The Best New TV Shows Of 2018 So Far

American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace

The death of Gianni Versace was tragic. In 1997, the fashion designer was shot outside his home in Miami by Andrew Cunanan — and while news outlets reported on Versace’s passing, they rarely mentioned the killing spree Cunanan went on before arriving in Miami.

ACS: Versace works backwards from the fateful day to show the equally tragic stories of people whose lives were taken away by Cunanan, but weren’t famous enough to make the news. Versace’s life works in parallel to each character to emphasise how it’s all equally tragic. Within the context of its late-1980s and early-1990s setting, the show covers the plight of Asian-Americans, class tensions, gun violence and sexuality.

ACS: Versace is far from a trashy true-crime story. The series lays its trap with a dramatic retelling with a cast that includes Penélope Cruz (as Donatella Versace) and Ricky Martin — who can actually act — but then surprises with a stunning examination of American life. Like OJ Simpson, Cunanan is a monster made in America.

Is there more? American Crime Story is an anthology series with each season focusing on a different case. No date has been announced yet but season three will centre on the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, based on the book Five Days at Memorial: Life and Death in a Storm-Ravaged Hospital by Sheri Fink.

Can you watch now? American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace is available on Foxtel Now.

The Best New TV Shows Of 2018 So Far

Soundtrack review: The assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story (Mac Quayle – 2018) – Soundtrack dreams

“The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story” is the second season of the FX true crime anthology television series American Crime Story. The season premiered on January 17, 2018, and concluded on March 21, 2018. It consists of a total of 9 episodes, and explores the murder of designer Gianni Versace by serial killer Andrew Cunanan, based on Maureen Orth’s book Vulgar Favors: Andrew Cunanan, Gianni Versace, and the Largest Failed Manhunt in U.S. History. Mac Quayle, the new composer of choice for Ryan Murphy shows, wrote the score.

The score starts boldly with an almost 8 minute long “Adagio in G Minor” which I imagine serves as a sort of elegy for Gianni Versace and somehow using such a familiar piece to open the score fits with the popularity and elegance of the designer. It’s the kind of deep, sombre orchestral piece hat cannot leave anybody unaffected. Mac Quayle’s original contribution starts with the theme for Donatella and it’s really my kind of cue, deeply ambient, just the kind Mac Quayle knows how to write so well; a mix of tenderness and mystery that always gets to me. It’s almost a Pavlovian like reaction for me to be hypnotized by these sounds. After hearing a little while ago Mack Quayle’s surprising score for “Feud”, so old school orchestral, I didn’t know what to expect from ACS; as an electronic music fan I am more than happy to discover a pure electronic ambient score that just flows and lets me get lost in it, very inviting to reflection. I get Zimmer vibes when I hear a cue like “All of them” (not just because of the title) as this sounds similar to his electronic sound as of late; it goes quite deep.

It is hard for me to be objective and clear minded when I listen to a score like this because this is the sound that’s closest to me, I can’t help it. Electronic ambient, with subtle nuances of suspense and sadness that break the mood every now and then; I don’t even care or notice where one cue ends and another one begins because it’s all just an ambient feast for me. I do notice “Idea to kill” because this is one of those cues where the craft of a composer really shines, because in keeping his sound and atmosphere he manages to evoke completely different and raw feelings, aggressive,violent, full dark.

Fans of Mac Quayle and fans of ambient electronic music will love this score for sure. I can’t wait to listen to it in context as well and see how it fits with the story, the investigation. Until then, Mac Quayle cements his place as one of the best electronic music composers right now.

Cue rating: 82 / 100

Highlights:
Adagio in G Minor
Donatella
All of Them
Autopsy
David Murdered
Interviews 
This Is Not for You
Calling Modesto
Another Stage

Soundtrack review: The assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story (Mac Quayle – 2018) – Soundtrack dreams

The Best TV Shows of 2018 (So Far)

American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace (FX)

It’s not completely surprising that this second round of “American Crime Story” didn’t get as much attention as its “People vs. O.J.” season. For one, every episode essentially acts as its own excruciating horror story, ramping up the tension to near unbearable degrees as serial killer Andrew Cunanan (an electric Darren Criss) tears through victims. For another, the series tells the very real, ugly, and undeniably recent history of homophobia in the United States, laying bare its costs and enduring consequences. The series could be very hard to watch, but its unrelenting gaze made for some of the year’s most compelling television. — Caroline Framke

The Best TV Shows of 2018 (So Far)

From Dunkirk to Mad Bastards: what’s streaming in Australia in June

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story (US, 2018) by Ryan Murphy – new episodes on Thursdays

The failure of the American dream has always made for juicy storytelling. Now, in the follow-up to The People v OJ Simpson: American Crime Story, it gets the Ryan Murphy (Glee) treatment, spun through the tale of the assassination of Italian fashion designer Gianni Versace in Miami in 1997.

