


|
THE FEMININE HERO OF THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS
By Jane Alexander Stewart, Ph.D. San Francisco Jung Institute Library Journal
She emerges almost as if out of the earth and pulls herself up a steep incline, out of the abyss of a dark morning fog. As she reaches the top of the hill, she hesitates for a moment to get her bearings. The wings of a bird shudder and flutter. She starts to run. Alone in the woods, her footfalls echo in dead leaves crackling over hard ground. She picks up momentum, running slowly at first and then more rapidly, speeding through the deserted forest. Her eyes dart from side to side and she pushes herself to run faster with the resolve of a woman being chased, as if she fears some shadowy pursuer. Her breathing gets heavier. She scales a webbed fence three times her height and falls to the ground on the other side. Is there a sound of someone pushing his way through the bushes behind her? She breathes so loudly now that she would fail to hear the approach of any intruder and if he's there, she certainly doesn't see him. A man steps out behind her and calls out: "Starling!" She breaks from the obstacle course and, by the look in her eye, it's clear she works to be strong enough to compete with any man, that she won't be defeated by her size, her vulnerability, her sex. "Jack Crawford wants to see you in his office." (From the screenplay The Silence of the Lambs, Ted Tally, Orion Pictures Release, l990)
-
In this very first scene, Jonathan Demme's terror-filled
film The Silence of the Lambs from Ted Tally's Oscar winningscreenplay sets the audience in position to identify with a new heroic journey of the feminine. When Jodie Foster makes
her appearance, an FBI agent-in-training alone in the
forest, we feel the context of danger that is the familiar
hallmark of a woman's life. "She's not safe," the red light
flashes in our brains. Any woman alone, anywhere, puts us on
signal alert. Watching Lambs terrifies us because we,
especially we as women, know the danger so well. We know a
woman isn't safe living alone in her own apartment; and she
tempts the fates when she chooses to run by herself through a
park. Though classical mythology likens the female spirit to
a nymph, at one with nature, invisible killers haunt the
contemporary American landscape and women live with the fear
that attack can come from out of nowhere. Not only do they
fear men's attacks on their bodies but also they face
denigrating social systems that reinforce a second class
status and devalue what it means to live through a feminine
point of view.
The character Clarice Starling represents an emerging
model of a new female heroine. She embarks on a journey of
confrontation with this hidden and pervasive annihilating
force against the feminine in American society. Instead of
following the precedent of most action/ adventure films
starring women, The Silence of the Lambs does not focus on
the way in which women have to function from the masculine in
order to get the job done. In Clarice, we see an action/adventure character who is full of feelings from beginning to end, one who never doubts that feelings are an asset, a source of power. We watch her balance her intuitive clarity with a skillful maneuvering of frank and intimate conversation. She has an uncanny ease with emotionally piercing scrutiny by her male bosses, peers and even the male killers. Close examination of her most private thoughts does not rattle her. If anything, she becomes more focused. She is responsive, not passive, in the face of male betrayals and holds a mirror for the transgressors to look at themselves. And, against all warnings, she continues to place importance on establishing real interpersonal trust with Hannibal "the Cannibal" Lecter.
Clarice begins her story where classic stories of the
heroine's journey end; at the return to ordinary life after
the descent. Whether or not the filmmakers are aware, the
first image of Lambs shows Starling pulling herself up from a
metaphorical feminine center like Inanna, a vision that
suggests a heroine making her return from the deep process of
self-examination and affirmation. She lifts herself out of
the abyss, stands at the top of the hill ready to go forward,
to forge a career for herself guided by the strength she
discovered on the inner journey. When Clarice Starling
succeeds, she succeeds as a heroine who carries a set of
feminine ethics. She goes beyond self-growth or professional
accomplishment. She manages to achieve a far greater
victory: she establishes the strength of the feminine up
against unmitigated evil and creates hope for the safety of a
feminine presence in our society. Clarice Starling is a
larger than life heroine, one who leads us on a newly
unfolding quest to transform fear of the feminine into a
triumph of the feminine.
To imagine that a woman is safe--safer--because she
adheres to her feminine values sharply contradicts our
thinking. Conventional male-oriented rules for survival are
symbolized in The Silence of the Lambs by the FBI training
that Clarice Starling receives: be strong, handle a gun
properly, cover your back. By inference, this schooling
suggests she must suppress her feminine qualities, qualities
that are regarded both as provocation for attack and as
explanation for women's helplessness. While the intention
behind that training may come from the well-meaning desire to
help women, schooling women to perform like men in order to
achieve safety shows a refusal to trust or rely upon what the
feminine has to offer.
The terror of The Silence of the Lambs is built upon our
subliminal acceptance that a woman is, by her very nature, an
invitation to irrational aggression from men. Before she
receives her assignment, Starling has a moment alone in
Crawford's office where she reacts to the pictures of serial
killer Buffalo Bill's victims posted on Crawford's office
walls. We know from the tensing in Jodie Foster's face that
this photographic vision of mutilation of the feminine
affects Clarice in a more personal way than it ever could
affect one of her male colleagues. Here is the first of many
examples of this theme: women experience things differently
from men.
