Tag: january 2018
‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’ and ‘I, Tonya’ Interrogate a Moral Gray Zone
The new FX series The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story has a famous fashion designer in its title–but the show is much more interested in his killer. Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss), before he goes to kill Versace in Miami in 1997, spends his young life in pursuit of status and material wealth. He’s fascinated by opera–or at least claims to be to meet rich men–and the association fits: the form’s unironically bold emotions seem to suit Cunanan’s roiling inner life, and its lavish stagings are a reminder of all he wants but can’t access when the curtain falls.
Versace wants to be an opera too. The show, cribbing from recent-enough history to build a narrative of increasingly high dudgeon, is rigorous about its devotion to aesthetic and to its big ideas about culture and society. Along with the new movie I, Tonya, it’s among a recent wave of entertainment that repurposes the half-forgotten scandals of the 1990s into morally righteous art. Even when the result falls flat–which it often does–the impulse to create it makes sense: at a moment when offscreen life feels particularly unsettled, the media scandals of two decades ago are as suitably perverse a place as any to try to find something clear and certain.
There’s plenty of certitude in Versace, which is unabashed about underlining its theses over and over. One of these is the idea that a borderline-malicious lack of interest in gay men on the part of the police led them to miss out on apprehending Cunanan before he made his appointment with the doomed Versace. But the show’s bigger point is that the concept of the closet is a sickness that hurt Cunanan and hurts our culture on every level. Between their separate story lines, Cunanan and Versace (Édgar Ramírez) take a sort of Forrest Gump tour through every milestone for the gay community in the 1990s–coming out, the AIDS crisis, high society, crystal meth and “Don’t ask, don’t tell.”
All of that could be argued to be part of the saga, but how much of it is really part of this particular story? The military policy on gays, for instance, arises in a lengthy digression about a gay naval officer (Finn Wittrock) who falls under Cunanan’s sway. Elsewhere, another victim (Mike Farrell) is imagined as a closeted fellow besotted with Cunanan even as he hates his own gay impulses. We do not know whether this victim knew Cunanan in real life, or what the nature of the association was. Choosing to make the victim a heartsick, tragically closeted man is the easy choice in order to garner sympathy from an audience that’s come a long way–though hardly all the way–on the issue of gay rights. Sure, people in the 1990s (as now) withered away in the closet–but everyone Cunanan encounters seems burdened by their urges. The fact that Cunanan tends to see the world according to his own strict-if-warped moral code becomes less character trait than understandable way of dealing with the world around him. After all, everyone he meets seems punishingly aware of their own shortcomings. But what a shame: these men were already murder victims. Must this series force them to play the victim in life too?
Meanwhile, Versace lives his life, unaware of the creature coming his way. His sections of the story are stronger: Versace is just a man, in thrall of pleasure but just about the only person onscreen who is not toxically addicted to it. (That he’s portrayed so evenhandedly suggests fealty to the Versace name, or a minor miracle.) The story is tragic, certainly, but it also can be read as a lurid one-liner: monster kills star, motive unknown. Morals suggest themselves in the spaces between what is known, but airing them at great length seems a disservice to the story we actually have.
Of course, the true-crime genre–which often speculates about the unknowns in cases like Cunanan’s–is nothing new. But there’s a special fascination with a story of this particular timing, one that’s old enough to be history but recent enough to allow us to feel shocked at just how much has changed. Pop culture has always worked on a 20-year nostalgia cycle; here, that seems in part motivated by the degree to which the audience can give itself a nod of approval–we’re much more enlightened now than they were not so long ago. Things really were simpler then, and retro entertainment like Versace gives us the double comfort of understanding that we’ve got it all figured out now and escapism from our growing existential fears that we don’t.
What made The People v. O.J. Simpson, the previous installment in producer Ryan Murphy’s American Crime Story franchise, work was the effortlessness with which it found resonance between Simpson’s case and our lives in the present. That story’s elements of class, race, gender and celebrity needed no massaging to fit into a narrative urgently relevant to our lives in the 2010s. It succeeded because the details of that trial are so widely known as to make excavating the real figures from behind the headlines possible, and endlessly interesting.
