WARNING: MAJOR SPOILERS ahead for Netflix's Ripley and The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999).

Summary

  • Ripley's dark tone differs from the 1999 film's innocence.
  • Ripley showcases a chilling depiction of Tom Ripley.
  • Ripley takes creative liberties with character additions and deaths.

There are many differences between the new Netflix limited series Ripley's cast is led by the Emmy-nominated actor Andrew Scott in a chillingly exceptional rendition of the con artist, Thomas Ripley.

Ripley is written and directed by Academy Award winner Steven Zallian, who is famous for writing classics such as Schindler's List, The Irishman, and more. Ripley has received rave reviews from critics upon its April 4, 2024 release exclusively on Netflix. Aside from the apparent age differences, the overall tone of the Ripley series is much more dark and broody, while the film has more of an innocent and fun-loving air about it in general.

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15 Tom Isn’t A “Hard Man To Find” In The 1999 Film

Mr. Greenleaf meets Tom as a piano player in the film

Andrew Scott as Tom Ripley sitting at a bar in Ripley series

In The Talented Mr. Ripley, Mr. Greenleaf spots Dickie playing piano at an event and notices a Princeton jacket he's wearing from the class of 1956, which leads him to think that Tom knew Dickie.

Tom is described as a hard man to find at the beginning of Ripley, although this is not the case in the 1999 film. In Ripley, Herbert Greenleaf hires a private investigation to track down Tom's whereabouts to ask him about going to Italy to get Dickie to come back home and face his responsibilities in the United States. In The Talented Mr. Ripley, Mr. Greenleaf spots Dickie playing piano at an event and notices a Princeton jacket he's wearing from the class of 1956, which leads him to think that Tom knew Dickie. In truth, Tom borrowed the jacket for the performance.

14 Ripley Takes Place In Atrani, Not Mongibello

Atrani seems much more remote than the bustling Mongi

Dakota Fanning, Johnny Flynn, Andrew Scott sit around a table in Ripley series

While both the novel and film of The Talented Mr. Ripley initially take place in the coastal town of Mongibello, Ripley starts out in Atrani, Italy, which is also on the Amalfi Coast just south of Naples. The biggest difference between Mongi and Atrani appears to be the population density, since Atrani is essentially a remote ghost town while Mongi is overflowing with people and excitement. When Tom encounters Dickie and Marge on the beach in Ripley, they are literally the only people there, whereas in Mongibello in the 1999 film, the beach is packed with people.

13 Tom Is A Talented Piano Player In 1999 Film

Tom hardly plays any piano in the series

Tom on a rooftop in Italy in The Talented Mr. Ripley

Tom's talents in Ripley are much more sinister in the way that he is a professional liar, scammer, and con artist, while Damon's Tom has some ostensible talents and hobbies, particularly playing the piano and enjoying the opera.

Tom in Ripley says he does "ing" back in New York, while Damon's Tom in the 1999 film makes ends meet as a very talented freelancing pianist. Tom's talents in Ripley are much more sinister in the way that he is a professional liar, scammer, and con artist, while Damon's Tom has some ostensible talents and hobbies, particularly playing the piano and enjoying the opera. Tom lackadaisically taps on a few piano keys at some point in the Ripley series, likely a nod to the 1999 film, but he is not ionate about the piano like Damon's Tom is.

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12 Meredith Logue Is Not In The Netflix Series

Cate Blanchett's character was created for the film

Cate Blanchett smiling in The Talented Mr. Ripley

Meredith was not an original character in Highsmith's novel either and was added in order to raise the stakes and complicate the grand scenario of deception.

One of the most apparent differences between Ripley and The Talented Mr. Ripley is the absence of some of the ing characters from the 2024 limited series. Cate Blanchett's character Meredith Logue, who befriends Tom disguised as Dickie on his initial voyage to Italy, is not in Ripley and was actually invented by Minghella for the 1999 film. Meredith was not an original character in Highsmith's novel either and was added in order to raise the stakes and complicate the grand scenario of deception for Damon's Tom character. Meredith ends up falling in love with "Dickie" in the final moments of the film.

11 Peter Smith-Kingsley Is Not In the Netflix Series

Jack Davenport's character was created for the film

Jack Davenport as Peter Smith-Kingsley in The Talented Mr. Ripley

Another addition to The Talented Mr. Ripley was the ing character Peter Smith-Kingsley, played by Jack Davenport. Peter is initially a close friend of Dickie and Marge who helps Marge cope with the sudden disappearance of Dickie. Like Cat Balchett's character, Davenport's character was created specifically for the film and is not in the original 1955 novel. Peter was added to reveal that Tom was secretly gay and reaffirm the notion the Tom had romantic feelings for Dickie, which completely changes his motivation for killing Dickie in the first place.

