Thursday, November 30, 2017

Deadly Transformation: The Silence of the Lambs

Few films hold the established title of earning the Big Five Oscars; Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actress, Best Actor and Best Adapted Screenplay and when it comes to films which earn these accolades, they are very few and far in between. Jonathan Demme's skin-crawling depth charge of a film The Silence of the Lambs, based on the best-selling tome by the same name by Thomas Harris is one of those films which have not only earned those coveted golden statuettes but also to this day, 25 years on, upholds its reputation for its' seemingly elegant simplicity without sacrificing one shred of its compelling, insidious and intelligent narrative which bubbles underneath.

Jodie Foster plays gutsy FBI cadet Clarice Starling, who is approached by her superior Jack Crawford (Scott Glenn) for an errand to interview the infamous serial killer Hannibal Lecter (a magisterial Anthony Hopkins) in order to capture a madman known as Buffalo Bill (Ted Levine) who not only has a penchant for skinning his female victims but has far more insidious plans in his demented mind.

The most difficult thing about composing a review for this film is that practically anything one could say about this film from a critical and academic standpoint has already been stated time and again. This is a film which is studied in film school, analysed and deconstructed by the academic alumni for various studies and still remains a key artistic inspiration by writers of thrillers and horrors across the globe. A procedural crime drama, a tensile cat gut of a thriller and a satisfying blood chiller are but several adjectives which have been used by countless viewers when they discuss The Silence of the Lambs.

However, in the interest of having something of relevance to say, I would like to discuss a particular concept about this film which resonates most with me, and that being the combined elements of sex, identity and transformation.

First things' first, let’s have a butchers' at that poster all of us know so well;

Closer, please. 

Cloooooseeerrrr....

Bingo

Some of you may know where this image comes from, but for those of you who don't, it's actually a rendition of Salvador Dalis' famous piece known commonly as 'In Voluptas Mors', or 'Voluptuous Death' picturing six naked women forming the shape of a human skull, which in a sense, could be construed as a perversion of divine symbology or even, say, a representation of the suffering and transformation into and of womanhood.

You can probably figure out where I'm going with this. Given this design is artfully placed on the moth, its' fairly clear it is not only a metaphor for the transformative process, but also how it relates to the character of Clarice Starling, who is a woman, and Buffalo Bill, who aspires to be his interpretation of a woman.

Throughout the film, Clarice grows and learns how to be a competent field agent while trying to keep up with Bill, her successes and failures are ones of which we see through her eyes, her experiences are ours. She is not a flawless individual; she makes errors and flubs her investigation, but her persistence, intelligence and accountability are what makes her stronger, her nerves give way to a resolve to not only combat the dominating evil of Buffalo Bill, but also her own past traumas and her professional reputation in what the film clearly shows is a male-dominated environment. Whenever Clarice shares a scene with a male character, she feels the need to prove herself despite the fact she is clearly competent as what could be a prospective field agent. Given the various dire situations she finds herself plunged in, it's little wonder she ultimately transforms into a formidable FBI agent; the grounded caterpillar becomes a soaring butterfly (which is fascinating given her surname is that of a diminutive bird) through her concrete will and drive.



On the other side of the coin, Buffalo Bill is a dark reflection to Clarice, a creature who thinks himself above the gradual law of evolution and aims to reach the next level without putting in the true work it requires to be more than the sum of his parts. Given his clear background of abuse, displacement of identity and misinformation about humanity, he wants to become a woman without even so much considering what it truly takes to BE a woman. 



Gender and sex are facts of life; we can be born a male or a female, that is the biological lotto many of us are given (I didn't say all because there are a small percent of people who are born with male and female genitalia which is a completely different kettle of fish I'm not competent to dive into on a whim). However, gender is where things get notably more interesting. Many of you have most likely heard the concept of 'Nature vs. Nurture', a very popular discussion given that term by Francis Galton, about whether human behaviour is determined by the environment, either prenatal or during a person's life, or by a person's genes. Nature is what we think of as preordaining and is influenced by genetic inheritance and other biological factors. In simple terms, there is little doubt Clarice is indeed female through her appearance and how she is perceived by her peers. Bill, despite notable effeminate leanings and personal desires, is biologically built like and sounds like a male because he IS male. 

Both are what they are due to genetic design. 

I just added this still because this scene was scary AF.

Meanwhile, the idea of Nurture is generally taken as the influence of external factors after conception; this being the product of exposure, experience and learning on an individual. While Clarice effectively became an orphan from a young age and had that harrowing experience of witnessing the spring lambs being slaughtered one night and not even being able to save the one she impulsively fled with, she did not lose herself in her pain. Instead, she worked through it by following her departed father's example and became a hopeful upholder of the law her father valiantly fought for. Granted, the ordeal with Buffalo Bill did summon those long-suppressed pains of helplessness, but she continued to fight because of those values that had been long ingrained into her sense of morality and ethics. 

In Bill's case, given his tragic history, it’s clear that his relationship with women was mainly negative, and the reason why HE wants to adopt the physique of a woman is to not only escape his history, but also to mock those who tainted it. Bill is a confused, bitter and entitled misogynist through and though who doesn't so much want to become a woman as they are generally seen by those with a lick of sanity and social decency, but his toxic, warped perception of one; deadly, dangerous and devoid of the laws of God and man, hence his entire behavioural patterns and means of killing his victims.

Both Clarice and Bill undergo a startling transformation, but The Silence of the Lambs clearly and rightly favors the evolution of Clarice Starling given she is a whole and functional person who has been able to not only endure the traumas of her past, but has managed to overcome them using a healthy means of self-reflection and exorcising her demons. Bill meanwhile was unable to surpass his demons and thus become one instead.