Red Dragon is a 2002 thriller film, based on the novel of the same name written by Thomas Harris featuring the brilliant psychiatrist and menacing serial killer Dr. Hannibal Lecter.
Directed by Brett Ratner and written by Ted Tally (who also wrote the screenplay for The Silence of the Lambs), it starred Edward Norton as Graham and Anthony Hopkins as Lecter — a role he had, by then, played twice before in The Silence of the Lambs and Hannibal.
Red Dragon is, in publishing chronology, the first story in the Lecter saga (Hannibal Rising, a later-published origin story, was released on February 9, 2007). Red Dragon's story takes place before the events in The Silence of the Lambs, and after Lecter's original capture and incarceration. While Lecter plays a central role, Red Dragon focuses more on the characters of Will Graham and the tortured serial killer, Francis Dolarhyde.
In his Baltimore townhouse, famous local psychiatrist Dr. Hannibal Lecter hosts a dinner party. The main subject of conversation over dinner is the disappearance of a local musician who was criticized for playing several false notes at a concert that Lecter attended. He then serves what the guests see as a delicious meal.
After dinner, Lecter is visited by Will Graham, a young gifted FBI agent, with whom he has been working on a psychological profile of a local serial killer. Body parts of the victims were removed by the killer and Graham is convinced that the killer is actually a cannibal. During the consultation and brainstorming session, Graham discovers evidence implicating Dr. Lecter in the murders, shortly before Lecter returns and attacks Graham, wounding and nearly killing him before Graham resists and subdues him.
Lecter is subsequently sentenced to life imprisonment in an institution for the criminally insane while Graham, severely traumatized by the experience, retires from the FBI.
Years later, another serial killer appears. Nicknamed the Tooth Fairy, he stalks and murders seemingly random families during sequential full moons. Hoping to speed things up and capture the killer before his next attack, Special Agent Jack Crawford seeks out Graham and pleads for his assistance. Graham, believing the death of another family to be an unbearable burden on his conscience, reluctantly agrees. After checking over the crime scenes, with only minimal insight, he comes to the realization that most of his previous successes were achieved due to the insightful collaborations of Dr. Lecter, and concludes that he must once again visit Lecter and seek his help in capturing the Tooth Fairy.
The Tooth Fairy is actually a disturbed man named Francis Dolarhyde who worships Lecter after learning of his crimes. Calling himself The Great Red Dragon (because of his obsession with the William Blake painting, "The Great Red Dragon and the Woman Clothed in Sun"), Dolarhyde is unable to control his violent and sexual urges, which turns him into a dangerous serial killer. These conditions were born from the systematic child abuse he suffered at the hands of his grandmother.
Graham continues to run into complications, the first being Freddy Lounds, a tabloid reporter whom Graham despises from the days following the conviction of Dr. Lecter and who now follows Graham relentlessly for leads on the Tooth Fairy story. Further complicating the investigation is the secret correspondence between Lecter and Dolarhyde, where Lecter provides Dolarhyde with Graham's home address, endangering Graham's wife and child, who are evacuated to a remote farm which belongs to Crawford's brother. Graham discovers the secret communication and tries to intercept it without Lecter's knowledge but the doctor is quick to realise that the Feds are onto him and his protegé and humiliates the authorities by upping the stakes in return for his help in capturing the Tooth Fairy, such as being served a first-class meal in his cell and having his book privileges returned.
Hoping to lure the Tooth Fairy into a trap, Graham gives Lounds an interview in which he gives dispariging details about what the FBI believe the killer to be: impotent and pathetic — whereas in fact they consider him highly dangerous and cunning. This provokes Dolarhyde but instead of Graham he kidnaps Lounds, tortures him, forces him to recant his allegations before setting him on fire and depositing him outside his newspaper's offices.
At about the same time, Dolarhyde falls in love with a blind co-worker named Reba McClane. Dolarhyde's new-found love conflicts with his homicidal urges, which manifest themselves in his mind as 'The Great Red Dragon'. After his association with Reba, Dolarhyde attempts to stop the Dragon's "possession" of him. In order to stop killing, he believes that he must dominate the dragon by consuming the original painting. Dolarhyde goes to the Brooklyn Museum, beats a museum secretary unconscious, and tears apart and eats the original Blake watercolor of The Red Dragon.
