One striking aspect of The Silence of the Lambs is the care taken by its director, Jonathan Demme, and its screenwriter, Ted Tally, to establish Starling and her well-ordered world. A trainee FBI agent, she pounds through the Bureau’s woodland assault course at the start of the film. Demme goes on to stage several long scenes which were shot at the actual FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia, so that we can see Starling’s colleagues doing their paperwork, practising their shooting, drinking their coffee. Most films about law-enforcement agencies have maverick protagonists: agents who either break the rules (James Bond) or turn against their nefarious handlers (Jason Bourne). But Silence of the Lambs has a deep respect for the FBI’s methods, and so does Starling. She isn’t a rebel. She doesn’t rely on intuition or luck. She is a clever, dedicated professional who succeeds by doing everything by the book and with the encouragement of her superiors. How many other Hollywood heroines – or heroes – are anything like her?

Boys’ club

When Jack Crawford (Scott Glenn), the head of the FBI’s Behavioral Science Unit, sends Starling to meet Lecter in his cell at the Baltimore Hospital for the Criminally Insane, Demme moves us from her ascetic domain to his rococo one, from meticulous authenticity to nightmarish fantasy, from detective thriller to horror movie. In the process, Demme gives Lecter one of cinema’s all-time great introductions. The hospital’s slimy director, Dr Chilton (Anthony Heald), recounts the stomach-turning story of how Lecter ate a nurse’s tongue, and he and Starling descend from modern offices, via staircases and corridors, into a shadowy subterranean dungeon.