The Silence of the Lambs/Trivia


 * Author Existence Failure: The reason Ron Vawter didn't return as Paul Krendler.
 * The Danza: William Petersen as William "Will" Graham.
 * Enforced Method Acting:
 * Anthony Hopkins deliberately provoked Jodie Foster off-camera by mocking her rendition of a West Virginia accent, which helped her convey Clarice's outrage when Hannibal taunted her for hiding her in-character accent.
 * And taken Up to Eleven by John Douglas, whom the character of Jack Crawford was modeled on: Scott Glenn consulted Douglas as part of research. Douglas played him tapes of a young teenager being tortured by serial killers Lawrence Bittaker and Roy Norris; Glenn left the office in tears. He refused to take the role in the sequel as a result.
 * When filming phonecalls, it is standard practice to film both sides separately and have the actors pretend they're having a phone call. At the end of Silence they hooked up the phone to the phone network and had Hopkins call from the set of another movie across the country. When Jodie Foster picks up the phone and Hopkins speaks back to her the look of surprise on her face is genuine.
 * Executive Meddling: There was not going to be Hannibal Rising except execs told Harris someone else would write the book if he refused.
 * Hey, It's That Guy!: Captain Stottlemeyer is gonna . Also, he's a dad in The Hills Have Eyes remake. And the hero of The Mangler.
 * That crazy team leader from Vertical Limit is Jack Crawford?? Or wait a minute, am I thinking of Donald Rumsfeld from Oliver Stone's W?
 * Oh, and one more thing: he was also the Wise Man in Sucker Punch.
 * Peter Cook was a cannibal Nazi?
 * Bob (!!!) had a side-career helping out with autopsies at a funeral parlour?!
 * Barney eventually became the Commissioner of the Baltimore police department.
 * Cordell later became a federal agent on a munhunt for people with superpowers.
 * Murdock apparently moonlights as a police Lieutenant in Tennessee.
 * Hannibal's Italian voice actor is also Doc Brown and Bender.
 * Life Imitates Art: In the book, the FBI approaches Johns Hopkins, a known center for sex-reassignment surgery, for help tracking down Buffalo Bill. The institute refuses, objecting that this would give transgender people a bad name. After this exchange was cut from the movie, real-life activist groups made the same complaint about the film.
 * In the book, the FBI was able to get what they needed by emphasizing that they didn't want names of people they'd approved for the surgery, but of people they'd rejected because they were not transgender. The diagnosis of Lecter's that they were going by pegged Buffalo Bill as more of a transsexual wannabe.
 * The Other Darrin: Pretty much everyone at some point.
 * Star-Making Role: For Anthony Hopkins who was 54 when he got the role.
 * Throw It In: Ft-ft-ft-ft-ft-ft. Hopkins threw this in as a joke at the end of the take (hence the long pause between the end of the line and when he actually starts the noises) but the director decided it was appropriately creepy and kept it.
 * What Could Have Been: Hannibal: A Jonathan Demme film. Starring Jodie Foster, Anthony Hopkins, and Scott Glenn. Screenplay by Ted Tally.
 * Louis Gosset Jr. auditioned for the part of Hannibal in Silence but claims he was turned down partly because they didn't want to make him a Scary Black Man. I have no idea what he's talking about.
 * Silence was initially put together at the behest of Gene Hackman, who planned to direct and star as Hannibal Lecter. When he left the project, Robert Duvall was considered for the role. Dustin Hoffman and Robert De Niro are also rumored to have been in the running. Michelle Pfeiffer was Demme's original choice for Starling, and her refusal cleared the way for Jodie Foster. Mickey Rourke was offered the part of Jack Crawford and turned it down.