The title of this episode of The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story is a bit of a bait and switch. It seems like we’ll be covering more of the aftermath of the death of Gianni Versace (Edgar Ramirez). The actual manhunt for Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss) will start to drive the narrative.
Surprisingly, after a post-death scene that shows us Versace being prepared for his funeral and the icy relationship between Donatella Versace (Penelope Cruz) and Antonio (Ricky Martin), Versace’s boyfriend. The show transports us to days before the killing. The titular “Manhunt” plays out in different ways in the two big storylines of the episode.
Andrew arrives in Miami, changing the license plates on his truck and already on the run from the FBI after committing four murders. Even more than the premiere, we get to know Andrew. I almost said that we delve into who he is as a person, but that really isn’t true at all. Except for a few looks in his eye, a desperate urge to meet Versace and an engrossing final scene, Andrew is still a mystery to us. The way that Andrew is presented in the show so far takes more than a few cues from American Psycho, which is a reasonable way to portray him. When you see him charm a hotel worker with such obvious lies, it’s hard not to feel like you’d at least partially fall for it as well. People, in general, don’t like calling seemingly polite folks out on their bullshit.
What’s interesting is when Andrew befriends Ronnie (Max Greenfield). They discuss their lives and whether or not they’ve lost people to the HIV/AIDS. Andrew tells Ronnie all about why he’s in Miami. He’s going to reconnect with Versace. They were engaged once, but it ended amicably, and they’re still friends. Ronnie clearly has a better bullshit detector than some others. He still finds Andrew entertaining and if Andrew’s willing to prostitute himself and share the profits, why not hang out with him?
A large focus of the episode is about living in the gay community in the ‘90s, specifically in Miami as well as abroad. Controversially, the series implies that Versace was HIV-positive — something that’s been denied by his family — which ties into Ronnie and Andrew’s story. Versace and Antonio deal with committing themselves to each other, which seems especially difficult in a world that won’t officially let them. While those with a much lower socioeconomic status contend with sex work. They live out of a motel or even just scoring something to feel good for a little while. It’s certainly covering a wide spectrum of issues within the gay community, which I assume will continue to be an undercurrent throughout the rest of the series.
Max Greenfield as Ronnie joins the ranks of David Schwimmer from American Crime Story: The People v. OJ Simpson and Ricky Martin from this season as a nice surprise. Ronnie was likable and sympathetic, without us feeling sorry for him. When he parts ways with Andrew, I legitimately worried for his safety. He knows there’s something off with Andrew, but who can he go to? Like the man that Andrew picked up on the beach, there were barely any lifelines available for a closeted family man. Let alone a poor, HIV-positive drug user. The brief scene with the FBI coordinating with local cops showed how little they seem to care about catching a man whose victims might be gay. That a serial killer with four victims didn’t even seem close to their top priority is sad but not at all shocking.
Andrew Cunanan’s American Psycho-lite presentation is both aesthetically interesting and completely horrifying. The show seems to even quote Michael Mann’s Manhunter when Andrew emerges from the bathroom, face taped up like the man he picked up earlier. It’s important to display those awful elements and keep into perspective that, even though Andrew seems to be the centre of the series, he was a monster. The moments when he isn’t performing are morbidly intriguing. Darren Criss shines in every scene, but there’s something deeper when we see Andrew being Andrew. When he’s doggedly trying to track down Versace. Or, when he says this to a man at the club who just wanted to know what he does:
I’m a serial killer… I said, ‘I’m a banker’. I’m a stockbroker. I’m a shareholder. I’m a paperback writer. I’m a cop. I’m a naval officer. Sometimes I’m a spy. I build movie sets in Mexico and skyscrapers in Chicago. I sell propane in Minneapolis. I import pineapples from the Philippines. You know, I’m the person least likely to be forgotten. I’m Andrew Cunanan.
But the true heart of the show is Versace. Especially his relationship with Antonio. Ramirez is a ray of sunshine and does a fantastic job showing the difficulties of being an artist and the joy he wanted to send out into the world. Versace’s death was a loss to the world. This series is definitely showing us that.
Verdict: Keep watching. “Manhunt” had a lot of interesting, interpersonal drama as well as some big, standout setpieces. Andrew with the businessman and Andrew searching the club for Versace are both flashy and tense scenes. Versace’s fight with Donatella and, even more, his conversations with Antonio were played extremely well. The series continues to be acted and shot perfectly.
Emmy is out this week so you are stuck with me as your recapper. Luckily for you all, she’ll be back next week.
Last week we delved further into the state of mind our killer Andrew Cunanan was in in the lead up to his final murder, that of Gianni Versace in July 1997. We met his third and fourth victims, Chicago real estate developer Lee Miglin and New Jersey cemetery caretaker William Reese and saw just a few of the mistakes the FBI and local law enforcement made that could have stopped Cunanan before he hit Miami and murdered Versace, and possibly even spared William Reese. This week we move back to the start of his killing spree, heading to Minnesota and the “House by the Lake”.
The First Murder: Following a tourist bureau ad for Minneapolis, we discover that it’s April 27, 1997 and a week before the murder of Lee Miglin. Andrew is visiting for the weekend with his friend David Madson (Cody Fern). Things are a bit tense between the pair as Andrew has asked David to marry him, telling him that he is the love of his life. David refused using the fact that same-sex marriage was not legal in the US to get out of truly answering him. However, it is implied that David has actually started up a relationship with Jeffrey Trail (Finn Wittrock) and that is the real reason for his refusal, well among other things.
Andrew has somehow cotton-on to the fact that there’s something between David and Jeff and has invited Jeff over. Jeff arrives and Andrew tells David to go and bring him up to the loft spitting out that it will “Give you a chance to talk about me”. Which they do, light-heartedly laughing about how strange Andrew is, but that they know he’s a liar. They enter the loft and see David’s dog whining, tied up to a table. David rushes over to the dog. Meanwhile Andrew has come up behind them, slams the door shut and then proceeds to bludgeon Jeff to death with a hammer, striking him 27 times in the head (and yes I screamed at the TV in shock and horror again, thank you very much Darren Criss).
Needless to say it’s a bit of a bloodbath in the loft, so Andrew takes David into the bathroom to clean them both up. After the shower, he gets out David’s collection of porno mags and sex toys, leaving them scattered over David’s bed. He also cleans up the murder scene a bit – rolling Jeff’s body up in a rug and hiding it behind a table.
Using his charm and a gun tucked into his waistband, Andrew manages to convince David not to call the cops, telling him “When the police open the door, they’ll see two suspects, not two victims,” that they’ll lock him up too, he’ll be hated for being gay, and that he can’t tell his Dad because then he’ll have to turn David in and you don’t want your Dad to have to do that. Cunanan does promise though that “No one else will get hurt as long as you’re by my side.”
The cops arrive: When David fails to show up at work the next day, they become concerned, as he never misses a day of work. A co-worker and David’s building manager knocks on his door but only hear his dog barking. Andrew and David, hearing the couple leave to go get keys to get into the loft, make a run for it. The couple come back and find the loft empty and the dead body. The cops arrive, find out David was gay, see the sex paraphernalia and make the assumption it was sex play gone wrong. It’s only on discovering that David was blonde and the murder victim was black-haired that they believe Andrew had been murdered and that David had fled. Realising they are now in the home of a suspect not a victim and without search warrants or permission to be there, the cops make a hasty retreat wanting to ensure the investigation is “by the book”, waiting for the proper paperwork and clearance to come back.
Men on the run: Having oh so calmly escaped, Andrew informs David of his plan for them to be together. He has a good friend in Chicago, Lee Miglin, who’s rich and owes Andrew some favours so would be willing to help out. They can then escape to Mexico and live the life he’s always dreamed of for them together. David meanwhile is in an obvious state of shock and fear for his life and merely acting on autopilot.
They’ve got the wrong man: The cops are back at David’s apartment and searching for clues. Jeff’s body has been taken away and they are beginning the autopsy on him when they discover that the body does not belong to Andrew Cunanan, but to Jeffrey Trail. They still believe that David is the killer and pay his parent’s a particularly hard visit, questioning them on how well do they truly know their son.
A chance for escape: Andrew continues on, apparently completely unaffected by the whole thing, planning this wonderful life with just him and David and no one else to bother them. David is starting to lose it though, fearing people are looking at him suspecting him of murder, when really its just their homophobia surfacing as the murder has not hit the news yet. They pull into bar (with a lovely cameo by Aimee Mann) and David excuses himself to the bathroom. Seeing an opportunity to escape, he smashes the bathroom window.
Back at the table Andrew is listening intently to the cover of “Drive” when he finally drops his façade and breaks down. It is such an intense moment of vulnerability from Andrew (and Criss) where you start to feel the beginning of sympathy for him. He really is just a little lost boy, wanting to be loved and thought of as someone special and extraordinary. In one of the many big mistakes David makes, instead of jumping out the window to freedom, he returns to Andrew and the table. The next morning marks another possibility of escape when David wakes alone in the car in the middle of wooded area. He jumps out and starts walking trying to make his escape, only to come across Andrew wielding his gun – if only he went in the opposite direction from the car.
