Penelope Cruz’s bizarre portrayal of Donatella and outstanding acting by Ricky Martin were two of the more startling features that stood out in The Assassination Of Gianni Versace.
But, as with The People vs. OJ Simpson the reality the drama was based on was even stranger. The white dove found lying by Versace’s body, also killed in the shooting for example, was a detail the best crime writers couldn’t make up.
There’s one big problem with making a show as universally acclaimed and exactly right for the times as The People vs. OJ Simpson and that’s what do you do next?
The Assassination Of Gianni Versace was not just the perfect follow-up but arguably, amazingly, even better material.
It made similar observations about the downside of celebrity, the appetite of the media, and flawed police procedure and prejudice (sexual this time rather than racial) but was more glamorous, more intriguing, and revealing than the first American Crime Story mini-series – largely because most viewers knew the details of the OJ case/murder (the Ford Bronco chase, the gloves etc) beforehand.
In contrast, this had an assassin few of us knew much about, that (strangely) never became as famous as the likes of Mark Chapman or John Hinckley Jn, despite killing Versace and being wanted by the FBI for four other murders at the time.
Episode One suggested that instead of facts established by a court case and endless analysis in the media, the story here revolves around speculation and ambiguity.
Even the show wasn’t sure we could believe what we were seeing, or saying that we should.
The issue whether Gianni Versace had ever met his killer Andrew Cunanan before their fatal encounter on July 15 1997 is disputed by the designer’s family.
Here though we saw Cunanan approach him seven years earlier in the VIP area of a nightclub in San Francisco and subsequently meet him at the opera he had created the costumes for.
The various versions of how these came about (and whether they did at all) was a product of three sources: the book Vulgar Favours by Vanity Fair writer Maureen Orth who supposedly uncovered them; scriptwriter Tom Rob Smith who by the series’ own admission ‘filled in a lot of the blanks involving the relationship between predator and prey’; and anecdotes by Andrew Cunanan himself.
The problem was, as we saw, that Cunanan was an inveterate liar, a pathological fantasist, and seemingly a sociopath – unable to empathise with other people emotionally or understand why telling the truth even mattered.
‘Is it real?’ a friend at Berkeley asked him about the story of meeting Versace.
‘How do you mean?’ frowned Cunanan, genuinely puzzled. ‘Honestly, truthfully, I really do swear I have a date with Gianni Versace !’
Given the lies he’d told about being half-Jewish and his sexuality his friend (like us) found Cunanan’s claims unlikely.
‘You tell gay people you’re gay and straight people you’re straight,’ he pointed out.
‘I tell people what they need to hear !’ countered Cunanan gleefully.
Darren Criss (Blaine Anderson in Glee) was superb portraying Cunanan’s dual personalities: the American Psycho-styled loser with ‘nothing’, consumed by self-hatred, torment over his sexuality, and jealousy of Versace’s lifestyle also able to pass himself as a handsome, camp, student at UC Berkeley and then blend into Miami’s beach scene.
He was wearing a grey t-shirt, shorts, and ordinary orange baseball cap when he walked up to the designer and shot him in broad daylight outside his house on Ocean Drive.
Criss certainly had a whale of time depicting Cunanan’s derangement (mimicking the shocked response of a woman watching Versace’s death on TV, placing his hand over his mouth as she did – except to conceal his glee at the news), not to mention his chilling charm and penchant for elaboration.
‘For my first job I worked for my father on his pineapple plantation in the Philippines ! Can you imagine that?!’ he purred to Versace (supposedly), before claiming his father had also been a pilot for Imelda Marcos and that he was writing a novel about his ‘crazy’ family.
Edgar Ramirez was equally brilliant as Gianni Versace (not to mention eerily similar physically) but the contrast between characters couldn’t have been greater.
Every time Versace spoke about his childhood and his family, his stories were touching and admirable.
His inspiration was his mother’s ethos as a dressmaker and the Versace company logo (the head of Medusa) far from the crass, pretentious, symbol people regarded it but a memory of his childhood playing in Rome’s ruins.
‘For me family is everything,’ Gianni gently explained to Cunanan (again allegedly). ‘The first dress I ever made was for my sister Donatella. Maybe every dress I make is for her.’
