Andrew Scott Discusses His Decision to Take on Dark Role in Netflix’s Latest ‘Ripley’

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Andrew Scott is expanding his roles in his film catalog with Ripley, the latest addition to Netflix, but admitted he does not want to take on these type of roles too often.

Playing Tom Ripley, a famed con man, fraud, and murderer, Scott has received praise for his acting in the Netflix series. Scott previously admitted that his Bond villain character in Spectre, was such an evil role that was “not a territory that I feel like I would want to go over again. Now I know who I am a little bit more, I feel like the work that I’m just interested in doing is more in the grey areas.”

Andrew Scott, Eliot Sumner, and Steven Zaillian attend Netflix's "Ripley" world premiere after party at The Hollywood Roosevelt on April 03, 2024 in Los Angeles, California.
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – APRIL 03: (L-R) Andrew Scott, Eliot Sumner, and Steven Zaillian attend Netflix’s “Ripley” world premiere after party at The Hollywood Roosevelt on April 03, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Charley Gallay/Getty Images for Netflix)

Yet, as of late, the star admitted to The Hollywood Reporter that he does not see the same for his role as Tom Ripley.

“I see him absolutely as an anti-hero, but he’s the protagonist. He’s not the antagonist, so we’re seeing it through his eyes, that’s the whole part of it,” Scott explained. “It’s certainly dark… it’s a definite thing after you play somebody dark like that who has a completely different ideology to you, it’s different, you spend a lot of time in a dark place and don’t want to do it too much, but it was a great honor to play this character because he’s so multifaceted.”

The new eight-episode series from Netflix s adapted from Patricia Highsmith’s 1955 novel The Talented Mr. Ripley by creator Steven Zaillian, and also stars Dakota Fanning and Johnny Flynn. The entire series is shot in black and white.

Ripley Premiere. (L to R) Maurizio Lombardi, Andrew Scott, Dakota Fanning, Eliot Sumner at The Egyptian Theatre Hollywood. Cr. Roger Kisby/Netflix
Ripley Premiere. (L to R) Maurizio Lombardi, Andrew Scott, Dakota Fanning, Eliot Sumner at The Egyptian Theatre Hollywood. Cr. Roger Kisby/Netflix © 2024

Scott said he was particularly drawn to “the opportunity to spend this amount of time with this character, who appears in about 90-plus percent of the scenes. It was a huge amount of acting, but I thought it was really witty, and I thought it was just economically, beautifully and sort of scintillatingly written and seemed to have a real respect for the book without having too much reverence for it, made it very visual. I think the pacing and the look of the story is genuinely singular and unique.”

On the other hand, Zaillian admitted he was not influenced by any of the story’s past adaptations, including the 1999 hit starring Matt Damon, Jude Law and Gwyneth Paltrow.

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He admits they landed on Scott as his Ripley because “I love the look of Andrew. Andrew has an incredible face, and he’s complicated in the way I felt the character was. I’d seen him as Moriarty [in Sherlock], I’d seen him as the priest in Fleabag, and I thought just between those two roles that’s a big range. And we’ve got, I think, both ends of that and other things in between.”

Fanning, who played the infamous role of Marge, originally starred by Paltrow, said she and Scott “loved getting to do our scenes where we’re kind of going at each other with our eyes. We loved doing that, and I think we were able to do that very well because we get along in real life so well. Somebody said we had great anti-chemistry onscreen together, and I was like, That’s a good description.’”

She went on to admit she also didn’t reach out to Paltrow throughout the process “because I felt like we were doing such a different thing.” Scott took the same approach with Damon, noting he has yet to meet the actor “who I’m absolutely a massive fan of.”

Ripley is now streaming on Netflix.

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