The truth comes out: Later that day, Andrew and David are in a diner reminiscing about the night they met. David talks about how he so wanted to be just like Andrew: rich, suave, popular, charming, the whole world at his feet. However, he also reveals that he knows that that whole of his is all a lie. That Andrew is a master manipulator and that he just can’t stop lying. He accuses Andrew of killing Jeff because he was in love with Jeff but that not only did Jeff not return his feelings, but he had discovered just who Andrew was: a fraud.
The second murder: Following a tense car ride in which Andrew doesn’t want to talk about anything, David tries to veer them off the road and make an escape that way. He fails. He ends up off road, next to a lake pleading with Andrew for his life and a life for them together. He doesn’t succeed. Reminiscent of an earlier flashback scene where he remembers sitting in a house by the lake with his father drinking coffee after a failed hunting expedition, David dreams of opening the house door and finding his father offering him coffee once again. Instead, he’s outside the house bleeding out after Andrew shot him.
On the run again: Having spent some time cuddled up with David’s dead body, Andrew gets up, gets back in the car and heads off – presumably to Chicago and Lee Miglin.
Instant Reactions:
Where the hell is the Darren Criss I know and love??!!! He is unbelievable in embodying Cunanan. He’s charming, he’s creepy, he’s sinister, and yet he’s also oh so tragic and this episode more than any before it showed a real vulnerability and a sense that even he can see things are starting to spiral out of control. Week after week Criss blows me away with his performance and this week’s ep just had everything.
OMG David, why didn’t you escape?? There were so many opportunities – at least how it was portrayed here and given both David and Andrew are dead, we’ll never know exactly what took place over the period of time leading up to Jeff’s death to David’s death – and yet he kept going back to Andrew. Cody Fern was amazing and another great Ryan Murphy find. His ability to shut down and still be completely present in his scenes was so painful, yet great to watch.
I need more Finn Wittrock. We can’t just have that short opening scene! Luckily the preview for next week’s ep guarantees us more Jeff.
Wow another ep without the Versace’s and their storyline – I have to admit, I didn’t even realise they were missing until well after watching the ep, I was that caught up in the drama of Andrew’s story. They do return next week though.
We go further back in time with the fourth episode in “The Assassination of Gianni Versace,” “House by the Lake,” written by Tom Rob Smith and directed by Dan Minahan. Specifically, a week before Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss) murdered Chicago real estate mogul Lee Milgin in last week’s fantastic episode.
The episode focuses on Andrew’s first two murders – his friend Jeff Trail, a former U.S. naval officer and propane salesman, and David Madson, Andrew’s friend and former lover. This is also the second episode in a row not to feature the show’s main crew Edgar Ramirez, who plays the titular Versace, Ricky Martin, as the designer’s partner Antonio D’Amico, and Penelope Cruz, as Versace’s sister Donatella.
“House by the Lake” opens with Andrew staying with David, a rising architect, (played by Australian actor Cody Fern) at his Minneapolis loft. In the tense opening scene, Andrew invites their mutual friend Jeff (Ryan Murphy regular, Finn Wittrock) over unbeknownst to David. “It’ll give you two a chance to talk about me,” Andrew says.
When David goes to the apartment lobby to let Jeff in, he tells Jeff Andrew proposed to him, saying he was “His last chance at happiness.”
“How did you get out of it?” Jeff asks.
“I told him it was illegal for us to get married,” David replies, adding Andrew believes he’s in love with Jeff.
“He knows about us,” David tells Jeff. “He has this feline intuition.”
As the men enter David’s loft, Andrew is waiting by the door and strikes Jeff, his first victim in what would become a murdering spree, in the head several times with a hammer in front of David.
After the murder, Andrew uses it as leverage to convince David they should be together. Understandably David is freaking out, and though Andrew isn’t locking him in the apartment, a sort of Stockholm syndrome takes over David and he rationalizes the murder.
Andrew cleans up the body and the two men talk about running away together – exactly what Andrew wants. As they’re packing up, David’s coworker Linda stops by his home to check in on him since he didn’t show up to work. As the apartment manager gets the keys to his home, David and Andrew escape and his coworker and the manager discover Jeff’s body, rolled up in a rug – except they believe it’s David’s body.
Once Minneapolis police are involved, the episode highlights the authorities’ views on the LGBTQ community in the 90s.
“Does he have a girlfriend, a wife?” a detective asks Linda.
“No, he’s gay,” she says. He response sparks the two detectives to give each other a disconcerting look.
As the detective search David’s home, they come across some porn left on the bed.
“It’s a gay thing,” one of them says and then starts to put together a scenario that couldn’t be further away from the events that took place.
“A guy shows up. They did what they do…all this "extreme” stuff. It goes wrong. David ends up in a rug; the other guy runs – doesn’t steal a thing,“ he says.
Linda later tells one of the detectives about Andrew staying with David, saying something seemed off about him as he described himself as a "Jewish millionaire New Yorker” and that he was building sets for the “Titanic” in Mexico. She also tells the authorities David has blond hair – different from the body in the rug. Now they believe the body is Andrew and since they believe David is still alive, they realized they’ve entered his home without a search warrant and illegally.
The authorities pack up and tell Linda David is the killer.
The episode later cuts to David and Andrew on the run – Andrew couldn’t be happier as David is sick to his stomach.
“I’m so glad you decided to come with me,” Andrew tells David, who can’t stop thinking about his situation. He’s also concerned about the world finding out he’s gay, especially those in his small hometown in the midwest.
“Did you hear? That boy is a suspect – there was always something about him – that boy!” David says, later adding that he’s worried about his parents and how the small community will treat them. “No one will buy from my dad’s shop.”
“Am I afraid of the disgrace? The shame of it all? Is that what I’m running from?” David asks himself.
David also tells Andrew he thought Andrew was going to kill him.
“I told you, I could never hurt you,” Andrew says. “Know that.”
Back with the cops, they finally learn the victim is Jeff Trail. They visit David’s parents and tell them David is the killer.
“We’re telling you, he didn’t do this,” David’s father tells the authorities. The detectives tell them “there’s a lot you don’t know about your son.”
Andrew and David stop by a hole in the wall bar, where a woman is playing an acoustic cover of The Cars’ “Drive,” causing Andrew to burst into tears. Meantime, David attempts to escape by breaking a window in the bathroom but ultimately decides against it, returning to Andrew’s side, where Andrew embraces him. The scene shows Andrew’s loneliness – his misguided perception of love and relationship – he’s willing to kill to get what he wants; it’s a twisted view that “The Assassination of Versace” later digs into.
After that scene, the episode shows David’s flashback where he comes out to his father. He tells his dad he’s graduated college at the top of his class and then blurts out that he’s gay.
“You mind if I take a moment? I don’t want to say the wrong thing,” his father replies. “I won’t lie, saying it won’t make a difference. You know what I believe.”
His father remains honest, saying he doesn’t have a problem with his son’s sexuality but adds, “What I can say is that I love you more than I love my own life.”
Later, at breakfast, Andrew and David reminisce the first time they met – Andrew wined and dined David, pretending to be an affluent socialite.
“It was all a lie,” David tells Andrew, his demeanor souring. “You’ve never worked for anything. It was an act.”
“What’s wrong with you?” Andrew asks.
“Is that why you killed Jeff. You loved him. It was so obvious but he figured you out in the end…he finally saw the real you,” David says.
Andrew completely ignores David, tell him he’s going to have a fabulous life when they go to Mexico.
“You can’t do it can you?” David asks.
“Do what?” Andrew asks back.
“Stop,” David replies.
Back on the run, David questions Andrew about the murder – how Andrew planned Jeff’s murder and wanted David to see the killing.
“I don’t want to talk about it, David!” Andrew yells.
“I’m nothing like you,” David says, before taking the wheel from Andrew.
A delusional Andrew then pulls his gun out and, yelling at David they “had a future” together over and over. He pulls the car over by a lake house, drags David out and points the gun at him, execution style.
“We still have a plan!” David pleads. Andrew demands he convinces him.
“We’ll visit Lee Miglin in Chicago and he’ll give us some money, then we’ll drive across the country; it’ll be an adventure!… We’ll find a place to live!” David says while he’s kneeling on the ground, gun pointed to his head.
“You don’t believe that,” Andrew says.
As David is nervously planning their life together, but Andrew isn’t buying it.
“Why couldn’t you run away with me? If it was Jeff you would have run away with him. You would have gone to prison,” Andrew says.
“It’s not real,” David says.
“It could have been,” Andrew says.
“No, it couldn’t,” David says as Andrew turns his back away from him.
David attempts to run away, hiding in an abandoned lake house. There, he sees a vision of his father who hands him a cup of coffee and the two sit in a warm silence. The episode flashes back to show that David never really made it inside the lake house, and Andrew shot and killed him as he ran away.
The final eerie moments of the episode show Andrew cuddling with David’s body, who has a large bullet wound in his head. Andrew then gets up, calmly walks back to the car and drives away.
Welcome to April 27 1997, one week before the murder of Lee Miglin, the victim of last week’s episode. With episode four of The Assassination of Gianni Versace, “House By The Lake”, we witness the beginning of Andrew Cunanan’s killing spree. This is where it all started – this is the moment that would eventually bring Cunanan right up to Gianni Versace’s doorstep.
