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Hannibal Lecter - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hannibal Lecter

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hannibal Tetralogy character
 Anthony Hopkins as Hannibal Lecter in Red Dragon
Hannibal Lecter
Birth name Hannibal Lecter (VIII)
Titles Count Hannibal Lecter VIII
Hannibal Lecter M.D.
Aliases Lloyd Wyman
"Dr. Fell"
Nickname "Hannibal the Cannibal"
Gender Male
Race Caucasian
Birth 1933 (Actual)
1938 (Documented)
Ancestry Lithuanian (Paternal)
Italian (Maternal)
Relationships Count Lecter (Father)
Simonetta Sforza (Mother)
Mischa Lecter (Sister)
Robert Lecter (Uncle)
Lady Murasaki (Aunt and guardian)
Clarice Starling
Enemies Vladis Grutas
Pascal Popil
Frederick Chilton
Mason Verger
Respected Rivals Will Graham
Clarice Starling
M.O. Organized serial murder, Revenge Cannibalism, Torture
Occupation(s) Surgeon, Psychiatrist, Culinary Artist, Artist, Library Curator
Current status: At large
Portrayed by: Manhunter
Brian Cox
The Silence of the Lambs, Hannibal, & Red Dragon
Anthony Hopkins
Hannibal Rising
Gaspard Ulliel, Aaron Thomas

Dr. Hannibal Lecter is a fictional character appearing in four novels by author Thomas Harris and their film adaptations. The American Film Institute calls Lecter (as portrayed by Sir Anthony Hopkins) the most memorable villain in film history.[1] Lecter is a brilliant and cultured psychiatrist who is also a cannibalistic serial killer. Lecter is also recognized as the world's most famous fictional cannibal.

Lecter's first appearence was in Red Dragon, that was published in 1981. Its film adaptation was released in 1986 under the title Manhunter and its remake (2002) under the original title of Red Dragon. Even though Red Dragon was his first appearence, it wasn't until the film adaptation of its sequel Silence of the Lambs (1991) that Lecter became a cultural icon. Lecter's habits are further explored in Hannibal (the sequel to Silence of the Lambs), and his childhood is put into full detail in Hannibal Rising.

Contents

[edit] Biography

The following account of the character's biography is based strictly on the novel series. All date contradictions are purported to be by Lecter himself, with the dates in Hannibal Rising purporting to be the correct ones.
Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

[edit] Ancestry

Hannibal Lecter was an eighth generation Count, born in Lithuania in 1933. His father (whose actual name is never revealed) was descended from the warlord "Hannibal the Grim" who defeated the Teutonic Order at the Battle of Grunwald (1410). Hannibal Lecter's mother, Madame Simonetta Sforza, was descended from both the Visconti and Sforza families who separately ruled Milan for a total of 250 years.

It has been suggested that Lecter was also descended from Giuliano Bevisangue ("Bevisangue" means "Blood-Drinker"), a feared and ruthless figure in 12th-century Tuscany, and from the Machiavelli bloodline. In the book Hannibal, Lecter himself would pursue this subject, to determine from the records of the Capponi Library if there was any true connection to Bevisangue, but he was unable to answer the question. Hannibal also asserted that Lecter was a distant cousin of the artist Balthus.

[edit] Hannibal's Rising

Hannibal Lecter, along with his sister Mischa, in a scene from Hannibal Rising.
Hannibal Lecter, along with his sister Mischa, in a scene from Hannibal Rising.

Images of Lecter's childhood were first revealed in Hannibal, but were fully detailed in Hannibal Rising. Even though Lecter's reasoning behind murder remains a mystery, it is strongly suggested that the violent murder of his beloved sister Mischa was the catalyst that later lead him to murder and cannibalism. After the unexpected death of his parents in World War two, Lecter and his sister Mischa were held against their will by a group of looters during the severe winter of 1944. Unable to find food, the looters had no choice but to resort to cannibalism. Branding Lecter too skinny, the group chose Mischa to be consumed. Lecter was severely traumatized by his sister's death, and the incident haunted him for the rest of his life.