At this early point in the film, we simply feel the fear
behind that difference. We imagine the worst: unlike male
trainees, Clarice could become a victim of an attack like
this herself. We feel doubly frightened when we see the
emotional way in which photos of the victims of Buffalo Bill
affect Clarice because we expect those feelings to render her
a helpless victim. We anticipate that, because she reacts
emotionally, she will be unable to shield herself from that
terrible, lurking violent force we have all come to accept as
a part of the fabric of our daily lives.
Because we in the audience have worked so hard to numb
ourselves in our own lives, our judgement of Clarice is
unconsciously guided by the expectations of societally
learned prejudices against the feminine. We hope that Agent
Starling will submerge her natural inclinations to be
emotional, that she will inhibit her true self; that if she
insists on trying to become an FBI agent, she will at least
be smart enough to realize that this is man's work and must
be approached as if she were a man, performing the job the
same way he would. We hope that she will emulate the male
role model. And that hope is our Achilles heel. We are
afraid to identify with Starling, to choose her inclusion of
emotionality as a path of honor and nobility. Her lack of
regard for the rules heightens our fear even further as she
ignores what we have been taught makes a woman safe.
"Do you spook easily?" Crawford asks Clarice just after
he enters the office. On the surface, Jack Crawford appears
to be the perfect father-figure and mentor, tough but
interested in helping Starling's advancement within the FBI.
He evaluates her outstanding record as if she were any of one
his trainees, and our inclination is to interpret his
treating her without special attention to gender as proof of
his open-minded professionalism. But, this indifference
speaks to a subliminal prejudice. Pretending to ignore
Clarice's sexuality reinforces the belief system that says we
should discourage the feminine approach in this arena where
crimes must be solved and killers brought to justice. This
is the Department of Behavioral Science, a world where
agents must be trained to deal with serial killers who skin
their victims. And Clarice is about to encounter a man who
eats people alive, so terrifying that he can't even be
trusted behind normal lock and key. An almost morbid
curiosity is set in the minds of the audience: if men fear
Hannibal Lecter so greatly, what spectacle will we observe
when a woman encounters him?
We hesitate embracing Clarice Starling as an authentic
hero for this story. The majority of stories told in our
culture feature boys or men as protagonists and present human
dilemmas though the masculine ethic. Using Joseph Campbell's
outline of the hero's journey, it begins with the "call to
adventure." The assignment--such as Luke Skywalker accepting
the challenge to rescue Princess Leia--will be of the highest
order and promises to put the hero to the ultimate test,
helping him to learn what unique gifts he has to offer the
world. The key to any heroic adventure is in the central
character recognizing himself as in some way unique and
outstanding. The mentor, Obi Wan Kenobe, teaches Luke that
the force is within him, that he must discover his inner
power.
The stories of our culture, in the film arts as well as
in literature, support a man's adventure to discover his
outstanding qualities but inner feminine principles are not
viewed as heroic. "'Cries very easily'," writes Susan
Brownmiller in the chapter "Emotion" from her book entitled
Femininity, "was rated by a group of professional
psychologists as a highly feminine trait." The goal of the
study, she goes on to remind us, is to elucidate the way in
which "stereotypic femininity was a grossly negative
assessment of the female sex and, furthermore, that many so-called feminine traits ran counter to clinical descriptions
of maturity and mental health." In a letter to the Los
Angeles Times, a female probation officer took offense to
Jodie Foster's Academy Award night acceptance speech in which
she called her character in The Silence of the Lambs a
feminist hero. "The only way," this woman wrote, that
Clarice Starling "got any pertinent information from Hannibal
was to use her femininity (read 'vulnerability'), not through
any superior analytical investigative skills." In other
words, the only method of heroic behavior many women in
positions of power know how to embrace is that which can be
identified with the masculine: find out the facts, crash down
the door, shove the gun out in front, throw the perpetrator
on the floor, force his arms behind him and clap on the
handcuffs.
Suspense builds as Starling makes herself an exception
to these masculine rules of survival. She acts in a
spontaneous and natural manner, following a compelling
instinct to establish a relationship with Lecter. In her
book Psychotherapy Grounded in the Feminine Principle,
Barbara Stevens Sullivan writes the following:
Masculine consciousness depends on splitting the
world into opposites, on separating elements from
their union with each other....Masculine
consciousness separates the individual from his
dark inner labyrinth: instead, the individual
reaches in and pulls something out to be examined
in the clear light of day, in the process of
differentiation....The central value of the dynamic
feminine principle is Eros: the connections between
individuals, the relationships that encircle our
lives....We call this feminine consciousness
"wisdom." It is the intelligence of the heart,
even of the stomach, it is the wisdom of
feeling. (Wilmette Il, Chiron Pub, l989, pp. 17-27)
In what might be described as the metaphorical inner
labyrinth of our country's soul, Clarice makes a connection
with what the masculine-oriented world hides away and
dismisses as an enemy. Throughout the film, Clarice reaches
out to intermingle with the "opposite," regarding the darkest
areas of human nature as something she can learn from instead
of categorizing them as monstrous and abhorrent. Her success
lies in her wisdom of feeling. Through the power of her
relationship with Lecter, she is able to draw him out and
gain critical insights.
