House Of Gucci -

The legal battle was a war of attrition. Maurizio, now controlled by a new, cooler woman named Paola Franchi, wanted out. Patrizia wanted everything else. The penthouse. The millions. The title. In a Milanese courtroom, she raged, “He reduced me to the key, the cooker, the wife! I am Patrizia Reggiani! I do not cook!”

At first, the whispers were soft. “Your uncle Aldo is old,” she’d murmur, brushing a hand through Maurizio’s hair. “He treats you like a clerk.” Then, louder: “You have the blood. The name. Why do you only have the crumbs?” House of Gucci

Two shots to the back. One to the temple. Maurizio fell forward, his blood pooling on the white marble, his glasses askew. The music box shattered, playing a single, tinny note. The legal battle was a war of attrition

The trial was a theater of the absurd. Patrizia arrived in full Gucci regalia: a silk shirt, dark glasses, and the iconic horsebit loafers. When asked why she didn’t just hire a private investigator or a lawyer, she scoffed. “My eyesight is not good. I did not want to miss.” She famously declared, “I’d rather cry in a Rolls-Royce than be happy on a bicycle.” The penthouse

The legal battle was a war of attrition. Maurizio, now controlled by a new, cooler woman named Paola Franchi, wanted out. Patrizia wanted everything else. The penthouse. The millions. The title. In a Milanese courtroom, she raged, “He reduced me to the key, the cooker, the wife! I am Patrizia Reggiani! I do not cook!”

At first, the whispers were soft. “Your uncle Aldo is old,” she’d murmur, brushing a hand through Maurizio’s hair. “He treats you like a clerk.” Then, louder: “You have the blood. The name. Why do you only have the crumbs?”

Two shots to the back. One to the temple. Maurizio fell forward, his blood pooling on the white marble, his glasses askew. The music box shattered, playing a single, tinny note.

The trial was a theater of the absurd. Patrizia arrived in full Gucci regalia: a silk shirt, dark glasses, and the iconic horsebit loafers. When asked why she didn’t just hire a private investigator or a lawyer, she scoffed. “My eyesight is not good. I did not want to miss.” She famously declared, “I’d rather cry in a Rolls-Royce than be happy on a bicycle.”