Buffalo Bill (character): Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
Grammar correction: A -> an |
SilverLocust (talk | contribs) Retarget redirect to Buffalo Bill (The Silence of the Lambs) using pageswap Tag: Redirect target changed |
||
(6 intermediate revisions by 5 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
⚫ | |||
{| class="infobox" style="width: 21em; font-size: 90%; text-align: left" |
|||
|- |
|||
! colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Hannibal Lecter|Hannibal Tetralogy]]'' character |
|||
|- |
|||
| colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | [[Image:silencelamp7.jpg|200px]] |
|||
|- |
|||
! colspan="2" style="text-align:center; font-size: larger; background-color: #001; color: #ffa;" |Buffalo Bill |
|||
|- |
|||
! Real Name |
|||
| Jame Gumb (a misprint of James Gumb) |
|||
|- |
|||
! Aliases |
|||
| Mr. Hide<br>John Grant<br>Jack Gordon<br>Jamie Gumb<br> |
|||
|- |
|||
! Nicknames/ Other |
|||
| '''"Buffalo Bill",'''<br>'''(William) "Billy" Rubin''' (novel name Lecter gives),<br>'''Louis Friend''' (film name Lecter gives)<br> |
|||
|- |
|||
! Gender |
|||
| [[Male]] |
|||
|- |
|||
! Race |
|||
| [[Caucasian race|Caucasian]] |
|||
|- |
|||
! Birth |
|||
| [[1948]] |
|||
|- |
|||
! Relationships |
|||
| Benjamin Raspail (Lover)<br>Fredrica Bimmel (Girlfriend, later victim) |
|||
|- |
|||
![[Modus operandi|M.O.]] |
|||
|Kidnapping by acting disabled and getting people in his van. Leaving his victim in a pit for a few days, then partially skinning the victim for use of skin. |
|||
|- |
|||
! Cause of death: |
|||
| Shot by [[Clarice Starling]] |
|||
|- |
|||
! Portrayed by: |
|||
| [[Ted Levine]] |
|||
|} |
|||
'''Buffalo Bill''' is the main [[antagonist]] in the [[1988]] [[novel]] ''[[The Silence of the Lambs (novel)|The Silence of the Lambs]]'' by [[Thomas Harris]], and its 1991 [[The Silence of the Lambs (film)|film adaptation]], in which he was played by [[Ted Levine]]. |
|||
==Character overview== |
|||
Bill's real name is '''Jame Gumb''' ("James" was misspelled on his [[birth certificate]]). A [[serial killer]], he [[murder]]s overweight women so he can remove their skin and fashion a "woman suit" for himself; he believes himself to be [[transsexual]] but is too disturbed to qualify for [[sex reassignment surgery]]. He becomes known as "[[Buffalo Bill]]" during his murder spree because of an off-color joke by [[Kansas City, Missouri|Kansas City]] homicide detectives; upon discovering his first victim, the detectives say "This one likes to skin his humps." |
|||
==Character history== |
|||
The novel reveals that Gumb was abandoned by his [[alcoholic]] mother, and raised by his grandparents, who became his first victims when he killed them impulsively as a teenager. After being released from a juvenile facility, he went on to serve in the [[United States Navy|Navy]]. |
|||
He begins the "Buffalo Bill" murders by killing a girlfriend named Fredrica Bimmel. Bimmel's is the third body found and the only one Gumb attempts to hide, by weighting it down in a riverbed. |
|||
Gumb's [[method]] is to [[kidnapping|kidnap]] a woman by approaching her pretending to be injured, asking for help loading something heavy into his [[van]], and then knocking her out in a surprise attack from behind. Once he has a woman in his house, he starves her until her skin is loose enough to easily remove, then shoots and skins her, and dumps the body. He then places a [[Death's Head moth]] in her throat. He is fascinated by the moths' [[Metamorphosis (biology)|metamorphosis]], a process he wants to undergo by becoming a woman. In one of the film's more infamous scenes, he dances around with his [[penis]] tucked between his legs, wearing a silk cape which he flourishes like butterfly wings--as one of his victims works toward her escape offscreen. Gumb thinks of his victims as ''things'' rather than people, often referring to his victims as "it", e.g., "It rubs the lotion on its skin, or else it gets the hose again." |
|||
The [[FBI]] intensifies the manhunt for Gumb when he kidnaps Catherine Martin, the daughter of [[United States Senate|U.S. Senator]] Ruth Martin. Then-FBI trainee [[Clarice Starling]] enlists Lecter's help in tracking him down, as Lecter had met him while treating Benjamin Raspail, a lover of Gumb's. Lecter gives Starling a series of cryptic clues to Gumb's identity, but never reveals his name in hopes that Starling would figure it out for herself. She eventually deciphers one of the doctor's riddles — "We covet what we see every day" — and realizes that Gumb knew his first victim, Bimmel. |
|||
Starling convinces her mentor, FBI Director [[Jack Crawford (character)|Jack Crawford]], to allow her to follow up on the lead. She travels to [[Belvedere, Ohio]], Bimmel's hometown, to question her family and acquaintances. Over the phone she is informed that the FBI has learned the name of the killer and is deploying to [[Chicago]] with the [[FBI Hostage Rescue Team]] to take him down. |