"Just do your job," Crawford commands Clarice. His
advice is clear: feelings will work to her disadvantage. In
a man's story, the strong and rational Crawford would be an
appropriate mentor. In Clarice's story, he fails to see the
force within her. "You're to tell him nothing personal,
Starling....And never forget what he is." True to the
cultural prejudice against women, Crawford's message to
Clarice says she must learn to be someone other than who ”she•
is. Her inner forces (for example trusting in intuition, in
revealing herself and interacting on the level of intimacy)
are seen as her worst enemies, perhaps greater enemies than
even the outer threat of an adversary like Hannibal Lecter.
This figure who in a classic hero's story would prove to
be a mentor turns out to be a symbol of patriarchal
disregard for the feminine in Lambs heroine's story. In a
hero's story, Jack Crawford would send his trainee to see
Lecter as if he were going off to slay his dragon. In giving
Clarice her assignment, Crawford downplays its importance (he
calls it more of an "interesting errand" than a true
assignment and assures her he expects little or no results).
A few scenes into The Silence of the Lambs and it has already
been established that agent Starling has to depend on skills
her FBI training does not provide. Crawford's half-hearted
deception/offer hardly resembles a hero's call to action but
something in his presentation arouses the heroine's
attention. "What's the urgency?" Clarice wants to know.
Intuition tells Clarice that she is onto something important.
She senses Crawford's dishonesty. She refuses Crawford's
attempt to gain obedience by frightening her with his
simplistic description of evil. She shifts from intuition to
another feminine trait we see her use often, the depth
searching question. "What is [Lecter] exactly?" Clarice
wants to know.
"He's a monster," the chief psychologist Dr. Chilton
answers in an elliptical film cut to the maximum security
asylum. "Crawford's very clever, isn't he, using...a pretty
young woman to turn [Lecter] on." Now we learn that Crawford
deliberately misled her, hoping her innocence would be
disarming to a menacing killer he knows might have
information regarding the Buffalo Bill case. Crawford
dismissed her ability to be effective if she knew the
seriousness of her task. Crawford not only fails to
acknowledge Starling's value, he feigns a protective attitude
as a cover to exploit her femininity as a lure and engage her
cooperation without revealing his motive.
Where Crawford veiled his sexism, Dr. Chilton can't
seem to contain a leering misogyny: "We get a lot of
detectives here but I must say I can't ever remember one
quite as attractive," he says upon meeting Starling. From
the moment she leaves the training ground, in the very first
encounter of her very first case, Clarice endures an open
verbal assault on her sexuality. Chilton alternately
insults her and then flirts with her, refusing to accept her
lack of interest and professional manner. She holds her
ground as Chilton reveals he has no respect for Starling, not
because she is a trainee, but because she is a woman; and one
who refuses his advances. Again, the experience of the
heroic journey changes because Agent Starling is a woman.
She can't rely on the patriarchal system to nurture or
respect her talents.
As they travel down into the cellars of the building,
below the ground, towards the gallows where the state keeps
its most demonic criminals, Dr. Chilton coldly briefs her on
the rules regarding conversations with Hannibal Lecter. His
prelude to introduction would frighten even the strong at
heart. Clarice surprises us. She stops and asks to proceed
alone. While Clarice's request might be interpreted as an
effort to take control and assume a certain masculine
bravado, her agenda remains hidden: she wants to approach
Lecter on her own terms. She knows everyone has failed in
trying to gain cooperation from Lecter and maneuvers an
opportunity to be alone with him, using feminine wiles for
the first time in order to gain advantage. She finesses her
rejection of Chilton by flattering him as someone with a
power that Lecter reviles. Going alone to the interview with
Lecter, Clarice will be able to test and challenge herself,
to plumb the depths of her personal strength. Like a true
heroine, she furthers her own spiritual search as she pursues
the information necessary to solving the Buffalo Bill case.
If the opening scene of the movie hinted at the way in
which we fear for a woman's ability to protect herself,
Clarice's slow approach to Hannibal Lecter's cell vividly
reminds us that locks and keys are not adequate reassurance.
Even the following written description of this scene from Ted
Tally's screenplay sends chills:
INTERIOR. DR. LECTER'S CORRIDOR. MOVING SHOT--with
Clarice, as her footsteps echo. High to her right, surveillance cameras. On her left, cells. Some are padded, with narrow observation slits, others are normal, barred....Shadowy occupants pacing, muttering. Suddenly, a dark figure in the next-to-last cell hurtles towards her, his face mashing grotesquely against the bars as he hisses: "I can smell your cunt!"
Clarice's dress surely does not project an invitation to
seduction in this scene but nevertheless she draws out sexual
advances from hidden places by her sheer physical presence.
