4. The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story
Network: FX
Last Week’s Ranking: 4We use the word “ego” almost as if we’re describing a character flaw. In fact, the literal translation of the word is “I am.” To be completely egoless might be the ostensible aim of some religious philosophies, but there’s a big difference between relinquishing one and never developing one in the first place. People with broken or empty or malformed egos are miserable and very often highly dangerous. “Creator/Destroyer” is basically a primer on how to build a human being with no stable idea of who he is—in this case, Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss), by his father, Modesto (Jon Jon Briones). The pressure of that instability is like the seismic buildup between tectonic plates in a subduction zone. The longer the pressure builds, the more catastrophic the quake’s going to be when the ground finally gives way. —Amy Glynn
Tag: review
What’s on TV tonight: Performance Live, Troy: Fall of a City and more
The Assassination of Gianni Versarce: American Crime Story
BBC Two, 9.00pm
The more time we spend with serial fantasist and murderer Andrew Cunanan, the more Darren Criss, who plays him, walks off with the series. Tonight sees Cunanan very much to the fore as we head back to April 1997 to examine how his murderous spree began. SH
What’s on TV tonight: Performance Live, Troy: Fall of a City and more
A soufflé with a bloody centre
When the ninth and final episode effectually titled ‘Alone’ airs today, the snake in the grass will be found dead. Though not by being caught and killed, but like the ancient Egyptian symbol of the ouroboros, where the serpent eats its own tail. Viewers following the second season of the anthology series American Crime Story, The Assassination of Gianni Versace on the online streaming platform HotStar would have guessed this spoiler in the first episode.
In a nearly wordless eight-minute opening sequence in the first episode, the two main characters, fashion designer Gianni Versace (a resolute Edgar Ramirez), and his killer Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss) are shown stirring out of their lairs at sunrise. Cunanan is sitting on a deserted stretch of the Miami beach in Florida on the morning of July 15, 1997. He looks visibly distraught and is carrying a gun, making his motives clear. Versace, whose bedroom overlooks the beach, is shown getting dressed for breakfast in his Mediterranean-style villa that is fitted with sumptuous sights.
Both characters are alone and remotely together in their loneliness. Ominous stringed instruments take flight in the entire sequence and forecast terrible news on a sunny morning such as this. Cunanan shoots a bullet in Versace’s face, killing him instantly, and the title of the series surfaces right after it, setting the mise-en-scene for a chi-chi crime drama that works in reverse chronology, and makes it immediately evident that the victim is gone in the first episode, and the criminal will go in the finale.
The overture music is recreated from Adagio in G Minor — a neo-baroque Italian composition with a foggy history of origin, and is perfectly suited to the show’s defining moments and also its best bits. It will be no surprise if the same composition is played in the concluding episode when Cunanan takes his own life on a houseboat on the beach.
But despite the obvious narrative in subsequent episodes which proceed as a marker to count several dead bodies that show up in gruesome acts of violence by the serial killer Cunanan (Darren Criss in a breakthrough performance), it is through the show’s tinted lens, filming lush colours and stunning locales, and its perfect ensemble cast, including Penelope Cruz (in an ice-cold version of Donatella Versace), Ricky Martin (as Versace’s puppy-faced lover), Judith Light, Mike Farell, Finn Wittrock, amongst several others, that the show’s creators, director Ryan Murphy, and writer Tom Rob Smith open a window into a world of high fashion, glamorous people and hedonistic lifestyles, perhaps not entirely dissimilar to the strata the cast already inhabits in real life.
The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story is about as insightful as a tour of a patisserie, delighting in screaming pinks tones and burnished yellows, reflecting the titular character’s ostentatious tastes in clothing and décor, but where is the man in the scenario? Crucial scenes are heavily glazed in rhetoric (or sinister silences) and Versace appears to be an onlooker watching Cunanan take centre stage.
The show’s villians are no doubt sexier and more worship-worthy than heroes, and Criss’s posterior is on ample display (one critic wrote a punny piece saying Criss’s “magnificent ass” deserves an Emmy trophy) but these parts (including fetishised models tied up in bondage-style dresses) don’t add up.