Penelope Cruz as Donatella made a late entrance but predictably a drama one, descending from a private plane wearing trademark leather trousers and a huge pair of shades.
When she took them off she didn’t look much like Donatella, or sound like her (or even Italian) when she confronted Gianni’s partner Antonio D’Amico (Ricky Martin), dismissing his sobbing snapping: ‘that’s not what I need from you right now. You are not to speak about my brother without consulting me first.’
D’Amico had just been grilled by the police – the scene that showed most that the Versace story may lack the resonance of OJ Simpson’s but it still has a striking relevance to modern-day politics/prejudice.
Asking about the lovers and one-night stands Antonio arranged for Versace, one FBI officer wondered: ‘did they consider themselves to be his partner too? Do you see why I’m confused? What’s the difference?’
‘I lived with Gianni for 15 years. I was his companion not his pimp !’ D’Amico wept. ‘It’s a good length of time,’ conceded the Fed. ‘Were you paid?’
Cruz came into her own when Donatella declared she was cancelling her brother’s plan to float Versace on the New York stock exchange and intending to keep it in the family.
‘Gianni grew his company from one small store in Milan, from a single rack of clothes, a little simple bench,’ she reiterated to their lawyers. ‘This company was his life. My brother is still alive as long as Versace is alive. I will not allow that man, that nobody, to kill my brother twice.’
Admittedly her words (and her accent) were more reminiscent of a woman announcing she was taking over South American drug cartel than the heir to an Italian fashion empire.
Everything about her portrayal of Donatella right down to the styling was suitably flamboyant without ever necessarily being completely convincing.
But even this was a reason to watch, to see how it/she progresses, and part of what made The Assassination of Gianni Versace as mesmerising as its predecessor about OJ.
Tag: review
The Assassination of Gianni Versace: ‘A new American Psycho’
On paper, a script based on the dramatic murder of Italian fashion designer Gianni Versace in 1997, set in perma-tanned Miami and with a cast including Ricky Martin and Penelope Cruz, might sound like a recipe for the biggest slice of cheesecake melodrama you will get to see all year. Not that there’s anything wrong with cheesecake melodrama. From Dynasty to Nashville, when US dramas borrow the high-octane emotion of Latin American telenovelas and mix it up with cinematic opulence, it can be alchemised into TV gold.
You saw it glittering when Penelope Cruz, playing sister Donatella, magnificent in a peroxide blonde wig and skin-tight black leather, clomping around in high heels with the thuggish gait of bruiser in Doctor Martens, addresses a shadowy looking board room hours after Gianni has been shot dead outside his Miami palace by serial killer Andrew Cunanan. “I will not allow that man to kill my brother twice,” she hisses.
The Spanish actress doesn’t make much of an attempt to pretend she’s Italian – sniggering perhaps at English-speakers conception that they all sound the same and when all the Americans pronounce her brother’s name as ‘Johnny’. As a consequence, she reminds you of her wonderful she was in the same late 90s period in the films of Pedro Almodovar. Ricky Martin turns out to be a revelation as Gianni’s partner, vilified and shut out by both family and the police.
The Assassination of Gianni Versace is not just an excuse for some great fashion and Latin passion though but a real horrific tragedy, overshadowed in history by the death of Princess Diana only a month later. Edgar Ramirez gives Versace a poetic tenderness that makes you feel the senseless waste and brutality of his murder. But it’s Darren Criss who steals the show as the real American Psycho (with plenty of nods to the Mary Harron’s film) dissembling and deceiving with alarming ease, dancing to Phil Collins, his eyes flashing behind his preppy glasses.
The first American Crime Story series, The People v O. J. Simpson combined ersatz performances with an acute dissection of the growing fault lines in American society over race and the power of celebrity.
The second series suggests there will be similar analysis of how painfully and dangerously closeted homosexuality was and how glamour and money circulates and distorts passions like drugs. But without a long court case, the exploration this time seems more psychological than sociological – what drove Cunanon to kill Versace? Did he know him? The confabulation of fact and possible fiction and glamorisation of Cunanan, despite the beauty and drama, might make this slice of real life harder to swallow.