Cunanan, a shadowy figure even to journalists who’ve tried to understand his story, is knottier, and less easily understood. Reducing him to a morality-play story of a boy warped by his secrets is unsatisfying. It’s enough to make it relevant to an empathetic contemporary audience, but it’s not enough for a drama that uses the names and personae of people who really lived.
…
Cunanan and Harding were two of the defining sensations of the 1990s, a peacetime decade during which tabloid stories colonized the front page. That neither were, or are, widely understood comes with the territory. And while FX’s Simpson series proved there’s room for real and thoughtful exploration of the people behind the boldfaced names, resonance can’t be forced. Reading Cunanan’s warped journey through America as tragically consequent to the gay experience, rather than the random actions of a psychopath, flatters an audience that feels sympathetically toward gay people. And reading Harding’s story as Real Housewives–level exaggerated but off-limits for real irony flatters an audience that likes edge, but not too much.
Part of what makes the real stories interesting is the ways in which their details exist in a moral gray zone: we’ll never know what pushed Cunanan, or if he could have been somehow saved. And the debate about Harding’s culpability, among those genuinely interested in the facts of her case, could go on for decades more. For now, I, Tonya seems to have settled the debate among casual fans: Harding is enjoying a media renaissance as the subject of sympathetic interviews, and has announced a return to the rink. “Tonya was the victim” may be less chewily satisfying than really digging into her story, just as FX’s Cunanan will never fascinate in the way the real one, with the contradictions and silences in his story, has for decades. But which one–the comfortingly safe interpretation or the violent, odd, real one–is likelier to sell tickets? A good opera demands a happy ending, even if that happy ending is just the pleasant sensation of an audience’s preconceptions being confirmed.
We’ve gotten these stories back at a moment when seeking deeper meaning in pop culture seems especially urgent. (Who understands the national political scene better than a viewer who spent her 2000s watching reality TV?) And many younger viewers will encounter these tabloid stories for the first time this winter. But in so relentlessly bending the stories to the will of the moment–one in which perceived villains deserve their moment of redemption, or at least bend-over-backward justification–their creators miss out on making something that will last. No matter how assured of their rightness the fictions may be, how long will we be talking about The Assassination of Gianni Versace and I, Tonya? Probably less time than we will spend still intrigued by Andrew Cunanan and Tonya Harding. Their true stories, messy and unresolved, still have the quality of the most meaningfully provocative of art.
‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’ and ‘I, Tonya’ Interrogate a Moral Gray Zone
@Nikotheikon: Excited to announce my supporting role on “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story,” To play a member of the Versace design team in this iconic story was a privilege and an honor. Look for me premiering January 17th on FX @ACSFX
Starstruck Darren Criss Performed a Ricky Martin Song for Ricky Martin While Shooting Versace
Darren Criss didn’t get to spend too much onscreen time with his American Crime Story costars — but they more than made up for it when the cameras weren’t rolling.
During an appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on Wednesday, Criss opened up about shooting the upcoming FX series, The Assassination of Gianni Versace, which chronicles the 1997 murder of the Italian designer outside his Miami Beach home at the hands of Andrew Cunanan, played by Criss.
“He was a spree killer, a very troubled young man who does not follow the typical prerequisites of a killer,” said Criss, 30, of Cunanan. “He didn’t kill small animals as a child, or have a history of violence. Such is the exploration of our show — how a kid with so much promise becomes somebody so destructive.”
Asked if he had “fun” playing the killer, Criss said, “I don’t know if fun is the polite word, but it certainly goes to dark places. We see the good sides of him, the sad sides of him.”
“But the fun part, truly, if I have to just be a big stargazer, is I got to do this show with this insane-o cast of huge superstars,” he continued, referencing A-list cast costars Edgar Ramírez as Gianni Versace, Penélope Cruz as his sister Donatella and international pop superstar Ricky Martin as Versace’s lover, Antonio D’Amico.
