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  2. Jan 29, 2015 · It's one of the most quoted lines in film history and appreciated for the malevolent calmness of Sir Anthony Hopkins' delivery. But Dr Lecter's choice of sides weren't based on his...

    • 1 min
    • Christopher Hooton
    • 8 min
    • Ramin Setoodeh
    • “Is it a children’s story?” When Hopkins first received the screenplay for “The Silence of the Lambs,” he initially thought it was for a film for kids.
    • Where did Hannibal’s voice come from? “I knew what the character looked like,” Hopkins says, who asked the wardrobe team to give him a fitted prison suit — not just a drab orange jumpsuit.
    • Similarly, Foster found her way to Clarice through her diction. In Foster’s interpretation of Clarice, she spoke slowly and with trepidation. For example, she didn’t use contractions in her syntax, because Clarice tried to present herself as better educated than she was.
    • Hopkins stayed in character between takes. “The Silence of the Lambs” shot in Philadelphia. Although Hopkins and Foster’s prison-cell conversations are among the most iconic in the film, they don’t actually share much screen time.
    • The Sound of A Wrench
    • The Importance of Liver, Fava Beans, and A Nice Chianti
    • Similarities to Other Monster Movies
    • The Secret of The Doors
    • The Creepy Moths Were Enhanced by Production
    • Hannibal's Cell Was Constructed That Way For A Reason
    • The Scene with Catherine in The Pit Was Hard to Film
    • Why Did Hannibal Lector Wear White?
    • Buffalo Bill Was A Hybrid Creation
    • The Movie Was Shot in An Intense Way

    One of the most iconic scenes in the movie is that in which Clarice talks to Hannibal about the fateful "lambs." If you listen closely while you watch it, you might hear the sound of a wrench dropping in the background. This was a mistake by a crew member. But Jodie Foster loved the take regardless. She wound up convincing the director to keep it i...

    One of the most iconic lines in The Silence of the Lambshas Hannibal telling Clarice that he just had liver, fava beans, and a nice chianti. It sounds like Hannibal is just relishing in a delicious meal after escaping prison, or even that he had more sinister intent as if its code for a human meal. But in actuality, what Hannibalis saying is he's o...

    When Clarice initially goes to meet Hannibal for the first time you might notice some strange effects like flashing blue lights and heavy crackling noises. Even the shadow of Hannibal moving in his cage is shown in distinctly sinister light. You may think it was just orchestrated like that to create the sense of suspense, which is true, but it is a...

    In order to get to the top-secret holding cell where Hannibal Lector is contained, one must pass through seven different high-security steel doors. Ironically, in order to get to Buffalo Bill's hideous underground basement hole, you also have to pass through seven doors. It's a nice way of creating a parallel between the film's two most diabolical ...

    The moths are a big symbolic aspect of the movie. The moth you see on the film poster is supposed to be a Death's Head Hawk Moth. However, the production actually wound up using a different species of moth in the movie. They then used fake nails with the designated skull symbol on its body. If you look closely you'll notice the design.

    While watching the film, you might have noticed that the cell Hannibal is kept in isn't a traditional jail cell. You would think that a notorious murderer with such a high intellect might be kept in a more intense, high-security, place. But they constructed the cell out of perspex because film director, Jonathan Demme, didn't want to film through t...

    Brooke Smith, the actress who played one of Buffalo Bill's victims, Catherine Martin, was an inexperienced actress that only had one role before this movie. She even gained 25 pounds to play the part. But ultimately, her inexperience helped her win the role because the director didn't want someone over-acting to play a victim. He felt it would be m...

    The decision for Hannibal to wear white was actually something that Anthony Hopkins came up with himself. He liked the idea of Hannibal wearing white because that's the color often worn by doctors, dentists, surgeons, and other people in the medical profession. Most people can't help but feel a little unnerved by medics because they don't typically...

    Did you ever wonder how the producers came up with the idea for a serial killer as terrifying and sadistic as Buffalo Bill? Well, it might make you even more horrified to discover that Bill was based on three very real serial killers. In the way he captures his victims, by tricking them into helping him with something, that is straight from Ted Bun...

    If you watch the movie and pay careful attention, you'll notice the camera shots are very close and intense. Jodie Foster has talked about how exhausting the filming process was because of how the camera was used. If she would move too much in one direction she could wind up out of focus. This required an intense kind of concentration to ensure the...

    • Madison Lennon
  3. The Silence of the Lambs is a 1991 American psychological horror thriller film directed by Jonathan Demme and written by Ted Tally, adapted from Thomas Harris's 1988 novel of the same name. It stars Jodie Foster as Clarice Starling, a young FBI trainee who is hunting a serial killer named "Buffalo Bill" , who skins his female victims.

  4. Feb 18, 2001 · The secret of “Silence” is that it doesn't start with the cannibal--it arrives at him, through the eyes and minds of a young woman. “Silence of the Lambs” is the story of Clarice Starling, the FBI trainee played by Jodie Foster, and the story follows her without substantial interruption.

  5. Jun 7, 2020 · The Real Meaning of Silence of the Lambs' Ending After executing his meticulous and gory escape plan, Lecter is free once again and has no intention of changing his murderous ways. The next time Clarice hears from him he is calling from the Bahamas where he has managed to track down a doomed Dr. Chilton.

  6. The Silence of the Lambs, American suspense film, released in 1991, that was the first psychological thriller since Rebecca (1940) to win the Academy Award for best picture.

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