The Assassination of Gianni Versace: ‘A new American Psycho’
The Assassination of Gianni Versace review – Ryan Murphy’s fashion fable is flawed but fab guilty pleasure
The mood and effect of American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace is best exemplified by the fact that, when his boyfriend of 15 years, Antonio D’Amico, hears gunshots and races to find his dying lover riddled with bullets and bleeding upon the steps of Casa Casuarina, their Xanadu-like villa, you don’t think: “Oh, sweet fragility of life! Oh, the endless evil that man will visit upon man! But playthings to the gods are we!” You think: “Ooh, that’s Ricky Martin! In tennis whites! Isn’t he ageing well?”
Which is to say that, in the opening episode at least, the soapy sensibility of Ryan Murphy, the show’s creator, has some emotional distance to close between the subject and its viewers. There’s also the inescapable high camp elements of the story of the Italian fashion designer’s murder, with which series two of Murphy’s pop culture anthology is concerned. It’s not helped by a weirdly clunky script that has the murderer, Andrew Cunanan, disgorging great lumps of exposition that pop the narrative bubbles we would otherwise be chasing after. On the other hand, maybe it’s not a problem at all. Maybe keeping us at a distance is as knowing and deliberate an artistic decision as Versace’s every design choice in Casa Casuarina.
Like Murphy’s first and Bafta-winning American Crime Story, The People vs OJ Simpson, The Assassination is at least in part a commentary on the lenses in front of which a febrile piece of social history played out. When Cucanan’s bullets first met their mark in real life, the reaction from the public was, after all, just as shorn of genuine sorrow. A brand has been shot! Look, there’s Donatella arriving! And Diana and Naomi crying at the funeral! It was only ever deliciously unreal to us.
The nine-part series opens with the murder and the first 50-minute episode flashes back and forth from there to 1990, interleaving the evolution of Cununan’s obsession with his victim and the development of the murder investigation. Cunanan is played by Darren Criss, who is a touch stagey. But Criss was a fine turn as Blaine Anderson in Glee, and hopefully he will find his groove over the next eight episodes.
Edgar Ramirez as Versace does wonders with his part, managing to evoke the man’s fabled charm and a sort of commanding gentleness that explains why so many clients were drawn to him, and how he built a tiny Milan shop with a single rack of clothes into a billion pound fashion house.
Quite what is fact and quite what is fiction is never clear. Donatella et al have disowned the series as “a work of fiction”. The programme itself carries the disclaimer: “Some events are combined or imagined for dramatic and interpretative purposes. Dialogue is imagined to be consistent with these events.”
It is entirely in keeping with the genre that it is the bits that you are most sure are made up that are actually true. A fragment of one of the bullets that killed Versace also hit a dove and brought it down next to him. The police had failed to distribute the posters advertising Cunanan – who had killed four men in six months before Versace – as one the FBI’s 10 most wanted. And if the fact that a bystander ran to his car to get his Polaroid camera to capture the dying man’s body being loaded into the ambulance doesn’t seem stranger than fiction now, children of the smartphone world, let me assure you it did then.
Having looked a little ahead at the series, it does begin to thicken and deepen. You don’t need to feel too guilty about what promises to be a glorious and, given its central subject, eminently unjustifiable pleasure.
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Ross Sinclair, Claire Morrall and the Tuesday Review
Plus the Tuesday Review: Claire Sawers, Pete Ross and James Crawford review new BBC2 series Civilisations, The Assassination of Gianni Versace, and Tracey Thorn’s new album Record. | 28 February 2018
What’s on TV tonight? Shows to watch on Wednesday 28 February from The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story and Beindorm
The Assassination Of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, 9pm, BBC Two
If you loved The People Vs OJ Simpson, this latest American Crime Story dramatisation will hook you in once more. On 15 July 1997, fashion designer Gianni Versace (played by Edgar Ramirez, right) was gunned down outside his Miami villa by Andrew Cunanan, and while we get an insight into Cunanan’s mind, it’s Versace’s lover Antonio D’Amico (a painfully grief-stricken Ricky Martin) who you’ll feel for most, as he’s treated particularly harshly by both the police and Gianni’s sister Donatella (Penelope Cruz).
