Multi Talented
Mr. Ripley is the film of the year
by Peter Keough
THE TALENTED MR. RIPLEY. Directed by Anthony Minghella. Written by Anthony Minghella based on the novel
by Patricia Highsmith. With Matt Damon, Jude Law, Gwyneth Paltrow, Cate
Blanchett, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Jack Davenport, James Rebhorn, Sergio
Rubini, and Philip Baker Hall. A Paramount Pictures release. At the Apple Valley, Holiday, Showcase, Tri-Boro, and Woonsocket cinemas.
Deservedly or not, and owing mostly to a late flurry of such releases as
American Beauty, Three Kings, and Being John Malkovich,
1999 has built a reputation as a landmark year for innovation and originality
in film. In fact, the "newness" of many of these movies was already
passé in 1970; what's more, the best film of the year is also the
most old-fashioned. Although it goes on one stilled heartbeat too long, Anthony
Minghella's masterpiece, an adaptation of Patricia Highsmith's creepy favorite
The Talented Mr. Ripley, is indeed fashioned the old, classical way. All
its parts -- narrative, performances, cinematography, soundtrack -- combine
organically to form a radiant whole. But the themes sounded by this shining
integrity couldn't be more cutting edge: the arbitrariness of identity, the
elusiveness of desire, the inevitable isolation of the soul.
This combination of the conventional and the subversive also partly describes
the hero, Tom Ripley (Matt Damon), who is first seen hammering away at a piano
accompanying a soprano singing an aria for an audience of tony Ivy League
types. In his Princeton sportscoat and horn-rims he seems a budding
upper-cruster himself, and that's what Herbert Greenleaf (James Rebhorn) of
Greenleaf Shipping takes Tom for when he offers him $1000 to go to Italy for
the Henry Jamesian task of bringing back his prodigal son. Dickie Greenleaf
(Jude Law, in a charismatic role ranging from buff demi-god to well-groomed
rodent) has fled his legacy to pursue his ambition to be a jazz musician --
this is the meticulously re-created late '50s of late Charlie Parker and early
Miles Davis -- and daddy's patience with this whim has run out.
What Greenleaf doesn't know is that Tom's jacket is borrowed and that the
bright young thing is a cipher. In the tradition of Jay Gatsby, however, Tom
seizes the opportunity, sensing that the first step to becoming a self-made man
is not so much being a nobody as being a phony. And at that he's far from
polished, which makes his act the more convincing. He stumbles onto the beach
at Mongibello in the goggles, bad haircut, loafers, and unfortunate bathing
suit that announce a movie makeover is in the works. He introduces himself to
Dickie and Dickie's "fiancée," Marge (Gwyneth Paltrow), as an old
Princeton classmate. Bemused, Dickie replies, "You're so white!"
Indeed he is; Tom's a blank page onto which he imprints his idealization of
Dickie, borrowing Dickie's clothes, absorbing his mannerisms, imitating his
dilettantish fetish with jazz. For his part, Dickie finds Tom a temporarily
amusing adorer, a respite from the clingy Marge. Only Dickie's plummily boorish
pal Freddy (Philip Seymour Hoffman in one of the great comic performances of
the year) perceives this new friend is a mooch and a sycophant; he will prove
Tom's nemesis. But Tom has his charm, an appeal to the hapless neophyte in
everyone -- and perhaps the narcissistic Dickie is attracted to and repelled by
Tom because he recognizes that Tom can play Dickie's life better and more
earnestly than Dickie can himself.
That abyss of selfhood and the need to fill it with identity is what drives
Ripley, despite its canny guises of homoeroticism and homicide. And in
the leading role, Matt Damon masterfully evokes the terror, pathos, and
conniving that underlies everyone's search for the figment of who he or she is.
Damon is both self-reflexive and spontaneous, calculated and ingenuously
vulnerable, as he creates the character of "Tom from Princeton," or as he
engages in amusing mimcry of Mr. Greenleaf, or Chet Baker singing "My Funny
Valentine." Even when his mummery turns sinister, as he practices before a
mirror his biggest performance as Dickie Greenleaf, Damon's eager ingenuousness
arouses sympathy that only increases as the stakes grow higher. Paradoxically,
in this film in which the hero's self is only a mirror of the world he desires,
the world depicted aches with that hero's inner turmoil.
Not since Nicolas Roeg's Don't Look Now has a film used the patina'd
beauty of Italy to such intense psychological effect. Cinematographer John
Seale captures a sense of alienation and liberation, of grimy decadence and
shimmering purity that mirrors Ripley's protean but always shrewd state of
mind. It's a world in which catastrophe is always immanent, whether lurking in
a tiny crimson sports car in a murky square at dusk or in a tiny white boat in
a swelling lake at noon. There, and in every aspect of Anthony Minghella's
rendition of Highsmith's most disturbing novel, from Gabriel Yared's icily
complex and insinuating score to the wry tragedy of Cate Blanchett and Jack
Davenport in throwaway roles as people who genuinely love a man who never was,
Mr. Ripley is the consummation of many talents into one triumphant,
subversive illusion.
Ripley's game
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