The Silence of the Lambs [DVD] [1991] [Region 1] [NTSC]

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  • Total New: 0
  • Total Used: 0
  • Total Collectible: 0
  • Total Refurbished: 0
  • Actor : Jodie Foster
  • Actor : Anthony Hopkins
  • Actor : Scott Glenn
  • Actor : Ted Levine
  • Actor : Brooke Smith
  • Binding : DVD
  • Creator : Jodie Foster
  • Creator : Anthony Hopkins
  • Creator : Edward Saxon
  • Creator : Gary Goetzman
  • Creator : Grace Blake
  • Creator : Kenneth Utt
  • Creator : Ronald M. Bozman
  • Creator : Ted Tally
  • Creator : Thomas Harris
  • Director : Jonathan Demme
  • EAN : 0027616869104
  • Format : NTSC
  • Languages : Original Language: French
  • Product Group : DVD
  • Region Code : 1
  • Running Time : 118
  • UPC : 027616869104

Based on Thomas Harris's novel, Jonathan Demme's terrifying adaptation of Silence of the Lambs contains only a couple of genuinely shocking moments (one involving an autopsy, the other a prison break). The rest of the film is a splatter-free visual and psychological descent into the hell of madness, redeemed astonishingly by an unlikely connection between a monster and a haunted young woman. Anthony Hopkins is extraordinary as the cannibalistic psychiatrist Dr Hannibal Lecter, virtually entombed in a subterranean prison for the criminally insane. At the behest of the FBI, agent-in-training Clarice Starling (Jodie Foster) approaches Lecter, requesting his insights into the identity and methods of a serial killer named Buffalo Bill (Ted Levine). In exchange, Lecter demands the right to penetrate Starling's most painful memories, creating a bizarre but palpable intimacy that liberates them both under separate but equally horrific circumstances. Demme, a filmmaker with a uniquely populist vision (Melvin and Howard, Something Wild), also spent his early years making pulp for Roger Corman (Caged Heat) and he hasn't forgotten the significance of tone, atmosphere and the unsettling nature of a crudely effective close-up. Much of the film, in fact, consists of actors staring straight into the camera (usually from Clarice's point of view), making every bridge between one set of eyes to another seem terribly dangerous. --Tom Keogh, Amazon.com

- Amazon.co.uk Review


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