Ripley's Game (film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Directed byLiliana Cavani
Screenplay byCharles McKeown
Liliana Cavani
Produced bySimon Bosanquet
Ricardo Tozzi
Ileen Maisel
Ripley's Game
Theatrical release poster
Directed byLiliana Cavani
Screenplay byCharles McKeown
Liliana Cavani
Based onRipley's Game
by Patricia Highsmith
Produced bySimon Bosanquet
Ricardo Tozzi
Ileen Maisel
StarringJohn Malkovich
Dougray Scott
Ray Winstone
Lena Headey
CinematographyAlfio Contini
Edited byJon Harris
Music byEnnio Morricone
Production
company
Distributed by01 Distribuzione (Italy)
Entertainment Film Distributors (United Kingdom)
Fine Line Features (Worldwide)
Release dates
  • 2 September 2002 (2002-09-02) (Venice)
  • 7 February 2003 (2003-02-07) (Italy)
  • 30 May 2003 (2003-05-30) (United Kingdom)
  • 4 September 2003 (2003-09-04) (United States: TV)
Running time
110 minutes[1]
CountriesItaly
United Kingdom
United States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$30 million
Box office$6.2 million

Ripley's Game is a 2002 thriller film directed by Liliana Cavani. It is adapted from the 1974 novel Ripley's Game, the third in Patricia Highsmith's series about the murderous adventures of the anti-hero Tom Ripley. John Malkovich stars as Ripley, who arranges for an innocent man (Dougray Scott) to accept a job as a contract killer from a gangster (Ray Winstone).

Ripley's Game grossed $6.2 million on a budget of $30 million, making it a box-office failure;[2] although it received positive reviews. The novel was previously adapted in 1977 as The American Friend.

Tom Ripley is involved in an art forgery scheme in Berlin, in partnership with the British gangster Reeves. Learning that Reeves has attempted to cheat him, Ripley forces Reeves's client at gunpoint to give him the money intended for the forgeries and kills the man’s bodyguard. He steals back the artwork for himself and tells Reeves that their partnership is over.

Three years later, Ripley is living in a villa in Veneto, Italy, with his wife, Luisa, a harpsichordist. He is invited to a party by a neighbour, Jonathan Trevanny, an art framer who is dying of leukemia. Ripley overhears the host, Jonathan insulting his taste and alluding to his shady reputation. He confronts him and leaves.

Reeves arrives at Ripley's home, to Ripley's annoyance, and asks him to eliminate a rival mobster. Ripley recommends Trevanny for the job as revenge for the slight. Believing Trevanny to be an assassin, Reeves offers him the job for a large fee. Bewildered, Trevanny eventually agrees, to make sure that his wife and son are provided for after his death.

Trevanny travels to Berlin under the pretense of seeing a leukemia specialist and kills the mobster at a museum. He refuses Reeves' offer of more money to kill another mobster, this time on a train, but relents after Reeves threatens his family.

Trevanny freezes on the train and contemplates suicide. Ripley intervenes and the two dispatch the target and his two bodyguards in the train toilet. They return home, where Trevanny attempts to persuade his wife Sarah that he won the money playing roulette.

Reeves ignores Ripley's warnings to keep a low profile, fearing that the mafia will seek reprisal for the killing and deduce who was involved. The mobsters come to Italy seeking revenge, killing Reeves and leaving his body in the boot of their car. They storm Ripley's villa, but Ripley has boobytrapped it. With Trevanny's help, Ripley kills them all.

Ripley leaves Trevanny under the assumption that all the killers have been dispatched. However, Trevanny returns home to find two surviving gangsters holding Sarah captive. Ripley spots the killers' car outside in the bushes and doubles back to Trevanny's to save Sarah. A wounded assassin fires at Ripley, but Trevanny sacrifices himself by jumping in front of the bullet.

Puzzled by Trevanny's selflessness, Ripley tries to give Sarah her husband's share of the blood money, but she spits in his face. When he leaves Sarah, the packet of money is still on the floor. That night, Ripley attends Luisa's concert as if nothing has happened, but smiles at the memory of Trevanny's sacrifice.

Cast

Production

The film is set in two Palladian villas: one in the center of Asolo, a hilltop town in the province of Treviso, and the other, Villa Emo, in Fanzolo [it], a hamlet of Vedelago. Other featured locations include Vicenza (including the Piazza dei Signori and the Teatro Olimpico), Padua (including the Pedrocchi Café), Bassano del Grappa, and Berlin (including the Gendarmenmarkt, the Berlin Aquarium of the Berlin Zoo, and the Monbijou Park).[3]

Reception

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI