
5 Things I Want to See in the TALENTED MR. RIPLEY TV Series
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A Talented Mr. Ripley TV series is in the works, and I for one have a lot of feelings about that. I mean, there have been a few Ripley movie adaptations, but this is different. It’s meant to cover the whole Ripliad, the five-book series by Patricia Highsmith depicting everyone’s favorite scheming American abroad. That’s a pretty big deal.
There are, of course, questions to contemplate about what material will make it into the series. One has already been raised: Will Ripley be gay? I want to delve into that, but there’s a lot more to discuss! Below are some specific things that I’d like to make it to the small screen.
This show may not reach the level of Killing Eve as a stylish crime series featuring obsessive queer or queer-ish attachments. I don’t know if I would even want it to. But when it comes to Ripley on TV, here’s what I’d like to see.
via GIPHY
Okay, let’s get this out of the way first. Now, I’m not in the least against creative adaptations. However, I would personally like to see Ripley’s sexuality portrayed more or less as it is in Highsmith’s original. If only because that hasn’t really been done yet, so far as I’m aware.
In Anthony Minghella’s movie starring Matt Damon, which is the screen adaptation most people are probably familiar with, Ripley comes across as a tortured variety of criminal. He appears consumed by his attraction to Dickie Greenleaf, whose father hired Ripley to bring back him from Europe.
In Highsmith’s The Talented Mr. Ripley
, by contrast, Tom is relatively composed about matters of sexuality. He does feel intensely drawn to Dickie, but he’s more cold-blooded in his eventual attempt to take over Dickie’s identity. He isn’t exactly skulking around sniffing at Dickie’s pocket squares. This doesn’t necessarily mean that he’s not sexually repressed. But regardless, I would prefer that he not be portrayed in a way that equates queerness with violence and suffering.
Popular movies and TV have a way of using queerness as a tragic plot point, and I would really, really like for that not to happen here. I can appreciate that Highsmith herself felt compelled to remain closeted during her life, and that this probably affected her writing. And truthfully, I wouldn’t necessarily mind if the creators shifted the tone and content of the show to make Ripley more explicitly queer. But I think this would have to be done delicately in order to work well.
I also think it’s important to note that the question of whether Tom Ripley will be gay in itself seems insufficient. If we’re thinking about how the character could serve LGBTQIA+ representation, it makes sense to consider bi/pansexual and asexual representation specifically. We can’t say for sure what Tom’s sexual orientation is in the books, but we can note a few things:
Sensitively Rendered Queer Sexuality
- In The Talented Mr. Ripley, Tom recalls quipping that he isn’t able to decide between men and women and is thinking of giving them both up. It’s reasonable to imagine that, as the charming psychopath type, he was just trying to be witty and impress. But he then thinks to himself that “there was a lot of truth in it” and that he’s “one of the most innocent and clean-minded he had ever known.” There could be an element of self-deception here, especially considering the morally loaded language. But there’s a simpler possibility: That he’s just attracted to more than one gender and doesn’t care about sex very much.
- He seems drawn to queer spaces. On one occasion in The Boy Who Followed Ripley, after entering a gay bar in Berlin, Tom even feels self-conscious about the possibility of being perceived as straight. Again, this could just be the desire to fit into every milieu, but there could be a much simpler explanation.
But…Let’s Skip the Automatic Sexualization of Characters
Some Sunniness, Style, and Gosh-Darn Joie de Vivre
People of Color
A Talented Mr. Ripley in Multiple Languages
With Highsmith’s novels spanning cities across Europe, America, and North Africa, there’s an opportunity to display locales from all over the globe. And with that, of course, comes the opportunity for multiple languages.via GIPHY
All of the above is probably too much to hope for, but it’s fun to think about! What do you want to see in the Ripley TV series?