Some family news: Ms. Spenser (DOCTOR Ms. Spenser) just got back from leading a study abroad trip to Ischia, Italy. So she requested The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999) when she got back, because parts were filmed in Ischia. It's a beautify island. It's a beautiful and terrifying movie.
It starts with Matt Damon, the titular talented, playing piano for an opera recital at a fancy New York party, ca. 1950. James Rebhorn, the rich man throwing the party, sees that he is wearing a Princeton jacket and asks if he knows his son, Dickie Greenleaf. When Damon says that he does, he offers him a thousand dollars to go to Italy and retrieve Dickie, who is spending his time and his father's money lazing around and digging jazz.
What Rebhorn doesn't realize is that the Princeton jacket was borrowed, Damon has never been to Princeton, and is a washroom attendant living in a barely furnished basement (although he can play piano). But Damon likes the money and the idea of a trip to Italy. He meets a rich girl at customs in Italy (Cate Blanchett), and claims to be Dickie Greenleaf. But he surely won't meet her again...
In "Mongibella" (actually Ischia), Damon arranges to come across Dickie Greenleaf on the beach. Greenleaf is played by Jude Law and his girlfriend, Margie, is Gweneth Paltrow. Damon claims to have known Law at Princeton, although Law doesn't recognize him. Soon, he has worked his way into Law's rich circle.
When Law asks him if he has a talent, he replies that he is a liar, can impersonate anyone, and is good at forging documents. When Law asks for an impersonation, he does Law's father, freaking him out. Then he imitates Rebhorn offering him money to bring Law back to New York - putting his cards on the table.
And so begins a three-way friendship between Law, Paltrow and Damon, living la dolce vita. Paltrow is attracted to Damon's seeming sweet naivete but Damon seems to be more interested in Law. Of course, everyone is interested in Law. He's a beautiful man who makes you feel like the most important person in the room - until he drops you. But maybe Damon doesn't just want to sleep with Law. Maybe he wants to be him.
An interesting thing about this movie is how Damon plays Tom Ripley. Although he is good looking and claims to have been to Princeton, he nonetheless plays him as naive and socially a bit clumsy. It's partly because Ripley is naive - doesn't even know how to ski, for goodness sake. But also because he knows it's endearing. It's a manipulative technique. Law is the golden god, unruffled by anything and ready for anything for a thrill. I had expected the roles to be reversed - possibly based on what I have heard of Purple Noon, with Alain Delon in the role. I guess director Mike Minghella made this version closer to the original Patricia Highsmith novel.
Being based on Highsmith, this movie is very gay, and rather closeted about it. And that leads to bad places. But by the end, it kind of looks like he gets away with it.