The Borneo Post (Sabah)

FX’s ‘Gianni Versace’ reaches for beauty but can’t find meaning

- By Hank Stuever

THE TWISTED, true story of Andrew Cunanan’s 1997 killing spree exists in whatever dark sliver of cultural space remains between lurid and sordid. It dangles just out of satisfying reach, even with all the fresh attention being lavished upon it by Ryan Murphy and company in FX’s watchable yet incrementa­lly disappoint­ing “The Assassinat­ion of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story.”

A stylish but depressing nineepisod­e tragedy (premiering on Wednesday), the series heralds, of course, the much-awaited return of the true-crime anthology that launched two years ago with a marvellous­ly textured retelling of O.J. Simpson’s murder trial.

This time the series (eight episodes of which were made available for review) takes a big swerve into a dead-end story that is far less compelling. Fascinatin­g yet repellent, “The Assassinat­ion of Gianni Versace” demonstrat­es why some celebrity-related crimes acquire lasting notoriety and others just fade away.

The brilliance of “The People v. O.J. Simpson” was how it made a widely famous and wellraked case seem entirely new. The failure of “Versace” is that it takes a case that is at best vaguely remembered (mostly by fashionist­as and gay men) and tries to apply to it the same degree of resonance and insight.

Alas, the themes that so easily presented themselves for fresh scrutiny in “People vs. O.J.” (systemic racism and sexism, media manipulati­on, elusive justice) are far from evident in “The Assassinat­ion of Gianni Versace”: Is it about beauty? Is it about psychosis? Is it about gay rights?

Yes to all that, but never effectivel­y. (And why has Versace’s murder been upgraded to an “assassinat­ion?” We’ll get back to that.)

It’s far from a total bust, however. As with “People v. O.J.,” the series has that intoxicati­ng mix of reportedfa­ct (drawing on Vanity Fair journalist Maureen Orth’s 1999 book “Vulgar Favors” for details) and a dash of invention that now defines the “American Crime Story” style.

“Glee” star Darren Criss is plenty creepy and believable as Cunanan, a 27-year-old charlatan and chronic fibber who mooches off the kindness of strangers. Criss capably holds the series together when the writing and dialogue can’t, particular­ly in how he portrays the

smarmy banality of Cunanan’s evil. Sometimes he’s a charming creep. Sometimes he’s a violent creep. It works like a light switch, and it does get predictabl­e; as such, the scary legend of Cunanan might have better lent itself to a serial-killer season of Murphy’s “American Horror Story.”

In the first episode, Cunanan arrives in Miami in July 1997 and wastes no time locating his ultimate target, the Italian fashion designer Gianni Versace (Edgar Ramarez), who lives in an ornate South Beach mansion. Versace takes a morning stroll to a nearby newsstand to buy a stack of magazines; when he returns to his front gate, Cunanan walks up and shoots him a few times, including a bullet through his face. As the murderer flees, Versace’s longtime companion, Antonio D’Amico (Ricky Martin, crying sufficient soap-opera tears) cradles a dying Versace in his arms.

By night’s end, Versace’s formidable younger sister,

‘The Assassinat­ion of Gianni Versace’ demonstrat­es why some celebrity-related crimes acquire lasting notoriety and others just fade away.

the brutally blond Donatella (Penelope Cruz, savouring each snarl) arrives and immediatel­y takes charge of her brother’s empire. Cunanan has fled; Miami police soon learn that the FBI has been pursuing the suspect for weeks, tying him to four other killings.

The episode flashes back and surfs along the quasi-true world of its killer. Among the many falsehoods Cunanan regaled his friends and acquaintan­ces with is the claim of a dalliance with Versace, circa 1990 in San Francisco. True, or not true, or sort of true? If you need to know definitive­ly, with “Law and Order”-like objectivit­y, then “The Assassinat­ion of Gianni Versace” will be tough going. If, on the other hand, you’re tantalised by the fantasies Cunanan created for himself, then carry on.

For sensation’s sake, obviously, “The Assassinat­ion of Gianni Versace” has started at what should be its penultimat­e chapter, with a handsome gunman on the loose and an exquisitel­y — if grotesquel­y — displayed corpse in the morgue. Anyone with a search engine (or a good memory) knows that Cunanan never went to trial; he took his own life once the police caught up to him a week later.

In a serious miscalcula­tion of structure and coherence, each episode of “Versace” stutters and skips along a chronology that moves mainly backward, further into Cunanan’s deceits in the 1990s and late ‘80s, until it finally arrives (in the eighth episode) at his spoiled yet abusive childhood, marred by his Filipino crook of a father (Jon Jon Briones). Along this same disordered timeline, the show wanly offers a story about Gianni and Donatella’s struggle to keep the House of Versace in the black.

Thus, the Cunanan sequences play like reheated “Dateline” episodes while the Versace scenes are like paging through a stack of old Vogues. Ramarez brings a dour elegance to Versace’s creativity and moods — and one episode somewhat opaquely references Orth’s reporting that Versace was HIV positive, which was supposedly kept private to protect the business.

As you may have already heard, an outraged Donatella Versace and her family have lashed out at Murphy and FX, calling “The Assassinat­ion of Gianni Versace” an unauthoris­ed work of fiction and gossip. For what it’s worth, the Versaces come off sympatheti­cally in the series, which is a surprise; Maya Rudolph’s impression of Donatella years ago on “Saturday Night Live” was probably more damaging than this. Carping about the new show only gives it more publicity.

Rather than exploit too many of Donatella’s glycerin tears, “The Assassinat­ion of Gianni Versace” is best (and most disturbing) when it chronicles the dismal fates of Cunanan’s other victims — quiet, nonfamous men who made the terrible mistake of crossing paths with a dangerous liar. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Cruz (centre) as Donatella Versace and Criss as Cunanan in ‘The Assassinat­ion of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story’. — Courtesy of FX
Cruz (centre) as Donatella Versace and Criss as Cunanan in ‘The Assassinat­ion of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story’. — Courtesy of FX
 ??  ?? Ramirez as Gianni Versace and Martin (left) as his longtime companion Antonio D’Amico. — Courtesy of FX
Ramirez as Gianni Versace and Martin (left) as his longtime companion Antonio D’Amico. — Courtesy of FX
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