The whispered obscenity of Lecter's cellmate, Miggs, burns like a hot coal reminding us of Clarice's inherent vulnerability. She has entered into America's underground, the place we hide away the worst imaginable sociopaths, the physical representations of our greatest fears; and the object of their aggression is female sexuality. This symbolic underbelly of society holds a dark male secret, a lust for and hatred against the mysterious power of the feminine. From emotional fragility all the way through to the flash of a leg out of a slit backed skirt, woman is seen as target in our culture. And because Clarice goes alone, we as the audience get our first view of what sustains the female heroine and helps her hold steadfast while being tested and degraded.
The confrontations between Agent Starling and Hannibal
Lecter take us into new territory where we can begin to see
the advantage of a woman at work with the demonic. Her
method is receptive and responsive from the outset: she
avoids a power struggle with the supernaturally charismatic
doctor and instead defers to his authority. "I'm here to
learn from you," she offers, reaching out to Lecter with an
odd respect. He tests her sincerity immediately, asking what
Miggs said to her, wanting to see how capable she is of
emotional honesty; and she meets his challenge without
reservation. Everything Clarice has been taught and told,
from the most subliminal messages of systemic sexism to the
direct warnings she's received from Crawford and Chilton,
urges her not to allow Lecter even the most minimal insight
into her feelings. Still, within moments of their first
interaction, this heroine appears almost reckless in her
willingness to engage Lecter.
That orientation towards personal connection affects
Lecter more than even he might suspect. Where Crawford
approached Clarice's gender with indifference, and everyone
from the respected psychiatrists of the world (Chilton) to
the deranged deviants (Miggs) respond to her sexuality with
varying degrees of uninvited arousal, Hannibal Lecter
acknowledges Clarice as unique. He finds himself
fascinated, not titillated, by her character. In their first
meeting, Jack Crawford read Starling's resume. Lecter reads
her soul: who are you, where do you come from, what have you
run from and where do you want to go?
Her individuality intrigues him. She reveals herself
and makes it clear that she is more than an FBI agent. She
is a person, and, even more important, a woman. Later in the
film, when the mother of the latest Buffalo Bill captive
makes a televised plea for her child's life, Clarice remarks
on how smart it is to make the killer aware of the girl as a
feeling human being. "If he sees her as a person," Clarice
says, "it's harder to tear her up." By giving Lecter a sense
of who she is, Clarice has affected his desire to destroy
her.
In their first meeting, Lecter does dismiss Clarice in
an angry fit over her bold assertion that he use his high-powered perception to evaluate himself, but when, on her retreat from Lecter's cell, Miggs defiles Clarice by flinging his animal-semen at her face, Lecter is highly agitated. Witnessing this degrading attack on Clarice's sexuality spurs Lecter into a frenzy, and he offers her a
proper call to adventure. He calls Clarice back and awards
her with information directly related to the Buffalo Bill case.
Though the audience audibly gasps each time Clarice
violates the rules and ignores the warning to remain
impersonal, the underground demon surfaces now as Clarice's
mentor. The true call to heroine action, the call to rise
above ego, comes from the dark side. "Go deep within
yourself," Lecter says echoing Obi Wan Kenobe, and he gives
her a real life and death assignment that will lead to her
finding Buffalo Bill. Her interpersonal treatment of Lecter
elicits his feelings of empathy for her and prompts him to
give her what she wants most: "advancement".
There is no doubt that on the surface he means to say he
offers her advancement within the FBI system. However, the
advancement he offers holds symbolic meaning as well and
refers to her heroine's journey. Starling's "job" involves
more than just catching a criminal. This story focuses on a
woman who, while in training to develop her masculine side,
discovers her exceptional nature lies in her ability to
utilize feminine powers. She confronts an almost mythic
demon who demands an emotional exchange whereby she must
yield her softest innards in order to gain his cooperation.
She opens herself up to Lecter and trusts--not in him--but in
her own feminine capabilities as weapons in her fight for
life and safety.
In translating Thomas Harris' novel into screenplay
form, the filmmakers changed the name of the storage facility
from "Split City Mini-Storage" to "Yourself Storage,"
heightening the metaphor of the heroine's journey, sending
Starling literally deep within herself. And why did Demme
photograph the scene to feel as though it were underwater?
Here is a quotation excerpted from The Woman's Encyclopedia
of Myths and Secrets:
Students in mythology find that when the feminine
principle is subjected to sustained attack, it
often quietly submerges. Under the water (where
organic life began) it swims through the
subconscious of the dominant male society,
occasionally bobbing to the surface to offer a
glimpse of the rejected harmony. (Walker, San
Francisco, Harper and Row, l983, p. 1066)
In fact, the filmmakers continually photographed Clarice's
voyage to feel as though it occurs in the underwater and the
underground, the arenas of feminine exploration, emphasizing
the closeness to the ebb and flow of nature and darkness that
a woman experiences. She then resurfaces to resume her FBI
training where her methods contrast against and test
masculine rules for success.
