Few fictional characters have grabbed the public’s attention more than Hannibal Lecter. From the cold and calculating first appearance as portrayed by Brian Cox in Michael Mann’s Manhunter to the Academy Award-winning performance of Sir Anthony Hopkins in Silence of the Lambs, Hannibal Lecter’s impact is virtually unmatched. As with any fictional character with a larger-than-life persona, the public sometimes demands more. As such, author Thomas Harris has kept the character alive in multiple novels, though these have diminished levels of quality, with some not being as captivating as their predecessors. The same can be said regarding the number of films that have emerged since Silence of the Lambs.
From Hannibal, Red Dragon, and Hannibal Rising to the Hannibal television series, something of a double-edged sword has attached itself to the various adaptations. In some regards, Hannibal Lecter’s various appearances satisfy the public’s love for the anti-hero. However, the other side of this double-edged sword causes more harm to the character. The mystique generated by his early appearances and the enigmatic persona of Hannibal Lecter has ultimately been diminished, and some might say that it no longer exists. If real horror is what one doesn’t see or know, then the complete opposite has happened with Lecter.
A Perfect Ending in Theory
Michael Mann’s Manhunter, which introduced the world to Lecter, formulated a tapestry of intrigue regarding the character. The strength of Cox’s performance, albeit brief, firmly established the cold and calculating nature of the psychiatrist turned serial killer. The relationship between Lecter and Will Graham (William Petersen) is complex, and by obscuring much of the past from the audience, a level of mystique and curiosity builds throughout the film. The later adaptation, Red Dragon, went the opposite direction, showing more and obscuring less, which was detrimental to the impact of the narrative as a whole.
To say that Silence of the Lambs, which marked the second appearance of Hannibal Lecter—this time portrayed by Hopkins—is a near-perfect film would be accurate. Similar to the relationship between Lecter and Graham, the exchanges between Lecter and Clarice Starling (Jodie Foster) were potent, with the dialogue and attempts by Lecter to manipulate the young FBI agent grasping hold of the audience and pulling them into the story of the hunt for serial killer Buffalo Bill (Ted Levine)
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In the film’s finale, Lecter phones Starling to inform her he’s “having an old friend for dinner” and walks into the Bahamian sunset as if he were a conquering gunslinger in an old western. As an audience, we weren’t certain if he would be victorious in his retribution against Dr. Chilton (Anthony Heald), his old jailer, or what the future holds. In theory, this is the perfect ending to Lecter. The character’s mystique and future are all up to the audience’s speculation.
A Series of Diminishing Returns
In a perfect world, the saga of Lecter in the visual world of film and television would have ended with the conclusion of Silence of the Lambs. Lecter, a character we’re fascinated with, is starting a new chapter in his legacy, one obscured by our collective vision. As is the case with any character or series that’s made such a notable impact, both on the public consciousness and at the box office, there’s a built-in audience wanting more. The results from this have proven to be detrimental to Lecter’s mystique.
Both Red Dragon and Hannibal, which saw Hopkins reprise his role from Silence of the Lambs, certainly possess many attributes that made the actor’s performance in the aforementioned motion picture so captivating. Hannibal shows audiences what happened in the events following Silence of the Lambs, and luckily, the original ending from Harris’ novel of the same name, where Starling and Lecter run off with one another, was omitted. Hannibal was one of the first inclinations that the mystique that Lecter had developed as a character was now beginning to fade. The cold and calculating nature that we had seen in Manhunter and Silence of the Lambs was replaced with murders based on medieval art and the consumption of brain matter.
Going back to Silence of the Lambs, Lecter describing eating the liver of a census taker and Chilton showing Starling a photo of what he did to a nurse are far more powerful, especially with Starling’s reaction and the mental image formulated by the audience. Both sequences are highly effective, as the imagination must make up for what isn’t shown.
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While Hannibal might have diminished the mystique regarding the future events of Lecter’s life, Hannibal Rising did almost irreparable damage to his backstory. Set in Lithuania during the Second World War, Lecter’s origins are somewhat akin to those of real-life Russian serial killer Andrei Chikatilo, who survived a harsh famine and resorted to cannibalism to survive. Hannibal Rising, with its convoluted plot of Lecter hunting down former Nazis while attending medical school in France, is for all intents and purposes a ludicrous backstory, one that is so far-fetched that it takes the mystique away from Lecter altogether. The one saving grace from Hannibal Rising was Gaspard Ulliel’s performance of the titular character, who managed to capture the subtle mannerisms from Hopkins’ past performances.
Hannibal, a television series that takes place before the events of Red Dragon, sees Mads Mikkelsen assume the role of Lecter, the fourth actor to do so. As a series, Hannibal was well-received among critics and audiences. But, as with the other films that preceded it, revealing more about Lecter’s past eliminates the need for an audience to use their imagination. These diminished returns, possessing vastly different levels of quality, ultimately explain too much and place subjection and speculation on the back burner.
A Defining Lesson in Less Meaning More
Orion Pictures
If there’s something we can take away from the rise and fall of Hannibal Lecter as a character, it’s that sometimes origins and backstories are best left up to the imagination. From the first two appearances of the character, both in Manhunter and Silence of the Lambs, we’re aware that we’re dealing with a master criminal whose crimes and deeds have cultivated a reputation that preceded him. The character’s mystique was so well-established that our curiosity was drawn to Lecter. If the multiple adaptations that followed Silence of the Lambs taught us anything, it’s that less is more, and our imagination and speculation are more powerful than any screenplay.
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The Silence of the Lambs
Release Date
February 14, 1991
Runtime
118 Minutes
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