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	<title>Patricia Highsmith Archives - Toronto Guardian</title>
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	<title>Patricia Highsmith Archives - Toronto Guardian</title>
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		<title>Ripley (Netflix) Review: All Play and No Work</title>
		<link>https://torontoguardian.com/2024/04/ripley-netflix-review/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Steven Lantier]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 04 Apr 2024 16:12:54 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Lifestyle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Netflix]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Patricia Highsmith]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Review]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ripley]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tv]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://torontoguardian.com/?p=108551</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>At once the most beautiful and most horrifying eight hours of television you’ll see this year, Netflix&#8217;s Ripley, adapting for <a class="mh-excerpt-more" href="https://torontoguardian.com/2024/04/ripley-netflix-review/" title="Ripley (Netflix) Review: All Play and No Work">[...]</a></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://torontoguardian.com/2024/04/ripley-netflix-review/">Ripley (Netflix) Review: All Play and No Work</a> appeared first on <a href="https://torontoguardian.com">Toronto Guardian</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>At once the most beautiful and most horrifying eight hours of television you’ll see this year, Netflix&#8217;s <em>Ripley</em>, adapting for the umpteenth time Patricia Highsmith&#8217;s 1955 novel <em>The Talented Mr. Ripley</em>, is a marvellous showcase for actor Andrew Scott, the art of black-and-white cinematography, and the Amalfi Coast &#8211; and not necessarily in that order.</p>
<p>And while <em>Ripley</em>&#8216;s &#8211; and Ripley&#8217;s &#8211; relentlessly bleak nature can be exhausting after a while &#8211; the highly bingeable series drops all eight episodes on April 4, 2024 &#8211; it&#8217;s a journey through familiar waters which is still well worth the plunge.</p>
<p><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-108552" src="https://torontoguardian.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/RIPLEY_1.jpg" alt="Ripley (Netflix) Review: All Play and No Work" width="1000" height="561" srcset="https://torontoguardian.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/RIPLEY_1.jpg 1000w, https://torontoguardian.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/RIPLEY_1-300x168.jpg 300w, https://torontoguardian.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/RIPLEY_1-678x381.jpg 678w, https://torontoguardian.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/RIPLEY_1-768x431.jpg 768w" sizes="(max-width: 1000px) 100vw, 1000px" /></p>
<p>Produced by Showtime, Netflix&#8217;s <em>Ripley</em> is a basically faithful adaptation of Highsmith&#8217;s 1955 novel, here set in 1960 &#8211; not coincidentally, the year the first Ripley adaptation, <em>Purple Noon</em> starring Alain Delon, released &#8211; and filmed in gorgeous black-and-white by long-time Paul Thomas Anderson cinematographer Robert Elswit (<em>There Will Be Blood</em>, <em>Punch-Drunk Love</em>, <em>Inherent Vice</em>, among others).</p>
<p>Created and directed by Steven Zaillian (whose last TV outing, the U.S. remake of British miniseries <em>The Night Of</em>, won the 2017 Emmy for best miniseries), <em>Ripley</em> follows Tom Ripley (Scott), a penny-ante con artist who stumbles into the opportunity of a lifetime when he is recruited to track down former university chum Dickie Greenleaf (Johnny Flynn, excellent), who has been gallivanting across Europe.</p>
<p>Dickie was last seen on the Amalfi Coast with girlfriend Marge (Dakota Fanning, underused), to which Ripley is rapidly deployed after a table-setting first episode in New York, where we get a glimpse of his decidedly less glamorous criminal ventures. Events really get underway once Ripley tracks Dickie down in the coastal village of Atrani &#8211; it&#8217;s the famous one in every depiction of the Amalfi Coast &#8211; and begins to worm his way into Dickie’s life, emulating his mannerisms, likes, and dislikes in increasingly unsettling ways.</p>
<p>If the character of Tom Ripley is an actor&#8217;s dream, then Andrew Scott is a dream actor to tackle the role. Scott, best known for his award-winning turn as Jim Moriarty on BBC&#8217;s <em>Sherlock</em>, is one of the finest actors of his generation, turning heads most recently in 2023&#8217;s <em>All of Us Strangers</em> and as <em>Fleabag</em>&#8216;s infamous Hot Priest.</p>
<p>But where Scott&#8217;s undeniable charisma was put to excellent use in his earlier roles, in <em>Ripley</em> we find him at his most subdued, even inaccessible. Unlike the various prior Ripleys, Matt Damon (<em>The Talented Mr. Ripley</em> of 1999) and Alain Delon (<em>Purple Noon</em> of 1960) included, Scott&#8217;s Tom Ripley is effectively a charisma vacuum: impossible to like, and even more impossible to read. In this <em>Ripley</em>, at least, it&#8217;s not so much Tom Ripley&#8217;s charm that Dickie is drawn to, but rather his inscrutable, maddeningly vague nature.</p>
<p><em>Ripley</em> refuses to provide easy answers about what it is that drives Ripley &#8211; even the queer undertones are downplayed compared to the 1999 version &#8211; leaving his motivations tantalizingly obscure. That said, it does not take long to discern that Ripley, if he ever had a moral compass, has lost it long ago, probably somewhere in that vast open sea which serves as a recurring visual motif.</p>