Like last week’s episode, though, Versace is nowhere to be see in “House By The Lake.” Versace’s death was merely the rocket fuel to launch this season of American Crime Story into orbit. Ever since this season began its grim backwards march, it’s been moving further and further away from the overlit world of Miami Beach to show us the deceptive, manipulative reality of Andrew Cunanan.
“House By The Lake” begins in Minneapolis, with Andrew staying at the spacious loft apartment of friend and former lover David Madson. Clearly, something awkward has occurred between these two men right before this episode begins. The air in the room is thick with tension. “We both said some things we regret,” David says, trying to make peace. “I don’t regret anything I said,” Andrew replies, each word deliberate and meticulous as he utters it.
This passive aggressive mood seems almost unbearable, but things get a lot worse, fast. Andrew and David’s friend Jeff Trail soon arrives. He’s come to retrieve a gun Andrew stole from his apartment (big red flag alert). David has to let Jeff into the building, and as the two make their way back to the apartment – where Andrew waits in the shadows – they converse about Andrew the way someone talks about a volatile child. It’s clear they both think they need to handle Andrew with kid gloves. David seems sympathetic; Jeff, not so much.
“He has no one,” David says.
“He should ask himself why,” Jeff shoots back.
Before the opening title card has even appeared, Jeff is dead – brutally bludgeoned to death by Andrew with a hammer. From here, the episode settles into a steady, unrelenting feeling of nameless, inescapable dread. Andrew is able to manipulate David into going on the run with him. But it can’t last. Andrew wants to live in a fantasy where David will love him for who he is – but that’s the problem. Andrew isn’t anyone. He’s a blank slate; a shapeshifter who can be whatever the situation needs him to be. You get the sense throughout “House By The Lake” that Andrew is really trying to make his new arrangement with David work. But it’s impossible. David is Andrew’s emotional (and in some cases, physical) prisoner, and when the realization seeps in that David will never accept him, Andrew kills David too. And then it’s off to Chicago, and towards last week’s murder of Lee Miglin.
No One Else
Unlike previous episodes, “House By The Lake” isn’t ultimately about Andrew. It’s about David, and the tragedy of his all-too-brief life. In various flashbacks, we see David as a younger man with his gruff, outdoorsman father. While out hunting one day as a small boy, David runs from the sight of a dead animal. He’s later ashamed at his perceived weakness, but his father is sympathetic. “I never want you to be sad,” his father tells him.
Later, we see David coming out to his father in an uncomfortable, not entirely hopeful, but ultimately realistic scene. “Mind if I take a moment?” David’s father asks after David confesses he’s gay. “I don’t want to say the wrong thing.”
The father follows this up with, “Maybe you wanted to be told I don’t have a problem with it; I can’t say that, but what I can say is I love you more than I love my own life.” It’s a heartbreaking moment, made all the more heartbreaking later when, as David lays dying, he has a vision of sharing a cup of coffee with his father.
David’s sexuality, and his ultimate fear of disgrace – a fear that was brought up last week as well, but about Lee Miglin – is what colors all of David’s ultimately terrible decisions following Jeff’s murder. A rational, reasonable thing to have done following Andrew’s brutal crime would have been to call the police and report Andrew immediately. But Andrew, so adept at manipulation and exploitation, is able to talk David out of this. And when enough time passes, it’s too late. As Andrew puts it, if David tries to call the cops, the cops will simply believe he was in on the murder with Andrew. “They hate us, David. They’ve always hated us,” Andrew says. “You’re a fag.”
These fears turn out to be ultimately reasonable. Later, when two detectives arrive at the apartment after Jeff’s body is discovered, their first assumption is that the murder is some sort of “gay thing.” They arrive rather quickly at the assumption that David was in some way involved with the murder, and they go so far as to bring that assumption to David’s frightened parents.
The most telling moment of the episode comes when, while on the run, David and Andrew stop at a bar. Andrew is still riding high, seemingly unperturbed that he’s committed a murder and is now a fugitive. In this moment, David excuses himself to the bathroom, where he shatters a window and sees a clear path to escape. The camera lingers on this moment, as we wait for David to do the obvious thing: get the hell out of there.
Andrew, meanwhile, sits in the bar, listening to the soothing sounds of special guest star Aimee Mann crooning a sad, slowed-down cover of The Cars’ “Drive.” Here, in this brief moment, Andrew’s barriers fall away and he begins to weep. Is he weeping because of the music (it’s pretty damn sad), or is he weeping because he knows he’s dug himself into a hole he can never climb out of? Up until he murdered Jeff Trail, Andrew’s crimes were petty – long cons and little (and sometimes big) lies. There’s no going back from murder, however. And in this moment, perhaps Andrew realizes that nothing matters anymore. That if he wants something going forward, he might as well kill to get it.
This moment of reflection is broken when David unexpectedly returns to the table, having decided not to escape. Why? The answer comes later, as the two are on the road again. David confesses he’s thinking about what the police are going to find out about him, and says he realizes he’s been doing this his entire life – thinking about people “finding out” about his sexuality. He wonders how his parents are going to live in their small town “with all that talk.”
“Was I really afraid…that you were going to kill me, or was I afraid of the disgrace?” he asks Andrew. David is stuck. He’s fear of people judging his sexuality has tethered him to Andrew, and it will, tragically, lead to his doom. As Andrew puts it: “The truth is, we have no one else.”
It Was All A Lie
By now, the viewer has likely caught on to the bait and switch American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace has pulled. This isn’t a bad thing; in fact, it’s rather ingenious in its construction. The first two episodes lull the viewer into assuming they know exactly what type of season this will be. Episode three, however, hints that things are going to turn out much differently. And now, by episode four, Versace seems to be pulling back the curtain completely. If this were a card game, this episode would be the moment the player who has been brilliantly bluffing you shows you their hand.
Perhaps this is why, ultimately, the season is moving backwards rather than forwards. Andrew Cunanan’s murder of Versace made headlines, but it wasn’t an isolated incident. By moving back in time, we’re getting the whole story, bit by bit. We’re learning the true, terrible nature of Andrew Cunanan.
Director Dan Minahan approaches this episode on two different fronts: one is that ever-mounting tension mentioned earlier. The first half of the episode, set in the nightmare that is David’s apartment, is full of pulse-quickening moments of dread, all of it underscored by an unsettling, ever-present droning sound on the soundtrack. The other front of this episode is the tragic side; the sad life and death of David Madson, who ultimately dies by a river in the middle of nowhere. These heartbreaking elements are the more effective, made all the more so by the performances, particularly Cody Fern as David.
By the episode’s end, David has realized Andrew’s true nature. He recounts the romantic evening he and Andrew once spent years ago, sounding wistful before ultimately ending with a harsh, blunt: “It was all a lie.” “Is that why you killed Jeff?” he asks Andrew. “You loved him…but he figured you out in the end, didn’t he? He finally saw the real you, and you killed him for it.” Fern’s delivery of these lines, with just the right mixture of anger and misery, is pitch-perfect.
As always, Darren Criss’ performance as Andrew remains a highlight, but Andrew has grown more and more despicable and detestable as the season has continued, which ultimately makes spending time with him distasteful. It’s a very tough balancing act, and Criss pulls it off for the most part. But there’s only so much we can take. A shot near the end of Andrew cuddling David’s dead body is particularly blood curdling.
Stray Observations:
– As I’m pretty sure I’ve said multiple times in this review, this is a sad, heartbreaking episode. But there’s some (darkly) funny stuff, too. The way Criss delivers Andrew’s line, “I’m so glad you decided to come with me!” after he’s virtually kidnapped David is bleakly hilarious.
– One subtle but unmissable running motif in the episode: Whenever David and Andrew walk somewhere, Andrew puts his arm over David’s shoulder possessively, like property.
– Finn Wittrock makes a very brief appearance in this episode as Jeff Trail. Next week’s episode, “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell,” will give him center stage. It’s also the best episode of the entire season.
– This week’s pop songs: the aforementioned “Drive” by The Cars (as covered by Aimee Mann), and “Pump up the Jam” by Technotronic.
– Yes, that really was Aimee Mann in the bar. “We talked about who we could get to play this,” producer Brad Simpsontold Vanity Fair. “Somebody who was first known in the 1980s, who had a strong voice and you could buy as somebody who would live in this landscape. When we went to Ryan [Murphy] for suggestions of who could it be, he instantly said, without a beat: ‘Aimee Mann. Send her the pages, tell her we’re gonna figure out the song, but it has to be her.’”
The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story Season 2 Episode 4 “The House by the Lake” takes us to the very beginning of Andrew Cunanan’s killing spree. It’s another well-acted but upsetting episode which shows Andrew murdering two unsuspecting men.
The episode starts a week before the murder of Lee Miglin, in Minneapolis. Andrew is staying with David Madson, a successful architect and the man who he just proposed to.
Things are obviously tense between David and Andrew. David tells Andrew that they both said things over the weekend that they regret.
Andrew tells him he regrets nothing. They are also not engaged.
At this point, Andrew has not killed anyone, but that changes very quickly. We already know what Andrew is capable of, so from the very start, his very presence is menacing.
Finn Wittrock makes a very quick guest appearance as Jeff Trail, a mutual friend (and supposed secret lover of David) before he is promptly and viciously murdered by Andrew.
