Traditionally, TV listings are found towards the back of a newspaper. These days, however, anyone wondering what the next hit series will be is better off looking for the most violent item on the front page.
The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, which premiered in the US this week, is the latest in a seemingly endless new wave of true-crime dramas. Like a recent series of British primetime hits, it taps in to an apparent appetite to relive headline-making cases of the recent past. But unlike our dour docudramas, it does so with unapologetic panache.
It’s a very stylish – and very stylised – account of the serial killer Andrew Cunanan’s life, told in reverse, from his apparently motiveless 1997 murder of the Italian fashion designer Versace back to his troubled early years. The Versace family have branded it “a work of fiction”. It’s a compliment, though they didn’t intend it as one. This anthology series (which last year won nine Emmys and two Golden Globes for its retelling of the O J Simpson trial) puts good storytelling first. American Crime Story’s creator, Ryan Murphy, is also responsible for Glee. His métier is gorgeous, meticulously crafted trash, with a side order of stunt casting: here pop singer Ricky Martin plays Versace’s bereaved boyfriend Antonio.
Given Murphy’s reputation, the emotional depth of American Crime Story has come as a surprise to some critics. But Murphy has never been shallow. Beneath the kitsch, his dramas have always had an understanding of what pop culture can teach us about ourselves. O J Simpson’s trial has taken on different resonances over the decades – as proven by a scene in American Crime Story’s first series, in which OJ’s lawyer Robert Kardashian lectures his daughter Kim on the dark side of fame. Similarly, just as OJ offered interesting observations about race and celebrity, the Versace drama has pertinent things to say about gay identity.
Viewing the past from an ironic distance, Murphy’s bold approach places his true-crime dramas leagues ahead of his British peers’ efforts. The contrast will become unignorable when the show’s second series arrives on BBC Two next month – and, despite all their hand-wringing earnestness, it’s the British shows that feel more exploitative.
One of the big differences is timing: both series of American Crime Story are about events that took place 20 years ago. When a tragedy is too fresh in people’s memories, however, any irreverent, experimental retelling risks accusations of insensitivity. As a result, British filmmakers covering more recent crimes have found themselves hamstrung by convention – but even then, the speed with which they are ready to translate real-life suffering into primetime drama has necessarily felt a bit queasy.
In the space of just four months last year, British viewers suffered through The Moorside (about the 2008 disappearance of Shannon Matthews), Little Boy Blue (about the 2007 murder of 11-year-old Rhys Jones) and Three Girls, broadcast just five years on from the Rochdale sex-trafficking trial that inspired it. (The first two, incidentally, were both written by Jeff Pope, who has become the recognised leader of the genre)
Each show took a similarly down-the-line approach to narrative, and presented the suffering of Northern working-class families in washed-out greys, pushing the audience towards helpless anger at the slow-moving, ineffectual authorities. Each show had similarly doleful performances, earning the same raves from critics. None attempted anything that couldn’t have been achieved better by a documentary.
The other option, of course, is to create dramas that cut straight to the issues, without exploiting real people’s stories to do it. In 2016, the excellent National Treasure – following a fictional Seventies TV star hit by sex abuse allegations – turned the quagmire of Operation Yewtree into art, raising questions a straightforward factual account never could.
But our myopic, ripped-from-the-headlines docudramas are often too close to their subject to offer either documentary insight or dramatic depth.
Nevertheless don’t expect the true-crime trend to abate. Next up from the BBC is The Barking Murders, a three-part drama about the East London rapist and serial killer Stephen Port, who targeted victims on gay dating apps. It will arrive less than two years on from his conviction – let’s hope it is not another case of “too much, too soon”.
Tag: january 2018
via Ricky Martin’s Instagram Story | 20 January 2018
“ACS: The Assassination of Gianni Versace”, Episode 1 – Blog – The Film Experience
The first installment of American Crime Story made such a deep dent in culture by taking the O.J. Simpson murder trial, a case that was heavily imprinted in popular consciousness, and used it to analyze issues of race, sexism, and tabloid culture that still resonate today.
The second season focuses on, as the title establishes, the assassination of famed designer Gianni Versace in 1997 (shortly after the O.J. case) by serial killer Andrew Cunanan. And if the first episode is any indication of what the season as a whole will attempt, it will both broaden and narrow the cultural conversations that the first season tackled.
On the premiere episode, we get a first look into the mind of a murderer, the house of an icon, and the jet of a queen…
Episode 1 “The Man Who Would Be Vogue”
The premiere opens with Gianni Versace’s morning routine on the day of his murder. We follow him through the halls and patios of an overbearingly sumptuous mansion, in an exquisite tracking shot that indicates that excess is an everyday part of this man.Then we see Andrew Cunanan played by a never-better Darren Criss who will inevitably and deservedly going to be showered with awards on the fall. He’s contemplating, executing, and ultimately relishing the act of murdering Versace right on his front porch.
Opening with the murder is an indication that the series, much like in its first season, will not be focusing on the act itself, but rather on the players around it, and the culture that allowed it to happen. Gianni Versace was not the first murder Andrew Cunanan committed, and it was not the final chapter of his story. The series will delve both into the events that led him to commit that murder, and what happened afterwards.
