Save Me: unlikely hero; The Assassination of Gianni Versace – The Australian

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story is Ryan Murphy’s dramatic retelling of the story of spree killer Andrew Cunanan, played with mesmerising intensity by former Glee star Darren Criss. He is a private-school-educated serial killer with a genius IQ whose cross-country path of destruction earns him a spot on the FBI’s 10 Most Wanted List before he murders international fashion icon Gianni Versace (Edgar Ramirez) on the steps of Versace’s Miami residence in 1997.

Based on the best-selling book Vulgar Favors by Maureen Orth, the series examines the disorganised search for Cunanan by law enforcement and how, according to Murphy and writer Tom Rob Smith, institutionalised homophobia at the time was partially to blame. Penelope Cruz co-stars as Versace’s sister and muse Donatella, who after her brother’s death was herself embraced by the fashion world.

Cunanan’s story is told backwards chronologically from Versace’s shooting on a bright South Beach morning outside his extravagant mansion, a piece of shrapnel also taking out a dove that lies next to the fashion king as the coroner pursues his grim task. Murphy calls his approach the “onion peel of shame”, layers stripped off as we journey in time away from the murder, the picture of Cunanan gradually emerging in flashbacks.

Murphy knew the huge success of his Oscar-winning The People v. OJ Simpson meant something singular was needed to surprise the audience. And what he cleverly gives us is not merely another serial killer story, but a complex narrative about what it takes to become a monster. The first episode reveals Cunanan as a deeply flawed narcissist with the motivation and intelligence to become anything he desired to be, but who really only excelled at manipulation and sinister deception. Murphy directs with his characteristic skill, revelling in the juxtaposition of the beautiful and the ugly and violent.

Save Me: unlikely hero; The Assassination of Gianni Versace – The Australian

The subtle brilliance of American Crime Story’s ‘Versace’ second season

I am a huge fan of producer Ryan Murphy. After his hit shows Nip/Tuck and Glee, I’ve gone on to watch American Horror Story, Scream Queens, Feud and, most recently, American Crime Story – not a spin-off, but more of a cousin to AHS. When the first season of ACS came to BBC2 in 2016, my friends and I watched together in unison and live-texted each other updates. In fact, I’d go as far as to say the debut of American Crime Story was perfect and was, I think, one of the best seasons of television ever seen.

To follow up the series’ hugely successful debut, subtitled ‘The People vs. OJ Simpson’, Ryan Murphy immediately planned the show’s second, third and even fourth iterations. Their themes? Season two was set to follow the lives of people affected by Hurricane Katrina; season three was set to follow the iconic assassination of Gianni Versace; and season four was slated to depict the high profile affair between President Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky. Fast forward almost a year and the Lewinsky idea is out (reportedly, when Ryan Murphy consulted Monica Lewinsky on the idea, she didn’t feel comfortable about it) and season two ‘Katrina’ has been switched around with then-third season ‘The Assasination of Gianni Versace’. As someone who is impartial to looking into the lives of the rich and famous, the news of the upcoming Versace season excited me greatly; as a fellow fan of grandeur and glamour, I knew that Ryan Murphy could do it well. But what initially struck my friends – and me – was that this season was not at all what we were promised. For some, like myself, this was fine. But for others, it pushed them away.

Because you see, the main issue with The Assasination of Gianni Versace – and it didn’t have many – was that it isn’t really a show about the assassination of Gianni Versace at all. In fact, it feels as though the show had this title slapped onto it purely because the marketing team knew they could sell it better if it were called that. In actual fact, the second season of American Crime Story would have done much better if it had named itself The Murders of Andrew Cunanan as that is what the story truly followed. Instead of focusing exclusively on the murder of Gianni Versace, the show chronicles a whole host of murders committed by killer Andrew Cunanan, with some episodes scarcely including even a mention of the fashionable clan, never mind an appearance by the actors.

For me, I really wasn’t affected by this. In fact, I enjoyed the show a whole lot more than I anticipated I would and thought it was a fantastic series as a result of the perspective it took; even Ryan Murphy himself suggests that this season is “the best thing [he] has ever made”. I think that writer Tom Rob Smith did a fantasic job on breaking apart the character of Andrew Cunanan and exploring him from as many angles as possible. By the end of the season, I felt like I knew everything that could possibly be known about Cunanan – maybe even too much – and it was fascinating to see. It’s the kind of character study that you could only possibly explore over the course of 10 hours, something that a limited series really allows Smith and Murphy to do perfectly.