“So you have Latin royalty, and then the half-Filipino kid,” quipped Criss of himself.
Criss said he “made sure” to spend time with his costars offscreen, because “for plot reasons — and you can do the math — I don’t actually spend a lot of time with their characters at all onscreen.”
During production, Martin had everyone over to his house “several times” — and, according to Criss, the singer is quite the host.
“I’m sort of the Pied Piper of karaoke in singalong situations. I usually don’t bring booze, I usually don’t bring food, but I’ll bring a guitar and we’ll have a singalong, so that was my contribution,” said Criss. “One of my favorite memories of shooting the show is we’re at Ricky Martin’s house, which is already a place-setter of like, ‘Woah, this is wacky.’ And I’m sitting there next to his five or six Grammys, and what Ricky thought would be nice as a host was he got pedicures for people.”
“So I’m playing guitar — I’m playing ‘Let It Go’ and Penélope is singing that song, then I start playing one of Ricky Martin’s songs and Edgar Ramírez is singing it to me, he’s singing it to Ricky, we’re sitting next to his Grammys — and all the while, they’re getting pedicures. And I’m like … ‘How did this all happen?’ ”
“You’re now both livin’ la vida loca,” quipped host Jimmy Kimmel.
Starstruck Darren Criss Performed a Ricky Martin Song for Ricky Martin While Shooting Versace
Carmen Mormino: Had the pleasure of working with Penelope Cruz and Ricky Martin on “American Crime Story: The Death of Gianni Versace. “ Not sure when my air date is but episode number one I believe is next week. Had a great time, and wow what an experience playing a priest Giving the eulogy at the funeral! In all the best ways, my life is not a normal one! Never a dull moment but oh soooo fortunate (and of course grateful)!
Tuned In: Another excellent true crime tale in FX’s ‘Versace’
PASADENA, Calif. — The most interesting character in FX’s heartbreaking and engrossing “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story” (10 p.m. Jan. 17) is not Gianni Versace.
Versace (Edgar Ramirez) is probably the fifth most interesting character after his killer, Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss), and three of Cunanan’s earlier, largely unknown victims.
Featuring an Emmy-worthy performance by Mr. Criss, “Versace” is as much a true-crime story as it is an exploration of the cultural climate for gay men in America in the 1990s. Through this lens viewers see the cruelty and damaging unfairness of the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy and the pain of alienation for gay men who felt they could not be open with their families.
“Versace” is not perfect — some episodes meander a bit and anytime the story takes viewers back to Versace and away from the other victims, it becomes less compelling — but it marks an early, strong entry for one of the best series of 2018.
The series begins with Versace’s 1997 Miami Beach murder and each episode that follows goes further back in time, tracing Cunanan’s path from fame-and-wealth-seeking compulsive liar and fabulist to murderer. It’s not an effort on the part of producers to humanize Cunanan as much as it is an attempt to explain how he could commit such atrocious acts of violence.
There are a bounty of strong supporting players in “Versace,” including Mike Farrell (“MAS*H”), Judith Light (“Transparent”), Finn Wittrock (“American Horror Story”) and newcomer Cody Fern, but the true breakout performance comes from Mr. Criss, who capably inhabits the role of the sometimes desperate, sometimes pathetic and often creepy Cunanan.
“Versace” may not be quite on the level of the last “American Crime Story” installment, “The People v. O.J. Simpson,” but as true crime TV dramatizations go, it comes close.
‘Versace’ veracity
But here’s an important aspect of “Versace” that viewers need to understand: It’s a well-made drama but large swaths of it — particularly in episodes four, five and six that purport to show Cunanan with his earlier victims — are entirely speculative. No one knows the details of what happened between Cunanan and his victims because Cunanan and the victims were all dead before anyone could investigate the case.