This will be an exploration of Andrew Cunanan, who Darren Criss embodies with overbearing charisma, ambition, wide-eyed naiveté, and the right amount of flickering darkness to make us raise an eyebrow. We see that all throughout his life he has looked from the outside longing to belong, and that his magnetic personality and natural ability to lie through his teeth have carried him through.
In another superbly executed tracking shot, Andrew walks through a gay club with a friend, lusting not only after the boys around him, but this style of life. He meets Versace and insinuates himself into his life, landing a date at the opera he’s producing. He’s a serial liar, and to us it is evident, but you desperately want to believe him.
But this is also about the other players around him: the cops that are investigating Versace’s murder and are full of prejudices around his lifestyle. His lover and partner, Antonio D’Amico (played with impressive grace by Ricky Martin), who has to pick him up from the steps and spend the entire evening covered in his blood.
And it’s also about Gianni’s sister, Donatella, who is given perhaps the greatest television entrance in years: out of a jet into a limousine through the mansion, where, without a word, she’s swallowing her grief. And the moment Penelope Cruz finally speaks with that perfect accent, a couple of octaves down, we know Donatella means business.
She needs to keep the family company a family company, and will do whatever it takes to keep her brother’s legacy alive. It doesn’t seem Donatella will be much in the spotlight throughout the show, but Penelope iz making the best with her time, chewing every single piece of gold-coated scenery.
Whereas The People vs. OJ explored issues of racism and misogyny that reverberated in the present more than ever, Gianni Versace seems to be wanting to tackle both the homophobia and the celebration of gay culture that allowed these murders to happen. The majority of the players were gay themselves, and their relationship with that identity deeply influenced the case, either emotionally (with Ricky Martin’s character), strategically (all of Cunanan’s victims followed a very specific pattern), or legally (the Miami PD relationship with the local gay community was complicated, to say the least)
We’ll see exactly what statement the show frames around the murder as it develops, but the pilot doesn’t shy away from letting us know that identity politics will play a huge role in this; and that, yes, they are also still relevant.
The Assassination of Gianni Versace is perhaps a bit more scattered than its predecessor, but it also seems to enjoy itself a bit more. The show could develop into a lavish drama about passion and murder, or be an intricate exploration of broken minds and gay culture, or a combination of both. But wherever it takes us, I was in from the first moment Edgar Ramirez descended his spiral case in a silk bathrobe.
“ACS: The Assassination of Gianni Versace”, Episode 1 – Blog – The Film Experience
Jon Jon Briones, Ricky Martin and Édgar Ramírez on ‘Versace’ roles (part 2)
(Conclusion)
LOS ANGELES—In this part two of my column on “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story,” here’s more of Ricky Martin and Édgar Ramírez talking about their roles. The entire cast of the FX Networks’ production is getting enthusiastic reviews, including this one by critic Todd VanDerWerff of Vox:
“…As with any given (Ryan) Murphy production, the show’s cast is electrifying. Édgar Ramírez and Ricky Martin craft a deeply believable love for a lifetime in the handful of scenes they share together as Versace and his partner Antonio D’Amico, while Penélope Cruz might seem over the top as Donatella Versace, until you check out actual footage of the woman and realize the actress has absolutely nailed her performance.
“But it’s Darren Criss as Cunanan who leaves the biggest impression. Criss is best known as a dreamy song-and-dance man from ‘Glee,’ and his take on Cunanan is the very best kind of take on a dark character. He doesn’t want to create empathy for Cunanan so much as a kind of understanding. You are invited to think about him less as a person and more as an aberration, like some dark part of America’s worst self-made flesh. This is going to redefine Criss’ career, and it deserves to.”
Ricky Martin
The pop star, who recently announced his engagement to Jwan Yosef, a Syria-born, Sweden-raised artist (they held hands at the recent Golden Globes, where he, Penélope, Edgar and Darren were presenters), was also grateful that the story was filmed in chronological order, except for the series’ opening scene which shows that tragic day in 1997.
“Something that I’m thankful for was that my scenes were shot in chronological order,” Ricky pointed out. “I had a natural buildup. The first scene I shot was me walking down the stairs, going to pick up my racquet ball, because I’m going to play tennis and Gianni saying, ‘Ciao,’ and me saying, ‘Ciao bello.’
“All I needed to do was go back to those eyes and him saying goodbye, and I get emotional. I was really immersed in this.”
The 46-year-old shared more on D’Amico, who’s often referred to as Versace’s lover and nothing else. “Antonio was raw,” Ricky began. “His honesty was cutting. That was why Gianni was obsessed and so in love with him. Antonio would tell him, ‘I’m sorry you’re wrong. And that’s a horrible sketch, by the way.’ That is the relationship that they had, and that’s what Gianni needed.
“Gianni was surrounded by yes people. The only person who would tell him, ‘You’re wrong,’ was Antonio. I think Antonio would also ask Gianni, ‘Come on, go out, have fun and live. Life is short.’ That stimulated Gianni in many ways.