For some though, notably a few of my friends at least, the surprising story jarred them and made them turn away and I think that’s fair enough; when you’re sold one thing by a show’s marketing campaign, you end up feeling disappointed when it turns out to be different. The teaser trailers and marketing for the season suggested an in-depth look at Gianni and Donatella Versace, seemingly promising us 10 hours worth of haute couture and bitchy rich people. But instead, watchers were served up with a lot of poverty, seedy behaviour, drug abuse and violent murder. My Grandma for one – who I initially started watching the show with every Wednesday night – decided to give up after episode four because of this.

Marketing campaigns aside though and I do really think that ACS’s sophomore run was fantastic in its own right. As I said previously, what struck me initially as being brilliant was its structure and detail that it was given thanks to head writer Tom Rob Smith. The story really was liberated in regards to time and had no problem in moving backwards and forwards through Cunanan’s timeline to serve different perspectives on the character. Its structure and its writing felt fresh and unique: while season one was pretty linear in how it told the story and was incredibly well written in its own way, Versace managed to be brilliant too and its structure served its story beautifully.

Of course, the show is only as good as it is because of its cast, too, and Darren Criss really knocked it out of the park with his portrayal of Andrew Cunanan. I think it’s hard to see people in different lights when you’re used to seeing them one way and after seeing Criss on Glee for so many years, I really didn’t think I’d be able to shake that off. But I did and Criss was amazing in a performance that surely earns him at least an Emmy nod, if not a win. Yes, the writing did an incredible job at making Andrew layered and extremely complex, but it was Darren’s performance that really brought that to life and made it so endearing. Kudos to him and his work.

The same should also be said for the rest of the cast of course. When we were first told of Versace, everyone was so sure that Lady Gaga would be playing Donatella (she is, of course, very close friends with the designer anyway), but it was later confirmed to be Penelope Cruz. At first, I was a bit upset by this change-that-never-actually-changed, but I’m so glad that I let myself get over that. As per usual, Cruz is a scene-stealer and I love her to pieces. Plus she makes an amazing scene partner to Edgar Ramirez’s Gianni and Ricky Martin’s Antonio. Judith Light – one of my favourite screen actresses – also gave a gut-wrenching recurring performance, as did Finn Wittrock and one of my favourite actresses ever, Annaleigh Ashford. These high-budget movie-style TV shows are made infinitely better by great casting (season one of ACS was proof of that) and Versace expertly played that to its advantage.

So when it got to the end of the season, I wondered to myself: what was the point of that, and what did we achieve by watching it? I know that not everything needs to have a moral behind it – that not all art needs a reason for existing – but when it comes to high-budget television, I think it kind of does. And knowing Ryan Murphy, he wants to anyway. What I took from The Assassination of Gianni Versace – or at least what I think that it wanted to say – was that a little help can go a long way.

The show tells us that Andrew Cunanan is a child of a very disturbed family, implying that he was driven to this madness as a result of his parents and bizarre upbringing. In a way, though it shows that Cunanan’s final murder was that of himself – a suicide – I think Tom Rob Smith really showed that he had been dead from long before. Who really was Andrew Cunanan? It seems as though no one really knew, not least Andrew himself. From a very young age, he was lying through his teeth about anything and everything, eventually driving himself so mad, he began to kill. Andrew Cunanan had, in one way or another, been dead most of his life and was, instead, simply surviving, but the flashbacks to his childhood suggested to me that it didn’t have to turn out this way.

Over the course of the series, we see a whole slew of people enter into Andrew’s life, sponge what they could get out of him, and move on. His parents wanted to live vicariously through him, but when that failed, they moved on; rich men wanted him for their secret gay love affairs, but when that was over, they simply paid him off; even Versace himself appeared to use Cunanan for the way he made him feel, but always kept him at an arm’s length. So many people that passed through Andrew’s life identified a problem, but instead of finding a way to deal with it, they allowed it to fester within him, ultimately leading to carnage and tragedy. I don’t think the show necessarily makes a case for the audience to forgive Cunanan for what he did because in this instance especially, murder is inexcusable. I don’t even think that the show tried to imply that we should feel any sort of sympathy towards Cunanan and what he went through. But when it seemed to tell me by the end of it all was that it maybe wasn’t entirely Cunanan’s fault.

The subtle brilliance of American Crime Story’s ‘Versace’ second season

Bret Easton Ellis and the future of fiction

NO: Are there any aspects of this softer, more empathetic culture that you do appreciate, particularly as a gay man?

