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    SILENCE OF THE LAMBS

    February 9th, 2009

    lector2

    Overall Impression – A dark classic, analyzed  for us by guest reviewer Len Massar.

    THE FOUR QUESTIONS

    Who is your main character? – Clarice Starling.

    What is she trying to accomplish? – Professional: Catch Buffalo Bill. Personal: Please her father-figure boss. Private: Move past her traumatizing childhood memory of lambs being killed.

    Who’s trying to stop her? – Buffalo Bill.

    What happens if she fails? – The Senator’s daughter will die and more deaths will come.

    THE FOUR ARCHETYPES

    Orphan – Clarice feels alone in the world.  Her Sheriff father is long deceased and her father-figure FBI Chief Crawford is stern and a hard taskmaster. She accepts a temporary assignment to engage the uncooperative Hannibal Lecter for the benefit of the agency’s behavioral sciences unit. Lecter is quite smitten and dangles clues for the attentive pupil to find. She suddenly doesn’t feel so alone (“I’ll help you catch him, Clarice”).

    Wanderer – Clarice accompanies Craford to W. Virginia and help in the identification of what appears to be yet another Buffalo Bill victim. She discovers a cocoon inside the victim’s throat and a subsequent follow-up visit to a museum yields her a fresh clue. Clarice discusses these with Lecter, who demands a quid pro quo in revealing details about herself. Following the abduction of the Senator’s daughter, the opportunistic Dr. Chiltern conspires with Lecter to shut out the FBI. Forced into deviousness, Clarice manages a last interview with Lecter but this is cut-short by Chiltern and she returns home dejected.

    Warrior – Forced into deviousness, Clarice manages a last interview with Lecter but this is cut-short by Chiltern and she returns home dejected.  She decides to revisit the Ohio home of the first victim and uses her instinct to find a new clue. She relays this to Crawford who reveals that the team is on the way to capture Buffalo Bill. Doggedly tying-up loose ends, Clarice interviews a friend of the Ohio victim and learns about the work for nearby resident Mrs. Lipman. When she comes calling at the Lipman address, unknown to Clarice the door is answered by Buffalo Bill. He invites her into the run-down house and when she begins to suspect his true identity, he flees into the dark interior.

    Martyr – Clarice enters the house’s basement. Hearing Catherine’s screams for help, Clarice is now absolutely certain of Buffalo Bill’s identity and whereabouts. The lights go out and Clarice is pursued in the dark by Buffalo Bill and his night-vision goggles. Sensing his presence, she turns on instinct and shoots him dead. At her Academy graduation, she is congratulated personally by Crawford. Hannibal Lecter calls her on the phone to do the same.

    AND, IN THE END…

    What is basically a simple story is made into the classic it is by the characters of Ted Tally’s Oscar-winning screenplay. 

    The script draws us fully into Clarice’s head and her world.  We first see her running alone at the Academy, pushing her physical limits. There are easily five minutes of unscripted action off the top where we become familiar with Clarice and her environment.

    Her descent into the cellar is masterful writing and obviously compelling viewing.  It seems that the action of the third act is very compressed, hitting Contour’s four Act Three plot points in rapid succession; she knows that Gumb is Buffalo Bill (Big Yes), then he flees (No) and then the lights go out when she’s most vulnerable (Big No). The serial killer’s eventual defeat, the saving of the the Senator’s daughter and graduating with Crawford’s (and Lector’s!) final words of approval (Final Yes) all serve to underscore Clarice’s achievement of all her goals. 

    – Len Massaar


    1408

    January 6th, 2009

    1408 

    Overall Impression – A man who doesn’t believe in ghosts is trapped in a room haunted by them and cannot escape no matter what he does.  Great!

    THE FOUR QUESTIONS

    Who’s your main character? — Mike Enslin

    What’s he trying to accomplish? – Professional: Trying to escape room 1408. Personal: Healing the relationship with his ex-wife (I think).  Private: Trying to accept his daughter’s dead.

    Who’s trying to stop him? — Room 1408 or is it the manager Gerald Olin? He however doesn’t play a role during the struggling part, so I go for the room.

    What happens if he fails? — If Mike cannot escape from room 1408, he will die and in the end, his ex-wife with him.

    THE FOUR ARCHETYPES

    Orphan — Mike Enslin is divorced, his daughter died some time ago and he travels around the country alone to debunk paranormal occurrences.

    Wanderer — Inside room 1408, Mike examines the room, and experiences unexplainable things: the radio starts to play music by itself. After ripping the clock’s electrical cord from the wall, the display changes into “60:00″ and starts counting down from 60 minutes; When Mike is unable to hear anything, he opens the window to check his hearing; the window slams down, wounding his hand; Mikes wants to leave the room to go to a hospital; however his key breaks off; Mike has visions of his daughter in the hospital before her death; Mike sees his own father in a hospital or institution of some kind.

    Warrior — Mike tries to get out of room 1408:  He crawls through the air vents, where he meets a strange monster; he climbs out the window to enter another room, however suddenly all the other rooms on his floor are gone; he talks with his ex-wife via video-chat on his laptop, till the sprinkler system shorts out his laptop.  Later his laptop works again and a person looking like him tells Lili to join him in the room (which would lead to her death.)  The room fills with water; Mike is getting sucked under water and wakes up in a hospital. Free!  No… Suddenly everything around him breaks down and he’s back in the room, the nightmare continues. The clock resets itself to 60 minutes and counts down, starting the hour of hell from the beginning. Mike gets a phone call, asking him if he wants to take the expressway out; hanging himself. Mike says no. The caller tells him that his wife is on her way to join him.

    Martyr — Mike doesn’t want his ex-wife to get into the same problems as he has and decides to end this now. He sets the room on fire with a Molotov cocktail, sacrificing himself. (So, in fact, the hotel manager gave him the tool to end everything!) There are two versions of this ending: In the theatrical release, Mike Enslin is rescued, in the director’s cut, he dies. Still, dying or surviving, he made the sacrifice by wanting to die so his ex-wife would be saved.

    AND, IN THE END…

    I love this movie! I believe it’s well done, although the scene with the monster in the ceiling was, I believe, out of place. It belongs more in a zombie kind of movie than here. Why not just let every exit leading him back in his own room instead of being chased by a monster? And I wonder who sent him that anonymous postcard, but maybe I missed that.

    –  André van Haren