Fun fact about Anthony Hopkins: he liked Breaking Bad so much that he went out of his way to write to Bryan Cranston to applaud him on his acting ability
He is always a step ahead He can predict your behaviour He instructs your mind He pokes around ur psyche, things u resist ''whats ur worst memory of childhood?" Asserts constant control Hes fascinated by human patterns, scent, behaviors
I get the sence that he's fascinated about what makes the good guy tick, about what in Clarice Starling's case what drives her as a straight arrow, Will Graham's ability to almost see through another person's eyes and is disturbed by it whilst Lecter is fascinated by it, and I like how Barney is the only person who is cordial with him, treats him with respect unlike Chilton
I resist ... you.. and containment or .. law ..or commitment being on time .. i resist patterns and people who come into my personal space ..i resist heavy strict intimidating people ..because i like myself ..im very small i like being small and i have to protect myself...from negative thoughts and negative toxic people.
Totally agree I watch this film every single year. I recently tried to watch manhunter and as much as I love that actor from the Escapist I was just thinking you're not even 10% as terrifying as Hopkins ... I've wondered how much was done in editing to make Hopkins so terrifying because I have seen all the documentaries and making of's and some of Hopkins delegated scenes seem a bit corny but thats WHY they got deleted lol
You can't have this anymore. Millennials write everything currently. What a truly neglected generation. Trying so hard to replicate what made things great. No room for character unless it's political.
People often ignore Ted Levine's absolutely brilliant performance as Buffalo Bill, truly Oscar worthy (yet, not even nominated; a true shame for the Academy).
I think it's sequels distracted hannibal's appeal. Only Hannibal tv show somehow capture the psychology of Hannibal as good as in TSOL.(thanks to brilliant writing and great cast) Other Movies of the franchise ruined the TSOLs impact. Fantastic video tho, loved it ❤️
Hopkins definitely did a great performance and because of that I was so attracted to rewatch the movie. The psychology, the games and intelligence make it so interesting for me as I love psychology movies. Not necessarily the story of the movie but mostly the behaviour of some characters. Thank you for this channel
I actually find the sequel, Hannibal, to be my favorite out of Hopkins portrayal of Lector. In Hannibal, we see Dr. Lector actually free from his incarceration for the entire movie. We get to see more of his motivations and what he enjoys out of life. Which for the most part is still tormenting and eating people of course.
What? No! He mostly just minds his own business and lives peacefully. When people threaten him or his lifestyle, he claws come out! It's self - preservation 😊
I liked it because we get to see him outside of a cell he's not in restraints,no bars or mesh net like the novel cell, we see him on a kind of adventure outside in the world, my favourite segment in the novel is Lecter in Florence as Dr Fell, roaming the library's of the palazzo caponi, I like both the movie adaption as well as the book, though the book has more details of each character and Hannibal's formed memory palace where he can go and live inside his head if his surroundings are unpleasant and if he has to be confined in a plane, I love the little nod to silence of the lambs with Lecter and inspector Pazzi in his room while Lecter taunts him about his ancestor and Pazzi says: in fact I can't remember when someone brought it up,I love the film from start to finish I have a fun time every time I see it and the makeup on Gary Oldman was so good I had absolutely no idea it was the same person who was in the Harry Potter films, I actually tried to find a film with him in it just to see what he actually looked like haha after binge watching the Hannibal Lecter films when I was 17 in 2010 its such a great film to me from the beautiful shots of Florence and the contrast between Italy and the USA are fantastic
Your video is brilliant simply because you reference Harris’ encounter with “Dr. Salazar” in the prison. It’s unmistakeable the impact he had on Harris.
I remember (basicly) Everyone mentioned that Hopkins Never blinked during his scenes. As a young (well, I was atleast younger back then then today (no joke intended...) I rewatched the movie and I couldn´t find any blinking of the eyes. It was haunting in a way. Wrote this before the video started, I know there will be more deeper and more profound (??) thoughts about the character development on the study. This channel deserve so many more subs. Shame on you (take that lightly, but still) if you allready haven´t. Great study on all the movies that I have seen so far. Be safe Everyone and have a great day. Or else Lecter might.. no wait..
What made him stand out was his complete rejection of social norms, even if he used them at times. It's the thing that really makes him scary, you locked him up but you still have no control over him.
Your videos are AWESOME!!! Please include captions on the next ones, it helps so much for people like me who is learning english as a second language. Anyways, thank you for this amazing content!!
Hopkin’s portrayal is masterful but I also really admire the aspects that Brian Cox and the script bring to the character in “Manhunter.” He still has the veneer of sophistication and charm but the facade is more apparent because he isn’t trying to manipulate and impress an inexperienced investigator like Clarice, and there are two important scenes where Graham reacts to Lecter’s world view. In the supermarket scene he makes it clear that his physical recovery after being attacked by Lecter was less difficult than recovering from adopting Lecter’s worldview during the investigation - “The thoughts hurt so bad?” “They’re the ugliest thoughts in the world.” In the final scene with Lecter, Hannibal grandiosely compares killing to being like God, and Graham moves the telephone receiver from his face in disgust as Lecter banally rattles off the death tolls of tragedies he read in the daily news. Cox’ Lecter only cares about vicariously enjoying suffering; everything else about him is a smokescreen.
