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==Character overview==
==Character overview==
Dolarhyde is a [[serial killer]] nicknamed '''"The Tooth Fairy"''' due to his tendency to bite his victims' bodies, the uncommon size and sharpness of his teeth and other apparent [[oral fixation]]s. He refers to his other self as "'''The Great Red Dragon'''" after [[William Blake]]'s painting ''[[The Great Red Dragon and the Woman Clothed with the Sun]]''.
Dolarhyde is a [[serial killer]] nicknamed '''"The Tooth Fairy"''' due to his tendency to bite his victims' bodies, the uncommon size and sharpness of his teeth and other apparent [[oral fixation]]s. He refers to [[alter ego|his other self]] as "'''The Great Red Dragon'''" after [[William Blake]]'s painting ''[[The Great Red Dragon and the Woman Clothed with the Sun]]''.


==Character history==
==Character history==

Revision as of 20:50, 30 July 2008

Hannibal Tetralogy character
File:Francisdolarhydereddragon.jpg
Francis Dolarhyde
Aliases The Great Red Dragon
Nicknames Mr D.
"D."
The Tooth Fairy
Gender Male
Race Caucasian
Weight 217 lbs
Birth June 14, 1938
Relationships Michael Trevane (Father)
Marian Dolarhyde Trevane (Mother)
Reba McClane (Girlfriend)
M.O. Organized serial murder
Mutilation
Weapon of Choice: Pistol
Teeth
Current status: Deceased
Portrayed by: Manhunter
Tom Noonan
Red Dragon
Ralph Fiennes
Frank Langella (voice of The Great Red Dragon; deleted scenes)

Francis Dolarhyde is a fictional character featured in Thomas Harris' novel Red Dragon.

Character overview

Dolarhyde is a serial killer nicknamed "The Tooth Fairy" due to his tendency to bite his victims' bodies, the uncommon size and sharpness of his teeth and other apparent oral fixations. He refers to his other self as "The Great Red Dragon" after William Blake's painting The Great Red Dragon and the Woman Clothed with the Sun.

Character history

Born in Springfield, Missouri, on June 14, 1938 with a bilateral complete cleft lip and palate, Francis Dolarhyde is abandoned by his repulsed mother and cared for in an orphanage until the age of five. He was then discovered by his Grandmother, who ran a geriatric home. Dolarhyde suffered severe emotional and physical abuse from his sadistic grandmother, including threats of abandonment, castration and constant verbal humiliation for his considerable speech impediment. After his grandmother becomes afflicted with dementia, Dolarhyde is turned over to the care of his estranged mother and her husband in St. Louis, Missouri; he is further abused by this family, and is sent back to the orphanage after being caught hanging his stepsister's cat. He begins torturing animals at a young age. After being caught breaking into a house at age 17, he enlisted in the Army. While on his tour in Japan and neighboring countries, he learns how to develop film as well as receiving cosmetic surgery for his cleft palate. He later gets a job with the Gateway Corp. as the production Chief in their largest division - home videos. His grandmother is released from the sanatorium and spends her remaining years with Dolarhyde (he still lives in his grandmother's old home) in relative peace.

Dolarhyde begins his killing spree in 1981 by murdering two families within a month after discovering The Great Red Dragon and the Woman Clothed in Sun with both crimes being committed on or near a full moon; it is hinted in the book that he had killed before that, however. Dolarhyde is obsessed with the image and convinced that he is "Unique" and is Becoming the Dragon. He chooses his victims through the home movies he edits as a film processing technician. He believes that by killing people (or "transforming" them, as he calls it) he can fully become the Dragon. On a trip to Hong Kong, he had a large dragon tattooed across his back, and had two sets of false teeth; one of them normal for his usual life, the other distorted and razor sharp for his killings, based on a mold of his grandmother's snaggle-toothed grimace. There is also a sexual component to his crimes; he molests the corpse of one adult female victim, and he often masturbates to the films he himself makes while committing murder.

FBI profiler Will Graham is asked to return from early retirement to aid in his capture. Graham had previously captured Garrett Jacob Hobbs ("The Minnesota Shrike") and Dr. Hannibal Lecter, a cannibalistic psychiatrist and serial killer, whom Dolarhyde idolizes. Graham visits Lecter in the Chesapeake Mental Institute, hoping that the doctor would be able to help identify the Dragon, or at least assist in creating a psychological profile. Following this meeting, Lecter "helps" by sending Dolarhyde Graham's address in code with the note, "Kill them all." Dolarhyde is foiled when his FBI supervisor Jack Crawford intercepts the message in time to warn Graham's family and the local Sheriff.

