This book traces the intertextual genealogy behind Netflix s new series Ripley, directed by Steve Zaillian, and offers a critical examination of Tom Ripley s enduring appeal across different media. As the series quickly climbs Netflix s international charts, this volume provides a timely and insightful contribution to the Ripleyverse, exploring the character s complex moral and sexual dimensions in today s cultural context. McEntee investigates Ripley s role within the televisual antihero genre, engaging with theories from Jason Mittell s Complex TV and Margrethe Bruun Vaage s The Antihero in American Television. While Andrew Scott s portrayal of Ripley aims to generate empathy, this book contends that traditional frameworks for understanding antiheroes are insufficient. Instead, it introduces Eric Leake s notion of difficult empathy as a more appropriate model for analyzing Scott s Ripley, offering a fresh perspective on the character s moral ambiguity. This contrasts sharply with Anthony Minghella s 1999 adaptation, where Matt Damon s Ripley elicited a more straightforward emotional response. Readers will discover a nuanced discussion of how Ripley both adheres to and subverts the conventions of the antihero genre and comments self-reflexively on the process of adaptation. The book invites scholars and students of television studies, film, and literature to engage with these themes, providing a rich resource for understanding the evolving landscape of media narratives. Whether you are a scholar of media studies or a curious reader intrigued by the complexities of modern narratives, this book promises to deepen your understanding of the cultural significance of Tom Ripley s latest iteration.
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