Culture Cinema & Tv Show reviews

Ripley

Ripley | Show review

Patricia Highsmith’s 1955 psychological thriller novel The Talented Mr Ripley was first adapted for the screen shortly after its release in 1956 and has since then become one of the most famous and popular stories in Western culture. Alan Delon starred in the 1960 French adaptation Purple Noon and then most famously Anthony Minghella took the story to Hollywood in 1999 with the assistance of young stars Matt Damon, Jude Law and Gwyneth Paltrow. Now, enter the ubiquitous duo of Andrew Scott and Johnny Flynn.

Living as a fraudster in New York, Tom Ripley (Andrew Scott) is approached by an extremely wealthy businessman and hired to travel to Italy to urge his son Richard (Johnny Flynn) to return home. All expenses paid, the job seems like a dream to Tom, but upon arrival in Europe, he becomes enamoured with the life and personality of Richard, and the job moves from one of deceit and fraud to something far more sinister.

What writer-director Steven Zaillian has delivered is a series that is the perfect blend of charming and subtly unnerving. We truly believe that Andrew Scott is not in fact Andrew Scott acting at all, but Tom Ripley. We know who Tom is from the beginning: a conman who takes no prisoners when it comes to taking money and using other identities, but what develops is one of the most complex roles Scott has had to perform to date and he does so marvellously. Scott and Flynn are the on-screen duo of the ages and you find yourself gripped by every scene, even if it just merely focuses on painting during a rainy afternoon or a discussion about New York. Dakota Fanning is also given a chance to stretch her wings as Marge, in a more strong, assured and suspicious interpretation than we have seen before.

Academy award-winning cinematographer Robert Elswit once again shows what a cinematic visionary he is through Ripley. The cinematography is to die for, breathtakingly beautiful in a black and white presentation that you could dine on forever. The Amalfi Coast lends itself to the visual storytelling and the score gives a 50s noir feel to the series, with sinister tones combining with fresh jazz to complete the feeling of an era long past that is receiving a sprinkling of twistedness before our very eyes.

For some, Ripley may feel like a slow burn, but it is this meandering pace, interjected with sudden sobering moments of fear from Tom Ripley’s actions builds a never-ending sense of uncertainty and dread about each character’s next move. We know something is coming, we are shown it in the opening scene, but how is it going to come about and what chilling moments are we going to experience along the way? Zaillian teases you across this indulgent eight-episode masterpiece and leaves you crying out for more, while also needing a stiff drink.

Guy Lambert

Ripley is released on Netflix on 4th April 2024.

Watch the trailer for Ripley here:

More in Shows

Paolo Sorrentino’s La Grazia to open Venice Film Festival 2025

The editorial unit

“Letting us pass this torch on to the kids just makes me reflect on how crazy this experience has been”: Milo Manheim, Meg Donnelly, Freya Skye and Malachi Barton on Zombies 4: Dawn of the Vampires

Christina Yang

Miley Cyrus unveils visual album Something Beautiful, streaming on Disney+ this July

The editorial unit

Ryan Gosling goes interstellar in Project Hail Mary, the latest sci-fi epic from the team behind The Martian and Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse

The editorial unit

Trailer drops for Roofman, Derek Cianfrance’s stranger-than-fiction crime drama starring Channing Tatum and Kirsten Dunst

The editorial unit

Dave Franco and Alison Brie face a rural nightmare in Michael Shanks’s upcoming horror film

The editorial unit

Jurassic World: Rebirth

Guy Lambert

Mediterrane Film Festival 2025: The Theft of the Caravaggio

Mae Trumata

Olivia Rodrigo at BST Hyde Park

Katherine Parry