Orphaned, Lecter was then raised in Paris by his uncle and aunt, Robert Lecter and Lady Marusaki. Hannibal learned art from his uncle and grew fond of his aunt, so much that he attacked a local butcher when the butcher insulted her. Robert attempted to confront the butcher, but died of a heart attack shortly after. Enraged, Hannibal killed the butcher by decapitating him.

After being accepted to medical school, Lecter spent his time wandering Europe in an attempt to find the members of the group of looters who killed Mischa. As revenge, he killed the group members one by one, and for retribution, he cannibalized some of them. Lady Marusaki, knowing his intentions, told him to forgive them. Hannibal refused and never saw Lady Marusaki again. In the end, the leader of the group, Vladius Grutas, reveals to Lecter that he also ate Mischa in a broth given to him. This knowlege sends Lecter into a fit of rage and he kills Grutas my carving Mischa's initials into his flesh.

[edit] Baltimore

Lecter's drawings led to an internship at Johns Hopkins Medical Center in Baltimore, Maryland, where he graduated with a degree in medicine and eventually settled. As written in Red Dragon, Lecter established a psychiatric practice in Baltimore in the 1970s. He became a leading figure in Baltimore society and indulged his extravagant tastes, which he financed by influencing some of his patients to bequeath him large sums of money in their wills. He became world-renowned as a brilliant clinical psychiatrist, but he had nothing but disdain for psychology; he would later say he didn't consider it a science, criticizing it as "puerile".

Lecter killed at least nine people in the United States before his incarceration. Only three of his victims survived, including Will Graham, an FBI profiler who was Lecter's captor and who figures largely in the plot of Red Dragon. Another one of these, Mason Verger, figures largely in the plot of Hannibal.

[edit] Incarceration

Lecter was caught in March or April 1975 by FBI Special Investigator Will Graham. Graham was investigating a series of murders in the Baltimore area committed by a cannabalistic serial killer, and had sought Lecter out after discovering he'd treated one of the victims for a hunting wound. When Graham questioned Lecter at his psychiatric practice, he noticed some antique medical books in his office. Upon seeing these, Graham knew Lecter was the killer he sought; the sixth victim had been killed in his workshop and laced to a pegboard in a manner reminiscent of Wound Man, an illustration used in many early medical books. Graham realized that the hunting wound that led him to Lecter was similar to one in the illustration which inspired Lecter to further emulate the illustration. Graham left to call the police, but Lecter crept up from behind and stabbed him with a linoleum knife, nearly disembowling him. However, Graham managed to shoot Lecter, who was then apprehended by police.

The courts found Lecter insane; this spared him the death penalty. He was instead sent to the Chesapeake State Hospital for the Criminally Insane for nine consecutive life terms, under administrator Frederick Chilton (The second book in the series changes the name to Baltimore State Hospital for the Criminally Insane for reasons unknown, though there is evidence given in the books that the hospital may have had a name change and renovation). Many of the families of his victims pursued lawsuits against Lecter to have their files destroyed. The FBI exhumed the graves of four patients who had died under Lecter's care for further investigation into the cause of their deaths. He was nicknamed "Hannibal the Cannibal" in the National Tattler, a tabloid that also published unauthorized photos of Graham in the hospital after being attacked by Lecter. Another officer retired from the FBI after being the first to discover Lecter's basement. Lecter's electroencephalogram (EEG) showed a bizarre pattern and, given his history, was ultimately branded "a pure sociopath" by Chilton, even though Harris wrote in Red Dragon that Lecter didn't fit seamlessly into any specific psychiatric diagnosis.

Lecter, while in custody, was said to be "far too sophisticated" for most forms of psychological evaluation, especially as he enjoyed staying abreast of all of the latest developments in his field. Since he knew how the tests worked, he could easily come up with the typical answers that would brand him as not being psychologically disturbed, and he also mocked the psychiatrists' attempts to profile him by folding their tests into origami.

Hannibal Lecter assisting Will Graham during the "Tooth Fairy" investigation.
Hannibal Lecter assisting Will Graham during the "Tooth Fairy" investigation.