|||
Starling, meanwhile, goes to the house of a Mrs. Lippman, Bimmel's elderly employer, only to find Gumb himself, calling himself "Jack Gordon." Gumb had killed the old woman, and is living in her house and using it as a [[torture]] chamber for his victims. Starling realizes who he really is when she sees a [[Death's Head Hawkmoth|Death's Head Moth]] flutter by, and orders him to surrender. Gumb flees into the basement with Starling in pursuit, and then cuts power to the basement and stalks her with [[night vision goggles]]. As he cocks his revolver, Starling instinctively fires at the sound, killing him. With his dying breath, Gumb asks Starling how it feels to be beautiful. Martin is rescued, and Starling becomes an hero, as well as a full-fledged agent. |
|||
==Character notes and controversy== |
|||
The movie [[screenwriting|screenwriter]] [[Ted Tally]] does not delve too deeply into Gumb's [[pathology]], but, in the movie, Lecter summarizes his life thus: "Billy was not born a criminal, but made one by years of systematic [[abuse]]." |
|||
The film adaptation of ''Silence of the Lambs'' was criticized by some [[gay rights]] groups for its portrayal of the [[Psychopathy#Sociopathy|sociopathic]] Gumb as [[bisexual]] and transsexual. A [[Johns Hopkins Hospital|Johns Hopkins]] sex-reassignment surgeon, present in the book but not the film, protests the exact same thing; Crawford pacifies him by repeating that Gumb is ''not'' in fact transsexual, though he believes himself to be. In the film, a similar scene is shown with Starling and Lecter in the same roles as the surgeon and Crawford, respectively. Also controversial was the [[swastika]]-laden [[quilt]] Gumb had in his bedroom. It is never directly stated that he is [[anti-Semitic]]. In the director's commentary for the 1991 film, director [[Jonathan Demme]] draws attention to various [[Polaroid]]s taken of Buffalo Bill in the company of strippers; these are visible in Gumb's basement in the film. |
|||
== Similarities between Buffalo Bill and Francis Dolarhyde == |
|||
{{Original research|section|date=July 2008}} |
|||
Jame Gumb shares many similarities between himself and [[Francis Dolarhyde]] from ''[[Red Dragon]]''. |
|||
The first, and most obvious is their hatred of their own [[personal identity]]. Dolarhyde was convinced by his abusive grandmother that he is ugly at an early age, which is why he breaks all the [[mirrors]] in his victim's houses and is often angered or driven to kill by what others say about the way he looks, even if what they say is not meant as an insult. Gumb was also abused to the point where he hated his own identity so much that he came to believe he was a [[transexual]]. |
|||
There is also the fact that they both care about something or someone despite their ruthless and potentially [[insane]] nature. In the case of Jame Gumb, it was his [[poodle]], Precious. In the case of Dolarhyde, it was Reba Mcclaren, a blind woman he had met and who was attracted to him, not knowing that he was a killer. |
|||
In the case of their murders, they both leave a [[calling card]]. For Dolarhyde, it was stabbed eyes with pieces of glass from the broken mirrors and a symbol he carved into a tree as the sign of the Red Dragon. Gumb left the women's clothes out that he killed, sliced up the back and eventually removed the women's skin after three days and dumping them in a river. Gumb also shoved [[Deaths Head Moth]] [[cocoon]] down the victim's throat. |
|||
== Influences == |
|||
Harris based Gumb on five real-life killers:<ref>Bruno, Anthony. [http://www.crimelibrary.com/serial_killers/weird/lecter/2.html "Buffalo Bill" page 2 - ''"All About Hannibal Lecter - Facts and Fiction"''] @ Crime Library.com</ref><ref name=Salon>Bowman, David.[http://www.salon.com/books/feature/1999/07/08/profiler/print.html ''"Profiler"''] Interview with John E. Douglas @ Salon.com July 8, 1999.</ref> |
|||
* [[Gary Ridgway]], who like Gumb only murdered women and dumped his victims bodies in rivers often with objects inserted inside their bodies. |
|||
* [[Ed Gein]], who murdered two women and dug up several graves to make a "woman suit" for himself. |
|||
* [[Ted Bundy]], who pretended to be injured and asked his victims for help, and then incapacitated and killed them. |
|||
* [[Gary M. Heidnik|Gary Heidnik]], who kidnapped five women and held them hostage as [[sex slave]]s. |
|||
* [[Edmund Kemper]], who, like Gumb, killed his grandparents as a teenager "just to see what it felt like". |
|||
== References == |
|||
{{reflist}} |
|||
{{Hannibal}} |
|||
⚫ | |||
[[Category:Hannibal]] |
|||
[[Category:Fictional characters based on real people]] |
|||
[[Category:Fictional bisexuals]] |
|||
[[Category:Fictional serial killers]] |
|||
[[Category:Horror film characters]] |
|||
[[no:Jame Gumb]] |
|||
[[pl:Jame Gumb]] |
Latest revision as of 06:58, 2 March 2024
Redirect to: