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American Gigolo TV Review: Nice suits, fast cars, but no satisfying climax

Our TV critic has a new Jew crush

October 28, 2022 11:19
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2 min read

American Gigolo
Paramount+ | ★★★★✩

I’ve got a new Jew-crush. Gone from my bedroom wall are the posters of Wonder Woman and Spartacus, to be replaced by The Punisher and now American Gigolo. Jon Bernthal could be any one of us, just with a full head of thick hair, a chisel jaw, and a body that’d have Michelangelo’s David asking for gym advice. And which Jew couldn’t relate to his combination of intense broodiness and vulnerability, abilities he utilises to great effect in this TV remake of the 1980 Paul Schrader movie of the same name.

The original had Richard Gere preening around 1970s LA, catering to the needs of the unhappy rich and powerful before getting subsumed into a murder mystery. Now the core stays the same, updated to this century, but Bernthal has a lot more to work with in constructing his Julian Kaye.

What may seem on instinct an unnecessary remake of a dated footnote of cinema, explaining its near decade in development purgatory, it turns out that being given the time to breathe across eight episodes is an opportunity to get beyond the superficiality of the source material. Yes, you still get the nice suits and fast cars and disco tunes, and there are lots of nods to the original, but this version delves much further into the history, psyche, and limited choices of someone forced to sell not just their body for money, but also their soul. If anything, this is the story about whether or not it’s possible you can get it back.