Lecter was a model patient until the afternoon of July 8, 1976. After complaining of chest pains, he was taken to the infirmary. After his restraints were removed for his electrocardiogram (ECG) he attacked a nurse, tearing out an eye, dislocating her jaw, and biting her tongue off. Chilton would later note that Lecter's pulse never went above 85 BPM "even when he ate her tongue." During the struggle with the orderlies, his shoulder was dislocated. Following the incident, Lecter was treated very carefully by the hospital staff, often outfitted with heavy restraints, a straitjacket and muzzle, and transported only when strapped to a hand-truck.

Chilton and Lecter's relationship was marked by mutual hatred; Chilton's status as a psychologist, his mediocrity and inflated self-importance offended Lecter, who often humiliated his keeper; while Lecter's constant mockery and elusiveness infuriated Chilton, who punished him by removing his books and toilet seat. At the end of Red Dragon, Lecter diagnosed this form of punishment as indicative of the damnation of society by half-measures: "Any rational society would kill me, or give me my books." By contrast, Lecter reached a mutual respect with his primary caregiver and warden, Barney Matthews, and the two often shared thoughts over Barney's correspondence courses. During the investigation of Buffalo Bill, the two would also discuss Clarice Starling. It is also implied at the end of the novel and of the film adaptation that Lecter seeks revenge on Chilton for the mistreatment that he endured at Chesapeake. Moreover, near the end of the novel, Harris writes:

"Next, he dropped a note to Dr. Frederick Chilton in federal protective custody, suggesting that he would be paying Dr. Chilton a visit in the near future. After this visit, he wrote, it would make sense for the hospital to tattoo feeding instructions on Chilton's forehead to save paperwork."

[edit] Aiding the FBI

Lecter and his frequent visitor, Clarice Starling, portrayed by Jodie Foster.
Lecter and his frequent visitor, Clarice Starling, portrayed by Jodie Foster.

During his stay in Baltimore State Hospital, Lecter would help with four FBI cases. Graham came out of retirement in 1978 to offer his insight on the "Tooth Fairy" case and upon arriving at a dead end, went to Lecter for help, as he had twice before after Dr. Lecter was in custody, but before Graham went into retirement. Lecter gave Graham some valuable insights into the Tooth Fairy, but upon learning about the case, secretly sent a coded message to the killer, Francis Dolarhyde, to kill Graham and his family (which would later result in Graham's permanent disfigurement). Five years later, Jack Crawford sent FBI trainee Clarice Starling to Lecter to administer a psychological questionnaire. Starling, initially assuming the assignment was related to her studies, ended up getting him to help the FBI in the Buffalo Bill case. In both of these cases, Lecter used wordplay and subtle clues to help Graham and Starling arrive at the conclusions themselves.

Lecter's relationship with Starling, around which The Silence of the Lambs and Hannibal revolve, was part antagonism and part seduction. Starling allowed Lecter into her mind in return for leads and information on Buffalo Bill, which Lecter found fascinating. Nevertheless, Lecter was not amused when Starling provided possibly the best psychoanalysis of him, observing:

"You see a lot, Dr. Lecter. I won’t deny anything you’ve said. But here’s the question you’re answering for me right now, whether you mean to or not: Are you strong enough to point that high-powered perception at yourself? It’s hard to face. I’ve found that out in the last few minutes. How about it? Look at yourself and write down the truth. What more fit or complex subject could you find? Or maybe you’re afraid of yourself."

Buffalo Bill's last kidnappee was Catherine Martin, daughter of Senator Ruth Martin. Lecter told Chilton he would reveal Buffalo Bill's real name to Martin and was promptly flown to Memphis, Tennessee, and held at the Shelby County Courthouse. During his stay in Memphis, Lecter lied to Martin, giving her the fake name "William Rubin," or "Billy Rubin". (Bilirubin is a pigment found in feces. It is the same color as Chilton's hair, Lecter's hint that the name was fake. The film adaptation changed the name to "Louis Friend," an anagram for "iron sulfide" - fool's gold.) Starling then visited Lecter at his makeshift cell, and he gave her some final clues before making a bloody escape, killing two police officers during the ordeal. He escaped by making a "mask" from the face of one of the officers, donning the officer's uniform and pretending to be his own still-living victim so that he would be hurried away by ambulance while the authorities hunted for him.