It’s interesting to see how Andrew’s murders become less and less intimate or involved as his spree continues. Considering how Jeff Trail’s murder is a crime of passion, where Andrew is out of control and covered in blood, Versace’s assassination almost seems impersonal.
Where is Versace by the way? By traveling back in time to see Andrew’s previous murders, we miss out on the Miami storyline and the aftermath of Gianni Versace’s death.
The murders of William Reese, Lee Miglin, David Madson, and Jeff Trail could have been intercut with the investigation surrounding Versace’s death in Miami. We didn’t need two whole episodes without the Versace storyline.
However, I appreciate the Versace-less episodes. Gianni may have been the most famous of the victims, but that doesn’t mean the other four men weren’t as important or as loved.
“The House by the Lake” is a little clunky with David’s flashbacks of hunting with his father and then coming out to him.
But, the final scene with David as he imagines he makes it into the house by the lake and sits down to have coffee with his father is just so heart-breaking that it really packs a punch.
Although Andrew has been the predominant character in each episode, I’m glad that we’re no closer to knowing the real Andrew. The writers aren’t trying to find reasons as to why he is the way he is, nor are they trying to make him relatable.
“The House by the Lake” shows Andrew in a slightly different light—he’s still threatening (even singing “Pump Up the Jams”) and a master manipulator, but he shows some tenderness and emotion towards David.
That still doesn’t make us feel for Andrew, though.
The murder of Jeff Trail seems to be premeditated, although Andrew says it wasn’t. Whether or not it was, Andrew still saw that he would be able to confuse law enforcement. By putting out David’s pornography on his bed, the cops thought that it was a hook-up that went wrong.
They also thought David was the murderer for a short time.
It really is fascinating to see how Andrew was able to commit the murders he did and be on the run for more than two months in plain sight.
Overall, “The House by the Lake” is a sad chapter that starts off Andrew Cunanan’s murderous spree that leads him to the assassination of Gianni Versace. Darren Criss impresses again as does Cody Fern who plays David Madson.
Fade up on a cheery tourist video for Minneapolis, lit with contemporaneously cheese-ish overbrightness, then cut to a title card telling us it’s April 27, 1997 – one week before Lee Miglin’s murder. Then we’re at the gorgeous, massive loft of David Madson. He’s on the cordless, pitching himself for a project, and he promises he won’t let the caller down as Andrew Cunanan looms into the frame, and this probably isn’t the first time he’s done this, but he has his t-shirt tucked into his jeans and no belt, like, why is this a thing on TV? | 8 February 2018
Fade up on a cheery tourist video for Minneapolis, lit with contemporaneously cheese-ish overbrightness, then cut to a title card telling us it’s April 27, 1997 – one week before Lee Miglin’s murder. Then we’re at the gorgeous, massive loft of David Madson. He’s on the cordless, pitching himself for a project, and he promises he won’t let the caller down as Andrew Cunanan looms into the frame, and this probably isn’t the first time he’s done this, but he has his t-shirt tucked into his jeans and no belt, like, why is this a thing on TV?
Cunanan awkwards up to David’s workspace, his arms stiffly at his sides, as David hangs up and celebrates: “They said yes!” “I’m so happy for you,” Cunanan oozes, sounding about as sincere as Siri. David looks doubtful, but out loud he accepts Cunanan’s well wishes, then softens and notes that, “this weekend,” they both said things they regret. Can they put it behind them – “just be friends”? “I don’t regret anything I said,” Cunanan says. David manages not to roll his eyes and asks if they can move on, then. “Sure,” Cunanan says flatly. David heads off to shower. Cunanan continues to stand, immobile, by David’s desk, the smile leaking off his face.
David relaxes under the water, and while this isn’t the Psycho shot set-up – and while I know David is not killed in this scene – it’s still tense. Way in the back of the shot, you can see Cunanan start to come into the bathroom, then, when David turns the water off, hastily withdraw. David comes out to find the apartment empty, he thinks, but then at the end of the bedroom hallway, there’s Cunanan, David’s dog Prints on a leash. (The real-life dog was a Dalmatian, which the dog playing him is not, so at first I assumed thanks to the location of the episode’s events that the dog’s name was Prince, as in “Rogers Nelson.”) Here again, I know the actual Prints came to no harm, at least from Cunanan, and I don’t think the production would depart from the generally accepted timeline to make us watch a pet suffer, but Cunanan is already acting so lights-on-nobody-home two minutes into the episode that I don’t want him anywhere near the hound, fictionalized narrative or no. Anyway, Cunanan doesn’t say anything, so David has to prompt him as one does a child: “Taking Prints for a walk?” “Yeah,” Cunanan tries to chirp, and heads for the door. David’s like, “…k,” and goes to get dressed.
When he comes out, though, he finds Prints tied to a leg of his desk…and Cunanan once again Nosferatus into the frame, his face a bland mask. So he’s…not taking Prints for a walk, David asks, untying the dog. The buzzer goes off, and David asks who it is. “It’s Jeff,” Cunanan duhs. David asks if they’re going out, and Cunanan duhs again that Jeff’s coming up. David has clearly been trying up to this point not to betray his impatience with Cunanan’s toddleresquely obtuse behavior – no doubt because one of the things he said “this weekend,” which he is going to regret more than he could ever have imagined, is that he isn’t into Cunanan that way anymore – but finally snaps that he has work to do. “It won’t take long,” Cunanan says, continuing to stand like a mannequin as the buzzer sounds several more times.
Then he snots, “Could you get the door?” Fern loses control of the accent somewhat as David eye-rolls that he doesn’t have time for this, but gets up to answer. Cunanan’s Manson lamps flip on as he hurries to say that it’ll give them a chance to talk about him. David’s given pause: “What did you just say?” Cunanan repeats that, when he brings Jeff up, it’ll give them a chance. To talk about him. (The buzzer doesn’t admit people from the loft; David has to go down in the elevator and physically open the building’s front door. I lived in an apartment with that “set-up” for a while, so I didn’t think much about this on first viewing, except to clock Cunanan’s rudeness, but it’s made more of later.) David shoots Cunanan a silent “you wish” look and storms out. Prints goes the front door when he’s left and whines a little.
Downstairs, David lets Jeff in with a familiar “hey.” It’s nice to see Finn Wittrock as Jeff Trail at last, but like everyone else, he’s coming in at the miserable end to his own story, so I’m bracing for that as Jeff asks grimly, “How’s he?” Equally grimly, David says Cunanan proposed. “Are you serious?”
“Said I was the man of his dreams…his last chance at happiness.” Jeff pulls another ffs face as the elevator arrives and asks how David got out of it. “Told him it was illegal for us to get married,” David sighs. In the elevator, David adds that Cunanan thinks Jeff’s why David says no: “Thinks I’m in love with you.” Jeff snorts, “D’you tell him he’s the reason you said no?” “He has no one,” David says sadly, almost to himself, and Jeff snarks that he should ask himself why, but David warns Jeff, “He knows about us.” What this means is debatable; per Maureen Orth’s Vanity Fair piece, Jeff “was known to have warned” David that Cunanan “was a liar,” but I can’t find any indication in contemporary news accounts or elsewhere that David and Jeff were romantically involved, except in Cunanan’s resentful fantasies. Jeff’s say-WHAAAAAT head turn suggests that that’s the implication here, though, as he adds in disbelief that “no one knows!” “He has this feline intuition,” David says.
Coming down the hall, Jeff urges David not to feel sorry for Cunanan. Why not? Jeff does. “Not anymore,” Jeff says. In fact, he never wants to see Cunanan again, and he’s only there because Cunanan stole Jeff’s gun.
Inside, Cunanan is lying in wait behind a bookcase, holding a hammer and wearing no expression. David finds Prints once again tied up to some furniture and angrily calls for Cunanan, but Cunanan is busy lunging at Jeff as he’s closing the front door. Cut to David watching in horror and Prints barking as we hear the squelchy sounds of Cunanan beating Jeff to death. Jeff hollers. Prints barks. David backs away along the sectional as stripes of overkill blood spatter hit him and the walls of the entryway. Finally Cunanan subsides and stands up, in an odd hunchy posture reminiscent of Karl from Sling Blade. He whips some blood off the hammer and walks towards David, who crab-walks away from him along the couch. Hard to see how even Cunanan would think stroking David’s face with his bloody hands, one of which is still holding the hammer, is comforting, but that’s what he does while whispering that it’s okay.
He touches his forehead to David’s, then cradles him, covered in Jeff’s gore. David somehow does not vomit all over this delusional creeper, instead allowing Cunanan to escort him as though he’s an aging invalid to the bathroom; seat him; start getting undressed, removing his blood-caked glasses but still taking care not to touch the lenses; partially undress David; and move them both into the shower to wash off the blood. David is in shock throughout this oogy process but occasionally flinches away from Cunanan’s affectionate ministrations. He finally manages to ask if Cunanan’s going to kill him. Cunanan sounds surprised: “No!” But you killed Jeff, David says, twice. “Why?” “I lost control,” Cunanan murmurs, not sounding like that’s the case at all. But he loves David. David, shivering with revulsion, pushes Cunanan’s hand away: “No. No! Call the police!” Cunanan tries to calm him but David scrabbles away, repeating, “Call them! Do it now!”