The Versace family has disavowed the series issuing a statement to say “this TV series should only be considered as a work of fiction.“
Writer Tom Rob Smith (“London Spy”), working from the Maureen Orth book “Vulgar Favors,” acknowledged that he often had to begin with “a tiny pinpoint of a fact” and build the story from there, particularly when Cunanan is shown holding one of his victims at gunpoint.
“So we are trying to imagine a journey. We know the, sort of, shape of it,” he said. “We know that they must have gotten to a point where they were, at some level, working together. He wasn’t running away. Was he at gunpoint? And then, at some point, he was begging [based on the wounds on his body]. What was that conversation like? So you have these tiny points of truth, and you then try to connect the tissue between it. But I would never use the word ‘embellishing’ or ‘making up.’ It’s trying to join those pinpoints.”
Some may also quibble with the show’s title. To suggest the murder was for political reasons requires knowing what Cunanan was thinking, but executive producer Ryan Murphy defends the title.
“This was a person who targeted people specifically to shame them and to out them and to have a form of payback for a life that he felt he could not live,” Mr. Murphy said at an FX press conference earlier this month. “I do feel like any time that you methodically plot to kill someone with pain and murder in your heart to expose them for something, that is an assassination and so I feel like the title was important politically for us to say, and I also believe that that’s what it was.”
Mr. Smith said despite killing multiple people in a spree, he sees Cunanan as more of a terrorist than as a serial killer.
“What happens is once he’s lost everything and realizes that he can’t create, you have this fundamental choice in society,” Mr. Smith said, “which is either you build something that impresses someone, which is very hard, takes a lot of work, or if you can’t do that but you don’t want to accept anonymity, you can try to rip something down.”
Tuned In: Another excellent true crime tale in FX’s ‘Versace’
‘The Assassination Of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story’ Is A Frustrating Showcase For Darren Criss [Review]
There’s nothing intrinsically wrong with conventional, chronological cinematic storytelling, nor is there anything fundamentally good about non-linear structures in film. There must be a good reason to alter a story’s chronology, be it to convey a character’s subjective perception of events (“Memento”), to make a reveal at the most opportune moment (“The Usual Suspects”), or simply because you are Quentin Tarantino (“Pulp Fiction”). To employ a reverse-chronological structure for no purpose other than to be unconventional would make for a very frustrating experience indeed.
“The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story” tells the story of Andrew Cunanan, the real-life serial killer who murdered fashion icon Versace on the front steps of his villa. The series opens with Versace’s murder, and works backwards from there, exploring Cunanan’s life and previous murders. Occasionally, it checks in with Versace in the years leading up to his death.
Cunanan is played by Darren Criss, and if there’s any takeaway from this whole endeavor it’s that Criss is a monumental talent and that will almost certainly win “Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series or TV Movie” at the next Emmys ceremony. He’s breathtaking as Cunanan, a pathological liar and attention seeker who presents himself as being a dapper man-about-town with charisma to spare (he charms an American Express customer service agent into extending his line of credit over the phone — while simultaneously injecting heroin into his toe on the floor of his crappy motel room).
When “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” is great, it’s because of Criss’s performance. Whether Cunanan is lying his way into bed with the love of his life (a handsome young man by the name of David Madson, who ends up one of Cunanan’s early murder victims) or tracking his deadbeat father to the Philippines in the show’s most heartbreaking sequence, Criss plays it with just the ration of psychotic and pathetic. His performance is so outstanding that it’s a pity creator Ryan Murphythought it necessary to underscore so many of his scenes with comically ominous music. Criss gets these shades of his character just right; the musical assist does nothing other than to push the show into melodrama.