[edit] Winning Clarice

After plastic surgery and the removal of his extra digit, Lecter relocated in Florence, Italy. Lecter avoided major surgery on his nose, as such a procedure would alter his renowned sense of smell. In Florence, he took the pseudonym "Dr. Fell," possibly a reference to the Tom Brown translation of Martial's epigram "Non amo te, Sabidi" ("I do not love thee, Doctor Fell / The reason why, I cannot tell." Fell also means "cruel" or "fierce") As Dr. Fell, Lecter's dazzling charm won him the recently vacated position of museum curator; Lecter had, of course, murdered the position's previous occupant.

During his time in Florence Lecter seemed to enter a state of semi-retirement. Harris states that:

"He has found a peace here that he would preserve, he has killed hardly anybody, except his predecessor, during his residence in Florence."

When Lecter is forced to flee his new home he expresses sadness, lamenting "There are so many things he would have liked to read."

Hannibal and Clarice.
Hannibal and Clarice.

Lecter's identity would be discovered by Florence detective Rinaldo Pazzi seven years after his escape from Memphis. Lecter had been going by the false name Dr. Fell and Pazzi, who had been disgraced when he bungled the "Il Mostro" case, saw a chance for redemption when he realized Dr. Fell's true identity. Pazzi struck a deal with Verger to get the doctor alive so that Verger could exact his revenge by feeding Lecter to a group of specially trained boars. In his efforts to capture Lecter, Pazzi found himself the doctor's prisoner, and he informed Lecter of his plot. After disemboweling and hanging Pazzi, Lecter returned to the United States. Both Verger and Starling would hunt him, hoping to get to him before the other. Lecter was captured by Verger's men, but Starling rescued him. In the ensuing fight, Verger's men shot her with two darts filled with sedatives. Lecter carried her away from the boars and convinced Margot Verger to kill her brother. Lecter left a voice message claiming responsibility for Verger's death. (In the film adaptation of Hannibal, Starling was shot in the shoulder with a bullet instead of being shot by darts, while Verger met his end at the hands of his personal physician, Cordell Doemling.)

Lecter kept Starling in total isolation during the next few months, subjecting her to various conditioning techniques in order to systematically replace Starling's memories and personality and make her believe she was Mischa. After breaking Starling down, Lecter kidnapped her nemesis, Paul Krendler, who was trying to discredit her, as a final test. At the rented home that Lecter was living in, Lecter performed a craniotomy on a drugged Krendler and tastefully prepared and shared his brains with Starling.

However, Lecter's plan to brainwash Starling ultimately failed, as he utterly underestimated her strong will; Starling refused to have her own personality sublimated, mocking his efforts to turn her into his sister. Then, she exposed her breast to Lecter and seduced him.

The couple then vanished. In 1993, Lecter's former caretaker, Barney Matthews, spotted the two in Buenos Aires, Argentina. It is stated on the last page of the novel that both Lecter and Starling were capable of murder at any time; in essence, whatever of Lecter's conditioning took created a "counterpart" of himself in Starling.

The ending of Hannibal sparked controversy among critics and fans. Harris wrote an alternative ending for the film adaptation: in the new ending, Lecter didn't try to brainwash Starling, and the infamous dinner party where Krendler's brain was served took place days, not months, after the death of Mason Verger. The police tracked Lecter down, and, in order to buy time, Starling handcuffed herself to Lecter. In the film's climax, Lecter grabbed a meat cleaver and prepared to chop off Starling's hand to escape. She was defiant, so Lecter tested her: he asked her to beg him to turn himself in to the police and renounce his murderous ways — if he loved her. Starling refused, and Lecter thanked her for not disappointing him; he then chopped off his own hand so he could escape. The film ended with a scene from the middle part of the novel, where Lecter was on a plane and gave some food from his Dean & Deluca travel pack to a child sitting next to him. While the novel made it clear that Lecter gave the child liverwurst, the film heavily implied it was left-overs from Krendler's brain. At the end of the film, Hannibal Lecter was still alive and at large.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Modus Operandi

Lecter's MO is very unique when compared to other fictional serial killers, because he is known to kill based on retribution, discourtesy and poetic justice along with nessecity.