Graham eventually realizes that the killer knew the layout of his victims' houses from their home videos, which he only could have seen if he worked for a home video editing company, a company that transfers home movies to video cassette. Dolarhyde's job gives him access to all home movies that pass through the company. When he sees Graham interviewing his boss, Dolarhyde realises that they are on to him and goes to see Reba one last time. He finds her talking to a co-worker, Ralph Mandy, a man whom she actually dislikes. Enraged, Dolorhyde kills Ralph Mandy, kidnaps McClane and, having taken her to his house, sets the place on fire. He intends to kill her and then himself, but finds himself unable to shoot her. After he shoots himself with a shotgun, McClane escapes.
Graham is given Dolarhyde's scrapbook, saved from the wreckage of the house, which details the killer's tragic childhood and obsessions with murder. Despite himself, Graham feels pity for Dolarhyde, who he realizes was made a monster, not born one.
However, it turns out Dolarhyde did not shoot himself but left behind the body of Ralph Mandy in order to stage his own death. Dolarhyde then surprises Graham at his Florida home, holding Graham's son at knifepoint. In order to save the boy, Graham slings insults at his son that are reminiscent of the ones that Dolarhyde's grandmother had used against him, which Graham found in the scrapbook. This enrages Dolarhyde, who attacks Graham, allowing his son to escape to safety. Both Graham and Dolarhyde are severely wounded in a close-range shootout with each other when Graham's wife, Molly, having happened on the scene, finishes off Dolarhyde by shooting him in the head several times.
After recovering, Graham receives a letter from Lecter, which bids him well and hopes that he isn't too "disfigured". Graham throws it into the sea. Dr. Frederick Chilton then informs Lecter that there is a young woman from the FBI waiting to speak with him. Lecter asks what her name is — presumably Clarice Starling.
Allusions to The Silence of the Lambs and Hannibal
The film's opening sequence, featureing the dinner party at Lecter's home, is a direct reference to The Silence of the Lambs. In this novel, Clarice Starling learns that Lecter had murdered the musician and fed parts of his body to the rest of the sympathny orchestra at his annual dinner party. So, naturally, the musician in question, Benjamin Rasbial, would have already been missing. This part was never mentioned in the novel adaption of Red Dragon.It is learned in Hannibal that Lecter chose his victims based on his belief that they were rude in some manner. In the film, it is mentioned that he had attended the concert in which the missing musician had played the wrong notes, ruining the piece. This falls directly into Lecter's definition of someone being rude. Since Red Dragon was written before Hannibal, this was also not mentioned in the book.
Differences between versions
The story of Red Dragon has been filmed twice. The first film, released in 1986 under the title Manhunter, was written and directed by Michael Mann and focused on FBI Special Agent Will Graham, played by William Petersen. Lecter (renamed Lecktor) was played by Brian Cox. Manhunter is often recognized as a looser adaptation, leaving out Dolarhyde's backstory and having him die at Graham's hands during the climactic scene of the movie. Ratner's Red Dragon was more faithful to the novel in some respects. Lecter in Ratner's adaptation appears numerous times, and even the opening sequence was filmed specifically to show the audience how he got caught by Will Graham (in a version modified from the book). Red Dragon's chronology also does not match that of the novel.The character Ralph Mandy corresponds to Ralph Dandridge in Manhunter, and a composite of Dandridge and Ralph Mandy in the novel. Also, the body of Ralph Mandy found in the burned down house in the novel is instead that of a gas station attendant with whom Dolarhyde had a previous confrontation.
At the end of the film version of Red Dragon, the family is whole and sailing together on a boat. Will reads a letter from Lecter (transcribed verbatim from the book) and throws it into the ocean in contempt. The book ends with Graham in the hospital recovering from Dolarhyde's attack. Jack Crawford intercepts the letter before Graham ever learns of its existence. He reads it and destroys it without telling Will.
Cast
Anthony Hopkins - Hannibal Lecter- Edward Norton - Will Graham
- Ralph Fiennes - Francis Dolarhyde
- Harvey Keitel - Jack Crawford
- Emily Watson - Reba McClane
- Philip Seymour Hoffman - Freddy Lounds
- Mary-Louise Parker - Molly Graham
- Anthony Heald - Frederick Chilton
- Ken Leung - Lloyd Bowman
- Frankie Faison - Barney Matthews
- Ellen Burstyn - Grandma Dolarhyde (voice)
- Frank Langella - Great Red Dragon (voice) (scenes deleted)
Source : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Dragon_(film)
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