WT

The Silence of the Lambs

1991 · Directed by Jonathan Demme

🧘8

Woke Score

86

Critic

🍿88

Audience

Ultra Based

Critics rated this 78 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #214 of 1469.

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Representation Casting

Score: 32/100

Includes Black cast members in secondary roles (Kasi Lemmons, Frankie Faison) but without any particular consciousness regarding representation or integration into the narrative.

🏳️‍🌈

LGBTQ+ Themes

Score: 0/100

No LGBTQ+ themes or characters. The film treats gender and sexuality in conventional, heteronormative terms.

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Feminist Agenda

Score: 42/100

Clarice is competent and intelligent, but the film frames her primarily through male perspectives and explicitly uses her attractiveness as tactical advantage. Progressive by 1991 standards but not by contemporary measures.

Racial Consciousness

Score: 8/100

Minimal engagement with racial themes. Black characters appear in minor roles without any exploration of racial dynamics or systemic inequality.

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Climate Crusade

Score: 0/100

No climate-related themes or environmental consciousness whatsoever.

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Eat the Rich

Score: 0/100

The film accepts institutional hierarchies and capitalist law enforcement structures without question.

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Body Positivity

Score: 0/100

No engagement with body positivity or body acceptance themes. Bodies are presented conventionally.

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Neurodivergence

Score: 5/100

Hannibal Lecter is portrayed as a brilliant psychopath, but the film does not engage with neurodivergence as a concept or explore it with any nuance.

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Revisionist History

Score: 0/100

A contemporary thriller with no historical setting or revisionist historical engagement.

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Lecture Energy

Score: 0/100

The film prioritizes plot and character interaction over preachy exposition or moral instruction.

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Synopsis

Clarice Starling is a top student at the FBI's training academy. Jack Crawford wants Clarice to interview Dr. Hannibal Lecter, a brilliant psychiatrist who is also a violent psychopath, serving life behind bars for various acts of murder and cannibalism. Crawford believes that Lecter may have insight into a case and that Starling, as an attractive young woman, may be just the bait to draw him out.

Consciousness Assessment

The Silence of the Lambs presents a curious case study in pre-contemporary progressive sensibilities. The film centers on a capable female protagonist who operates within and against the patriarchal structures of law enforcement, using her intellect rather than physical dominance to navigate a male-dominated investigation. Clarice Starling is portrayed with genuine agency and competence, yet the film cannot help but frame her through the male gaze, most notably when Crawford explicitly deploys her attractiveness as tactical bait. This contradiction sits at the heart of the picture: a film about a woman's professional ascendancy that simultaneously reduces her to her utility as a woman.

The supporting cast includes Kasi Lemmons and Frankie Faison in minor roles, representing a baseline level of racial diversity typical of early 1990s studio filmmaking without any particular consciousness regarding representation. The film makes no effort to interrogate systems of power, inequality, or historical injustice. It is a procedural thriller about hunting a serial killer, operating within conventional genre constraints rather than challenging them. The violence depicted serves the narrative mechanics rather than any broader cultural commentary.

What remains undeniable is that Clarice functions as a complex female character in a genre dominated by male protagonists, which accounts for the modest elevation in score. Yet the film predates the contemporary discourse around progressive sensibilities by decades, and any progressive elements emerge accidentally rather than by design. We should resist the temptation to retrofit modern cultural categories onto a work that operates according to its own era's logic.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

86%from 20 reviews
Variety100

A mesmerizing thriller that will grip audiences from first scene to last.

Staff [Not Credited]Read Full Review →
San Francisco Chronicle100

The interplay between Starling and Lector as they share an indefinable, dark understanding gives the film its unforgettable and unsettling power. [14 February 1991, Daily Notebook, p.E1]

Judy StoneRead Full Review →
Rolling Stone100

The superbly crafted suspense thriller…slams you like a sudden blast of bone-chilling, pulse-pounding terror.

Peter TraversRead Full Review →
The Globe and Mail (Toronto)50

The plot is squeezed dry in this bloody Valentine from Hollywood and becomes annoyingly predictable. Thriller stumbles on its own success