While knocking repeatedly, she teases him.As her hair is being pinned up by her black maid-servant Zette (Theresa Harris), she deliberately stalls answering to him.This film, sometimes criticized as over-rated, was Spielberg"s biggest blockbuster up to that time.It also popularized Reese"s Pieces candy, Kuwahara bikes, and red hoodies.Observant audiences noted the film"s many merchandising tie-ins and inside "film jokes."While the film was regarded by some as a religious allegory or parable, the film more clearly identifies with many childhood experiences: a troubled, broken family with a single parent and no positive role-models, a lonely, disenfranchised boy lacking emotional fulfillment, a boy"s fierce caring for an equally-lost, stray creature or pet (also "broken away" from his family), the need for friendship, he malevolent world of grown-ups and the perils of childhood, miraculous healing, wish-fulfillment, courage, transcendence, and homesickness." She answered: "Eat him? Of course not.The angel intervenes in time." Lecter replied: "Not always," as he thought about the killing of his sister:"I have to know about Mischa.In the pool house cabana, a worried and detached Jesse told Lisa that he wasn"t "into" the party and was planning to leave.In the casino"s washroom where he preps himself, he is regarded by the attendant as a "peasant" for a cheap tip.