The series is adapted from Maureen Orth’s book Vulgar Favors: Andrew Cunanan, Gianni Versace, and the Largest Failed Manhunt in U.S. History, and has been dismissed by the Versace family as moonshine, probably referring to Criss’s moony behind as he casually remarks in the seventh episode, “Oh if only everyone could see me now?” to which his gullible sugar-daddy partner Norman (Michael Nouri) asks, “Who?” Precisely.
American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace || Episode 08 – Recap Rewind
On this week’s episode of American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace, we dive into the eighth episode titled ‘Creator/Destroyer’ JLAG and NBEA have some controversial opinions about this episode tune in to find out! | 20 March 2018
4YE’s TV Reel Feels For March 11th Through March 17th
Top Episode
Emmy: “Creator/Destroyer” is my choice for the week because I didn’t think anyone could be creeping and more repulsive than Andrew Cunanan but dammit, I was wrong. Jon Jon Briones’ Modesto matched Darren Criss’ Cunanan tit for tat in every way, and it was haunting to see how much alike father and son were.
Top Moment
Clare: The final scene between Darren Criss’ Andrew Cunanan and his father, Modesto, played by Jon Jon Briones in The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story’s “Creator/Destroyer” was electrifying. Andrew confronting his father over the discovery that his whole life was basically a lie is yet another example of why this series is must-see TV. The story is intriguing, the cast is perfect, the direction is amazing and the aesthetics as a whole are captivating. There was so much going on in this scene that lays the groundwork for the way Andrew behaves and reacts to things later in life. Criss and Briones just bounce off each other so well and take the viewer on their journey.
Top Quote
Clare:
“I bragged to my friends about your success. You were everything to me Dad, but it’s a lie. And if you’re a lie, well then I’m a lie and I can’t be a lie. I can’t.” – The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story
American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace S02E08: Creator/Destroyer
A stylish episode that fills in the last gaps in Andrew’s story, hopefully.
The Assassination of Gianni Versace has been a detailed character study of the assassin and his victims. Andrew Cunanan has been so thoroughly explored over the past seven episodes, with an episode each for four out of his five victims, that I’m starting to wonder whether there is anything left that we need to explore. Despite being a huge fan of this season’s backwards structure, last weeks Ascent left me craving that the structure would be broken, and the manhunt begun. Then Creator/Destroyer comes along and reaffirms my faith and confidence in this show’s direction. As much as we already know about Andrew there is always that lingering presence of his father, who has been conspicuous by his absence up to this point. We have already seen that Andrew’s family has a history of mental illness (most families do, which rarely leads to murder despite what pop culture would have us believe) due to his mother’s fragile mental condition. She is possessive, but not abusive, so where has Andrew learned this behaviour?
Enter Modesto Cunanan, Andrew’s father from the Philippines who has amassed a great fortune according to his son. Considering the fact that we have had almost an entire season to get used to spotting Andrew’s lies, it’s obvious that his image of his father, used in an almost PR-like way by Andrew, is far from his true identity. Creator/Destroyer draws parallels between Gianni Versace and the man who killed him once again in an effort to rubber stamp its themes. Before we meet Modesto, we are given an introductory scene consisting of how Gianni, as a young boy, found his passion for design. His mother is a dressmaker, and Gianni is so fascinated by her work that he begins to sketch some designs himself. Despite his teacher calling him a pervert when she sees these drawings, and a fellow student call him a pansy, Gianni’s mother supports her son’s dream of becoming a designer. As she agrees to help him create a dress from these designs, she tells him that hard work and perseverance are the essential components of realising this dream. While he may have talent his Gianni’s mother instils a strong work ethic that he and Donatella showcase in later life.
While these scenes are essential in showing the contrast between Gianni and Andrew’s upbringing, they feel purely functional (as most of the Versace stuff has been this season) and don’t have the same skill and nuance that Andrew’s scenes have.
Still, they do serve a function, and through Gianni’s mother’s sound advice, we can see how Modesto Cunanan short-changed his son. Remember when Andrew told David that he was given the master bedroom when he was younger? Like David, I bet you thought that Andrew made that up. It’s true, Andrew, despite having two other siblings, was his parents favourite, especially his father. Andrew’s father taught him that success, despite how nebulous that term is, is the goal. It doesn’t matter what you do, as long as it gets you lots of money. This is obviously bad parenting, neglecting to teach your children the value of a dollar can blow up in your face many times down the line, but even Andrew’s ambitions (like writing a novel because he loves stories) are put through this financial filter.
How can a child learn about working hard when he gets the master bedroom, preferential treatment compared to his brother and sister, and a car before he is even old enough to drive. Creator/Destroyer smartly shows how destructive being the golden boy has been to Andrew’s sense of self. His father shows all of the characteristics of an abusive partner, to both Andrew’s mother and to Andrew himself. He baits his family with tales of bad news so he can find a reason to exert his power when he turns the tables. He separates Andrew from the rest of the family by telling him how special he is, and how much he loves Andrew more than the rest. This is emotional abuse that can crop up in romantic relationships. A person cuts their partner off from friends and family by telling lies and saying that they are the only one that their partner can count on. The script, and Matt Bomer’s tasteful direction hint at sexual abuse by playing up mood and a chilling performance Jon Jon Briones when he is alone with Andrew in Andrew’s room. While there is no proof of this abuse, it does make sense within the context of this show and goes a long way to explaining Andrew’s own intimacy problems.
It’s finally revealed that Andrew’s father is a fraud: an embezzler of money that must flee to his home country. Andrew’s vision of his father is so firmly in place that he believes that there is money stowed away. When he visits his father in the Philippines the truth finally comes out. Modesto is a weak man, that shatters his son’s image of him while also calling out the hypocrisy of his Andrew himself. Andrew was willing to believe that his father was a big shot as long as the money was coming in. This is ridiculous of course. It’s not Andrew’s fault at all, despite what his father has accused him of. What’s also telling is that, despite Andrew’s clear intent to hurt his father he, like many victims of abuse, chooses to hurt himself instead. Faced with a new reality, one in which his father has irreparably failed him, he decides to symbolically kill off this version and replace him with the big shot plantation owner that we are familiar with.
8/10 – A return to the quality we’ve come to expect from this show, with Jon Jon Briones the latest guest star to challenge Darren Criss for performance of the season.
American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace S02E08: Creator/Destroyer
10 Binge-worthy shows to watch over spring break
John – “American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace”
Coming off of its major coup of a first season — which dramatized the trial of O.J Simpson — the second season of true-crime drama “American Crime Story” focuses on serial killer Andrew Cunanan and his most famous victim, Italian fashion designer Gianni Versace.
Darren Criss’ portrayal of Cunanan — who killed five people, mostly gay men, in a cross-country killing spree in 1997 — is a spot-on characterization of a man so enraptured with acquiring money and notoriety that he has become alienated from his own humanity.
Along the way, the show spends time focusing on issues that have predominantly affected the gay community through the eyes of the show’s characters. Issues include the former ban on openly LGBTQ soldiers, the American HIV pandemic and coming out of the closet in an often-hostile society.
New episodes of “American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace” are on FX every Wednesday at 10 p.m., but the previous episodes of this season are available for $2.99 each on Amazon.com — and while you’re there, don’t forget to check out the phenomenal first season about O.J.
ACS S2E8 – “Creator/Destroyer”
The People … want more episodes of ACS: Versace and it’s not even over yet! Natalie and Maren read your comments on the extended episode and dig into: Modesto “Pete” Cunanan, Andrew being the favorite in the family, open shirt yearbook photos and more! *Apologies for the sound quality in this episode!* | 16 March 2018
T Lo review the TV shows “Counterpart,” “The Alienist,” and “The Assassination of Gianni Versace,” rant about the CFDA nominees, gush over Ava DuVernay’s next directing job and what it means, and finally, review and recap the finale of “RuPaul’s Drag Race All-Stars,” season 3. | 16 March 2018