Retribution

Most of Lecter's murders were carried out for revenge and retribution. This characteristic of his MO started early on, his first murder (Paul Mummond) had insulted Lecter's aunt and Lecter then murdered him. The most relevent series of murders based on revenge was when he murdered all the members of the group of men that killed his sister Mischa. He is then seen neglectfully torturing Mason Verger for retribution of raping Margot Verger. He is then seen murdering Paul Krendler for disgracing Clarice Starling.


Discourtesy

Lecter is most widely known to kill because of discourtesy and rudeness. This is first discovered in Silence of the Lambs when he drove IJ Miggs to suicide after Miggs had thrown semen at Agent Starling as she walked by his cell. Lecter told Starling that discourtesy was "unspeakably ugly" to him. This is seen again in Hannibal when he kills the Bow hunter that offends him.


Poetic Justice

Lecter's signature style is poetic justice, placing his victim's bodies in positions that imitate the positions of figures in historical documents, art, and medical books. His most referenced poetic justice style murder was with his sixth American victim, who was laced to a pegboard in the postion of Wound Man. The next person we see this with is Pazzi during Hannibal, Lecter hanged him at the same location and in the same manner as Pazzi's ancestor. In the film Hannibal, Lecter kills the curator of the Capponi Library, and places her body in the position of a figure in a Botticelli painting (It is not certian why the gender of the Curator was changed for the film, in the book, the curator was an old man). Lecter then mutilates Paul Krendler by performing a cranionomy on him, a medical tradition of the ancient Egyptians. When he kills the bow hunter, he places him in a postion of an ancient Norse execution method, the Blood Eagle.

[edit] Victims

Lecter's confirmed number of victims is at least 27, though the actual number is most likely higher. By the end of Hannibal, the FBI knew of only 16 victims, a Florentine detective and a bow hunter being added to his original list of 14. Lecter's association with three attempted murders and a driven suicide become apparent too. The novels leave uncertain whether the FBI know of Lecter's role in Krendler's murder. The beginning of Hannibal suggests that Lecter killed the curator of the Capponi Library in order to more easily assume his position as Library Curator. Both The Silence of the Lambs and Hannibal make strong implications that Lecter killed Chilton after escaping from prison.

Lecter killed a total of eight people in Europe before he came to the United States. He murdered nine more victims when he lived in the Baltimore area. Only two of his nine pre-incarceration victims after he came into the United States are known by name in the books: Benjamin Raspail and Verger, the scion of a meat-packing empire. Verger went through psychiatric counseling with Lecter as part of a court-order after being convicted of child molestation, and for viciously raping his own sister, Margot, who also went to Lecter for counseling. Verger invited Lecter to his home in Owings Mills one night after a session. Lecter drugged Verger and suggested he try cutting off his own face with a mirror shard. Verger complied and, again at Lecter's suggestion, fed some of his face to his Dobermans and ate his own nose. Lecter then broke Verger's neck with a rope used for auto-erotic asphyxiation and left him to die. Later, the dogs were taken to an animal shelter to have their stomachs pumped which led to the retrieval of Verger's nose, lips and parts of his forehead; however, the skin graft was unsuccessful. Verger survived, but was left hideously disfigured and forever confined to a life support machine.

Raspail was Lecter's ninth and final (known) victim in the Chesapeake series before his incarceration. Raspail was a not-so-talented flutist with the Baltimore Philharmonic Orchestra, and it is believed that Lecter killed him because his musicianship, or lack thereof, spoiled the orchestra's concerts; he was also a patient of Lecter's. Lecter would claim to Clarice Starling that the reason for Raspail's death was that Lecter "got sick and tired of his whining" during their appointments. Raspail's body would be discovered sitting in a church pew with his thymus and pancreas missing, and his heart pierced. It is believed Lecter served these organs at a dinner party he held for the orchestra's board of directors. Raspail claimed to have killed a man whose head was found years later in Raspail's rented storage garage in Baltimore, but Lecter suspected him of covering up for Jame Gumb, who would later be involved in Lecter's life as the serial killer dubbed "Buffalo Bill".

