Is it Hannibal Lecter’s high IQ that captivates us? Hopkins’s portrayal as a man with a dense vocabulary certainly subverts our expectations of the mute thugs of our nightmares. Jason Voorhees and Michael Myers were not known for their sparkling dinner repartee. Perhaps it is this stark difference that absorbs our attention. In fact, a serial killer with an abnormally high IQ is not just a fiction of Thomas Harris’s. Ed Kemper, a real serial murderer popularized by the horrifically disturbing performance by Cameron Britton in 2017’s
What is interesting to note, is that all of these murderers are well-known in the public sphere, which lends to the notion that as a society we are fascinated with high-functioning serial murderers. As Oleson maintains, “the public exhibits a seemingly insatiable appetite for true crime, and has exalted many serial killers into its pantheon of infamy, but one serial killer commands the popular imagination unlike any other: Dr. Hannibal ‘The Cannibal’ Lecter.” While his superior brain enhances Dr. Lecter’s charm, there are other facets to his villainy. In his article for
Like many Hollywood monsters and boogeymen, Dr. Hannibal Lecter is exciting and magnetic because he is completely goal oriented, devoid of conscience and almost unstoppable. Hannibal Lecter is uniquely different than any other Hollywood movie monster or killer, however. Unlike cartoonish characters such as Godzilla or Freddy Krueger, Dr. Lecter is human. He is also brilliant, witty and even charming.6
Again, we are faced with the duality of monsters. Hannibal Lecter is both monster and man, an amalgam of the two. This schism has burst forth as a defining component of a memorable movie villain. Bonn continues, asserting that it is this humanity that ultimately generates our mesmerization by Hannibal “The Cannibal” Lecter:
My research suggests that Dr. Lecter’s enduring popular appeal and the terror he invokes are due to the fact that he is depicted as a mortal man. In many ways, he is like the rest of us. He bleeds and he feels pain. His humanness makes him a much more relatable and identifiable villain to the public.
As we continue our pursuit of further understanding film’s most notorious monsters, we are curious to note if this duality exists in witches, slashers, creatures, and beyond.
With all serial killers, both real and fictional, there are a multitude of psychological questions we could pose, though one word or taboo concept is synonymous with Dr. Lecter. Every viewer of
The Donner Party is widely known as a prime example of “normal” or non-deviant humans resorting to cannibalism to survive. In the winter of 1846, the Donners, along with eighty members of their settler party, became inexorably trapped in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California. In what was considered one of the worst winters on record, thirty-nine people perished from the cruel effects of the low temperatures and drifts of relentless snow.