THE TALENTED MR.
RIPLEY
(Anthony Minghella,
1999)
The Talented Mr. Ripley is
directed and written for the screen by Anthony Minghella
(The English Patient), and based on the suspense
novel by Patricia Highsmith. The Talented Mr. Ripley
tells the story of the often charismatic Tom Ripley (Matt
Damon), whose talents of impersonation, imitation and
forgery combine with self-hatred, and tempt him with the
possibility of adopting a different identity.
Set in New York in the 1950s, the
story introduces "the talented Mr. Ripley" as a modest young
man who was hired to play the piano at an exclusive party. A
wealthy shipbuilder mistakes him for an old classmate of his
son and Princeton graduate, Dickie Greenleaf (Jude Law).
Worried and angered by his playboy son's lifestyle of
wealth, freedom and diversion in the paradisiacal southern
Italy, he urges Tom (and pays him) to travel to Italy and
persuade Dickie to return home. Impressed by his own ability
to fool the stranger, the talented Mr. Ripley travels to
Italy and embarks on a risky journey of
persuasion.
The beautiful landscapes (of
Venice, Tuscany, the Gulf of Naples, and southern Sicily,
among other locations); the friendly girlfriend, Marge
Sherwood (Gwyneth Paltrow); and the enviable popularity of
the handsome Dickie (as with his "bon vivant" friend
Freddie, played by Philip Seymour Hoffman) overwhelm Tom and
amuse the viewer. Motivated by a dangerously potent and
well-repressed desire to possess the very lifestyle Dickie
personifies (a desire which is subtly and shyly represented
with scattered innuendoes of homosexuality), Tom realizes
that being with Dickie is not as promising a reward
as becoming Dickie.
Parting from the overly simplistic
premise and protagonist's motto, "it's better to be a fake
somebody than a real nobody", The Talented Mr. Ripley
focuses more on its protagonist's abilities than on his need
for a different identity; a choice which does not allow for
a fuller development of this potentially intriguing
character. Otherwise, the film successfully transmits the
lifestyle Tom longs for, as a result of the better-defined
character of Dickie, and of the desirability the actor Jude
Law effectively projects.
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