BEE: Look we all would benefit from that, but I don’t believe that’s life. I don’t believe that’s in our DNA. I don’t believe utopia is in our DNA. I think we’re deeply flawed animals with a sort of sexual lawlessness, that we are violent, that we want to be on top, that we want to be in control of things. We obviously don’t want to be killing each other in the streets, but we’ve got to get realistic about who we really are and what it means to be a woman, what it means to be a man, what it means to be a gay man. This is a bit of a digression, but I was watching The Assassination of Gianni Versace, the Ryan Murphy show, and I was thinking oh God, what are they going to do with this? I know a lot about the case; I’d read all the books about the case. Andrew Cunanan had gone around saying that he had helped to write Less Than Zero. I never actually met him but he was obsessed with some of my work. Anyway, I was really impressed by the fact that it shone a light on truths about gay men that are really … well you would think they were not acceptable today: body fascism, objectification of other men, an obsession with youth, an obsession with beauty. I was very surprised that Ryan Murphy went there and portrayed it accurately.

Bret Easton Ellis and the future of fiction

The Opposite of Genius: Netflix’s New Docuseries and the Limits of “True Crime”

[..] Marjorie Diehl-Armstrong indisputably had a condition. Probably several. But what hit me while I was watching the five episodes of Evil Genius was that there was something… boring going on. Not boring filmmaking—that’s not the issue. I was thinking about… well, I was thinking about Darren Criss, actually. Several of us here at Paste feel FX’s true crime drama The Assassination of Gianni Versace did not get its due in the court of public opinion and are scratching our heads at people who called it “disappointing.” Some of us think it was kind of a masterpiece. I’m one of those people, so I was weighing the shows against each other. Sure, one is a documentary and one a dramatization, with totally different styles and production values. But they’re both well-made and they’re both anatomies of sociopathy. Why did one fascinate me while the other left me faintly impatient?

The Opposite of Genius: Netflix’s New Docuseries and the Limits of “True Crime”

Review : The Assassination of Gianni Versace

I’m putting it out there front and center – the actual murder of fashion designer Gianni Versace is only a fraction of what is featured within the world of Ryan Murphy’s The Assassination of Gianni Versace so much so, the show would have been better titled The Delusional Life of Andrew Cunanan as Assassination delves into the world of Versace’s killer (played by Glee’s Darren Criss) more than Versace’s terrible fate as the title would suggest.

Opening with soaring operatic music and a flowing visual tour of Versace’s gaudy Miami mansion, Versace is dead even before the title credits.  However, the aim for Murphy wasn’t for us to follow those trying to solve this murder (hence the title) but in fact send us back in time and follow Cunanan and how he ended up with a gun in his hands aimed at the famed fashion designer.  Yes, Versace’s untimely death at the hands of Cunanan plays as the pilot episode’s main premise but that’s more to do with Versace’s celebrity status over Cunanan’s four other victims, who also get a look in during the shows eight other episodes in the form of time jumps.

Based off the book Vulgar Favors: The Hunt for Andrew Cunanan, the Man Who Killed Gianni Versace by author Maureen Orth, Assassination is spread among three different lines – Cunanan and his victims, Versace’s loved ones (including Ricky Martin as Versace’s long-time partner Antonio D’Amico) dealing with the fashion empire pre and post murder and the bumbling FBI who can’t seem to get to grips with the ‘gay’ aspect surrounding the murders (it was the 90’s).

The source material also happens to blur the lines between truth and made-up and Assassination quickly becomes a show that will have you asking “did that really happen?” while trying to decide what is fact and what is fiction considering to this day, there is still no actual proof that Versace and Cunanan had even met prior to the murder.

Gianni’s sister Donatella (played with startling verbal similarity by Penelope Cruz) has claimed the series as “a work of fiction” while 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” and that’s because the main players within this world are….well, dead.

Cunanan’s prior interactions (or lack thereof) with his victims – Versace (Édgar Ramírez), Jeffrey Trail (Finn Wittrock), David Madson (Cody Fern), Lee Miglin (Mike Farrell) and William Reece (Gregg Lawrence) – is somewhat pure speculation so while the work is based off fact, it is done so with much “let’s assume this is what happened”.

That aside, the character study of Andrew Cunanan is a rather intriguing one and is explored heavily within the series.  Cunanan’s ability to seamlessly morph into any given situation or social standing and flee when his lies have all been revealed is quite remarkable though giving so much focus on his life, his lies and his troubled youth feels like we’re being forced into empathizing with Cunanan in light of the fact he is/was a notorious serial killer.

Part of this comes down to how star Darren Criss brings the killer to life, playing Cunanan as mysterious yet suave with an air of charm, a believer in his own lies and the false world around him that he has created while trying to decide just how much of his true self he needs to reveal.  One could only presume by the middle of this series, much more freedom for Criss was enabled with Cunanan as this is where most of the fact/fiction lines become very blurred.

Perhaps the biggest problem with Assassination is the glaring fact that unlike season one’s OJ Simpson story, there is no real hero to root for.  While we all knew the end result, Sarah Paulson’s Marcia Clark still had us backing her to go and get hers in a male dominated environment yet in Assassination, that task is less male dominated environment and more gay acceptance.

That job is pretty much left vacant even though it may feel like we’re being forced into believing it should be Cunanan who, while never ashamed of his sexuality, understands how being gay can be perceived by those less educated on the topic.

The missing hero however is through no fault of anyone’s as there just was never one in this story to begin with.  It could never have been Cunanan (regardless of his childhood), the FBI, as it’s shown, were a bunch of bumbling bigots who couldn’t have cared any less about Cunanan’s victims and others such as Versace or even Lee Miglin’s wife Marilyn (played wonderfully by Judith Light) were so far removed from the central story line it would have meant stretching the truth even further to find that hero.

On the whole, this tale of Andrew Cunanan is a worthy watch and while lacking in the suspense and law and order that drove American Crime Story’s first season of The People Vs OJ Simpson there is still enough substance to dig in and make your own mind up about how much truth is actually found within this series.

Review : The Assassination of Gianni Versace

What’s on? TV highlights for Wednesday May 9

Pick of the day

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, 9.00pm, RTÉ 2

This follow-up to The People v OJ Simpson may lack the zeitgeisty appeal of Simpson’s car chase through Los Angeles live on TV, but it’s well worth a look and just as compelling.

It explores the murder of designer Gianni Versace (played by Édgar Ramírez) by spree killer Andrew Cunanan (an impressive Darren Criss), based on Maureen Orth’s book Vulgar Favors: Andrew Cunanan, Gianni Versace, and the Largest Failed Manhunt in U.S. History.

Tonight’s double-bill fashion begins with Versace’s murder outside his Miami Beach mansion by Cunanan, then flashes back to seven years earlier, when Cunanan meets Versace at a gay nightclub in San Francisco.

What’s on? TV highlights for Wednesday May 9

Seven of the best TV shows to watch this week

The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story
Wednesday, RTÉ2, 9.30pm

In case you missed it on the BBC earlier this year, here’s the second in the acclaimed true-crime docudrama series, this one focusing on Andrew Cunanan, the charming but ruthless drifter who embarked on a killing spree across America in 1997, culminating in the murder of fashion designer Gianni Versace in Miami.

The first series, The People Vs OJ Simpson, is a hard act to follow but it does a fine job of recreating the heady glamour of the fashion world, and re-enacting Cunanan’s horrific murders. Darren Criss stars as Cunanan, with Ricky Martin as Versace’s boyfriend and Penelope Cruz as Donatella Versace.

Seven of the best TV shows to watch this week

On my radar: Matthew Bourne’s cultural highlights

4. TV
The Assassination of Gianni Versace (BBC Two)

I’m very interested in storytelling and anything that plays with structure. Rather than building up to it, we actually get the killing of Versace in episode one and then you go back in time. I feel very drawn in by the character of Andrew Cunanan, played by Darren Criss in a real breakthrough performance. You get an insight into the mind of this serial killer and it’s interesting that, even though he goes around killing people, you have a certain sense of sympathy towards him. It’s really well produced and very glamorous. [Executive producer] Ryan Murphy is the king of television at the moment.

On my radar: Matthew Bourne’s cultural highlights

4YE Quicklist: 5 Podcasts To Indulge In For Your Commute, Road Trips Or Nights In

Still Watching: Versace

We’ve made no secret here how much we loved The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, so I was so excited when Vanity Fair critic Richard Lawson and senior writer Joanna Robinson announced they were producing a 10-episode companion podcast. Each Versace episode is given it’s own episode where Lawson and Robinson discuss the episode in depth, the accuracy of the events portrayed referencing back to Maureen Orth’s book and other sources. They then interview people associated with the series on that episode, the series as a whole and a ton of behind-the-scenes trivia. The guests, including Maureen Orth, Darren Criss, Edgar Ramirez, Ricky Martin, Cody Fern, and Matt Bomer, are interesting, insightful and really giving in discussing the material and their experiences. If you loved the series, this is the perfect companion. Note, they are now discussing Westworld, but the Versace episodes are still available, you just need to scroll down. You can listen to Still Watching: Versace on iTunes.

4YE Quicklist: 5 Podcasts To Indulge In For Your Commute, Road Trips Or Nights In

The 8 best new TV shows of 2018 so far

2. “American Crime Story: The Assassination of Gianni Versace” — FX

Critic Score: 87%

Audience Score: 93%

The series, which is Ryan Murphy’s best work to date, gives us a glimpse of Gianni Versace’s life, impact, and death. But more than that, it’s an examination of the men Versace’s killer, Andrew Cunanan, murdered. It showcases the lives of gay men in the 90s, a time that’s not so long ago, but was much different than today.

The 8 best new TV shows of 2018 so far