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Hannibal |
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ONLINE EDITOR'S NOTE: THIS FILM FEATURES GRAPHIC VIOLENCE. THIS REVIEW REFERENCES THAT CONTENT AND IS NOT APPROPRIATE FOR CHILDREN.
Manhunter. The Silence of the
Lambs. Hannibal. America has
participated in a long and twisted celluloid
love affair with Dr. Hannibal "The Cannibal"
Lecter. Now, 10 years after evading Jodie
Foster’s Clarice Starling in 1991’s hugely
successful Silence of the Lambs,
Hannibal’s hiding out in Florence, Italy. But he
has two determined foes hot on his trail:
Inspector Rinaldo Pazzi, an ambitious Italian
cop, and the extremely wealthy Mason Verger,
a rare survivor of Hannibal’s predations. Not
that FBI special agent Starling has ever
completely forgotten her encounter with
the intelligent, vicious and flesh-obsessed
murderer.
The movie opens as Agent Starling is
made to take the fall for a botched drug bust. A
corrupt Justice Department aide, Paul
Krendler, pushes Starling off the case to avoid
bad PR and puts her on what he believes is a
dead case: the pursuit of Hannibal.
Meanwhile, Inspector Pazzi recognizes
Hannibal from the FBI’s most-wanted list and
pursues him on his own time—not in the
pursuit of justice, but for the $10 million
reward. And Mason Verger has hired a team of
Italian hitmen to exact his own personal
revenge.
What follows is a monstrous trip through
the dregs of humanity as greed, ambition,
vindictiveness and resentment clash with an
implacable, remorseless killer.
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positive elements: Agent Starling
places honor and duty ahead of personal
gain. Inspector Pazzi allows his life to be put in
jeopardy to protect his wife.
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spiritual content: A man with a
hideously disfigured face asks Agent Starling,
"Have you accepted Jesus?" She responds, "I
was raised Lutheran." He answers back,
"That’s not what I meant. ... You can look me
in the face, but you’re shy when I mention
God." The man later says in regard to a crime,
"I have immunity from the risen Jesus."
Hannibal asks a soon-to-be victim to say
grace at the dinner table. After the victim
makes a crude remark to Agent Starling,
Hannibal says, "You’re like the Apostle Paul.
He hated women too."
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nudity and sexual content: A
flashback scene hints at homosexual flirting.
The cameras linger on a line drawing of a
topless woman. A cop propositions Agent
Starling with a crude reference to genitalia.
Crude remarks are made about deviant
sexual acts. A stone statue features full male
nudity.
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violent content: Intense, sick and
repugnant. Among other things, there’s a
violent shootout between cops and drug
pushers. A man’s head is crushed against a
windshield. Blood spurts from the mouth of a
shot man. A man’s head explodes. A woman
holding a baby is shot in the head. A man high
on drugs peels his face off, and the scraps
are fed to a dog. Hannibal attacks a nurse and
bites her ear off. A pickpocket is knifed. A
man’s throat is slit with a straight razor. A man
is disemboweled, then hanged from a
balcony—his entrails splatter to the ground
below. Wild boars attack and eat humans.
Hannibal cuts off the skull of a heavily drugged
man, exposing his brain. He then proceeds to
cut out a portion of the brain, fries it in a wok,
and feeds it to the still-alive man, who replies,
"Hey, that tastes pretty good." Hannibal also
feeds a small portion of fried brain to a young
boy on an airplane.
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crude or profane language:
God’s name is abused four times. A handful
of other profanities and obscenities include
two uses of the f-word.
•
drug and alcohol content: Cops
smoke cigarettes. Agent Starling consumes a
mixed drink. Lecter drinks wine on several
occasions. Other characters also imbibe.
•
other negative elements:
Director Scott apparently tried to "lighten the
mood" of this movie compared with that of
The Silence of the Lambs. But the
jokes aren’t funny, they’re just disgusting. After
screening the movie, gory storyteller Stephen
King said, "It was okay, but it was done in bad
taste." That’s an understatement. Hannibal is
a vicious and methodical executioner, yet
most of the film’s other characters (with the
exception of Agent Starling) are made out to
be worse than the urbane, cultured
Hannibal.
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conclusion: Newspaper
editors and film critics alike have cracked all
kinds of jokes and made bad puns about
Hannibal’s cannibalistic subject matter.
And the fact that the movie grossed $58
million opening weekend (outpacing How the Grinch Stole Christmas’s debut) gave
them all kinds of opportunities to do so. But
there is absolutely nothing humorous
about this film. It is grotesque and, dare I say,
downright evil. Anthony Hopkins, who put a
face on this evil in both Silence of the
Lambs and Hannibal, told
GQ, "Hannibal Lecter is one of those
creatures from the dark side of the human
personality. ... He’s self-governing, and he
may tap into our desire to become like
machines: to have no pity, to have no
conscience." Hannibal costar Julianne
Moore says shooting the film landed her in a
therapist’s office. "I actually talked to my shrink
about it," she told Vanity Fair. "As a
parent, as a person—what is this?
Hannibal is the dark side that is part of
everyone. ... We are socialized, civilized, but
in our fantasy lives we explore those themes.
That’s okay, but it’s a fine line I feel
uncomfortable with. I don’t want to sound as if
I’m sitting here rationalizing violence." And yet
her very involvement with the film is an attempt
to rationalize. Don’t let your family’s
involvement do the same. Cross
Hannibal off the "possible" list and give
the entire phenomenon a wide berth.
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