Murphy’s insecurity here is apparent not just in the show’s unnecessarily pointed score. The underlying problem with all ‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’ is its very structure. Here we have a story that would be maximally effective if told in traditional, boring, plain-old chronological order. It’s a story of a young man with a troubled past, whose sanity and personhood are stripped away by the circumstances of his life, until the tragedy of his life manifests in the most violent of ways. Watching as Cunanan’s mental stability wavered little by little, his pathological lying and violent tendencies increasing as time went on might not have been the most radical of viewing experiences, but could still have been fascinating — and even outstanding. But instead of letting the story, and characters speak for themselves, Murphy has decided to tell Cunanan’s story in reverse chronological order. The series begins with Versace’s assassination, moves backwards through each of Cunanan’s previous victims, and ends up at Cunanan’s childhood. The idea here is ostensibly to reveal Cunanan’s traumatic backstory only after showing us the crimes he committed as an adult.
This non-linear device is infuriating. Murphy’s method of dispensing information is flawed; he’ll have a character tell the story of their relationship with Cunanan in one episode only to spend the entirety of the subsequent episode showing us that same story — a story that we already know. There are full episodes that function as prequels to previous episodes, never shedding any light onto Cunanan’s motivations or characters — because none of the information is new.
The show’s midsection — episodes 3 through 6 — tell the story of Andrew’s first four murders. It’s not all bad (Andrew’s relationship with David, while frustratingly told, is a fascinating, and at times heartbreaking, story), but mostly it feels like network-TV serial-killer procedural fare, the sort of thing that might have been super popular five years ago. There’s an episode devoted to the killing of real-estate tycoon Lee Miglin — you can, and probably should, skip the episode entirely. No new ideas are presented, nothing interesting occurs, and Judith Light is entirely wasted as Miglin’s wife (herself a hugely successful perfume icon).
The fifth episode of ‘The Assassination of Gianni Versace’ spends some time telling the tragic story of Jeff Trail — a man I’d never heard of, but who deserves recognition as a hero. Jeff, who is eventually murdered quite brutally by Andrew Cunanan, was a closeted gay man in the military during the era of “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell.” His life unravels after he rescues a gay soldier from being murdered in his sleep, causing his superior officers to suspect Jeff himself of being gay. Jeff is played here by Finn Wittrock, who is brilliant in the role: strong, full of conviction, confused. However, the episode eventually circles back around to Jeff’s relationship with Cunanan, and ends up in the same cyclical repetitiveness that plagues ‘Versace’ throughout.
If the show’s later episodes presented Cunanan’s story in a more subjective light, if we were seeing the events unfold from the killer’s warped perspective, the retelling of these events might have been worthwhile. Instead, all that we get is information that we already knew, packaged in the bleak old veneer of a serial-killer procedural.
The series’ penultimate episode is likely its best. It tells the story of Andrew’s relationship with his father, Modesto Cunanan, played unconventionally by Jon Jon Briones. Modesto is a Filipino immigrant trying to make it as a stockbroker in America. We see a lot of adult Andrew in his father, who lies and cheats on a slightly less-ambitious scale to the one his son eventually will adopt. It’s the first episode to give us any insight into Andrew’s eventual actions, especially the pathological lying that becomes so much a part of who Andrew is. If only this was the first episode, and every episode after it chronological in nature, “The Assassination of Gianni Versace” would have been infinitely more engaging. The missed opportunity here is staggering.
On the show’s periphery throughout is Gianni Versace (Edgar Ramírez) and his sister Donatella (Penélope Cruz). Theirs is not the story Murphy has set out to tell, not really, and it shows in every one of their scenes. We watch (in reverse chronology, natch) as Versace almost dies of AIDS, recovers miraculously, gets back on his feet… only to be murdered by Andrew Cunanan. The Versace story as told here isn’t particularly striking, is only periodically engaging; it feels a bit like an afterthought. Ramírez and Cruz are both excellent in the small roles that they have, but nothing that happens in this part of the show is especially noteworthy.
