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Hannibal (film)

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Hannibal
Image:Hannibal movie poster.jpg
Directed by Ridley Scott
Produced by Dino De Laurentiis
Written by Novel:
Thomas Harris
Screenplay:
David Mamet
Steven Zaillian
Starring Anthony Hopkins
Julianne Moore
Gary Oldman
Ray Liotta
Giancarlo Giannini
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (USA)
Universal Studios (non-USA)
Release date(s) February 9, 2001
Running time 131 min.
Language English
Budget $87,000,000
Preceded by The Silence of the Lambs
IMDb profile

Hannibal is a 2001 film, directed by Ridley Scott, adapted from the Thomas Harris novel of the same name. Set seven years after The Silence of the Lambs, we find that one of Hannibal Lecter's surviving victims, the wealthy Mason Verger, is out to torture and kill him. The film begins in Italy and moves to the United States; one of the final scenes shocked audiences and critics alike.

Contents

[edit] Plot

FBI Agent Clarice Starling is disgraced after killing five people in a botched drug raid. One of the people killed by Starling was a female drug dealer, Evelda Drumgo, who is HIV positive and was holding a child at the time she was shot. (Drumgo shoots Starling with a submachine gun; Starling is saved by her bulletproof vest.) Following a hearing on her conduct she is sent to interview Mason Verger, having learned that he has information regarding Hannibal Lecter.

Mason Verger—a faceless billionaire mostly confined to a bed—tells his story: he was under a court order to have therapy sessions with Lecter after being convicted of child sex abuse charges. During a social call, Dr. Lecter suggested that Mr. Verger inhale amyl nitrite fumes ("poppers"); once Verger was high, Lecter also suggested that Verger rip his own face off with a glass shard and then hang himself. Verger later recounts that "it seemed like a good idea at the time". Lecter fed the remains of Verger's face to Verger's dogs.

Meanwhile in Florence, Inspector Rinaldo Pazzi is investigating the disappearance of a library curator. Here he meets Dr. Fell, the interim curator, whom he discovers is none other than Dr. Lecter. Inspector Pazzi turns this information over to Verger for a reward, who prepares his revenge. After a discussion at the library, Dr. Lecter murders Pazzi by disemboweling and hanging him from the Palazzo Vecchio, a fate that Pazzi's ancestor, Francesco Di Pazzi, suffered 500 years before. Lecter escapes to America.

Starling learns that Justice Department employee Paul Krendler is also working with Verger, using Starling as bait to lure Dr. Lecter out of hiding. Lecter is captured by Verger's henchmen and is taken to a barn, where he is anxiously awaited by several large, man-eating boars. Starling comes to rescue him and is nearly successful. Starling shoots Verger's henchmen and is in the process of cutting Lecter's other bond when a hidden henchman shoots her in the shoulder. Lecter cuts himself loose and picks up Starling in his arms. After Lecter shoots the remainder of Verger's henchmen, he convinces Verger's doctor that Mason doesn't deserve to live. Verger's doctor feeds him to the boars, with the assurance that Lecter will take the blame for the crime.

In the climax of the film, Lecter takes the wounded Starling to a lake-front house and performs surgery on her to remove the bullet. When she awakens, she finds that Lecter has dressed her in a cocktail gown. She comes downstairs, drugged and drowsy, calling the police on the way, and discovers that she's in Paul Krendler's house. Lecter, incensed that Krendler tried to get Starling fired, has kidnapped and lobotomized him. As Starling watches in horror, Lecter removes the top of Krendler's skull and feeds him a small portion of his own brain after it has been sautéed in butter and herbs.

Starling tries to apprehend Lecter, but he traps her hair in the refrigerator. Lecter tests Starling, asking, "Tell me Clarice, would you ever say 'Stop? If you'd love me you'd stop?'". Starling says no, which is the answer that Lecter had expected, and with a 'That's my girl,' he pretends to bite her, but she doesn't shy away and he kisses her on the mouth for a few seconds. While he is distracted in those seconds, Starling handcuffs him. He is startled and when Starling refuses to give him the key, he grabs a meat cleaver, asking her, "Above or below the wrist, Clarice?" He raises it over his head and informs her, "Now this is really going to hurt." In the moments before he brings the knife down, we see him struggle with the decision in his eyes. We see Starling grimacing in pain, but then a moment later we view her outside with both hands.

In the final scene of the film, we see Lecter with his arm in a sling on a plane, with a small boy asking if he can have a taste of the meal Lecter brought along with him; Krendler's brains. Impressed with the boy's refusal to eat airline food, Lecter happily obliges.