Dolarhyde is a reader of The National Tattler, a tabloid which runs sensationalistic stories about serial killers, and he obsessively collects clippings about Lecter's arrest and trial, and about Graham, as well as his own murders. In an attempt to provoke Dolarhyde out of hiding, Graham gives an interview to Tattler reporter Freddy Lounds in which he insults the "Tooth Fairy" as an impotent homosexual, and that Lecter considers him a "bottom-feeder." This enrages Dolarhyde, who kidnaps Lounds by anesthetizing him with ether, strips him naked and Superglues him to a wheelchair, forces him to recant his article on tape, bites his lips off, then returns to Chicago and sets him on fire and rolls him down an incline going into the Tattler's parking garage. Lounds survives his severe burns, but dies a few days later in the hospital.

Over the course of the novel, Dolarhyde develops a relationship with a blind woman named Reba McClane who works at Gateway - he feels comfortable in her presence because she cannot see what he (incorrectly) feels is a repulsive disfiguration of his face. He becomes close to McClane and grows fond of her: one point, he takes her to the zoo and lets her touch and explore a tiger that has been anesthetized for oral surgery. While at first her intimacy with Dolarhyde quells his murderous impulses, her presence only infuriates the other part of Dolarhyde's psyche which he calls the Dragon. Desperate now to retain control of himself and deny his violent urges, Dolarhyde flies to New York, where he devours the original Blake watercolor, believing it would destroy the Dragon.

The plan fails, however; if anything, Dolarhyde's ingestion of the painting only makes the Dragon angrier. Dolarhyde kills McClane's former lover after seeing them innocently together at the door to her house, and apparently had planned to kill her and himself by setting his house on fire with her in it. Dolarhyde relents at the last minute (with the fire growing), however, saying he cannot bear to see her die and apparently shoots himself in the face with a shotgun.

In a later conversation with McClane, Graham tells her, "There was plenty wrong with Dolarhyde, but there's nothing wrong with you. You said he was kind and thoughtful to you. I believe it. That's what you brought out in him. At the end, he couldn't kill you and he couldn't watch you die. People who study this kind of thing say he was trying to stop. Why? Because you helped him. That probably saved some lives. You didn't draw a freak. You drew a man with a freak on his back."

It turns out, however, that Dolarhyde is alive, having merely shot the corpse of a previous victim. Being blind, McClane was fooled when she felt the shattered head of the corpse. Dolarhyde later surprises Graham in Florida and stabs him in the face, but Graham's wife Molly catches Dolarhyde with the hooks of a fishing rod. Dolarhyde abandons the injured Graham and runs after Molly, fighting the dangling fishing pole dragging through the brush. Molly gets the .44 pistol that Graham insisted she learn to shoot, and shoots Dolarhyde as he crashes through the door into the house. Nevertheless, as revealed in "The Silence of the Lambs" Graham afterwards looks like "damn Picasso drew him" as a result of Dolarhyde's knife attack, and becomes an alcoholic. Prior to this, Lecter sends a 'sympathetic' letter to Graham saying, "I hope you are not too ugly."

Film adaptations

Dolarhyde has been twice portrayed in film adaptations of Harris' novel: By Tom Noonan (in which he was called 'Dollarhyde' instead of Dolarhyde) in 1986's Manhunter, and by Ralph Fiennes in 2002's Red Dragon. In deleted scenes in Red Dragon, Dolarhyde's Great Red Dragon personality is voiced by Frank Langella.

Francis Dollarhyde, portrayed by Tom Noonan in Manhunter

In Manhunter, Dolarhyde was filmed two different ways; shirtless with an elaborate tattoo covering his upper torso and back (as opposed to Dolarhyde's tattoos in the book, which only covered his back), and with a shirt on thus covering his tattoo. The latter was used in the finished film, partly because the tattoos were considered too distracting and similar to the ones that the Yakuza wore. The look, however, appeared on promotional photos for the film.

In the first movie, Graham kills Dolarhyde, while in the second, both he and his wife have a hand in Dolarhyde's death, with Graham firing the majority of the shots in a crossfire with Dolarhyde, and his wife finishing him off as Dolarhyde rises back up, even with the bullet wounds.