“American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace” will have one lasting legacy: jumpstarting Darren Criss’s career as a respected TV actor. There will also probably be memes (Criss, dressed in a flashy red leather suit, dancing wildly to “Whip It” is particularly gif-able). But it has nothing on “The People v. O.J. Simpson, American Crime Story” whose success can be attributed to its absolutely riveting, character-based — albeit conventional — storytelling. [C+]
TCA: Darren Criss Has the Role of a Lifetime in FX’s “Versace”
For former Glee star Darren Criss, the only thing to be gleeful about while tackling his latest role was getting what the actor describes as "the role of a lifetime.“ In FX’s The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, the latest installment of the hit Ryan Murphy limited series franchise, Criss not only portrays spree-killer Andrew Cunanan, the man responsible for the brutal slaying of famed fashion designer Gianni Versace and several other men, he embodies him. It was a challenge Criss relished and with which he wanted to take great care. "I think the actor’s job is to find the empathy in anybody [he is playing],” Criss (pictured above and below) told MediaVillage in a recent interview. "I don’t care if it’s a football player or a scientist or in this case a ‘serial killer.’ You have to take into account not only the worst moments but the best moments and find as many common denominators between you and that person as possible.
“That’s a lot easier than you think,” he continued. "[Andrew] is not your classic American serial killer as we know them, where there are a lot of tells. He was loved by many, was an enjoyable, delightful, smart kid brimming with potential, so you kind of reverse engineer that and latch onto those things. You then have to ask yourself at what point could this have been me, and what point in my life could I have done these things that we would conventionally understand as the most abominable?“
The Assassination of Gianni Versace begins with the murder of the designer on the steps of his Miami mansion in 1997 and backtracks through the lives of both Cunanan and Versace (Edgar Ramirez). For Criss, it was re-enacting the gunning down of one of the world’s most respected fashion icons – at the very location – he found most difficult.
“Yes, that was an overwhelmingly emotional day,” he admitted. "We spent a lot of time in that mansion and there I was, dressed as Andrew, with his likeness put on my face and hair. Andrew never made it inside the mansion, but there I was having lunch for a couple of weeks. That wasn’t lost on me.“
According to Criss it was the knowledge of what he, as Cunanan, would be depriving the world of that weighed so heavily on him. "You have this overwhelming sense of what was and could have been, then what was taken away,” he recalled. “The O.J. story, for example, was shot on sets, but this is where it happened! These are the stairs, it was the street, everything is as it was with the only difference being 20 years have passed and the bloodstains have been removed. I had a moment when I walked into the building and really could feel Gianni’s presence.
“I found myself walking in there and kind of talking to Gianni,” he continued. “Being like, ‘Look, man, this is a horrible thing that happened here and I’m so appreciative of what you gave the world.’ It certainly gave me a new appreciation of his legacy. Hopefully, we can start a new story dialogue that he might’ve been interested in and would have liked people to [know about]. I guess I found myself trying to make peace with it.”
Despite having to humanize Cunanan in order to portray him, Criss wants two things known. One: He’s not fond of serial killers. Two: while based on real events, the series is not a documentary. He’s appreciative of the fact that much of Cunanan’s dialogue and the events are conjecture, with only Cunanan and his victims, all of whom did not survive his wrath, a party to them.
That’s something executive producer and writer Tom Rob Smith was also aware of, as he told MediaVillage. “I made sure that the stuff I put in supports a greater fundamental truth, so the smaller inventions never contradict what I knew to be a greater truth,” he said.
“There has been a great sense of care that Tom has taken with Andrew,” explains Criss. "I think only he and I get to share this almost fondness, which I am scared to say, but it’s your job [as an actor] to humanize the person you play. As an over-empathetic person, I enjoy the challenge of people looking in and me saying, ‘How could you possibly find something good about this person?’ But there’s still that bleeding idealist [in me] who wants to find the good in everybody. I have to find that and exploit it as much as possible because we will [only] see the worst if not.“
The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, premieres Wednesday, January 17 at 10 p.m. on FX.
TCA: Darren Criss Has the Role of a Lifetime in FX’s “Versace”
douginglish: #unpublished out take from my shoot with #brilliant @edgarramirez25⚡️ #legendary @ricky_martin for @outmagazine
Darren Criss Got a Pedicure at Ricky Martin’s House (Full Interview) | Source