Learning about the true story of the doctor in Nuevo León makes me wonder how good of a twist it could have been to have the first novel And first film follow the investigation of a serial killer, only to find out that the psyquiatrist helping the investigation had been responsible for far worse and numerous crimes.
After Sir Anthony Hopkins, if someone truly portrayed the subtle insanity of Hannibal then it was Mads Mikkelson. It had a profound impact on me as a young teenager who watched all of it on TV when Netflix and all were not around. I still can't wait for a Season 4 or a reboot of the Hannibal Franchise with Mads returning to play our favourite psychopath.
Jodie Foster revealed on an interview with other premier actors that she never spoke to Anthony Hopkins during the entire filming. NEVER !!! He terrified her so completely. He was so Hannibal Lecter she would not go near him. He was Hannibal Lecter. The other premier actors were dismayed and visibly astonished, and uncomfortable at this admission. They these actors shifted gears and while watching them made a leap and made an artistic personal astonished realization we can't.. Jodie said on the last day Anthony Hopkins approached her and mentioned breifly he admired her performance. That is it, this was the only time they spoke. Imagine you watching this movie at a safe protected distance,and you are completely unnerved, seriously upset and uncomfortable at the horror's intimacy. Now be Jodie Foster live on set, right over there is the real Hannibal Lecter in the flesh. Even as an adult you can't wrap your head around it. Like the fear of knowing he's taken it too far. And maybe I should be afraid. Best wishes.
I personally didn't feel like the character Hannibal was "diminished" in the sequels, even the Origin made sense for him. His family was loving, and he cared deeply about his sister when he was a kid. But the upbringing of the monster within was due in large part because of the monsters that took his sister from him; he became worse than them without really realizing it til it was too late. That scene involving Grutas and Hannibal, his aunt trying to convince him to walk away, and he says "He ate my sister", then Grutas laughs "So did you! You ate her too!" Hannibal is hit with a powerful betrayal, trying to deny it, but he knows Grutas isn't lying. "You have to kill everyone who knows, don't you? So why don't you kill yourself! Half-conscious. Greedy little lips on the spoon!" In that moment, you knew, Hannibal was going to go super dark on him. Not only did he take his sister from him, but also fed his sister to him without him being aware. That level of psychological shock would break most people, but for Hannibal, it merely made the monster within him even worse. Even his excuse for killing the Butcher made sense for his character "Rudeness is an epidemic". In all Hannibal's films, he has a deep animosity towards "rude" people. His mind games in the origin story also mimic his personality in the other films, he can read people really well, "You knew exactly what he wanted. That he wanted his crucifix to remain with his brain, not his heart." And other people who saw the origin story act like he doesn't hiss, when it's like he definitely does, Anthony did hissing sound in all the Hannibal films. In truth, most don't like it because they misremember Hannibal, as though he's not as Menacing as he was in his origin story, even though he definitely is. And besides, the other bits that weren't in his origin story that are in the other films is his analyzation of his prey. That can easily be explained with time. I didn't have the experience and knowledge when I was a kid or teen, I picked up that knowledge an experience later an over time. Same with Hannibal. How it distracts or detracts from him is an unknown to me, cause I don't see it. No one is born a monster, even Psychopaths can live in society without becoming a monster. And many monsters are not psychopaths.
I'm sure someone has already mentioned that Brian Cox was Lecter first, well the before Silence of the Lambs movie, in 'Manhunter', which was based on the Red Dragon novel by Harris. Cox's portrayal was much more like the novel, but as a short simplistic side story, used in the book and movie to emphasize Will Graham's emotional unbalance.
Brian Cox's portrayal of Lector was both more subtle yet more direct than Hopkins'. I still think it's the superior performance. Manhunter is one of those films that divides an audience - it is very 80s, but even during the 80s it made audiences uncomfortable.
Thank you for mentioning it, both Cox’s performance and the movie are very underrated, Manhunter is both a much better movie and book adaptation than Red Dragon. Also one key difference is that Cox plays maybe less elegant but more natural Lecter, one that wouldn’t stand out and would blend much easier than somewhat eccentric one by Sir Hopkins.
Jesus whom is the one and only true God and Creator came to earth 2000+ years ago to go to the cross to pay our sin debt in full. His sacrifice was sufficient to pay the penalty for the sins of the world (1 John 2:2). A created being could not pay the infinite penalty required for sin against an infinite God. Only God could pay such an infinite penalty. Only God could take on the sins of the world (2 Corinthians 5:21), die, and be resurrected, proving His victory over sin and death and that true and only God is JESUS! And He did all that because He loves us and wants to save us and have a relationship with us. JESUS is the only way to Heaven, only He can save us from sin and from hell ( Luke 5:32, John 14, Romans 6:23). Jesus is waiting for you to come to Him, He won't cast you away from Himself if you come to Him. He calls us all to repentance, He loves us and wants to save us. believe and have faith in God then the Holy Spirit will come in and lead you to repent of your sins and God will forgive you of your sins and cleanse you by the blood of Jesus and you'll get born again by His Holy Spirit and have His salvation, you will become a new creation (John 3:3-19). God bless
It's the tale of the Scorpion and the frog. The scorpion is telling the frog what it wants to hear, what it NEEDS to hear. But the scorpion can't being the scorpion.
