee star Darren Criss), was how one man overcame the obstacles in his life, while the other was consumed by hatred; how one man created while the other man destroyed. Andrew Cunanan was not a serial killer – he was a terrorist, a man filled with loathing for other people’s success. He saw himself as a victim of this world.

To that end, his journey is a road movie through American society.

20 years on, why are there so many unanswered questions about Gianni Versace’s murder?