Raspail's role in the film versions has been inconsistent; Lecter states he was killed by Buffalo Bill in the film version of Silence of the Lambs, Clarice Starling contradicts this in the film version of Hannibal, attributing the death of Raspail to Lecter, in which he is described as a flutist for the first time on film. The film version of Red Dragon opens with a scene based on the fate of the literary Raspail, yet the flautist goes unnamed in the film, the credits and the script, and appears physically unlike Raspail's head in "The Silence of the Lambs", maintaining continuity between the two screenplays, both written by Ted Tally (however, it is possible that Lecter lied about killing Raspail, as he was seeking a transfer to a better facility at the time, and confessing to another murder was hardly likely to further that goal).

The novels also mention a few details about Lecter's other victims. One, who initially survived, was taken to a private mental hospital in Denver, Colorado. Others include a bow hunter, a census taker whose liver he famously ate with "fava beans and a big Amarone" ("a nice Chianti" in the film adaptation of The Silence of the Lambs), a Princeton student whom he buried. Lecter was given sodium amytal by the FBI in the hopes of learning where he buried the student; but Lecter, instead of giving them the location of the buried student, gave them a recipe for potato chip dip, the implication being that the student was in the dip. He had trained himself previously by administering self-hypnosis in case he was ever administered hypnotic drugs. Lecter committed his last three known murders within a nine day span.

Two other victims survived, one of which was Mason Verger. He also attempted to murder Special Agent Will Graham after Graham unmasked him as a serial killer, but failed and was captured and incarcerated. During his incarceration at the Baltimore State Hospital, he ravaged a nurse and he drove I.J. Miggs, a patient in a cell in the same ward, to suicide after he showed "discourtesy" toward FBI Trainee Clarice Starling. During his escape from prison, he killed at least five; two police officers, an EMT (possibly other EMTs), an ambulance driver and a tourist named Lloyd Wyman (at the airport). Seven years later in the events of Hannibal, he kills the Capponi Library curator, a pickpocket, Florentine detective Rinaldo Pazzi and a Sardinian who was working for Mason Verger. Upon his return to the United States, he killed Donald Barber, a bow hunter who offended him, and Paul Krendler.

Only two of his nine pre-incarceration victims after he came into the United States are known by name in the books: Benjamin Raspail and Verger, the scion of a meat-packing empire. Verger went through psychiatric counseling with Lecter as part of a court-order after being convicted of child molestation, and for viciously raping his own sister, Margot, who also went to Lecter for counseling. Verger invited Lecter to his home in Owings Mills one night after a session. Lecter drugged Verger and suggested he try cutting off his own face with a mirror shard. Verger complied and, again at Lecter's suggestion, fed some of his face to his Dobermans and ate his own nose. Lecter then broke Verger's neck with a rope used for auto-erotic asphyxiation and left him to die. Later, the dogs were taken to an animal shelter to have their stomachs pumped which led to the retrieval of Verger's nose, lips and parts of his forehead; however, the skin graft was unsuccessful. Verger survived, but was left hideously disfigured and forever confined to a life support machine.

[edit] Traits and abilities

In the books, Lecter on numerous occasions has been described as a "monster" because of his unusual, super human abilities. Lecter is described as short, but with noticeable wiry strength and dignity of bearing that makes him seem more physically able than his age presents. He has maroon-colored eyes that appear red when they reflect light. In Hannibal, it is said that his victims thought that his eyes glowed red in the dark, but the author notes that it is just the light reflecting on them. Lecter is said to have small even rows of white teeth. His "most ardent fan," Francis Dolarhyde, remarks that he is "the dark portrait of a Renaissance prince". In The Silence of the Lambs, he is mentioned to have a widow's peak, and dark hair. After plastic surgery, he has different hair and a minor alteration to his nose and cheeks. At the end of Hannibal, when Barney Matthews spotted him with Starling, he has had his face altered again. Lecter refrained from major alterations to his nose, because it would severely inhibit his incredible sense of smell. His cultured voice is described as having a metallic ring to it.