Cunanan puts Prints in his crate, like, could someone actually walk that poor pup? David, dry and dressed, pads fearfully out of the bedroom and into the loft’s main area, where Cunanan is sitting in the dark. “Andrew?” David quavers. Cunanan melodramatically switches on the lamp on David’s desk. The cordless is in front of him. “Did you call?” “I’ll call them if you want me too,” Cunanan says, fidgeting. “You haven’t called,” David says, despairingly. Cunanan says he’s been worrying – about David, who asks for the phone, but Cunanan has prepared his manipulation carefully, and goes into a disingenuous presentation about how it’s David’s apartment, David let Jeff in…what will the police think? David, in tears, demands the phone again, and gets an utterly chilling stare in response.
Cunanan sighs actorishly, gets up, and makes a big show of “giving in” to David’s wishes by handing him the phone. David calls 911, but Cunanan is musing that he’ll get 30 years, but David will get 10, and he just can’t allow that to happen. He draws the gun out of his waistband. The 911 operator has answered by now, but David is ensorcelled by Cunanan massaging his own temple with the butt of the gun and whining that he can’t let “this” destroy David’s life. Slowly David hits the off button and hands the phone back. Cunanan beams. I distract myself from the urge to reach through the monitor and flick Cunanan in the eyeball by trying to figure out who Cody Fern looks like – it’s partly Dax Shepard, but it’s someone else too, and I can’t quite put my finger on it.
…Andrew McCarthy! Man, that was bugging me. Not as much as Cunanan’s bugging me, as he comes into the bedroom where David is sitting, becalmed by horror, on the bed and starts digging through David’s drawers for Damning Gay Stuff: porn with titles like Bear Love, some S&M gear. He comes to the bed with it; David withdraws, terrified, but Cunanan is focused on arraying all of it neatly on the duvet and informing David that the cops won’t see victims in him and David – they’ll see suspects. David’s like, but you’ll tell them I didn’t do anything, I’m not a killer. Cunanan blares that “they hate us, David,” they’ve always hated us: “You’re a [F word].” David moves to the edge of the bed and babbles that he needs to talk to his father, ask him what to do. Cunanan condescends that in that case his dad would have to turn him in, or he’d be committing a crime. Does David want to put him in that position? David has had it, and announces he’s leaving; Cunanan gets between him and the door, but says David can, once he’s “thought this through.” David looks at the space between Cunanan and the door and repeats that he wants to leave. “Once you’ve thought it through,” Cunanan repeats, blocking the door and fixing David with another chilling stare.
With no real choice, David exhales, and Cunanan closes the door on the camera, leaving me to think about what I would do in that situation, how I might escape, how effectively Cunanan leveraged his own self-loathing into a loathsome trap to keep Madson under control.
Later. Cunanan has seated himself near the door, on the floor, and appears to be asleep. David eases himself up off the bed and is about to try to slink out when Cunanan’s eyes open and he asks with a Starman head-cock, “Were you going to leave me?” David says no, but Cunanan’s on his feet in an instant, protesting that he was going to leave. David thinks fast and says Prints needs a walk – he’ll shit everywhere, start barking, draw attention. Cunanan, who seems to have forgotten there’s a dead body moldering directly beside the front door, chooses to believe this more-flattering-to-him excuse, and lets David out of the bedroom…
…but once David has retrieved Prints, there’s still the matter of Jeff’s remains, the lake of blood in which they’re resting, and their location, which makes egress basically impossible without one creature stepping on or in the crime scene. Cunanan comes up beside David and pulls an inappropriately snotty what-a-hassle face, then drags David’s entryway rug over to the body and tells David to turn away. David does, but soon can’t resist watching Cunanan awkwardly rolling Jeff up in the rug and just as awkwardly trying to heave him out of sight, a task he’s eventually obliged to ask for David’s help with. David manages not to openly gag as they drag the body around behind part of the sectional; he also manages not to snark at Cunanan that a mere four paper towels and no cleanser is not going to do anything except smear the gallons of blood on the floor around, but when Cunanan semi-realizes this and leaves off bothering to go wipe his hands, David grabs the dog and makes for the door. Cunanan cheerily offers to come along. David says he doesn’t have to, and Cunanan immediately sours: “You don’t want me to come?” David stammers that if he’s tired…"Do you want to walk him without me?“ David has to say no, he doesn’t, like, obviously he does, and you obviously know why, so maybe have one moment of emotional generosity and skip the fucking playacting, but no, Cunanan strides over and repeats that he thinks David wants to go without him. David thought he might be tired. "Do I seem tired?” Cunanan grits, and David’s like, jfc, fine, let’s walk the dog.
On the elevator, of course a neighbor has to get on with the two men and Prints, and Karen cheerily greets both David, who very obviously looks like he just ate a handful of bugs, and Andrew, who doesn’t respond or even blink.
I can’t say I “applaud,” exactly, the show’s and Darren Criss’s choices, which make Cunanan not just scary and weird but also an asocial and annoying asshole – but they’re certainly effective. I want to punch the kid in the dick. As Cunanan blouses his sweatshirt over the gun once again stashed in his waistband, Karen croons at a whingy Prints that “someone’s not having fun on the elevator today.” “No. Guess not,” David grunts. On the ground floor, David wishes her a pointed nice day, then pauses before disembarking: “Are you gonna hurt anyone else?” “N…o?” Cunanan says. David needs him to promise, which of course Cunanan has no problem doing because: compulsive liar. “Nobody else will get hurt! As long as you’re by my side.”
On the sidewalk, David makes nervous eye contact with a fellow dog-walker while rambling about a story he just thought of, that he wasn’t home last night and he can pretend to be discovering the body for the first time – and by then, Cunanan will be “long gone.” Cunanan, already not having it, pulls up: “On my own?” David sees a mother and child approaching on the sidewalk and gulps. “Let’s go back.” They turn back to the building, Cunanan possessively patting David’s neck.
As Cunanan is packing them up, there’s a knock at the door. Inside, David looks stricken; outside, David’s co-worker Melinda is telling the building manager David would never miss work. Prints is barking and whining as David starts for the door but Cunanan grabs his arm, asking if he really wants to be there when they open the door and see what’s inside. The manager bustles off to get the keys, but when she opens the door, it’s clear the two sides of the door aren’t in the same timeline, because Prints bolts the loft, and the women find it empty. Well, except for all the blood, some of it drag marks leading to the rolled-up rug. Melinda gasps. David and Cunanan, meanwhile, buckle up for the worst road trip ever.
MPD homicide detectives Tichich and Jackson arrive at the loft building, and Tichich is struck right away by the fact that the patrol officer has to come down to let them in. Outside the loft, the women brief the detectives: the manager, Jennifer, used her key because the dog sounded “distressed,” and Melinda chimes in that David never misses work. She’s trying to say she found David’s body when Tichich interrupts to ask if it’s David’s apartment and what she can tell them about David. He’s nice, he’s 33, he’s a talented architect…does he have a wife, Jackson asks. He’s gay, Melinda shrugs, and Tichich frowns and passes a pair of rubber gloves to Jackson, which I guess could be something they were going to do anyway but, in the context of the season’s continuing commentary on how far we’ve come (or…haven’t) in our cultural assumptions about the queer community, is probably something we’re meant to notice.
Tichich squats down and sort of peers into the end of the rolled-up rug, but doesn’t unroll it. He opens the wallet on the counter with a pen; it’s David’s. “Wasn’t a robbery,” Tichich remarks. A patrolman notes there was no sign of forced entry. Tichich clocks the heaps of dirty clothes in the bathroom, the blood spatter on the floor, the hammer in the sink where Cunanan dumped it. I’ll note here that, while reporting on Trail’s murder describes the weapon as a “claw hammer,” this is what you or I would merely call a…hammer, with a blunt head for nailing and a bifurcated “claw” for prying. Based on what we later see of Trail’s scalp and skull – or what Cunanan left him of it – it’s clear Cunanan used the claw end of the hammer; I’m not pointing this out as an inaccuracy. I do think it’s noteworthy that, in accounts of murder/true-crime writing, bad acts committed with what would be described only as a “hammer” in literally any other situation will always have involved a “claw hammer,” because it sounds so much more brutal. And…is much more brutal, obviously, but I think the idea takes root subliminally, as it had with me until I took a second to confirm it on Google, that there is a specific, discrete tool that looks more like a scythe and seems only to exist for homicidal purposes, versus the garden-variety rubber-grip hammer we all have in the junk drawer.
…This has been Tool Time with Sarah D. Bunting. Insert your own urg urg Tim Allen noises here and let’s move on to the detectives finding Cunanan’s carefully arranged tableau o’ porn ‘n’ lube. Jackson seems not to know what he’s looking at; Tichich does, but evinces little judgment, except in the typically narrow-minded scenario he spins, in which “a guy turns up” whom David “probably” didn’t know, “they do what they do…this extreme stuff,” shit goes south, and David “ends up in a rug” while the other guy runs. So, note here that they assume at this time it’s David in the rug – and that Jackson has just found the ammunition Cunanan is using. Tichich wonders where the gun is, but the short version is, they’re already behind.