Murphy’s American Crime Story series has always been pulpy, high-production melodrama; this season is no different, right from the luxuriously lengthy opening sequence that introduces Versace (Édgar Ramírez) and his agonised killer, Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss). The rest of the season works backwards from there as a period piece and police procedural that emphasises trademark Murphy themes of queerness, wealth and celebrity, spun through the lens of 1990s fashion culture, as well as the homophobia that inhibited the investigation. It is as satisfying and schlocky as we’ve come to expect from a Murphy production, and features Penélope Cruz as Gianni’s sister, Donatella Versace, and Ricky Martin as Antonio D’Amico, his partner.

From Dunkirk to Mad Bastards: what’s streaming in Australia in June


https://acsversace-news.tumblr.com/post/174404863329/audio_player_iframe/acsversace-news/tumblr_p9js9vAOAH1wcyxsb?audio_file=https%3A%2F%2Fia801505.us.archive.org%2F4%2Fitems%2FEpisode61_20180530%2FEpisode%25206%25201.mp3

Episode 6

In this week’s episode of WHO magazine’s TV podcast, Binge List, Matthew Denby, Clare Rigden and Gavin Scott discuss and debate true-crime drama American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace, ABC series Mystery Road and Netflix food doco The Magic Pill. Plus, we ask To Binge Or Not To Binge The Good Fight and Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, and delve into Hidden Gem Dead Boss. | 30 May 2018

“The new drama that’s so compelling, it changed the way I see a world famous murder.”

The story of iconic designer Gianni Versace’s murder has always been a compelling one.

The perfect media storm mixture of high fashion meets true crime, featuring a villain with a layered backstory, only added to the drama of the whole event.

On the morning of July 15, 1997, revered fashion designer Versace left his sweeping, luxurious home on the streets of Miami Beach to fetch his morning papers.

As he returned to his mansion, a man named Andrew Cunanan approached him and pointed a .40-caliber pistol at his head. Versace, who was 50 years old at the time, was dead before he even had the opportunity to open the gate of his property and was left to bleed out on the steps of his home.

Since then, the story has been examined in such depth and retold in so many ways over the decades that it became the stuff of true crime legend and, like so many stories of this genre, the gore and the sensationalism quickly overrode the loss and the grief of the real people involved in the tale.

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, the second installment of Ryan Murphy’s true crime inspired anthology series, puts a human face on a famous tragedy.

The nine episode series is adapted from Maureen Orth’s Vulgar Favors by London Spy creator Tom Rob Smith, and just as he did previously with The People v. O. J. Simpson: American Crime Story Murphy has managed to take a story everyone thought they knew inside and out and put a refreshingly interesting spin on it.

The Assassination of Gianni Versace uses an innovative “crime-in-reverse”structure to set up the narrative, meaning the Versace’s murder opens the series and from there on the tale unfolds via three story-lines that all intertwine.

Due to the opulent setting of the story and the high drama of the murder narrative, it would have been easy to turn the series into a sweeping melodrama, and while there is quite a bit of campness at play here there is still an element of human pain and loss holding the whole series together.

Andrew Cunanan (played by Darren Criss of Glee fame) is first introduced as a murderer and then the series takes a great deal of time to gradually and meticulously build up his backstory and motivation, developing him as the show’s antagonist without ever presenting him as some kind of glamorous or showy assassin.

Penélope Cruz as Donatella Versace is also a standout out of the series, perfecting Donatella’s voice and mannerisms whiel also capturing a grieving woman and sister who is then charged with preserving an empire. The scene where she arrives at her brother’s home following his death and strides up the blood-spattered steps like some kind of avenging angel is truly a highlight from the premiere episode.

And, for a man known for his silky smooth vocal chords and hypnotic dance moves, singer Ricky Martin also turns in a good performance as Antonio D’Amico, an Italian model and fashion designer who was in a relationship with Versace for more than 15 years.

And, while the bulk of The Assassination of Gianni Versace is very much Cunanan’s story, the way Versace and D’Amico’s love story plays out, both before his death and following it with the examination of his will, it is an important look at how same-sex couples were treated at that time.

But perhaps the biggest takeaway from this series is the way it also holds a mirror up to the way we as a society fetishise and glamorise high profile murder cases and the people who play a role in them.