[edit] Cast

Anthony Hopkins: Dr. Hannibal 'The Cannibal' Lecter
Julianne Moore: Clarice Starling
Gary Oldman: Mason R. Verger
Ray Liotta: Paul Krendler
Frankie Faison: Barney Matthews
Giancarlo Giannini: Inspector Rinaldo Pazzi
Francesca Neri: Allegra Pazzi
Zeljko Ivanek: Dr. Cordell Doemling
Danielle de Niese: Beatrice (Opera Singer)
Bruno Lazzaretti: Dante (Opera Singer)

[edit] Reaction and Box Office

The film was a commercial success and had mixed reviews.It grossed $58,003,121 on its opening and grossed $163,877,858 worldwide at the box office. Some critics praised composer Hans Zimmer for his work on the film.

[edit] Trivia

  • Due to the length of the novel, a significant portion was left out of the film: In the book, Verger runs an orphanage, from which he culls children to verbally abuse as a substitute for his no longer being able to abuse them sexually. He also has a lesbian sister, Margot, whom he raped when they were children. When she discovered her sexual orientation, their father disowned her. As she herself is sterile due to steroid abuse, Verger exerts some control over her by promising her a sperm sample with which to impregnate her lover, who could then inherit the Verger fortune. At the end of the book, Margot and Starling both help Lecter escape during a shootout between Starling and Verger's guards. Margot, at Lecter's advice, stimulates Mason to ejaculate with a cattle prod, and then kills him by ramming a Moray eel down his throat. Following up on the fate of Krendler in the book, the crooked FBI official experiences a grisly fate when Lecter shoots him with an arrow.
  • The book's controversial ending has Lecter presenting Starling with the exhumed bones of her father, which he "brings to life" by hypnotising Starling, allowing her to say goodbye. This forges an odd alliance between Starling and Lecter, culminating in their becoming lovers and escaping to Argentina. At the end of the novel, Barney (the hospital orderly) sighted Clarice and Hannibal at the Opera house of Buenos Aires. A controversial reaction to the ending led the screenwriters to remove this ending from the film. Another reason was that Jodie Foster refused to appear in the film unless the ending was changed; by the time the re-write was done, she had moved on to another project. It was actually Thomas Harris himself who came up with the alternate ending for screenwriters David Mamet and Steven Zaillian to use.
  • Although released months before the September 11, 2001 attacks, Osama bin Laden can be seen on the FBI 10 Most Wanted web site Pazzi visits. Osama bin Laden had been present on the 10 Most Wanted for other terrorist attacks.
  • In the brain eating scene near the end of the film, the piece of brain Ray Liotta eats is actually a piece of cooked chicken.
  • The e-mail address of Clarice Starling "cstarling@fbi.net" can be seen on the monitor.
  • The gruesome brain eating scene was shot twice, once using Ray Liotta, and once using an animatronic of Ray Liotta. The best looking segments of both scenes were then edited together. Liotta maintains that, upon seeing the film, he could not tell when he was actually onscreen and when it was the animatronic. Animatronics were also used for the baby that Starling washes after the fish market shootout scene.
  • Christopher Reeve was offered and turned down the role of Mason Verger, but he regretted it when Gary Oldman won rave reviews for his performance. Reeve then signed on to play reclusive scientist Dr. Virgil Swann in two episodes of the popular drama show Smallville.
  • Gary Oldman originally wanted to share top billing alongside Anthony Hopkins and Julianne Moore. When the producers denied him this, he declined to have any billing at all and, in the original theatrical release, remained uncredited in the film's opening and closing credits. In the VHS and DVD releases, however, his name has been added to the closing credits only.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:


Hannibal Lecter films

Young Hannibal (based on Hannibal Rising)
Red Dragon / Manhunter
The Silence of the Lambs
Hannibal


The Hannibal Tetralogy
By Thomas Harris

The Books

Hannibal Rising | Red Dragon | The Silence of the Lambs | Hannibal

The Films

Hannibal Rising | Red Dragon | The Silence of the Lambs | Hannibal
Manhunter

Main Characters
Hannibal Lecter | Will Graham | Clarice Starling

Secondary Characters
In Alphabetical Order
Buffalo Bill | Frederick Chilton | Jack Crawford | Francis Dolarhyde
Paul Krendler | Mischa Lecter | Freddy Lounds | Reba McClane
Lady Murasaki | Margot Verger | Mason Verger

The Directors
Peter Webber | Brett Ratner | Jonathan Demme | Ridley Scott
Michael Mann

Other
Belvedere, Ohio


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