I just saw, for the second or third time, this cinematographic masterpiece, during an « UGC culte » evening, in Paris. The list of the Big Five Academy Award winners is short. There are currently three of them, in nine decades:
It Happened One Night (1934),
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975) and ...
The Silence of the Lambs (1991). This is not really surprising, this film being excellent, endowed with a script skillfully elaborated by
Thomas Harris, with an irreproachable casting including
Anthony Hopkins,
Jodie Foster and
Scott Glenn. In addition, the director
Jonathan Demme delivers a work obviously enjoying an admirable preparatory work.
Without unduly spoiling the script, if you have not seen it yet, by the greatest fluke: a psychopath known as the Buffalo Bill sows terror in the Middle West by kidnapping and murdering young pulpy women, after partially or completely skinning them. Clarice Starling, a young FBI agent, is in charge of interviewing Hannibal Lecter, a well-known former psychiatrist who has also the characteristic of a truly intelligent psychopath focused on cannibalism. Hannibal Lecter is able to provide Clarice Starling with providential information about Buffalo Bill . But he agrees to help her only in exchange for information about the young woman's private life. Between them is established a link of fascination and repulsion.
As a synthesis: a thrilling must see. 9/10 of 10