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  • 2021-10-24 (xsd:date)
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  • Is This True About Moth on 'Silence of the Lambs' Poster? (en)
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  • In the days before Halloween 2021, Snopes came across a web page that included numerous claims about hidden images or messages in scenes of popular movie thrillers. One of them supposedly exposed the truth behind the moth in the 1991 poster for Silence of the Lambs, reading: In other words, the web page (which was published by Nature World Today) alleged the moth was not just a symbol for the film's fictional Buffalo Bill character (the serial killer who put the creature inside the mouths of his victims and wore their human skin). It was also an optical illusion with multiple naked women that paid homage to the project (displayed below) called In Voluptas Mors, by Dalí and American photographer Philippe Halsman. The same claim circulated on Twitter, Facebook, and media sites such as Mental Floss, MovieMaker, and verbicide. To determine its legitimacy, we first obtained the official movie poster via IMDb's entry for the film and gave the illustration a close examination. From our view, the moth's head resembled the above-displayed project by Dalí and Halsman — which, according to Spanish Literature Professor Rebecca Bender of Kansas State University, was created over three hours in 1951 by arranging seven nude women in the shape of a skull. In that 2014 blog post analyzing artistic compilations of the female form and skull, Bender said the nude-skull venture by Dalí and Halsman inspired magazine covers, tattoos, and — yes — movie covers. However, the professor did not explicitly mention the Silence of the Lambs reference in the post, so we reached out to her to see if she had any expertise related to the claim. We were awaiting a response, at the original time of publication. Snopes also reached out to Amazon, the overseer of the film's liscensing rights after MGM Studios sold them (and the rest of its catalog) to the retail giant in May 2021. An Amazon spokesperson referred to us Universal Studios, to which we emailed the same inquiry. We have not heard back. [See also from Snopes: Scientists Believe ‘Dragon Man’ Skull Could Be Another Branch of Humans] In the meantime, however, we considered this writing by the Butterfly Conservation, a U.K.-based nonprofit dedicated to researching and preserving butterflies and moths: Below is a photograph of the referenced animal, a Deaths-head Hawk moth, courtesy of the Butterfly Conservation. Put another way, the illustration seemingly combined an image of a genuine animal (Death's-head Hawk-moth) with the above-mentioned photograph of naked women in the shape of a skull, according to the research organization. Considering that analysis, as well as our own visual examination of the movie poster, we rate this claim True. (en)
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