Lecter's left hand had an extremely rare condition called mid-ray duplication polydactyly. His left hand had six fully functional digits, the middle finger being perfectly duplicated. Lecter had the second middle finger removed at some point after his escape from custody, when such a distinctive feature would have quickly led to his recapture. No mention is made of Lecter's condition in the novel Hannibal Rising or in any of the film adaptations; and all the actors who portrayed Lecter had the regular five fingers.

Lecter is portrayed to be intellectually brilliant, but at the same time, primal in his mannerisms. On several occasions in the novels, his extraordinary intellect is described as "not measurable by any means known to man." His natural posture and stature is still and erect, and he tilts his head to one side when listening. Lecter's senses are so extreme that they are considered inhuman, his most noted trait is his animal-like sense of smell (being able to smell trace amounts of blood or semen, he is also able to identify a person by scent alone).

Lecter is a superb artist; his accurate representations of human anatomy were a major factor in his winning his internship to Johns Hopkins. He is also an excellent surgeon and psychiatrist; his articles were still accepted in scientific journals even after his incarceration. Lecter is also a brilliant pianist and a capable swordsman. His native tongue was Lithuanian, but his travels allowed him to gain fluency in a variety of different languages, including Italian, German, Russian, Polish, French, English and Spanish. He is also capable of passable Japanese.

Lecter organized his memories in an elaborate "memory palace". In Hannibal, Harris exposits Lecter's unique intellect and memory as being the product of well-developed Ars Memoriae, or Memory Palace form of mnemonic discipline. The young Lecter is taught this discipline by his tutor, Jakov, in Hannibal Rising. Lecter was able to remember entire books and could even recall entire conversations years after they occurred. Harris also raised the proposition that the palace can be a dangerous place for its owner. In one scene, Lecter retired to his palace in search of comfort only to become haunted by horrific memories his subconscious had stored there in numerous oubliettes. He also used it as a sanctuary; when he was being tortured with a cattle-prod by Verger's men, he entered his memory palace to place his face on the cold surface of a statue that he had touched while he lived in Florence. Lecter also has a remarkable photographic memory, and in Hannibal Rising, it is mentioned by a psychiatrist that he can have several unrelated trains of thought going at the same time without disturbance from one another. This is explained with his ability to operate the separate hemispheres of his brain so that they act independently. He is also noted to have incredible patience, so much that he waited eight years for just the right moment to escape from custody.

[edit] Psychological condition

Even though Lecter has been branded a "pure sociopath", his general behavior fails to perfectly exhibit the standard forms of the condition. In order to be diagnosed as a true sociopath, a person must exhibit all three sociopathic characteristics from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual's checklist. Lecter however, is seen to only exhibit two of the characteristics. Harris also writes in Red Dragon that Lecter did not fit any existing psychiatric condition, and physicians who examined Lecter during his stay at the Baltimore Asylum reported his brain patterns were inconsistent with those of typical sociopaths. In Red Dragon, Graham said he believed that Lecter has a neurological disability, akin to a severe congenital deformity. In The Silence of the Lambs upon his first interview with Clarice Starling, Lecter performs self diagnosis. He simply labels himself evil, stating that the nature of his actions couldn't be reduced to a behavioral abnormality.

In Red Dragon, Graham said that Lecter displayed the earliest sign of sociopathic behavior: sadism towards animals. However, Lecter never displays this form of sociopathic behavior in any of the novels. To the contrary, Lecter was in fact quite kind to the swans and horses that occupied his home as a child.

[edit] Character origins

Harris, who was a crime scene reporter before he was an author, has never given specific details about what influences that he had for Lecter. But in a documentary of Hannibal Rising, Lecter's early murders were said by the filmakers to be based on murders that Harris had covered when he was a reporter [1]. Harris, who rarely gives interviews, has never definitively explained his influences for creating Lecter. However, real-life cannibalistic murderers such as Albert Fish and Andrei Chikatilo have been suggested to be possible influences. In 1992, Harris also paid a visit to the ongoing trials of Pietro Pacciani, who was suspected of being the serial killer who was nicknamed the "Monster of Florence". Parts of Pacciani's killing methods were used as reference for the novel Hannibal.