The coroner arrives. Tichich continues obsessing about the buzzer situation until Melinda asks for a word: David had a friend staying with him that weekend, an Andrew “Cone-onan or something.” She describes him to Tichich, adding that Cunanan did a lot of bragging that “didn’t sound right.” Tichich confirms that Cunanan had dark hair – and that David has blond hair. Inside, the coroner is saying he doesn’t want to unroll the rug there, lest valuable evidence fall out, and on a side table, Tichich spots a Polaroid of David and (we’ll see later) his dad, and carries it over to the rug, asking the others what color they think the victim’s hair is. Cut to a truly gruesome shot of the ruins of Trail’s head as they confirm that guy’s hair is black. So now they understand it’s not David in the rug…but they think it’s “a man named Andrew Coo-nay-noon,” and Tichich is now preoccupied with the fact that, if David is alive, that means they entered the premises illegally, so they have to go back and get a search warrant so they don’t screw the pooch in court later. So now they’re even further behind, and given Tichich’s sticklering about the warrant, it’s dumb and shitty of him to inform Melinda and Jennifer that David isn’t the victim, “he’s the killer,” but okay.
Shot of a child’s hand running through reeds as young David and his dad, who’s toting a rifle and a thermos, hike alongside a lake. David dashes into a cabin, followed by Dad. Dad shares out coffee into two tin mugs, and they happily sip it. Later, David claps his hands over his ears as Dad takes a shot, then pulls David to the water’s edge and wades in to retrieve the duck he’s just killed. David sadly squats beside the bird and cradles its dead head in his hands. David runs off. Dad chases him, and kneels next to him, reminding him that they talked about this: “I explained. Okay?” At the end of the day, a brooding David asks if Dad is mad at him. Going against every expectation watching TV and movies has ingrained in us for this scene, Dad says of course he isn’t: hunting isn’t for everyone, and that’s okay. “We can still go on hikes,” he offers, adding that he enjoyed his coffee with David very much. Aw. It’s not entirely clear to me given what happens later whether this actually happened, but it’s still sweet. Dad takes David’s chin and says he doesn’t ever want David to be sad.
In the present day, David puts his hand out the window of Jeff’s Jeep and strokes the air the way he did the reeds as a kid. In the driver’s seat, Cunanan bugs out to Technotronic, car-dancing along to “Pump Up The Jam” and seeming legit wounded that David isn’t reacting positively to yet another tone-deaf response. Later on, Cunanan is boasting through a huge mouthful of sandwich that he’s “close” with Lee Miglin – “Maybe you’ve heard of him?” – and that the border won’t be a problem; they’ll get more than enough money from Lee to live in style in Mexico, plus he’s been “moving product across” “for years” and he knows people. Who knows whether his whole drug-dealer persona had any acquaintance with reality, but it was definitely something that was out there amongst his circle. David can’t with this fucker or with his sandwich, staring into the middle distance and not saying anything, at least until Cunanan glibs that David should start thinking about his “new life.” Cunanan lies that he respects that David probably wants to “part ways” once they get to Mexico, “but we make such a great team? And the truth is we have no one else.” Satisfied that he has now made this true of David as it is for himself, he takes another enormous bite.
Tichich returns with a warrant and the crime-scene team. Jeff’s body is taken out, then unwrapped at the morgue. His clothes are cut off as the camera pans up to his…well, it’s more tears and holes than face, now. Hideously on-point work by the production designer. Jeff’s jeans are folded away to reveal his tattoo (actually Marvin The Martian; here, the generic alien they could get the rights to). The coroner finds Jeff’s wallet, and ID, as the fellow dog-walker from earlier is telling the detectives that normally David would have Prints off the leash, so it was odd that he didn’t when she last saw him. She didn’t notice anything else about their demeanors, which is when Tichich gets a call on his Cornish-hen-sized flip phone that the victim is neither David nor Cunanan.
Those two are exiting a rest-stop men’s room, Cunanan slinging his arm with awkwardly chummy possessiveness around David’s shoulders.
David freezes up when a woman in a Benz gives them an icy look, paranoid that she recognizes him. Cunanan snorts that that’s impossible, but David is insistent; she looked at him like she hated him! Cunanan flips to psycho mode and suggests going after her, running her off the road, and asking her why she looked at “my friend,” “the nicest, kindest person” in the world like that. David yells at him to stop, that he promised nobody else gets hurt. “Whatever you say, David,” Cunanan says primly, peeling out, and although I’m physically becoming exhausted by it and him, I have to give it to this episode: it really gives you a sense of how firmly Cunanan must have had David pinned, mentally, and how slowly and awfully the last days of his life must have gone by, how he must have wanted to scream not only for help but also in Cunanan’s face that he’s a striving dickwad.
As the detectives arrive on Dad Madson’s doorstep, Cunanan burbles that he’s “so glad” David “decided” to come with him. David doesn’t dignify this version, saying through tears as he stares out the window that he keeps playing over what the cops will “find out about” him – and he realizes he’s done this his whole life, “playing over and over the moment people find out about me.” Presumably this is why we saw the hunting trip.
Dad insists David didn’t kill Jeff Trail. Tichich remarks that people saw him and Cunanan “calmly” walking the dog while Jeff’s body was rotting at the loft, riddled with holes from a claw hammer that belongs to David.
David is upset at the prospect of his parents having to endure gossip about him in their small town. Who’s “gonna buy from” Dad’s shop?
Dad is continuing to deny that David is capable of this. Tichich informs him that Cunanan’s friends in San Diego describe him as “reliable; intelligent. ‘Generous’ is a word they use.” We know him, Dad says. He didn’t do this. Tichich sighs that “there’s a great deal you don’t know about your son.”
David wonders aloud if he got in the car because he was afraid Cunanan would kill him, or if he was afraid “of the disgrace.” Cunanan murmurs that David knows he would never hurt David, which David rightly ignores. They stop at a roadside bar and Cunanan stashes the gun in his backpack as they head inside, where a woman and her guitar launch into an acoustic version of the Cars’ “Drive.” Cunanan urges David to eat something; he’ll feel better. David ignores this also and gets up to pee, which Cunanan allows. “Who’s gonna tell you when / it’s too late?” begins the singer, and on my first pass through the episode, I was like, dang, that sounds like Aimee Mann. The camera then pans around to a medium shot, and I was not looking 100 percent at the screen but said aloud to the cat, “Wow, they got someone who even looks like Aimee Mann. What are the odds?” Well, it is Aimee Mann, it turns out, so: pretty good odds, apparently. Anyway, David’s in the bathroom stall, contemplating his odds vis-à-vis breaking the window and shimmying out of it, and to my surprise, he does break out the window, then clear off the glass when nobody comes rushing in to stop him. “Who’s gonna pick you up / when you fall,” Aimee sings as David stares, terrified, out into the parking lot, probably thinking Cunanan’s “feline intuition” will have him waiting directly under the window to apprehend David.
It doesn’t. Cunanan’s other defining trait, self-pity, has him marinating in the parallels between the lyrics of “Drive” and his own situation. As I’ve said, I respect the line that Criss has to walk here with this character, who is both a psychopath and a brat, and if the decision was taken to give the viewer some so-called aid and comfort by tipping Cunanan towards “pitiably hateful” versus “opaquely charming,” I get it.
I also get…Crying Dawson.
Nobody’s going to drive Cunanan anywhere except crazier, and I don’t think we’re intended to feel sorry for him. And I do not. David reappears, alas, and Cunanan grabs his hands across the table. David shoots him a confused look.
Another flashback, this one to David showing his father a departmental award his thesis has won. Dad’s response is once again very explicitly, almost fantastically approving and warm: David put in the work, he deserves this. David then blurts that he’s gay, and after a long pause, Dad asks for a moment: “I don’t want to say the wrong thing.” I think this is what David means when he plays the moments over and over; what I still can’t quite nail down given the stylization of the dialogue in the two scenes is whether he’s playing back what really happened, or revising it to make it go right. What gives me pause in this second flash…something is that it doesn’t go all that well; Dad can’t lie and say it doesn’t matter, because “you know what I believe.” Maybe David wanted to hear that Dad doesn’t have a problem with it, but Dad “can’t say that.” What Dad can say is that he loves David more than he loves his own life. David’s eyes spill over. There’s no need for crying, Dad tells him, then asks why he waited to win the award to come out. David half-smiles. “Good news…bad news.”
Then he wakes up in the back of the Jeep, which…to my point. And it doesn’t really matter, but we’ll get into that later. For now, Cunanan is nowhere around. David emerges from the car in bare feet, and you still hope, even knowing that it won’t happen, that he’ll just climb a tree or melt into the woods silently, get away somehow, put those hikes he took with Dad to use and beat the story. But Cunanan appears, holding the gun, and greets him happily. “You’re not wearing any shoes!” He grabs David’s hand and leads him back to the Jeep, breathing in the country air, like it’s their third date.
