I've forgotten everything for a long time) for some reason it seemed that in the movie he killed him in the middle or at the end. And here in the third episode
I remember how impressed the scene of Dickie Tom's murder in a boat in the film adaptation with Jude Law and Matt Damon was, and then Andrew Scott's game generally elevated this scene to the absolute, it's just creepy! After his Moriarty in Sherlock, Scott will always be associated with cunning homicidal maniacs, and then there's the masterfully played role of Ripley😅👌However, in the film adaptation there were more similarities between Dickie and Tom, I wonder how dark Tom is/Andrew Scott will try to pass for the blond Dickie))
The crime begins with this series, I wonder what this ring is so special about, and also, half of the series is absolutely without dialogues, but at the same time, I didn't even want to speed up or rewind
The scene with the boat, of course, is spectacular, but how did he not lose consciousness from hitting the boat on the head? And from being hit by a heavy concrete anchor?)
It's like I'm missing the chemistry between Tom and Dickie. No, it feels like they are friends and somehow close. When it's the other way around in the movie, you see it
@LerkHa: Matt Damon, in general, as it seems to me, played the charming and trustworthy Ripley, and Scott is so frightening, he smells like a sociopath, everyone seems to look at him with suspicion and apprehension. And the picture in the film is so summery and attractive, here, on the contrary, it is detached and cold, there are no positive emotions.
Well, of course this Tom is a clumsy one! I don't remember what happened at that moment in the film, but here how did he even survive after such a blow to the back of the head with an anchor at speed underwater?? And anyway, to allow such a jamb with a boat - it still had to be managed. It's so careless to drop the anchor, even though the corpse is still in the boat... This is not entirely associated with the skillful Ripley, who is well described in the book and partially shown in the film.
And by the way, it's not very realistic with fuel either, it seems to me that his whole boat would have burned down))
Fantastic, of course, but what a horror Scott's look alone evokes. The actor plays smartly. It is already difficult to imagine him in any other role. Sociopaths are just his thing.
Gg's motivation is somehow poorly shown, why did he kill Dickie? There was no such question in the film, they led to this and in general the murder turned out to be impulsive, here it seems as if it had been planned for a long time, but why?..
@Elena-Uno: It seems to me that everything is clear from the scene with Dickie changing into clothes and depicting him. Tom wants that kind of life. Easy money, beautiful things, no worries. And they were going to drive him away from it.
And the picture in the film is so summery and attractive, here, on the contrary, it is detached and cold, there are no positive emotions.
Well, of course this Tom is a clumsy one!
I don't remember what happened at that moment in the film, but here how did he even survive after such a blow to the back of the head with an anchor at speed underwater??
And anyway, to allow such a jamb with a boat - it still had to be managed. It's so careless to drop the anchor, even though the corpse is still in the boat... This is not entirely associated with the skillful Ripley, who is well described in the book and partially shown in the film.
And by the way, it's not very realistic with fuel either, it seems to me that his whole boat would have burned down))