While it may seem that with the introduction of social media, the 24/7 news cycle and our ongoing fascination with true crime podcasts that our sense of inappropriate ownership over events like this is a modern invention, this series shows that these behaviours have been in place for a long time.

There’s a scene where a woman tears a Versace ad from a magazine she has clutched in her hand and breaks through the police barricade to smear the page in Gianni’s still wet blood. In a similar scene, a man sees the murder take place and instead of being horrified or offering assistance instead runs to his car to grab a camera so he can document the event.

All because he knows the demand for graphic images will be immense.

It’s not hard to imagine that same sequence of events happening now, except it would be a sea of camera phones capturing the death.

The Assassination of Gianni Versace takes the glitz and glamour out of a world famous murder and portrays it as what it truly is.

A complete tragedy.

“The new drama that’s so compelling, it changed the way I see a world famous murder.”

Five Ryan Murphy TV shows to binge before ‘Pose’ – Style Birmingham

The Assassination of Gianni Versace (2018)

The second outing of Murphy’s American Crime Story anthology series recently concluded its run on BBC2, and saw former Glee star Darren Criss transition from teenage dream to American nightmare. Opening with the murder of fashion designer Versace at the hands of Andrew Cunanan in 1997 and then travelling back in time to explore the making of a serial killer, Versace works as both a compelling character study and an indictment of the institutional homophobia and disregard for queer lives which allowed Cunanan to evade the authorities for so long. Filmed in Murphy’s trademark lurid style, with shades of Hitchcock and Highsmith, Versace also features stunning supporting performances from Penelope Cruz and Ricky Martin.

Five Ryan Murphy TV shows to binge before ‘Pose’ – Style Birmingham

Murder, So Rote: How True Crimes and Traumas Are Endlessly Mined for Your Viewing Pleasure

[…] The Assassination of Gianni Versace, based on Vanity Fair contributor Maureen Orth’s Vulgar Favors, is the most extravagant entry to date in FX’s American Crime Story franchise (Fellini, American-style). The first installment opens with the shooting of the mercurial fashion designer (played by Edgar Ramírez) at the gates of his Miami Beach estate by Andrew Cunanan (Darren Criss), a heat-seeking, fame-craving psychopath, the camera propelled as if adopting the P.O.V. in a first-person-shooter video game. So stylized and iconized that it seems custom-made for replay on an endless art-snuff loop, Versace’s murder didn’t carry the jolt of a life prematurely taken—it tolled the fulfillment of a reckoning preordained, the fatal final collision of a fashion emperor and an envious castoff. Given the extravagance of Versace’s kingly lifestyle, the mini-series couldn’t be expected to practice tasteful frugality, but nine episodes seems a lot of time, money, and scrutiny to expend on a punk whose sole claim to notoriety were the corpses he left behind, even if the series does posit him as the poster child for the dark side of the American Dream.

Murder, So Rote: How True Crimes and Traumas Are Endlessly Mined for Your Viewing Pleasure


https://acsversace-news.tumblr.com/post/174242024424/audio_player_iframe/acsversace-news/tumblr_p9agzuYQSi1wcyxsb?audio_file=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.tumblr.com%2Faudio_file%2Facsversace-news%2F174242024424%2Ftumblr_p9agzuYQSi1wcyxsb

Ep. 8 The Stacks Book Club – Vulgar Favors by Maureen Orth

Choreographer Sam Pinkleton is back in time for The Stacks Book Club to take on true crime, with Vulgar Favors: The Assassination of Gianni Versace by Maureen Orth. Vulgar Favors examines the serial killer Andrew Cunanan, who murdered 5 men in 1997 culminating in the murder of fashion designer Gianni Versace. We discuss Cunanan and his victims, but mostly we focus on the tone of the book. We examine the term “gay crime” and why we find this and so much of the book to be problematic. While there are spoilers in this episode, this book covers a real life event, which means all of the information is out in the public. You can listen without ruining the book. | 23 May 2018


https://acsversace-news.tumblr.com/post/174225907214/audio_player_iframe/acsversace-news/tumblr_p99ed4mIDY1wcyxsb?audio_file=https%3A%2F%2Fa.tumblr.com%2Ftumblr_p99ed4mIDY1wcyxsbo1.mp3

The Assassination of Gianni Versace, Darren Criss, and more

Margaret and Graeme review The Bookshop, sci-fi thriller Anon, and The Assassination of Gianni Versace, as well as talking to star Darren Criss. | 23 May 2018