Skip to content

ThePawn02

Gaming and Streaming Content

  • Blog
  • Editor's Picks
  • eSports
  • Guides
  • Headlines
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Uncategorized
  • Website Update
Primary Menu
  • Home
  • Watch Live
  • News
  • eSports
  • Blog
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Guild Login
    • Guild Mentality
    • The Zealots
    • Malign
  • Socials
    • Youtube Channel
    • Twitch Channel
    • Kick.com
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • Facebook
Subscribe
  • Home
  • 2024
  • April
  • Ripley Review
  • Reviews

Ripley Review

Ripley Review
April 4, 2024 3 min read
Ripley Review

Ripley Review

Netflix’s limited series Ripley is the best and most beautiful interpretation of Patricia Highsmith’s 1955 thriller The Talented Mr. Ripley to date – and yes, that includes Anthony Minghella’s Oscar-nominated version from 1999. Highsmith’s novel follows American con man Tom Ripley on a fateful trip to Italy, where he’s been sent to track down shipbuilding scion Dickie Greenleaf and wrest him from his beachside fantasies and his skeptical paramour, Marge. Despite some grating quirks, this adaptation from Schindler’s List screenwriter and The Night Of creator Steve Zaillian carefully replicates the most iconic scenes from a cerebral story that morphs along with its protagonist – played here by the always great Andrew Scott.

The first thing you’ll notice about Ripley is that it is beautiful – and that’s saying something for a series that opens with its title character dragging a dead body down the stairs. Cinematographer Robert Elswit shoots in black-and-white in an homage to indelible Italian films released around the time of Tom’s 1961 sojourn to the Amalfi Coast. (One of them, Federico Fellini’s La Dolce Vita, even lends its title to Episode 4.) And the framing – oh, the framing! Zaillan skillfully works Dickie’s (Johnny Flynn) love of painting into the narrative, comparing Tom’s exploits to those of Caravaggio, and Elswit produces swoon-worthy visuals to match. The interplay of shadow and light is a consistent theme, as in Caravaggio’s paintings. Elswit even flexes a few times, explicitly modeling shots after statues and paintings featured in the series. All this, combined with the vibes of mid-20th-century Italy, is just – whew! I, a shameless aesthete, often wanted to kiss my TV screen.

The second thing you’ll notice about Ripley is that the casting is unorthodox. This is no knock on Scott or Flynn, fortysomething actors playing characters originally written as being in their mid-20s. But Scott could play a compelling toaster, so it’s not exactly hard for him to pull off 35. Zaillian nudges the script in his favor, offering a more experienced, composed Tom Ripley, one who’s introduced paying rent via medical-billing fraud and must adopt a new identity to outrun some bloody consequences. And Flynn, as Dickie, falls neatly into place, lending his character a gruff, mysterious air that suits Dickie’s hot-and-cold attitude towards Tom. The real head-scratcher here is Eliot Sumner as Freddie Miles, a threat to Tom and a loose end in his scheme who’s given a rather one-note portrayal by Sumner. (And that note is “British.”)

As with Scott’s age, the script warps to suit this change, but far less naturally. Sumner’s a poor match for a character Highsmith described as “the kind of ox who might beat up somebody he thought was a pansy,” sapping necessary tension from key scenes. Zaillian overcompensates by insinuating, rather bizarrely, that Freddie is gay. He also forgoes a wry tone and exposition that would have granted Scott more time to really play with his character, yielding a more flattened, psychopathic take on Tom. At least the way he treasures certain possessions made the leap directly from page to screen: “Nice pen” may as well be Ripley’s unofficial tagline.

Some of these discrepancies might make Highsmith fidget uncomfortably in her grave, but most other decisions Zaillian makes actually serve the story. The rest of the cast is great, especially Maurizio Lombardi as a no-nonsense police detective. Dakota Fanning plays Marge like the sympathetic, complex character she is, offering gravity that the book occasionally lacks. Along with its dramatic visuals, Ripley painstakingly uses sound to add texture to each scene. In fact, if you watch any episode’s end credits all the way through, you’ll get little audio hints at what’s to come in the next one.

Savor those clues! Despite streaming in full on Netflix, Ripley works best when watched in moderation. There are no gimmicky cliffhangers at the end of each episode to spur you on, so take some time before you start the next one. This kind of meticulous artistry deserves equally attentive viewing.

About Post Author

See author's posts

Continue Reading

Previous: PCIe 7.0 is on track for a 2025 release, which means SSDs with speeds of up to 60GB/s should be available in the coming years
Next: Today’s Wordle answer for Thursday, April 4

Related News

Mario Kart World Review – A Worthy Marquee Launch Game
2 min read
  • Reviews

Mario Kart World Review – A Worthy Marquee Launch Game

ThePawn.com June 9, 2025
Animal Farm Review
4 min read
  • Reviews

Animal Farm Review

ThePawn.com June 9, 2025
Dune: Awakening Review in Progress
6 min read
  • Reviews

Dune: Awakening Review in Progress

ThePawn.com June 9, 2025

Latest YouTube Video

Check out these awesome streamers

ThePawn02 on twitch

From Gamewatcher

  • When is Chronicles: Medieval releasing for PS5 and Xbox Series X/S?
  • New RTS title Game of Thrones: War for Westeros coming from PlaySide in 2026
  • Jurassic World Evolution 3 revealed at Summer Game Fest, launching in October 2025 on PC, PS5, and Xbox Series X/S
  • Dune Awakening Patch Notes - Complete List
  • Dune Awakening Server Status - Latest Maintenance Alerts

From IGN

  • How to Play the Yakuza Games in Chronological Order
  • Dune: Awakening Review in Progress
  • The Best-Selling Final Fantasy MTG Presold Cards Before Release Day
  • Every Persona Game and Spin-Off in Order
  • Ninja Gaiden Ragebound: The 7 Coolest Things

From Kotaku

  • I Miss When Handheld Gaming Was Its Own Thing
  • Update These Five Switch 2 Settings Before You Start Playing
  • Black Ops 7, Invincible Vs & More — Here Are The 5 Games That Stole Microsoft’s Show
  • Summer Game Fest Shows That The PS4 Ain't Dead Yet
  • New Ironheart Trailer Unveils Magic Suit And New J.A.R.V.I.S. For Riri Williams

.

You may have missed

‘It’s just so unacceptable’: NiKo, m0NESY speak out after Team Falcons’ shocking exit at Austin Major
1 min read
  • eSports

‘It’s just so unacceptable’: NiKo, m0NESY speak out after Team Falcons’ shocking exit at Austin Major

ThePawn.com June 9, 2025
Today’s Wordle answer for Tuesday, June 10
4 min read
  • News

Today’s Wordle answer for Tuesday, June 10

ThePawn.com June 9, 2025
Tainted Grail The Fall of Avalon: Should you kill Galahad or One Eye?
1 min read
  • eSports

Tainted Grail The Fall of Avalon: Should you kill Galahad or One Eye?

ThePawn.com June 9, 2025
Lisan al-Gaib! Sandworm-riding isn’t a feature in Dune: Awakening, but players are doing it anyway
2 min read
  • News

Lisan al-Gaib! Sandworm-riding isn’t a feature in Dune: Awakening, but players are doing it anyway

ThePawn.com June 9, 2025
Privacy Policy
  • Home
  • Watch Live
  • News
  • eSports
  • Blog
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Guild Login
  • Socials
  • Twitch
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Kick.com
Copyright © All rights reserved. | MoreNews by AF themes.