10 Silvana Is Not A Character In The Netflix Series

Dickie did not knock up another woman in the series

Dickie on a moped in The Talented Mr. Ripley

Silvana ends up being the first person to die in The Talented Mr. Ripley and was used to emphasize Dickie's status as a carefree, hedonistic playboy.

Another character that was created specifically for the film was Silvana, a Mongibello local who Dickie was having an affair with. Silvana ends up being the first person to die in The Talented Mr. Ripley and was used to emphasize Dickie's status as a carefree, hedonistic playboy. Silvana also makes Dickie look like an indecent person, which ultimately allowed the audience to not feel as much hatred towards Tom when he killed him in the 1999 film. The movie adds several details to make Dickie look worse and Tom look better, whereas the Netflix series leaves no ambiguity.

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9 Dickie Is Sent Away To Europe By His Dad In The Film

Dickie had a violent past in the 1999 film

Jude Law as Dickie out at sea The Talented Mr. Ripley

Dickie is made out to be much more of a bad boy type in The Talented Mr. Ripley than he is in Netflix's Ripley. Dickie was actually sent away to Europe by his father in the film after a problematic incident that involved Dickie getting violent. Law's rendition of Dickie is also much more emotionally turbulent, carrying a living on the edge lifestyle of partying, drinking, and women. The Dickie in Ripley lives a relatively secluded life and has very few interests outside of his quaint world of painting and spending time with Marge until Tom shows up.

8 Tom Is Much More Innocent & Charming In The Film

Tom is also not as overtly creepy as the Ripley version

Tom Ripley (Matt Damon) at a beach smiling in The Talented Mr Ripley-1

Tom's protagonist character is made to be naive, innocent, and charming in The Talented Mr. Ripley, fueled by more honest and relatable ambitions than the methodical and frightening Tom in Ripley.

Tom's protagonist character is made to be naive, innocent, and charming in The Talented Mr. Ripley, fueled by more honest and relatable ambitions than the methodical and frightening Tom in Ripley. The tone of Damon's Tom is one of youthful hope and accessible ambition to become someone bigger than himself. His aims allude to a common desire of becoming wealthy, having friends in high places, and living life to the fullest. Tom in Ripley, however, is practically inhuman, a complete and total monster that is best described as an insidious parasite.

7 Dickie Is A Playboy & Has A Big Social Life In The Film

Ripley's Dickie Is Much More Conservative & Laid Back

Johnny Flynn as Dickie Greenleaf in Ripley

In the 1999 film, it's more believable that the womanizing Dickie would be capable of abandoning Marge to embark on a debaucherous bender with Freddie Miles.

Dickie in Ripley is completely faithful to Marge and is not in any way the big-time party boy that he is depicted to be in The Talented Mr. Ripley. This significant difference is actually what makes Marge's suspicions in Ripley more palpable because Dickie running off to Rome and cutting her off from his life is something that she knows he would never do. In the 1999 film, it's more believable that the womanizing Dickie would be capable of abandoning Marge to embark on a debaucherous bender with Freddie Miles. In Ripley, it seems so unlikely that it actually sounds bizarre to Marge based on Dickie's character.

6 1999 Film Has Much More Sexual Tension Between Tom & Dickie

The theme is hardly explored in the Netflix series

Dickie Greenleaf (Jude Law) with his arms around Tom Ripley (Matt Damon), both men smiling in The Talented Mr Ripley-1

The Talented Mr. Ripley is full of sexual tension between Tom and Dickie, but mostly from Tom's projections of his deep and somewhat obvious attraction to Dickie.

One of the biggest differences in Tom's character is the underlying implication that he has sexual or romantic feelings for Dickie and later, Peter. The Talented Mr. Ripley is full of sexual tension between Tom and Dickie, but mostly from Tom's projections of his deep and somewhat obvious attraction to Dickie. One scene in particular emphasizes this point, as Law's Dickie and Damon's Tom play chess while Dickie's in the bath. Tom asks to get in because he's cold, and Dickie is shown partially nude in the scene. Nothing even close to this occurs in Netflix's Ripley, and the thought of Tom having romantic feelings for Dickie is briefly mentioned but is not nearly as much of a theme as it is in the 1999 film.