A number of critics have noted similarities between Hannibal Lecter and Dracula [2][3], a connection which Harris compounded in Hannibal Rising by making Lecter, like Dracula, an Eastern European Count. Both characters share habits of vicious biting and a darkly seductive charm. Many of Lecter's physical features are also characteristics of Dracula. A police officer in Silence of the Lambs also asks Agent Starling if Lecter was some kind of vampire.

Harris may have based the Lecter-Starling relationship on the "consultations" between profiler Robert Keppel and serial killer Ted Bundy, in which Bundy offered to help Keppel track down the Green River serial killer. Interestingly enough, Bundy is known to have owned a copy of Red Dragon while on death row in Starke, Florida. In his book Obsession, profiler John Douglas suggests that Bundy's contacting Keppel was inspired by the Lecter-Graham relationship described in Red Dragon.

[edit] Film portrayals

Brian Cox as Hannibal 'Lecktor' from Michael Mann's Manhunter.
Brian Cox as Hannibal 'Lecktor' from Michael Mann's Manhunter.

Brian Cox was the first actor to portray Lecter, taking the role in Manhunter, but due to Cox declining the role of Lecter for the sequel, the actor was changed to Sir Anthony Hopkins for the filming of The Silence of the Lambs. Hopkins continued to portray Lecter in the following films (including the remake of Manhunter which was filmed under its original book title Red Dragon). However, in the film Hannibal Rising, French actor Gaspard Ulliel plays Hannibal Lecter as young man, and Aaron Thomas plays him as a boy.

In a commentary on The Criterion Collection DVD version of The Silence of the Lambs, Hopkins claims the villainous computer HAL 9000 from Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey as one inspiration for his interpretation of the character. Cox stated on the Manhunter DVD interview that his main inspiration for playing Lecter was Scottish serial killer Peter Manuel, who, according to Cox, "didn't have a sense of right or wrong."

Even before the character's established backstory in Hannibal, both Brian Cox and Anthony Hopkins portrayed Lecter with distinctly European accents. Cox spoke with a British accent, whereas Hopkins spoke in a hybrid of British and American. An accent is never even mentioned in the books.

The infamous slurping noise that Hannibal Lecter makes after he tells Clarice Starling about him eating the census taker's liver was never in the original script. Hopkins added the noise as a joke, and didn't think that director Jonathan Demme would keep it in the final cut. This quote was also voted as the 21st most famous movie quote of all time by the American Film Institute.

Robert Duvall was the first actor asked to portray Hannibal Lecter in The Silence of the Lambs. Robert De Niro was asked to not only direct the movie, but portray Hannibal Lecter after the role had been turned down by Duvall. Both said that the character was too disturbing. Jonathan Demme (the project's new director) then cast Hopkins.

[edit] Lecter as a cultural figure

Even though Lecter is a fictional character, he has been referenced in real life by authors, movie makers, and even the FBI. Because of his disturbingly realistic personality, many real-life serial killers, such as Andrei Chikatilo, BTK, Robert Maudsley, and Jeffrey Dahmer have been compared to him. Lecter's relationship with Starling and Graham set a precedent for the relationships between fictional murderers and police officers; it has now become common for cinematic detectives to have "special relationships" with serial killers based on grudging respect and mutual obsession, and for police to consult with them in their cases in order to "think like their prey." While Harris' novels Red Dragon and Silence of the Lambs were critically and commercially successful, it was not until the film adaptation of the latter was released in 1991 that Lecter, as played by Anthony Hopkins, became a cultural icon. The character became a major influence for cinematic portrayals of serial killers from that point on as cold, calculating master criminals who live to play "cat and mouse" with the police, manipulating both their victims and the detectives who "hunt" them.

[edit] References

  1. ^ AFI's 100 Heroes & Villains. American Film Institute (June 2003). Retrieved on February 12, 2007.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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