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  • If you want to find an example of a truly

  • terrifying villain you need look no further than Hannibal Lecter in the "Silence of the Lambs"

  • The director does a wonderful job of making this character terrifying

  • And he does it in a very interesting way

  • He introduces the character before he first appears on the screen. Now this might sound counter-intuitive

  • but he achieves this in two ways; one of which is in dialogue before we first meet him, such as this line when the

  • Asylum warden is talking about the kind of man he is.

  • "Oh, he's a monster.

  • Pure psychopath.

  • So rare to capture one alive.

  • From a research point of view, Lecter is our most prized asset"

  • Now, despite this lines bluntness in its purpose, it does a wonderful job at building the viewers' expectations.

  • It tells us straight up that Hannibal is the most depraved and psychotic man in the asylum

  • Now there are many lines in these opening scenes that serve a similar purpose.

  • The purpose of building up an image of Hannibal in the viewers' minds, and all of this buildup pays off in the next scene:

  • Now right here the director does something very interesting

  • As Clarice is walking along the corridor up to Hannibal cell he uses the camera to reinforce the information

  • We had learned previously. As she walked along the corridor

  • There are three inmates she sees before Hannibal. The first is a little creepy

  • Where he smiles at her and says hello. The next inmate seems even more dysfunctional as he just sits there and stares blankly

  • Barely reacting to her presence. The third is by far the most insane

  • He is jittery and leaping around his cell, almost like an ape.

  • This is brilliant because it establishes that as the cells go along the inmates are growing more and more

  • insane. We know that the man in the end cell he is not just bad

  • He's not just insane

  • He is the paragon of insanity, the absolute worst human being you could ever hope to

  • possibly imagine. And judging by the prior inmates where he is ape like

  • and whispers how he can smell a not so family-friendly area of the protagonist body we expect Hannibal to be some kind of

  • Feral beast ready to pounce. Now all of these expectations set in mind

  • Here is the next shot

  • "Morning."

  • He is standing straight in a welded cell and compared to the prior inmates, he shows no

  • obvious symptoms of insanity. This is terrifying because it totally shatters the viewers' expectations

  • We have been told he is a most depraved

  • Individual, yet he looks so civil and like anyone you might see on the streets except

  • there's something just a little bit off about him. What follows from this point on between the two characters is not so much a

  • conversation it's more a battle for power over the other, and I think this line right here

  • marks the very start of that battle

  • "Closer please.

  • Closer."

  • In this line of dialogue, Hannibal makes a demand that she brings her ID badge closer and she abides.

  • Even though this is a token action that on the surface seems like something quite harmless, it helps to lure us as an audience

  • Into a feeling of insecurity as we feel right from the start that Hannibal is successfully

  • manipulating the protagonists: He makes a demand,

  • she follows it. Hannibal has an amount of power over her and it makes us uneasy

  • When you look at a great example of dialogue in fiction there is almost always a conflict between the two

  • characters where one has a different opinion to the other or one wants something that the other doesn't want

  • This is a pretty basic concept

  • But part of the reason why this scene in Silence of the Lambs is so gripping and has such compelling

  • dialogue is because it is full of that conflict

  • Clarice wants Hannibal to help her with an investigation

  • Hannibal doesn't want to, and I think to the untrained eye

  • It might be a little confusing as to why Hannibal is so

  • terrifying in this scene because he is behind a thick glass

  • And he cannot physically hurt her so he shouldn't be terrifying because he has no power

  • So the reason he is scary must be because of something else

  • Right?

  • The problem is that is a surface level observation and the more we look at it the more

  • we realize that actually the truth is the exact opposite.

  • Now this might sound a little nonsensical seeing as he is in a cage

  • But Clarice came to him wanting one thing: For his help in catching a murderer in this respect

  • she is quite vulnerable because she could very easily fail and not achieve her goals.

  • It would require almost no effort from Hannibal's part to totally shatter her ambitions.

  • The outcome of this scene whether she gets help or not is entirely in his hands.

  • This right here the powerlessness of the protagonist is why Hannibal Lecter is such a

  • terrifying villain. The cinematography also does a wonderful job at helping to reinforce the two characters' power.

  • Near the start of the conversation she sits down

  • and he is stood up this makes her physically lower than him which helps to convey how non literally

  • he is above her in a sense of power.

  • You can see this in the shots where he looks down at the camera while she looks up instead and in a later scene where

  • he finally surrenders his power and agrees to help her she goes from sitting down on the floor to standing up so they are both seeing eye-to-eye.

  • Levels are a fairly basic dramatic technique, but when used properly they can be quite provocative

  • Also when you look at the framing of the characters there are something quite interesting going on. Hannibal's face takes up the whole screen

  • While with her, her face takes up only half. This helps make Clarice feel small and again with no power.

  • The negative space around the characters

  • is directly proportional to the amount of power that character has

  • "Most serial killers keep some sort of trophies from their victims"

  • "I didn't"

  • "No"

  • "No. You ate yours"

  • As you can see once she makes this statement,

  • that catches him off-guard

  • And her face in the shot when she does it is in the center and is much larger than in the prior

  • which indicates how she has reclaimed some of her lost power.

  • Also,

  • when she delivers the line, he breaks off his eye

  • contact with her that he had maintained constantly throughout the entire scene in his response to his loss of power

  • So how could we use this example to address how you can terrify your audience?

  • Well, it's all to do with power.

  • It is no coincidence that in horror films the protagonist is often someone with low

  • competence, for example how in "It" the characters at risk are a group of children or how in "Alien" the characters are a bunch of

  • pilots and mechanics who can barely defend themselves. Now "Aliens" was a great film, however

  • it was less horrifying than "Alien"

  • And I think understanding the reason why can help you to learn an important lesson in how to terrify your audience

  • because "Aliens" follows a group of Marines

  • who when it comes down to defending themselves are much more competent than the cast of

  • "Alien". The characters in "Aliens" have the ability to kill the monsters. The characters in "Alien", don't.

  • So what does this mean if you want your audience to feel

  • terrified? It is all to do with which character has the power.

  • Thanks for watching today's video essay.

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  • The Closer Look.

  • "You know I can't make that promise."

  • "I do wish we could chat live though but"

  • "I'm having an old friend for dinner."

If you want to find an example of a truly

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観客を怖がらせる方法 (How To Terrify The Audience)

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    Pedroli Li に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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