“Most of the experiences that dictated Gianni’s collection was because of how Antonio exposed him to a pretty tough, heavy, funky sexual hallucinogenic life. I was asking around what happened when people would come to Gianni to talk bad about Antonio. He would become a lion.
“There was a special connection between Gianni and Antonio. They just had to look at each other, and they knew what they both needed. Antonio was a bit of a caregiver. He was the one who’d give him his vitamins every morning. So, Gianni felt protected by Antonio.”
Édgar Ramírez
Édgar spoke about his different challenge when they shot the opening scene, which took days. “It was an interesting exercise of abandonment and trust because I spent days with my eyes closed, being handled by all the [actors playing] paramedics and witnessing the emotions that Ricky put into it,” said the Venezuelan actor.
“Gianni was declared dead roughly an hour after he was shot, so he might have been alive. He might have been listening to all the things that were going on around him, without being able to react because his body was shut down.
“I can’t fall asleep, but I had to be as quiet as possible. It was an exercise of trust.
“When we shot in LA, when they put me on the gurney for the first time and strapped me, I had like seven people around. I had a panic attack. My mind knew that it was fine, but my body was reacting to people talking.
On working with Darren, Édgar remarked, “Darren is great. I have never worked with him before. He has such a strong energy—he is a singer, musician, composer and a very fine actor. It’s interesting because we hardly encounter each other, but we share the same space many times. So we became closer personally on set. I’m very happy to be doing this with him. I know his work before from ‘Glee.’ ”
Édgar also discussed the dynamics between Gianni, Antonio and Donatella, as portrayed in the limited series. More than a week before “The Assassination…” premiered in the US on Jan. 17, the Versace family issued a statement blasting the series as a “work of fiction.”
“…The Versace family has neither authorized nor had any involvement whatsoever in the forthcoming TV series about the death of Mr. Gianni Versace, which should only be considered as a work of fiction,” the statement read.
Despite this statement, Donatella recently sent flowers to Penélope, according to Ryan. He told The Hollywood Reporter, “Donatella Versace sent Penélope Cruz a very large arrangement of flowers when she was representing the show at the Golden Globes. I don’t know if she’s going to watch the show, but if she did, she’d see that we treat her and her family with respect and kindness, and she really is a feminist role model in my book because she had to step into an impossible situation, which she did with grace and understanding.”
Donatella was quoted by The New York Times in 1999 as saying, “My relationship with Antonio is exactly as it was when Gianni was alive. I respected him as the boyfriend of my brother, but I never liked him as a person. So the relationship stayed the same.”
For his part, Édgar was diplomatic in his comments: “That’s one of the most interesting interactions in the story. The house of Versace had everything to do with that relationship. At times, it feels like a Greek tragedy. Also, the way it’s written and told, it feels almost like ‘The Borgias.’ It has a very classic element, which has to do with the cultural component.
“Gianni and Donatella were very close. They completed each other in many aspects. The first woman Gianni ever made dresses for was his little sister. She was his muse in many ways and, at the same time, she was his wild side.
“She was like his presence out in the world. She’d go out and inform Gianni about what was going on. She was in tune with what was going on in society.
“The house of Versace is a result of their interaction together. Gianni was at the center, but it was a family business. It’s a very Italian and Latin thing to have a family business for generations, for better and for worse.
“Because there is no one that you can trust more than your family. At the same time, you’re talking about business, so it always gets complicated. It’s a very endearing, intense, high-voltage relationship. But, there was a lot of love. For Gianni, family was a priority, and it was very important.”
Jon Jon Briones, Ricky Martin and Édgar Ramírez on ‘Versace’ roles (part 2)
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@carlinjames: Next, I’ll be playing Andrew Cunanan’s brother in Episode 8 of Assassination of Gianni Versace. Here with my ACS-sister, Isa Camille Briones, and our ACS-mom, played by the talented, @AdlerJo.
#ACS #Versace #actor #fashion #filipino #mestizo #blessed #actorslife #OOTD #TBT
@ACSFX: See why critics are raving about #ACSVersace.
https://ia601501.us.archive.org/34/items/TheShiftingTidesOfCulture1/The_Shifting_Tides_of_Culture%20%281%29.mp3?plead=please-dont-download-this-or-our-lawyers-wont-let-us-host-audio
https://acsversace-news.tumblr.com/post/169939720454/audio_player_iframe/acsversace-news/tumblr_p2vetu3tFo1wcyxsb?audio_file=https%3A%2F%2Fia601501.us.archive.org%2F34%2Fitems%2FTheShiftingTidesOfCulture1%2FThe_Shifting_Tides_of_Culture%2520%25281%2529.mp3
T & Lo discuss the ongoing cultural shift in Hollywood, examining the reactions to the Aziz Ansari story and how the wider #MeToo movement is changing the conversation. Plus, the “Heathers” remake and how it demonstrates a fundamental misunderstanding of the original film, which leads to a wider discussion on remakes, reboots and sequels, with thoughts on “Blade Runner 2049” thrown in. Finally, they review the 1st episode of “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” and how it depicts the assault on gay culture that followed his death.
*Starts at 37:45 on full podcast