<p>On the whole, this is a remarkably austere <em>Ripley</em>, one in which everyone in the cast, not only Tom but Dickie (Flynn) and Marge (Fanning) too, hold themselves at a remove. There&#8217;s a certain bloodlessness to the performances, one which will likely come as a surprise to most viewers. (The joyful jazz-playing Jude Law Dickie of <em>Ripley</em> 1999 is nowhere to be found, in other words.)</p>
<p><img decoding="async" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-108553" src="https://torontoguardian.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/RIPLEY_2.jpg" alt="Ripley (Netflix) Review: All Play and No Work" width="1000" height="560" srcset="https://torontoguardian.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/RIPLEY_2.jpg 1000w, https://torontoguardian.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/RIPLEY_2-300x168.jpg 300w, https://torontoguardian.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/RIPLEY_2-678x381.jpg 678w, https://torontoguardian.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/RIPLEY_2-768x430.jpg 768w" sizes="(max-width: 1000px) 100vw, 1000px" /></p>
<p>What is particularly fascinating about this adaptation is how obviously Ripley has gotten in over his head. Far from a criminal mastermind, Ripley&#8217;s attempts to manipulate people &#8211; Dickie, Marge, their friend Freddie Miles (Eliot Sumner) &#8211; rarely go his way, as he habitually does or says the wrong thing, then clumsily attempts to cover for it like a child caught with his hand in the cookie jar. &#8220;I was planning to tell you,&#8221; he assures a police inspector after failing to report a change in address; &#8220;Oh, I bought them in New York&#8221;, he blithely tells Freddie, about the shoes he has clearly stolen from Dickie.</p>
<p>A habitual liar, the only thing more exasperating than Ripley&#8217;s thinly disguised falsehoods is just how credulous the characters around him prove to be. That&#8217;s true to the Highsmith text, mind, but by series&#8217; end you might find yourself frustrated by the almost wilful level of ignorance of the characters around him.</p>
<p>Not everything about this <em>Ripley</em> works. Anachronisms abound, from the mildly annoying &#8211; characters incorrectly say &#8220;refrigerator&#8221; instead of &#8220;ice box&#8221; &#8211; to the grating &#8211; the overuse of the modernism &#8220;issues&#8221;, as in &#8220;Mr. Ripley has issues&#8221;, in place of the more era- (and lexically-) appropriate &#8220;difficulties&#8221;. As a remake of two widely celebrated films, this <em>Ripley</em> can also be faithful to a fault, lifting scenes wholesale from its predecessors, particularly the older and lesser-known <em>Purple Noon. </em>(All while borrowing liberally from masters of Italian cinema such as Fellini and Bertolucci.)</p>
<p>Re-adapting something which has already been adapted so well (and so often) can be a challenge, but one wishes that series creator Steven Zaillian had resisted the urge to rewatch the earlier versions before starting this one. A quasi-cameo appearance from John Malkovich, who played a late-career Ripley in 2002&#8217;s <em>Ripley&#8217;s Game</em>, reinforces the notion that Zaillian has indulged in a binge watch of his own. Presumably, if Dennis Hopper (Ripley in Wim Wenders&#8217;s wonderfully off-kilter <em>The American Friend</em> (1977)) were still alive, he&#8217;d have made an appearance too.</p>
<p>At 47 years old, Scott is also far older than the &#8220;mysterious man in his thirties&#8221; described both in Highsmith&#8217;s text and in this show&#8217;s dialogue. (By way of comparison, Damon was 27 when he played Ripley, and Alain Delon, a bona fide matinée idol of his era, barely 25 when he took on the role.) Scott <em>is</em> believable as the mystery man with a strange aura about him, but it&#8217;s difficult to accept him as the young, seductive beauty which the source text demands. (And I say this as someone who adores Andrew Scott.) Flynn at 42 years old is also too old for Dickie, raising the question of just how long he&#8217;s been wandering across Europe, and why his father took so long to go looking for him. Fanning, at 30, and Sumner, at 33, are the only relatively age-appropriate casting choices.</p>
<p>Speaking of casting, Scott is the obvious standout here, though Flynn does a fantastic job as the bored dilettante Dickie, whose amateurish paintings &#8211; the only productive output in an entirely unproductive life &#8211; betray his lack of motivation. Sumner, who identifies as non-binary, is also wonderful as the androgynous Freddie Miles, a role memorably played by Philip Seymour Hoffman in the 1999 <em>Ripley</em>. The casting of Sumner as Miles fits perfectly within a story that is already about the blurring of identities, gender and otherwise. (The fact that everyone around Freddie in this 1960-set piece can only conceive of the character as a &#8220;he&#8221; is one of the series’ nicer touches.)</p>
<p>At the end of the day, though, this is Andrew Scott&#8217;s series. He&#8217;s rarely off-screen, and even when he is, it&#8217;s only to <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-6F1O6RcYY">check in on other characters talking about or looking for him</a>. And when he is on-screen, the camera stays glued to him, his eyes curiously blank and his lips curled in a thin, ambiguous smile. What Ripley is thinking about is impossible to tell. What he does next, well, that&#8217;s for viewers to find out.</p>
<p><strong>#</strong><br />
<strong><em>Ripley</em> streams on Netflix beginning April 4, 2024. Watch it <a href="https://netflix.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">here</a>.</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://torontoguardian.com/2024/04/ripley-netflix-review/">Ripley (Netflix) Review: All Play and No Work</a> appeared first on <a href="https://torontoguardian.com">Toronto Guardian</a>.</p>
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