A grifter named Ripley living in New York during the 1960s is hired by a wealthy man to bring his vagabond son home from Italy.A grifter named Ripley living in New York during the 1960s is hired by a wealthy man to bring his vagabond son home from Italy.A grifter named Ripley living in New York during the 1960s is hired by a wealthy man to bring his vagabond son home from Italy.
- Won 4 Primetime Emmys
- 15 wins & 38 nominations total
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWhen Ripley uses Dickie's typewriter for the first time, he types "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog." This is a pangram, a phrase that uses every letter in the alphabet. This phrase was also used back in the day when people were learning how to use the typewriter... They learned the phrase then they had to keep repeating it to get their speed up. They are commonly used for analyzing a person's handwriting. In this case, it allowed Ripley to notice the "e" stamp was off center on Dickie's typewriter.
- ConnectionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 TV Shows of 2024 (So Far) (2024)
Featured review
Andrew Scott gives a deeply neurotic and disturbing impression of one of the most beloved psychopaths in movie history. He's a great actor and he knows exactly what he's doing, sharp, precise, intense, on top of his acting skills.
Zaillian stretches the story out here, (sometimes a little bit too much in the last three episodes), taking 8 hours, compared to shorter former versions. I must say I like all versions, because Highsmith's original story is of genius quality, and it allows to open a lot of doors to different interpretations. I loved Alain Delon in the Rene Clement classic, as well as Matt Damon in the luscious Minghella version, but comparing the different interpretations in detail would take to long.
About this one: Yes, I loved that it was shot in atmospheric black and white (fantastic cinematography, every frame a piece of art!), I loved that this version was slow, I loved that it was so dark, I loved the sardonic humour.
I could have easily given this version 10 stars, but, I am sorry to say, the characterization of Freddie Miles didn't work for me here.
Zaillian stretches the story out here, (sometimes a little bit too much in the last three episodes), taking 8 hours, compared to shorter former versions. I must say I like all versions, because Highsmith's original story is of genius quality, and it allows to open a lot of doors to different interpretations. I loved Alain Delon in the Rene Clement classic, as well as Matt Damon in the luscious Minghella version, but comparing the different interpretations in detail would take to long.
About this one: Yes, I loved that it was shot in atmospheric black and white (fantastic cinematography, every frame a piece of art!), I loved that this version was slow, I loved that it was so dark, I loved the sardonic humour.
I could have easily given this version 10 stars, but, I am sorry to say, the characterization of Freddie Miles didn't work for me here.
- berndgeiling
- Apr 3, 2024
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Ріплі
- Filming locations
- Pio Monte della Misericordia, Via dei Tribunali, 253, 80139 Napoli NA, Italy(Home of Caravaggio's 'The Seven Works of Mercy'.)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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