Silence of the Lambs

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Gender Inequality in Hannibal – It’s Not Just a Horror Flick about a Cannibal on the Loose!

Monday, September 14th, 2009
Who Saves Who?

Who Saves Who?

I remember watching Hannibal on DVD when it came out several years ago and not thinking much of it. It was well-made thriller but I didn’t give it a second thought when the film ended.

Several months ago, I rewatched both Silence of the Lambs and Hannibal again, and realized how just how feminist-driven both films were. In fact, I even wrote a paper for my “Monsters A-X” class about how both Clarice Starling and Hannibal Lector were viewed as monsters by the FBI – Starling was a monster because she was an ambitious, hard-working female agent with morals, and Lector was a monster because, well, he killed and ate people. There was almost no distinction between the two in the eyes of the FBI.

Clarice Starling - she's an ambitious female, therefore, she's a monster

Clarice Starling - hard-working female FBI agent

Hannibal Lector - he kills and eats people, therefore, he's a monster

Hannibal Lector - Philosophical Cannibal

Despite Starling’s allegiance to the FBI, the FBI doesn’t want her and in fact, finds her monstrous. As Lector tells Starling in the clip below (starting at 5:29), “You fell in love with the bureau, the institution, only to discover, after giving it everything that you’ve got, that it does not love you back. That it in fact resents you, resents you more than the husband and children you gave up to it. Why is that, do you think? Why are you so resented?…You serve the idea of order, they don’t. You believe in the oath you took, they don’t. You feel it’s your duty to protect the sheep, they don’t. They don’t like you because you’re not like them. They hate you and they envy you. They’re weak and unruly and believe in nothing….I want to know what it is you will do now that everything in the world you’ve cared about has been taken away from you…”

The fact that the FBI turned it’s back on Starling is interesting – gender bias clearly came into play, and that’s something a lot of women worry about, especially when it comes to promotions, raises, and equal pay. Despite the fact that we give it our all, we’re not always given what we deserve.

Silence of the Lambs ended on such a positive note – Starling single-handedly caught the serial killer Buffalo Bill and was praised as a rising star. But 10 years later, when Hannibal rolls around, we see that she still hasn’t moved her way up in the FBI and is still assigned work below her level. Lector is the only one who sees this and asks Starling why she puts up with it.

Hannibal and Starling Face/Off

Hannibal and Starling Face/Off

I hope I never find myself in her position (not being chased by a cannibal, mind you, but being stuck in a dead-end job where I’m not appreciated). I better figure out what I’m worth and stick with it.

An Intro to Woman Wonder

Thursday, August 13th, 2009
Wonder Woman

Wonder Woman

Hello and thank you for checking out my blog, Woman Wonder!

I recently realized how much of an impact strong female role models have had on me, whether they were characters in a movie or women I’ve met in real life. They’ve all inspired me in some way to do my best, to face the world head-on. The implicit and explicit encouragement I’ve received have meant a lot to me and I figured I should document how different women motivate me.

“Female power,” for lack of a better phrase, is meaningful to me because:

-I’ve been lucky enough to work with many impressive women – Dr. Deborah Streeter at Cornell University, Tyrrell Shaffner at SpiritClips, Rachel Doyle at GlamourGals, Michelle Crames and Diane Reichenberger at giiv.com, among others – women who’ve personally inspired me to do my best

-The recent advancements of women like Hillary Clinton (our current Secretary of State) and Sonia Sotomayor (recently elected Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the US) have demonstrated that I really can achieve whatever I put my mind to

-I grew up watching shows with incredibly strong female leads like “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” and “Xena: Warrior Princess”

-Movies with female leads or women who fought back – ranging from Clarice Starling in “Silence of the Lambs” to Alice in the “Resident Evil” films – have appealed to me far more than films with male leads. It was always so unexpected to see a female fight back just as ferociously and that contrast has always jumped out at me.

My favorite quote of all time is something Hillary Clinton said when she conceded defeat to Barack Obama after the 2008 Democratic primaries – “Although we weren’t able to shatter that highest, hardest glass ceiling this time, thanks to you, it has about 18 million cracks in it and the light is shining through like never before.”

That made me tear up (for real). Someday, a woman will smash that glass ceiling into a billion pieces with a sledgehammer and I hope I’m there to witness it.

I’m certainly going to enjoy writing about how women (both real and imaginary) from all walks of life inspire me – I hope you enjoy reading!

Cheers,

Star