South China Morning Post

‘FAVOURITE’ SERIAL KILLER RETURNS TO KNOCK US DEAD

Ripley writer and director Steven Zaillian tells why he chose Andrew Scott to play a sociopath who we want to see get away with murder

- Ripley, Talented Mr. Ripley. Fleabag All of Us Strangers, The Schindler’s List, Schindler’s List. Fleabag Sherlock.

It’s time to take another trip to Italy, to the charming, cobbleston­e streets of the Amalfi Coast, sipping coffee in cafes and looking for la dolce vita. And it just wouldn’t be fun without our favourite serial killer, right?

Tom Ripley is back for another turn at wearing dressing gowns and having champagne on the terrace in a thrilling new Netflix series based on the enduring character created by novelist Patricia Highsmith in

It premiered on April 4.

“The idea that we know we’re not supposed to like him, but we do want to see him get away with it, is very interestin­g. What’s it say about us?” asks Steven Zaillian, who created, directed and wrote the eight-episode adaptation.

Andrew Scott plays Ripley, a scrappy cheque fraudster in New York who is hired to locate a rich dilettante in Italy, but kills him and then impersonat­es him, leading to more murders and scams.

The eight-hour canvas allows viewers time to watch him figure out how to get out of jams in real time, like a murder he commits in his flat in the fifth episode.

He needs to find the victim’s car, clean up the crime scene, move the body and make it all seem like an alcohol-induced accident.

“I think because we sort of see every little step of how he figures things out and does things that we take part in them,” Zaillian says.

“He often doesn’t know what he should do next, and neither do we. And so we become part of the process in that way.”

Scott, known for his stage work, including the Emmywinnin­g and recent film

says it may take some viewers raised on TikTok a little while to adjust to a more sedate, deliberate storytelli­ng pace – one in which characters climb staircases, look at waves and make small talk.

There is time to watch where an ashtray is bought before it is later used to bludgeon someone to death.

“You have to teach the audience how to watch it to a certain degree,” he says. “There are certain times the pacing is really quite fast and there are certain times where you think this would take time and you have to stay with the agony and the thrill and the tension when things aren’t going right. That’s the way life is.”

Zaillian, an Oscar winner for his screenplay of refused a suggestion to update Highsmith’s book series and is careful to keep everything early 1960s, even filming it in black and white, like

“It puts us in that time period effortless­ly and immediatel­y. But more than that, I did not want what I would call a colour postcard sort of Italy for this story, with sunny blue skies and lots of colourful outfits.

“That was not something I saw in my mind when I read the book and not something that I wanted to do in the show,” he says.

If other television shows are dialogue-driven, Ripley is more interested in the spaces between. It’s all about suspicious looks, wary interactio­ns and putting on a brave face with police inspectors and hotel clerks.

“I was so excited by getting to communicat­e so much with micro-movements in the face and a look – that thing where you can read someone’s thoughts through their eyes,” says Dakota Fanning, who plays the suspicious girlfriend of the rich dilettante Dickie Greenleaf.

Zaillian is faithful to Highsmith’s novels, but adds some of himself into the series, like making Ripley a fan of Italian painter Caravaggio, who worked with intense and unsettling realism and was also a killer.

“I found as I was writing it there’s actually a connection between him and Caravaggio. They were both these sort of rascals and both ended up killing somebody.

“So it sort of grew from a personal moment that I had into a motif and then kind of into an aspect of his character,” he says.

Like Caravaggio’s paintings, the series is grounded in realism, from the rusty shower heads and the gritty, screeching subways of New York to the crumbling walls and pigeon-poop-streaked statues in Italy. Cleaning up blood takes what seems like hours.

Ripley, who over the years has been portrayed by, among others, Matt Damon, John Malkovich, Ian Hart and Dennis Hopper, is played understate­d by Scott as a killer who makes mistakes, improvises and must double back to correct errors. Zaillian thought of Scott for the role early in the casting process, aware of his work in

and as Moriarty on the BBC series He was smitten.

“I just found him really sort of watchable,” Zaillian says. “I knew that since we spend so much time with somebody alone – there’s a lot of scenes where it’s just us and him – he has to be watchable.

“We have to be able to see him think and express himself in a way that lets us know what he’s thinking. And I found that Andrew was able to do that.”

Johnny Flynn, who plays the golden boy Greenleaf, says filming in Italy took him to some of the most beautiful places on the planet, that got darker as the summer tourists left and the sun got lower, perfect for a noirish vibe.

He and the cast also reminded that many small Italian towns built on cliffs have many, many steps. “We were just out of breath all the time,” he says, laughing.

Which is what can be said for lots of people who meet Ripley.

He often does not know what he should do next, and neither do we STEVEN ZAILLIAN, WRITER/DIRECTOR

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