Regie:
Liliana CavaniCamera:
Alfio ContiniMuziek:
Ennio MorriconeActeurs:
John Malkovich, Dougray Scott, Ray Winstone, Hanns Zischler, Lena Headey, Lutz Winde, Chiara Caselli, Paolo Paoloni, Юрий Росстальной, Hendrikje Fitz (meer)Samenvattingen(1)
Tom Ripley, een Amerikaanse kunsthandelaar die tussen New York en Hamburg een duistere handel drijft in valse schilderijen maakt gebruik van een lijstenmaker met leukemie. Hij brengt hem in contact met één van zijn maffia vriendjes. Die biedt hem een grote som geld als deze bereid is een misdadiger neer te schieten. Met dit geld zou hij zijn vrouw en kinderen in goede doen achterlaten. Hij gaat op het aanbod in, niet wetende dat hij in een nachtmerrie van verraad en bedrog terecht zal komen. (RCV Film Distribution)
(meer)Recensie (3)
Ripley’s Game is an elegant, intelligent, skilfully written and well-acted thriller. Thanks to the dialogue and John Malkovich, the Ripley character is a first-class treat. As is the production design. A film without ideas, purely for the joy of the game. ()
Perhaps the fourth adaptation and again approached completely differently in terms of both plot and overall tone. This time it is a very low-key story that takes place in bad weather in the Italian countryside. This time Tom Ripley is played by John Malkovich and they probably couldn’t have found anybody better to play the role of the ascetic, self-important, arrogant genius of a killer who feels no remorse and has no conscience, keeps out of the public eye and himself to himself, while pulling strings and manipulates people just for fun. And he is wonderfully seconded by Dougray Scott in the role of the manipulated party. The scene in the train and Ripley’s killer performance with the piano string is absolutely flawless... Completely different from Black Sun or The Talented Mr. Ripley, but still comparable in terms of quality. ()
Another Provençal crime drama like The American, and others, but this time relying more on the flamboyant elegance of the sets and a fine main character played by John Malkovich, who does his standard mix of "half Con Air, half In The Line of Fire" psychopath. He succeeds again, but unfortunately the film is devoid of drive, without passion, and apart from a few scenes, there's not much to stand on. Dougray Scott is a piece of wood. ()