Monday, February 20, 2017

Red Dragon



Certain characters rise above the basic idea of a crazed killer to become a pop culture phenomenon. Norman Bates from Psycho has been firmly planted in the minds of the public since the 1960’s as a memorably unique character. However, in more recent pop culture, the idea of a psychotic serial killer is exemplified by one highly intellectual doctor, Hannibal Lecter. Reading his debut in Red Dragon by Thomas Harris, his infamy is easy to recognize, even as a more minor character. With a book this good, it’s impossible not to have iconic characters and a permeant mark on the horror genre to spring forth.
To be clear, Red Dragon has two fascinating psychotic serial killer adversaries for the FBI and Will Graham to contend with. Lecter isn’t the primary threat, as he is locked up securely throughout the course of the story. The Red Dragon (the press initially calls him the Tooth Fairy) is the killer on the loose.
The Dragon is well built as a psycho; a shy man with an extreme case of low self-esteem and body-dysmorphic issues based on his hare-lip. Harris includes a backstory section that gives the reader the opportunity to see how the Dragon grew into the serial killer he is, yet he is careful to leave the tid-bits in the past for the reader to construct for themselves. Specifics on his trauma from his mentally ill grandmother as well as his unloving mother and step family seep into his method of killing and choice of victims. This was done brilliantly to allow the audience the feeling of piecing the Dragon’s mind together themselves. It also created a twinge of sympathy for the man, while building disgust of him by his actions.
At the same time, Harris takes care to give Lecter a chilling sense of mystery. Graham isn’t able to give any more insight into why Lecter kills besides the fact that he enjoys it. Lecter is unnervingly calm and calculating. His interactions with Graham and the Dragon are limited, yet the reader gets the sense he is manipulating some of the action, watching over the other characters and deriving pleasure from the blood spilt. His code to give the Dragon Graham’s home address leads not only to the end demise of the Dragon, but the eventual erosion of Graham’s marriage and physical harm to Graham. Readers can’t help but wonder if Lecter had planned this all along. While the Dragon draws some understanding and a bit of pity from the audience, Lecter is irresistible interesting without explanation. It’s no wonder audiences have been insatiable for the character ever since.
Will Graham is also a well-developed character. The audience instantly identifies with him from the opening scene- a man who has put his demons behind him to have a relaxed family life only to have the past pull him back. I think everyone can sympathize with that, people are often plagued by the past. Readers might identify with him as an empath type character that must confront human violence in its extreme over and over again. He’s not the gloating, glory seeking hero, which is refreshing. His intuition isn’t magical either. There is a whole cast of specialists that add to his natural gut-feeling. The hunt for the Dragon is pieced together a clue at a time, not in a quick accurate succession. Graham does find a way into the killer’s head, but it is hard and painfully won. Although Graham wasn’t the most interesting of the characters (who really can compete with two bizarre psychos?), he does manage to hold his own in the story. I cared about his and his family’s safety enough to feel the tension in the story.

I felt adding in the Reba McClane character to disrupt the killer’s routine was an interesting twist. People expect that psychos have a pattern that is repeated over and over again. Harris explores here what would happen if something occurred in such a life changing way that the pattern is broken. The Dragon has a set ideas of himself and the world, and along comes this beautiful blind woman (careful crafted to be a strong individual and not just some helpless victim) that gives him evidence the world is not as he has assumed. His concerns about his physical appearance don’t matter to her, and he is confronted with a genuinely loving interaction with a woman which he never had expereinced before. Harris splits the Dragon from the man and records the battel between them for the reader. I’m not sure exactly how I feel about this deviation for the killer. While this was an interesting peek into the complicated workings of the killer’s mind, it felt as if we had gotten off track as far as plot goes. Suddenly the next family on the list took a backseat and the possible redemption took over. It also made the surprise attack at the end awkward. The reader now perceives the Dragon as a troubled man, not a soulless killing machine. Having this character ruthlessly attack Graham in the manner he did just didn’t sit completely right with me. For some reason, I felt slightly disappointed.
The investigation felt authentic for the most part. At some points, it did seem that Graham had some special treatment I wasn’t positive he could get, such as being able to wander through the Leedes’ house/crime scene alone and being able to visit Lecter on a whim. However, I honestly have no idea what the FBI is actually capable of, so maybe I’m not the best person to judge the authenticity. Nothing popped out to me to be incredible inaccurate.
I would like to add that in many ways, The Sculptor felt like a poorly executed imitation of this book after examining them side by side.

Overall, this is a great read. Any little slips of head-hopping POV and such are invisible under the strong storytelling. A solid read that anyone who enjoys a good psycho and a creepy story. 

5 comments:

  1. While I agree with you for the most part, I didn't find Graham as easy to relate to, I felt a little disconnected. I wanted just as much insight into his past as we got into the Dragon's. I do agree that his methods and personality were refreshing and more realistic.
    I think we differed in opinion most on the Reba story line. I absolutely loved it. For the first time ever we see a woman who puts up a road block and deviates everything for the psycho killer. We find that he is not this killing machine but when shown unconditional love he tries to stop himself and yet is so far gone, he can't. I believe that the next family's killing would get derailed by this complication and I found it fascinating to see him try to disconnect with this other personality he was fighting so hard to become. I think this was truly his downfall. And when his alter ego won out, the tiny human part died away and the animalistic psycho took over. That he would want to lash out so severely at Graham and anyone else, made sense to me. I felt this was almost pivotal for the ending to go as it did.
    But bottom line, it is Lector, even in his bit part that leaves an impression on the reader.

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  2. Since, I've seen Hannibal, a television show that depicts Dr. Lecter and Will Graham BEFORE Lecter is incarcerated, I definitely feel I didn't have as many questions. It actually kind of fills in the holes that you mentioned, answers a few of your questions about Graham's past, and provides more insight into his relationship with Dr. Lecter and the FBI.

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  3. Vanessa, I agree that Lector appeared to be manipulating a great deal of the story from his little prison cell! And while I did get a twinge of "what is this side track with Reba all about?" overall, I agree with Joe-la's assessment of the romance -- it was wrenching to see Dolarhyde struggle with feelings that he was way past being able to handle by this point. So, I could see the bitter overreaction in his attack on Graham making a kind of sense.
    And that picture of the dragon -- hard to believe that's a little watercolor!

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  4. I'm so glad you found Graham a relatable character. He is definately not the thrill-seeking, fame-hungry type and that makes him very likable. He is just an average guy that wants to live a simple life and is trying put past traumas behind him. But as you said, he is also excellent at what he does, but not in such a way that it is unbelievable. The mystery surrounding Hannibal is great for adding that tension to his relationship with Graham. I like the whole possible revenge take on Hannibal handing the Tooth Fairy Graham's address. The ambiguaty as to whether it is revenge on Graham or to help them catch the killer adds to the unknown thoughts behind Hannibal's motives and what's really going through his head.

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  5. I'm so glad you found Graham a relatable character. He is definately not the thrill-seeking, fame-hungry type and that makes him very likable. He is just an average guy that wants to live a simple life and is trying put past traumas behind him. But as you said, he is also excellent at what he does, but not in such a way that it is unbelievable. The mystery surrounding Hannibal is great for adding that tension to his relationship with Graham. I like the whole possible revenge take on Hannibal handing the Tooth Fairy Graham's address. The ambiguaty as to whether it is revenge on Graham or to help them catch the killer adds to the unknown thoughts behind Hannibal's motives and what's really going through his head.

    ReplyDelete