At a diner, David asks if Cunanan remembers where they met – on Market Street in San Francisco, a year and a half ago. The fancy clothes Cunanan wore! His “high-society friends”! He sent David a drink; David thought, who does that, “in real life”! Cunanan had everyone laughing! You can see where this is going to go, that David’s reminiscence of admiring and envying Cunanan’s wealth and sophistication has a sneering top note to it, but Cunanan is oblivious, preening at the memory of their $1000-a-night hotel suite and how he swanned to David about changing rooms three times to get the view he wanted. “Except it was all a lie,” David finishes. “You’ve never worked for anything! It was all an act.” This serves two purposes, I would say – in the scene, there’s the sense of a suicide-by-cop maneuver on David’s part, a let’s-just-play-our-cards attitude, and outside it for the viewer, a tiny tiny measure of justice in David at least clocking Cunanan for all his grand bullshit – but you can imagine how Cunanan feels about it.
Cunanan, seeming really not to know: “What’s wrong with you?” David asks if that’s why he killed Jeff when he obviously loved Jeff – that “he figured you out in the end.”
“Took him a few years but he finally saw the real you,” David adds. “And you killed him for it.” Cunanan swallows his dread and makes a flirty moue, saying that if David thinks that night in San Fran was great, just wait ’til they get to Mexico. He blathers on about staying for a month in a fancy hotel, a room with a patio, telling the cute waiters they’re movie stars from Los Angeles. David is disgusted: “You can’t do it, can you.” Cunanan’s face falls: “I can’t what?” “Stop.”
In the car, Cunanan stares out onto the road. David is sitting with his back to the door, and asks why Cunanan sent him down to get Jeff. Cunanan doesn’t want to talk about it. David snaps that he did it on purpose; he wanted David to see it, wanted to make David a part of it. He didn’t lose control at all; he planned the whole thing. Cunanan whines repeatedly in a tone usually reserved for, like, getting turned down for prom or something that he doesn’t want to talk about it. David keeps pushing: does he think they’re outlaws together or something? “I’m nothing like you.” Cunanan still won’t discuss it so David grabs the wheel, grunting at him to stop the car. Cunanan whips out the gun, points it at David’s chest, and wails that David needs to stop talking about the past, that they had a plan, they had a future.
He whips the car down a dirt side road, parks, and pulls David out, still ranting about the plan. David quavers that they still have a plan as Cunanan slings him onto his knees and, at gunpoint, bellows, “Convince me!” David begs for his life – to the detriment, I’m afraid, of Cody Fern’s American accent – and describes the adventure they’ll have together after they get money from Lee. Cunanan says David doesn’t believe that, but David word-paints the place they’ll live, and wisely throws in some details about Cunanan learning Spanish fast because he’s “so smart,” and how he’ll help David, because he’s always helped David. Cunanan is lulled by this for a moment, then raises the gun again: “It could have been true.” David seems to see that he has nothing to lose, and gets up, telling Cunanan to listen to him: it’s over. They have to contact the police. This has to stop. Cunanan’s face is a smear of self-loathing: “Why couldn’t you run away with me?” He’d have run away with Jeff, but not with Cunanan. He’d rather go to prison. “It’s not real,” David says, out of ways to explain. “It could have been,” Cunanan mumbles. “No,” David says, not willing to pretend now that it’s over. “It couldn’t.” Cunanan slumps and starts to turn away. David, almost in disbelief, turns and runs towards the decrepit trailer that’s near the Jeep. Cunanan turns back, sights the gun, and fires three times, but misses…
…and David lurches into the trailer, and locks the door of what is now the inside of the hunting cabin we saw earlier. He hears clinking, and turns to see Dad, unscrewing the thermoses and pouring coffee. David draws carefully near, and takes a cup from Dad, who smiles affably at him. David, delighted, smiles back and takes a seat. He takes a long sip of coffee and closes his eyes, and grins. What a lovely Jacob’s Ladder to give this young man to climb into a sense of peaceful homecoming and acceptance, amidst the utter and pointless terror of his last moments.
Because of course David doesn’t make the trailer. Cunanan shoots him in the back like the gutless shit he is. David manages to turn himself over and hold up his hands. His childhood hand strokes the reeds. Cunanan shoots him, through his hands, in the eye, and then as the sun goes down, snuggles with the body, finally able to possess him in death. Nestled on David’s dead chest, his head right under David’s unseeing shot-out eye, Cunanan looks at a cricket sitting on David’s shirt, then gets to his feet and uncricks his neck. The camera pans up to watch him drive away, then up farther, over the grass, over David’s body, over the darkening lake.
Entertainment doesn’t have to always be fun. Really, its main job is to provoke sensations in us that, even when unpleasant, help reframe our real experiences or bring insight into our lives. That is how fictional stories can feel not only true but essential.
The bulk of “House by the Lake” transpired between two now-dead men, so it’s impossible to know the thoughts, fears, or inner lives of either party leading up to their deaths. But in spending an hour exploring the final days of David Madson (via an incredible performance by Cody Fern), we know not only of his decency and humanity, but also about the life and (literal) death struggles of gay men in the 1990s. Aside from the camp value of the 1990s fashion scene (and Penelope Cruz’s instantly iconic performance) there has been almost no fun to derive from The Assassination of Gianni Versace. But that doesn’t mean it’s not great and important and endlessly heartbreaking. Let’s talk about this episode!
We began with what appeared to be a ’90s-era infomercial from the Minneapolis Tourism Board that strangely did not include any Prince music!
It looked like a nice place back then, and definitely not the kind of place where a senseless, gay-rage-fueled murder was about to take place.
This was one week before the Lee Miglin murder, explored in the previous episode. Andrew Cunanan was hanging out with his successful architect buddy David in David’s sweet loft. But apparently David had made two fatal mistakes: He didn’t like-like Andrew Cunanan back, and also he had openly talked about his successful career. Those are both Andrew Cunanan’s biggest turn-offs if we’re being frank.
Making matters worse, David was clearly in love with their other friend, Jeff. (Finn Wittrock had a free afternoon at some point apparently.) So when Andrew Cunanan summoned Jeff to the loft, it was not to hang out and watch Friends or ER. It was to murder him with a hammer right in front of David.
From this shocking and disgusting act onward, the episode became a tense hostage crisis in which a terrified (and heartbroken) David couldn’t seem to get away from Andrew Cunanan.
Andrew may not have been fully sane, but he fully had a gun. All David could really do was pretend things were normal, that they were still hanging out, and look for any opportunity to sneak off.
The horror and sadness of these scenes were so overwhelming that I was borderline relieved when we got to see a close-up of the latex dummy meant to be Finn Wittrock’s body. It was so bad and also it looked like Andrew McCarthy?
Thus concludes the only remotely fun thing about this otherwise heartbreaking episode.
After Andrew forced David to ditch the loft with him, a co-worker swung by to check in on David and found blood stains on the buffed concrete. Later, when detectives arrived, we got the sinking feeling that yet again the investigation would be hobbled by their evident discomfort and unfamiliarity with gay people. Certain immediate assumptions were just Occam’s Razor type mistakes, like the identities of the victim and killer. But when they came across some gay paraphernalia (including gay porn on DVD! In 1997!) it’s like they immediately wrote off the crime as part of some sick, gay underworld thing. When really it was just a psycho who murdered his friend out of jealousy, a thing that happens to 100% of straight people according to Investigation Discovery.
The episode also explored David’s background, in particular his relationship with (and coming out to) his father. This included touching flashbacks in which young David signaled that he was not like other boys (in that he hated murdering ducks) and his man’s-man father assured him that was okay. I was already tearing up.
As he sat trapped in Cunanan’s passenger seat, David even wept when he thought about how now the world would know he was gay, and he wondered what his parents would say, or what their friends would say. Again, if you are not a gay person who lived in the 1990s, try to imagine feeling so terrified of basic existence in society. And in addition to that, imagine there is a disease decimating your peers. If there’s one thing we can take away from this (admittedly hard-to-watch) series, it’s that life was truly hell for a lot of good people back then. Because, man. He is literally a hostage but is now most concerned that his parents’ store will lose business.
In a lovely surprise, Aimee Mann ended up playing the folk singer at a dive bar Andrew and David stopped at. While David considered attempting to escape through the bathroom window, Mann sang a cover of The Cars’ “Drive” and it verged on sublime. This guy knows what I’m talking about:
It had been a while since we’d seen Cunanan expressing anything resembling a human emotion, so this was unsettling. Part of him must have known he was past the point of no return. Yes he had successfully gotten the man he loved to go on the open road with him. But if we’re being real, he did not achieve this by very honest means.
In another flashback we learned that David had worked extremely hard in architecture school and won a prestigious award, perhaps mainly to impress his father enough so that when he came out to him, his father wouldn’t be overly angry. And in the scene where he finally did it, his father did express disappointment, but even more devastatingly, he seemed disappointed that his son couldn’t tell him this without also delivering “good news.” The whole thing would have seemed unbearably sad if the father hadn’t seemed like a decent, loving man at his core. So many weren’t/aren’t as lucky to have dads like that. Ugh, the ’90s.
In the episode’s final heartbreak (which we knew was coming), David attempted to finally rebuke Cunanan and run away from him. The episode allowed us to think he’d dodged Cunanan’s bullets and taken cover in a lake side cabin, where he enjoyed one last visit with his father.
But no. He had not outrun the bullets. He’d been struck down right there, and then finished off by a reprehensible madman.
Cunanan laid down to cuddle his slaughtered friend, but from our perspective he did not deserve the companionship even a corpse would afford. Just ask this cricket:
For the past two weeks we’ve seen Andrew Cunanan embody every gay fear and insecurity (both society’s and gay peoples’ own) and use his warped mind to destroy upstanding, good men. Good men, the kind he could never be and never would be. A smarter person than me could write an articulate essay about how Cunanan was a product of his time, or a symbol, or whatever. But the more important take-away from these two episodes, I think, was the greatness and dignity of Lee Miglin and David Madson. Though Cunanan ultimately wielded the tools by which they died, The Assassination of Gianni Versace wants to remind us that the world they existed in was at the very least complicit. It’s a dark thought, but a necessary one. And that’s how a show as complicated and frankly stomach-churning as this one is as essential as television gets.
But as the event leading up to Versace’s death play out, it’s very clear that no one knew just how twisted Andrew Cunanan really was.
While overall this series has been top notch in terms of casting and the overall look has been outstanding, isn’t hasn’t been without criticism. The pacing and general confusion being chief among them.
In the past two installments alone, we’ve been introduced to characters we know absolutely nothing about and we’re immediately expected to feel for them and their current situations. Having both episodes begin with a murder or the insinuation of one, does make the audience sympathetic but it doesn’t make it less confusing.
We’ve heard the names David Madson and Jeff Trail before in passing, but if you’re unfamiliar with the case in general, it may take a few moments to understand what’s happening when they first appear on screen.
Jeff: He took something from my new apartment. David: Yeah. What’d he take? Jeff: My gun.
Of all of Andrew’s victims, Jeff and David were the two h who had a relationship with Andrew. At the time of their deaths, Andrew was in town staying with David.
Through a brief conversation between David and Jeff, it sounds like a bit of a love triangle may be at play. Or just a heavy amount of jealously on Andrew’s part. Either way, Jeff doesn’t last ten seconds in David’s apartment before Andrew sneaks up and attacks him with a hammer.
It’s another brutal, brutal murder and shows again that these killings are very personal to Andrew. He wants these men to suffer.
Everything that comes after Jeff’s death is a chance for the actor playing David to shine. And he truly does.
David is shell-shocked and in a state of duress and panic for forty minutes straight. When Andrew pulled him into the shower so they could both wash the blood off their bodies, I desperately wanted David to just knock Andrew in the teeth and make a run for it.
There were several other times I just wanted David to run away or to just scream, but that’s so easy to say from the outside. David was panicked, scared for his life and standing face to face with a psychopath.
There’s no telling what anyone would do in that situation.
It doesn’t help that Andrew is a master manipulator and is able to slowly convince David that they could both be implicated in Jeff’s murder.
Or does he?
David: Are you gonna hurt anyone else? Andrew: No. David: I need you to promise me. Andrew: I promise you. No one else will get hurt as long as you’re by my side.
When they first set off on the run and David is given the chance to seek help while left alone for a few minutes, he chooses not to. Instead he returns to David and continues onward. It’s a puzzling thing to witness because there’s so many times you just want him to scream or yell that he’s in danger. But that moment never comes.
While running, David has a sort of epiphany about Andrew and Jeff’s death and it’s interesting to see that Andrew was able to run his con on people for so long.
We don’t spend enough time with Jeff to get a sense of who he was, but through flashbacks and almost hallucinations, we get to see David as a boy and his need to please his father.
Eventually Andrew has enough of David’s backhanded comments and unwillingness to go along with the plan and he snaps. We’ve seen Andrew snap before and even though I knew where this was headed, I desperately wanted it to be wrong.
Is that why you killed Jeff? You loved him. It was so obvious. But he figured you out, didn’t he? Took him a few years but he finally saw the real you. And you killed him for it. – David [to Andrew]
The episode ends right before Andrew heads to Chicago to see Lee Miglin. So, my assumption is the next week will lead us up to Jeff’s fateful trip to David’s apartment.
I’m still not sold on this style of storytelling, as at times things feel incredibly disjointed and the redundant the next. I’m saving my opinion on that until I see the series in its entirety.
Once again, we had an entry without the Versace’s. Considering the splashy casting moves and promotion has heavily involved the Versace name, they haven’t gotten nearly as much screen time as I would have thought so far.
And it feels like there is still more unfinished business with Andrew and his backstory, so it’s hard to say when they will be coming back.
Are you missing that element of the story? Do you like the standalone episodes that give us greater insight into Andrew’s other victims?
It’s interesting, going backward. I mean, we all do it sometimes; life isn’t linear, as much as we’re trained to expect it to be. But in a TV or film narrative the convention of starting at the end and heading back, not to the beginning and forward again, but to the previous step, the one before that, the thing that happens the week before—that trick seems to inject a level of horror born of its own banality. The quotidian-ness of psychopathy might be its scariest feature. By this point it’s clear that we’re building backward to a horrifying back story about Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss). I found myself wondering if we were supposed to be developing a strange pity for him, for whatever happened to him to make him what he is. I have concluded that we are not—let’s see if I still feel that way by the end.
If last week’s episode was in some ways the most artistically interesting episode we’ve seen so far, this one’s definitely the biggest kick to the gut. We open in the apartment of David Madson (Cody Fern), a young architect. He seems to have fallen into a boyfriend situation with Andrew, but there’s a third guy, Jeff Trail (Finn Wittrock), who seems to have been involved with both of them (and been duly creeped out by Andrew). “I don’t feel sorry for him,” Jeff insists on the way up to the apartment with David.
“Then why are you here?”
“He took something from my apartment.”
“What?”
“My gun.”
Jeff’s bludgeoned to death with a hammer the minute he walks in, and the shocked and terrified David can’t quite get away. Andrew proposes a “road trip” to start a new life in Mexico. David seems to know he’s probably not going to survive this, but he’s determined to try.
I don’t know, I remember the ’90s pretty clearly and even spent a brief portion of that decade in Minnesota, and in my memory there was not really this level of shock and shame and secrecy around being gay, though for sure I knew plenty of people for whom coming out to their parents was an ordeal. I think there’s a little poetic license being taken to heighten the homophobia in the series and this episode especially. But it doesn’t lessen the truth of the situation at all: It does what poetic license should do and makes poetry of the thing. Here, though it’s been hinted at, toyed with, before, is where homophobia, shame, and sociopathy become dazzlingly and horribly entwined. The episode is relentless in its casual brutality, from David’s flashback of stroking the bill of a duck his dad’s just shot on a father-son hunting trip (as barely depicted as it is, David’s relationship with his father is heartrending) to the gloriously bleak appearance of Aimee Mann in a roadside bar, to the obvious fear David and Jeff feel toward Andrew and its inextricability from a feeling of needing to stick together. As Cunanan drags David through a rest stop parking lot, David sees a woman watching them, arms around each other, and exclaims, “She knows who I am! Why else would she be looking at me like that?”
“Like what?”
“Like she hates me.”
Cunanan doesn’t answer. He doesn’t have to. The actual crime of murder and the social crime of being queer have suddenly become linked. It’s horrible to watch. Good-natured, hard-working David doesn’t even see it; he’s (understandably) consumed by the fact that he’s been abducted by a man who’s just committed a murder and could easily kill him as well. The look on Cunanan’s face is a little different. And it speaks volumes. He knows what the woman is reacting to, and you get a sense for just a minute that, in his own mind, this somehow confirms, justifies, indemnifies his actions—in society’s eyes he’s already a frightening aberration, right?
It’s the notion that they are both already condemned for being gay that Cunanan uses to manipulate and coerce David from frying pan to fire. David tries to get away, fails. Tries, fails. Tells Andrew he was briefly fooled by his lies, but sees him for what he is. Enrages him. Begs for his life.
Fails.
Meanwhile, the casually creepy homophobia that infiltrates the police investigations into all of the Cunanan killings is brought into the sharpest focus we’ve seen since the interrogation of Versace’s partner in the first episode. The minute the cops learn David’s gay, they start acting “different.” Despite eyewitness accounts from friendly neighbors who could tell something was going on, the immediate assumption when they learn that David is blond, unlike the body in the living room, is that David has killed Andrew. It takes a remarkably long time for them to get that there’s a third man involved, and it’s all full of subtle hints that gay porn and sex toys found in the apartment somehow have something significant to do with the murder. When questioning David’s distraught parents, the detective smugly informs them, “Oh, trust me, there’s a lot you don’t know about your son.” The way the scene is juxtaposed with a flashback of David showing his dad his architecture school award and then coming out to him is all the more bittersweet and all the more enraging for it. Two things are beginning to swim into focus. The people Andrew Cunanan targets do have something in common. They are makers of one sort of another, creators of real, actual, tangible things. And they have a particular kind of earned self-acceptance that he will never have. He knows he will never have it, and the only thing he can come up with to do about it is destroy it.
He shoots David in the back as David tries to run away. We re-enter his memory of that father-son hunting trip, only now his father is handing the cup of coffee to the adult David. Same cabin, same clothes, same smile. It’s the last thing David sees before Andrew shoots him again, in the face. Andrew seems to have a proclivity for mutilating people’s faces. Then he snuggles up to David’s body, lying with him in the grass for a few minutes before getting up and back into the car.