What’s on TV tonight: The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story and Rent for Sex
The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story
BBC Two, 9.00pm
Ryan Murphy’s true crime series follows up 2016’s dramatisation of the OJ Simpson trial with the story of serial killer Andrew Cunanan, who murdered at least five people over a three-month period, including the fashion designer Gianni Versace. Murphy and scriptwriter Tom Rob Smith use the word assassination very carefully here: the operatic opening scenes depict Versace (Édgar Ramírez) as a modern-day Medici prince, dispensing cheerful patronage to all in his Miami Beach fiefdom. By contrast, Cunanan (Darren Criss) is portrayed as a man so insecure in his own skin that he is almost physically incapable of telling the truth: “You tell gay people you’re gay and straight people you’re straight,” exclaims an exasperated friend. “I tell people what they need to hear,” comes the too-calm reply.
Both Criss and Ramirez are excellent and there’s strong support from Ricky Martin as Versace’s bewildered live-in boyfriend and a perhaps slightly too-camp Penélope Cruz as Donatella. Smith’s solid script does a good job of juggling various timelines to show how this particular killer came to be. Sarah Hughes
What’s on TV tonight: The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story and Rent for Sex
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The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story
FX, 10 ET/PTAs the series continues moving backward in time, we get to know more about spree killer Andrew Cunanan’s (Darren Criss) backstory and the how he became intertwined with the men he would later kill. Tonight’s episode shows Cunanan at a particularly desperate period of his life and depicts the beginnings of his relationship with David Madson (Cody Fern), with whom he becomes obsessed. Criss’ performance remains unsettling, managing to make Cunanan terrifying even in episodes without scenes of violence.
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What’s on TV tonight
The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story
BBC Two, 9pm
Ryan Murphy follows up The People vs OJ Simpson with a nine-part “true crime” drama, written by Tom Rob Smith (London Spy), telling the story of the death of the international fashion mogul Gianni Versace, who was murdered by Andrew Cunanan. Versace was the fifth victim of Cunanan’s killing spree, shot dead on the doorstep of his Miami mansion in July 1997. The drama is based on a book, Vulgar Favours by Maureen Orth, which, according to a statement from the Versace family, was not authorised, and therefore “this TV series should only be considered as a work of fiction”. The People vs OJ Simpson was also criticised for its historical inaccuracies, but that didn’t stop it from being a quality drama — it was nominated for 22 Emmys, winning nine. The Assassination of Gianni Versace isn’t in quite the same class, but it is stylish and compelling (and the interiors and costume design are impeccable), so don’t let its habit of playing fast and loose with the truth put you off. The first episode opens with the brutal murder and then heads back to 1990, with Cunanan (Darren Criss) encountering Versace (Édgar Ramírez, a ringer for the designer) in a nightclub and later for post-opera drinks. (Versace’s family deny a link between Versace and his killer.) Then we’re back to the crime scene, and the efforts to save Versace’s life and the subsequent police hunt for Cunanan. It really gets going with the introduction of Penélope Cruz as Donatella, who arrives at the Versace compound to establish control of her brother’s empire.
Wednesday’s best TV: The Assassination of Gianni Versace; Save Me
The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story
9pm, BBC Two
The follow-up to The People v OJ Simpson charts the story behind the 1997 murder of the fashion designer outside his Florida home. Darren Criss excels as Andrew Cunanan, a fantasist serial killer who, in this reading, calls to mind Patricia Highsmith’s Tom Ripley. Penélope Cruz and Ricky Martin add star power. Jonathan Wright
Wednesday’s best TV: The Assassination of Gianni Versace; Save Me
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In the second hour Brian and I discuss the murder of Gianni Versace by Andrew Cunanan, and the new FX show about the murder. Brian gives us an overview of Cunanan and his three month murder spree in 1997. Brian talks about Cunanan’s past, including his methamphetamine abuse and love of S&M. We talk about his brutal murder of Lee Miglin and some of the strange discrepancies and possible cover up by the Chicago police in that killing. Later Brian moves onto Cunanan when he arrived in Miami and killed Versace in broad daylight, and then his suicide on the house boat of Torsten Reineck. Brian discusses Reineck’s shady past as the King of Gay Bathhouses in Las Vegas and Miami, his connections to drug traffickers and the German equivalent of the DEA. Brian also lays out the theory that Reineck and Cunanan not only knew each other, but that Reinick may have hired him to kill Versace. Brian also talks about the fact that notion that Reinick may have promised to help Cunanan flee the county after the murder, possibly bringing him to his private island “Sealand” of the coast of the United Kingdom.