Sunday Tribune

Why the TV remake of ‘Clarice’ is an insult to the original

- DEBASHINE THANGEVELO

SERIOUSLY, why would CBS attempt a remake of The Silence of the Lambs?

The network has been tackling remakes with unmistakab­le gusto. Now there is absolutely nothing wrong with it, provided that it does the original justice.

CBS failed to learn anything from the flop that is The Equalizer, with Queen Latifah. The TV series misfired for several reasons, among those were the mediocre storylines and terribly lame action.

If anything, it got pity views largely due to Latifah’s involvemen­t. Of course, this is more of a testament to star-clout once again providing a safety net.

This brings me to Clarice, which sees Australian actress Rebecca Breeds slipping into Jodie Foster’s iconic role as Clarice Starling.

Before delving into this TV remake, there are a few things I would like to point out.

Jonathan Demme’s 1991 psychologi­cal thriller The Silence of the Lambs is celebrated as one of the greatest and most influentia­l films of all time.

Based on Thomas Harris’s novel of the same title, the film, while terribly disturbing, was also compelling. And it cleaned up at the Oscars, too.

Anthony Hopkins as Dr Hannibal Lecter, an exceptiona­l psychologi­st as well as cannibalis­tic serial killer, and Foster as Clarice Starling, a fresh-outof-the-academy recruit to the FBI’S Behavioura­l Science Unit, will forever be remembered for one of their finest performanc­es.

The movie made Empire’s 500 greatest movies of all time – it ranked at 48 – and it was listed as the fifth-greatest and most influentia­l thriller movie by The American Film Institute.

This psychologi­cal thriller was truly

in a league of its own, from the scriptwrit­ing and casting to the directing.

And it is for this reason that a remake of The Silence of the Lambs, especially for a TV series, should be done with careful considerat­ion.

In 2013, NBC released Hannibal with Mads Mikkelsen delivering an impeccable performanc­e as Hannibal Lector while Hugh Dancy was cast as a

gifted criminal profiler, Will Graham.

The series was a hit. The writers wonderfull­y blurred the line between right and wrong with the two characters. They looked at inner darkness versus inner goodness.

It ended after three seasons with mostly favourable reviews.

Unfortunat­ely, I don’t see Clarice making such strides. Of the two episodes but I’ve watched so far, I struggled to connect with the lead character, who lacks screen presence.

At the start of the series, there’s a interestin­g interactio­n between US Attorney-general Ruth Martin (Jayne Atkinson) and Clarice.

Ruth says: “You are a woman with a very public reputation for hunting monsters.”

“I can’t have a reputation, I’ve only done it once,” Clarice responds.

“It is time you owned that reputation,” Ruth asserts.

And so Clarice joins Martin’s new VICAP task force, a specialist team responsibl­e for taking down murderers, serial killers and sexual predators.

The writers attempted to give several characters interestin­g backstorie­s, including linking Ruth and Clarice – Clarice saved Ruth’s daughter while trying to catch the serial killer known as Buffalo Bill.

Sadly, this connection is one that is more agenda-driven than heartwarmi­ng, which I believe was the true intention here.

Meanwhile, Clarice is battling her own demons and her psychiatri­st has misgivings about her being back in the field.

Yes, she gets the job done. But she is weighed down by a lot of emotion.

And that’s the issue I have. The writers have taken a strong, formidable character and turned her into an emotional casserole that would be better cast in an episode of Grey’s Anatomy.

Even when she is challengin­g her superior, she kind of cowers and backtracks.

If the writers thought she would be more endearing as an empathetic lead, they were sadly mistaken. Not for a series saturated with dark and depraved characters. If anything, she should have balls of steel and be defiantly heroic.

The storyline, somewhat misogynist­ic at times, has taken an unapologet­ic tour de force character and turned her into a pussyfooti­ng lead.

And that is the greatest tragedy of this contrived remake. It’s antiquated, boring and, truth be told, an insult to the original.

Clarice airs on M-net (Dstv channel 101) on Thursdays at 9.30pm.

 ??  ?? AUSTRALIAN actress Rebecca Breeds slips into Jodie Foster’s iconic role as Clarice Starling.
AUSTRALIAN actress Rebecca Breeds slips into Jodie Foster’s iconic role as Clarice Starling.

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