"I don't know how to ”feel• about this, sir," Clarice says
when Crawford tells her that Lecter induced Miggs' suicide,
presumably on her behalf. "You don't have to feel anyway
about it," he responds. This is a key scene regarding the
delineation between the masculine and the feminine principle.
Crawford thinks answers lie in the facts of what Lecter says
while Clarice searches for meaning from the way his actions
make her feel. Again from Sullivan's book:
Masculine knowing seeks laser-like clarity that
fosters perfection, analyzing life from a rational
perspective, breaking it down into component parts,
examining each piece, judging it in a directed,
disciplined logical way....Feminine knowing orients
toward a state of wholeness that includes
imperfection and that blurs edges and
differentiations, a consciousness which exists
within close proximity to the unconscious. (Wilmette
Il, Chiron Pub, l989, pp. 17-27)
The masculine approach disregards feelings and exalts factual
information. The heroine works through feelings in order to
make sense of factual information. Clarice has a "feeling"
that Lecter was speaking metaphorically when he gave her the
assignment to check out his former patient Hester Mofet.
Clarice evaluated the message in context of Lecter's
character and decided he couldn't have been sincere about
telling her to "look deep within yourself," that there must
be some hidden message behind the phrase. Nothing in the
facts of what we have seen would lead us to deduce,
logically, that Hester Mofet was an anagram or that Lecter
wanted Clarice to discover a "Yourself Storage Facility."
She uncovers those details through some unexplained intuitive
understanding of Lecter's mind and, because of that ability,
finds herself pulling back the American flag, deep within
"Yourself", from the coffin-like hearse that holds the first
clue connecting Lecter to the Buffalo Bill case.
This American flag Clarice pulls back is the first in a
long list of references ”Lambs• makes to American society. A
close viewing reveals that when Clarice finally kills Buffalo
Bill, a stray bullet breaks open a window and a small,
tattered flag finally sees the light of day. The American
flag also hovers above Buffalo Bill's sewing machine and he
abducts his wonderbread-fed size-fourteen girl-next-door
victims from the very heartland of the country. When we
meet the U.S. Senator's frizzy-haired blonde daughter,
Katherine, just before she becomes Buffalo Bill's next
captive, she's belting out this Tom Petty lyric, singing
along with her car radio:
"After all it was a great big world, with lots of places
to run to. Yeah and if she had to die trying, that one ‰
little promise she was going to keep. Oh, yes, take it
easy, baby. Make it last all night. She was an
American girl."
***
The filmmakers clearly wanted The Silence of the Lambs to be
more than a horror film; this is intended to be a culturally
meaningful story about the patterns of our society that lead
to this unacceptable victimization of women. What dynamics
of the feminine do killers exploit? What societally suppressed powers of the feminine need to be re-emphasized in order to change the cycle of brutality? How do our mothers, sisters, and girlfriends find themselves cowering in the back of a van, trapped by a serial killer?
Haven't all women, at one time or another, walked from
their cars, maybe even carrying groceries, and found some
stranger or neighbor in need of a hand? The threat of danger
usually overrides the natural inclination to offer assistance
to someone in need; but every now and then, hasn't everyone
just decided to put those groceries down and help push that
car up the driveway or grab the end of that heavy couch? In
her book In A Different Voice, Carol Gilligan writes:
The moral imperative that emerges repeatedly in
interviews with women is an injunction to care, a
responsibility to discern and alleviate "the real
and recognizable trouble" of the world. For men,
the moral imperative appears rather as an
injunction to respect the rights of others and thus
to protect from interference the rights to life and
self-fulfillment. (Cambridge and London, Harvard
University Press, l982, p. 100)
Women like to help. It's part of their desire to make
connections, open up possibilities, to give and receive from
each other. The violent serial killer, like Buffalo Bill,
appeals to that desire and then exploits it. He draws upon
a woman's generosity and then attacks her; and (the male-oriented) society turns the event around, blaming the woman for engaging in the interaction in the first place.
Blaming the victim distorts and undercuts a woman's
ability to protect herself. American culture socializes
women away from their natural means of defense. The
character Katherine hesitates when the stranger asks her to
step into his van and carry the couch all the way back where
she'll be unable to escape if he is indeed Buffalo Bill. Her
intuition tells her she should switch off her helping mode
and stay out of the van, but she does as she's told and steps
into danger anyway. She doesn't back away, retreat. Why?
Like Katherine, American girls are taught from childhood to
be the "good girl," to be agreeable and compliant, to promote
an amiable emotional environment, to nurture even when it
goes against innermost intuitive feelings of danger. In
1848, pioneer feminist Elizabeth Cady Stanton, made the
following, capitalized declaration to reporters:
SELF-DEVELOPMENT IS A HIGHER DUTY THAN
SELF-SACRIFICE. (Gilligan, p. l29)
Whether its message is directed toward a woman who follows
the traditional goal to "stand by her man" or toward one,
like Clarice whose professional training suggests the
importance of being like a man, patriarchal society teaches
women to serve its goals at the expense of their own, less-linear, values.
The breakthrough aspect of Lambs is that the closer
Clarice comes to accepting her true feminine self, the
closer she gets to solving the crime; and the closer she gets
to solving the crime, the more she has to grapple with who
she is as a person. In their first meeting, Lecter chides
Clarice for trying to cover up her hinterland roots. She
surfaces from their tense confrontation in tears and has a
comforting vision, from her provincial childhood, of her
father returning home. Contrary to the negative assessment
of what it means to cry easily, here we see a woman's inner,
private life appearing to nurture her and help her work
through the fear she has just been courageous enough to
confront. When Crawford pulls her out of class and steps up
her participation in the Buffalo Bill case, Clarice
ironically has to go back to Virginia, the unsophisticated
"state" from where she came. Both Lambs and Clarice
Starling take Elizabeth Cady Stanton's advice by taking the
next step. Clarice's self-development overcomes her fears of
inadequacy and leads her to an even higher duty of asserting
her feminine presence in the world. Self-acceptance leads to
self-expression.
With her penchant for matter of fact confrontation of
authority figures and her reliance on feeling, Clarice
exhibits a growing confidence in her feminine complexity
after she returns from her mission into the "self-storage"
facility to meet with Lecter for the second time. Anything
but the good girl, Clarice sits on the floor, wet from her
submersion into the unconscious state of exploration and
discovery, and she thoughtfully exposes her exhilaration at
finding the beheaded former client of Dr. Lecter. As her
emotional bravery becomes more visible, we are impressed and
tentatively begin to look for Clarice Starling to be the one
who will find the killer through her privileged
conversations with this demon. We begin to trust in what
initially we feared the most and are prepared to follow her
on the heroine's journey that could transform our
constrictive beliefs about the feminine.
Our first inclinations lead us to fear that Lecter has
the upper hand, that he feeds Starling information in a way
that will further endanger her. Because she reveals herself,
maybe she isn't "watching her back," and ultimately Lecter
will make his offer of collusion in an effort to do her in.
Somewhere, somehow, he has a master plan to get out and kill
everyone; and Clarice must be playing directly into his
hands. Though resistance toward taking the path of heroism
through feminine principles is difficult to overcome, the
audience enters wholeheartedly into this heroine's quest; we
want Starling to succeed in her unorthodox method not just
for her but for ourselves as well. We begin to trust
Clarice not because she is capable and resilient but because
she has exceptional talents suited to this particular battle.
Clarice's ability to set the boundaries between
revealing herself and allowing exploitation defines both the
level and the complexity of her heroic interactive skills: it
puts her on par with Lecter's analytic prowess. Though she
tacitly gives Lecter permission to probe her with personal
questions, when he uses that privilege to focus on Jack
Crawford's sexual interest in her, she stops him cold,
refusing to dignify his verbal fantasy of Crawford's special
interest in her with an answer. "Frankly, doctor, that
doesn't interest me," she asserts, "It's the kind of thing
Miggs would say." That emotional sophistication protects her
from both her fear of Lecter and from our own subliminally
accepted sexism out in the audience. The ability to
differentiate emotional rapport from exploitation is one of
the distinctive, heroic capacities of feminine instinct.
Acting upon it enhances Clarice's status and establishes a
boundary with Lecter: Lecter cannot take her as a fool.
From this point on, Clarice's subtle, unspoken pride in her
inner power must be honored. This is not to suggest that
Lecter stops testing her or that he divulges his secrets to
agent Starling easily. As always, the demon/mentor has more
in mind than helping Clarice solve the Buffalo Bill case.
Clarice has established for herself a relationship that
parallels the Obi Wan Kenobe/Luke Skywalker model: as she
presses for answers that will help her complete her outer
pursuit, Lecter holds out in order to teach her about her
inner quest.
"All good things to those who wait," is Lecter's
tutelary snake-like response to Clarice's demand to know who
killed his former patient. This epithet, especially suited
to the heroine's journey, speaks to the importance of the
feminine ideal of immersion and contemplation, to let one's
growth process "happen", so as to avoid blocking a discovery
that is trying to surface in its own way.
Throughout this testing of her patience, Clarice is
learning to accept and rely upon her unique self, now, in ”all•
its facets. Confronted by the grisly reality and heinous
condition of the killer's latest victim in an autopsy scene,
she drops any countenance of urbanity. Now, both her gender
and her provenance work in her favor. Her understanding of
the specificities of the habits of a "girl from the city"
(versus one from the town) leads her to uncover things about
the victim (the way her nails are painted means she is more
likely to come from a particular area) that no other examiner
can see. She is coming to a fuller awareness of the
significance of self-respect or, in other words, she is
learning the importance of cherishing and not disqualifying
for any reason one's personal background experiences as
valuable and relevant to the task at hand.
More important, we see Clarice consistently return to
her inner gifts in order to further her double goal in the
outer world which is to solve the case while gaining
recognition for feminine principles. This dual agenda
emerged in an earlier scene, when Crawford had resorted to a
sexist ploy to win over the local sheriff when the FBI was
being met with a cold reception for intruding into the
community grief at the funeral of a hometown girl. Under the
pretense of protecting Starling's delicate ears from hearing
the description of the condition of the skinned girl,
Crawford had sought - and obtained - a private conversation
with the sheriff. Far from shielding Clarice, the exclusion
drew attention to her sex from a roomful of male deputies,
all of whom were already hostile to the FBI's intrusion into
their investigation. Crawford left her standing alone to
withstand the probing social gaze of these local policemen
whose attention he has focused on her alleged inadequacy.
Once again, we got a chance to see this action/adventure
heroine plunge down inward. Without an ally to protect her
from the invasive stares, she withdrew from a scene as
uncomfortable as any of the film's more graphically
malevolent moments by entering into the room of mourners and
recalling a fantasy memory of her father's funeral.
Clarice's recurrent retreats into childhood memory
implies that feeling images, even sad ones, have restorative
power. Clarice's feminine strength helps her gain control of
her emotions. She "resurfaces" from this immersion into self
and handles the deputies with a heroic feminine gesture.
Choosing not to assert her authority as an FBI agent to
dismiss the deputies' participation from the autopsy, Clarice
speaks up and assures the men she understands their concerns.
She asserts her control by taking their feelings seriously,
deftly circumventing the power struggle in an unexpected way.
Later, in the car, Crawford acknowledges his
mistreatment of her. He tries to seek her approval, and she
holds her ground to make what appears to be a small point,
illuminating the higher value of the act. "Cops look at you
to see how to act. It matters," she reprimands. Her point
is taken: as a man in a position of authority, his devaluing
of her leads to a greater acceptance of sexism. This is a
subtle representation of what is the larger and most
important issue that the film addresses. It is not
sufficient to make a place for a woman on the job: what is
needed is a place for the feminine to be expressed. Those
men who hold positions of authority must break old habits of
sexism and interact with the values and perspective of the
women close to them.
The feminine hero wants male respect both for her
ability to hold down a traditionally male job and to assert
her own way of being in that job. She wants to enter and
wield power in traditionally male institutions but with her
feminine intact, perhaps even doubly committed to feminine
values. She may lack development in the male skills, be
symbolically "in-training" like Clarice, but she is also
making demands on her colleagues and superiors to accept the
intrinsic value of a feminine orientation that has developed
as a consequence of experiencing life as a female. Just as
Clarice's goal involves more than finding the killer, the new
heroine's goal reaches beyond any desire to overthrow the
patriarchy: it strives instead for a transformation of what
has become heartless in patriarchy, seeking above all, a
societal rebalancing.
"What did you mean by transformation, doctor?" Clarice
asks Lecter after she has revealed her worst memory of
childhood and earned her turn to question him. Quid pro quo
- a fair exchange: that is the ethic of Clarice and
Lecter's confrontations with each other. The startling
realization that these two could share an ethic suggests a
symbolic basis for healing the imbalance in masculine and
feminine principles that creates such frightening aggression
in our culture. "Billy wasn't born a criminal, Clarice. He
was made one through years of systematic abuse," answers
Lecter. Billy hates his own identity, you see, and thinks
that makes him a transsexual. But his pathology is a
thousand times more savage, more terrifying."
Speaking of the masculine and feminine as principles
within all of us regardless of gender, Buffalo Bill's
character suffers from a severe detachment from his
feminine. This is a killer so out of touch with what it
means to be feminine that he thinks he can achieve womanhood
through stitching together a costume made from the hide of
the outermost definition of what it means to be feminine.
This is a sinister aggressive new strategy by the masculine
to take an unmerciful hold on the feminine by appropriating
its persona. Risking a homophobic interpretation, Demme
presents the psychological disarray of Buffalo Bill (a
character who disappointed many viewers, in contrast to the
texture found in Starling and Lecter) as a masculine
dementia driven to the point of pathological persecution and
destruction of the female in the outer world. It is
noteworthy that the pathological behavior of coveting what is
coveted can also be interpreted as a desperate attempt for
some remnant of self-esteem. This is another thread of the
theme of overcoming the evil wrought by what appears as an
irreparable schism at the heart of this film.
Resistance to using a feminine orientation as an inner
authority is particularly intense because claiming authority
as Clarice does means confronting that which male authority
often fears the most: its unknown territory, its darkness.
Masculine-oriented storytelling builds the hope that we can
dominate life, that we can exclude darkness. Stories in
which the good-hearted hero defeats the evil villain carry on
the fiction of possibility that we can live happily ever.
This masculine ethic of transcendence through domination
reinforces an escapist interpretation of institutionalized
aggressive behavior. The familiar result, socially, is to
live in a false state of security, a world run by the
masculine principle of protection from harm where killers
lurk behind every tree. In such a world, women aren't safe
to offer the counterbalance that includes respect for the
dark side, an embracing of the side of humanity where
solutions are not clear and problems of the shadow persist to
the point that evil is a fact of life that must be
continually confronted.
While Clarice does manage to fulfill the audience's
expectations for heroic action by killing Buffalo Bill, the
rescue sequence in the murderer's house is a parade of the
heroine's powerlessness against controlling the evil
underworld rather than the usual heralding of an FBI agent's
ability to save the day. It is hard to recall a film in
which the triumphing hero seemed more vulnerable. As in her
submersion into "Yourself Storage", or her descent to visit
Lecter's gallows, Clarice almost swims through the depths of
Buffalo Bill's subaqueous maze while he toys with his power
to reach out and touch her in the darkness. What would in
the usual detective film be the hero's victory in battle
against the antagonist feels instead like a narrow escape
from victimization; only in a flash of frightened intuition
does agent Starling manage to fire her gun in the right
direction and save herself from the very fate of the kind of
girl she has set out to liberate. This thin victory leaves
the audience feeling unsettled because the threat of
victimization continues: we don't feel secure about the
defeat of the villain.
The masculine journey, to which we have become so
inured, resolves through conquering and winning, (Lucas made
it work by locking into the joy of his boy-hero in Star Wars)
but this feminine journey fails to wrap itself up so neatly.
When in a masculine hero's journey, our knight slays the
dragon, the new equilibrium is one of safety and the
townspeople shower gifts upon their savior. Solving the
Buffalo Bill case, on the other hand, gives Starling little
more than an official commendation, and leaves the largest
relationship of The Silence of the Lambs unresolved: we know
that Lecter escaped and remains at large. Even as she
graduates with honors, with the always reticent Crawford
adding his supposedly supreme compliments, a dry assurance
that her father would be proud, Clarice gets a phone call
from Hannibal Lecter. Crawford's awkward and indirect praise
is contrasted with Lecter's presumptuously easy style and
pointed congratulations, which imply that he hasn't forgotten
their negotiation for a fair exchange. We respond to his
insinuation uneasily: does she still owe him something? Even
though we allow that their connection is strong and Clarice
has proven herself a worthy adversary, we slip back into
identifying with a woman who has violated all the rules,
revealed herself and told too much. It's clearly not over.
"I'll not be coming after you." Lecter's words are so
unexpected that they ring out even as he speaks them in soft
tones. "The world's a more interesting place with you in
it." he explains. What has moved Lecter, the symbol of pure
evil, to set this boundary of safety for Clarice? Why does
the demon choose to let the heroine live? Is it possible
that vulnerability has developed a safe passage instead of
invited disaster? Could empathy and intimacy have protective
power? We are left with questions.
Symbolically, this is Clarice's greatest triumph: she
has achieved a new state of equilibrium on the darkest level
where feminine values can not only withstand but ”co-exist•
with the hidden and terrifying consequences of an extreme
masculine emphasis on control of objectionable elements.
When Lecter asks Starling for reciprocity, for his liberty
from her pursuit, she defines her power through empathetic
language, "You know I can't do that," - and here again she
appeals, appealingly, to the connection between them. She
doesn't say I can't do that, as if she were now separate and
apart from him. She does not abandon the feminine
orientation but keeps it as a basis for action. Her honesty
is part of the balance, part of the give and take that is key
to the bargain that the Lambs characters have established as
a precedence for collaboration. Above all other imposed
responsibilities, codes of honor or magnanimous pacts of
exchange, it is Clarice Starling's perogative to affect the
world through asserting her principles and she takes it as
her duty to do so. On a literal level, she can't let Lecter
go because he is a criminal and she is an FBI agent; more
profoundly, she can't let aggression that breeds on
detachment live freely without offering the opposition of
intimacy as a balance. In symbolic terms, the masculine and
feminine opposites are not independent of each other: one
force simply ”• cannot prevail without influence from the
other. TheSilence of the Lambs ultimately suggests that the
feminine hero's goal lies not in destroying the demon that
masculinity has become under patriarchy but by creating a
relationship with him, to affirm feminine value in a hostile
world that has forgotten how desperately it needs her.
The Silence of the Lambs is an unusual story of a woman
who, even in the face of all the pressure to behave like a
man in order to remain safe and achieve success, confronts
her fear, and in turn challenges our fear that to be feminine
means you are a vulnerable target and a deserving victim. A
symbol of the modern woman who no longer finds herself in the
role of looking solely for personal approval or acceptance in
a professional position, Clarice is neither demanding nor
rebellious. She asserts her values with a self-possessed
presence and a matter of fact manner of expression. She is
able to gain crucial information from the most renowned
serial killer alive as well as to learn from him. She
succeeds where men have failed. By the time the movie ends,
the hero has done the usual. She has saved the girl,
destroyed the bad guy and graduated with honors; but
something does not feel usual, ordinary. This hero won the
day not by being an expert, male-identified FBI agent, but by
breaking away and asserting herself as a woman who could rely
on her feminine self to provide her with the special or
"super" strength she needed. In this breakthrough film, as
Jodie Foster recognized, the filmmakers vaunt a new type of
heroine, one whose "feminine" capabilities make her
exceptional.
|