Another influence on Hopkins characterisation, was an acting teacher called Christopher Fettes, who taught at RADA, & who would be absolutely precise when teaching his students
Yes, Hopkins played him in the first 3 mentioned here, but you can't ignore or forget that Manhunter was made in the 80's and Red Dragon was simply a remake of that.
Heath Ledger’s Joker, Javier Bardem’s Anton Chigurh, Daniel Day-Lewis’s Daniel Plainview and Christoph Waltz’s Hans Landa are all villain’s for ages, yet nothing has topped Anthony Hopkins’s Hannibal Lecter, and probably never will.
Great stuff...thank you...thoroughly enjoyed. Personally, the greatest acting is the ability to mesmerize just by speaking; Anthony Hopkins did such a remarkable job in Silence....just a man's face, speaking.....Of course, the script is essential, but I can't imagine anyone else doing a better job.
I liked Silence best, but Rising is extremely good. I feel Rising offers a plausible explanation for his character, but nothing can really be known with certainty - it must remain a mystery.
Anthony Hopkins' performance of Hannibal in Silence is very much of a university professor lecturing his Master Class in Psychology, including the psychological games to get a better idea of who is deserving of passing grades on their thesis, who deserves to fail, while actually hoping to challenge someone to rise above and give a thesis worthy of an A, or at least a B. Starling would get the B, but Lecter would give her the B+ because he actually likes her. The B is because she is intuitive, and knows her subject well enough to get lucky. But she doesn't have the intellect for an A. I had a professor who was very much like this. Very insulting to the undergrads and playing psychological games with his graduate students. His subject was Geology, not Psychology or Criminology. He loved when students challenge him intellectually. He were identical clothing everyday just to see how long it took anyone to notice. Then to see if they could figure out he had a closet full of tweed, identical shirts, pants and ties. His shoes I expect he had a few pairs, but likely 5 of everything else. Maybe 10. It was a top university and paid professors much better than most schools. His favorite story ended with the geologist attempting to kill himself. He expected us to understand the lesson of running all the tests, especially the cheap test that gets the fastest result. But he advised us to use a larger caliber gun to be certain we kill ourselves rather than leaving ourselves a mental vegetable, as in the case study/story he had just told. Yes, a test was skipped because he was sure he identified the rock correctly. It resulted in the brand new dam failing just 2 weeks after filling. It killed. The geologist could not live with the guilt of those deaths, but went cheap with a 22 and lived, but would never think again. Professor recommended a 45. A 38 should do the trick, but poor handling by a novice may not kill. A 45 is almost guaranteed to kill. I am paraphrasing, it was long ago. Take off the prison jumpsuit, dress him in tweed and they are practically the same. JK. That was years before workplace shootings became a regular thing in the US. Decades before school shootings or random shootings into crowds became a regular thing n the US. But guns are not the problem, even though places without widely available guns don't have random murders like the US. (Sarcasm.)
This Hannibal Lecter Psychological Profile is Awesome! Anthony Hopkins Best Performance in All Memories. What makes The Silence of the Lambs (1991) a Great Masterpiece, is the Rivalry between Clarice (the Hero) and Lecter (the Antagonist) Face to Face.🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆 Dr. Hannibal Lecter looks at you, like a Dragon fixes his Prey. Protecting his Treasure, Knowledge.🐲🐉
I may sound stupid, but I would be okay with being in the same room as this guy, having an intelligent conversation with him, hopefully talking about Florence, art and music, psychology etc. and not human meat
My two bits. Good essay, but I think it misses a couple of things, although to be fair this is made more explicit in the books, where he makes an interesting journey. (I'm ignoring "Hannibal Rising" - origin stories for psychos are bad ideas since it removes their mystery and power.) In "Red Dragon," Lecter has no problem killing innocent people, but he underwent a shift in "Silence," and maybe it was the shift from a male to female protagonist. In "Silence," in the book more than the movie, he actually functions more like a dark father, helping Clarice see that there are people around her who have no problems using Lecter's crimes to advance their own careers, making them, in some ways, worse than him. (Remember that Lecter doesn't kill Mason Verger, but his nurse does after Lecter tells him that he can kill him and blame it on Lecter.) In "Hannibal," it's made even more clear that although Lecter will kill anyone he sees as a threat, his real targets are opportunists and hypocrites. The movie also makes a critical change from the book, where Clarice joins him in the end as a companion after she's betrayed by the FBI. The less said about the tv series, the better. Mads is always watchable and it was certainly one of the strangest and goriest shows on tv; but it was overseen by a gay showrunner that reimagined the story as a gay love story where Lecter spent three seasons trying to seduce fluffy nutcase Will Graham away from boring heterosexuality. It also made it seem like Lecter does nothing but eat people from his well-stocked freezer, where in the films it implies that eating people is a special treat reserved for his enemies, his victory feast, so to say. Harris lost film and television rights to the character so he had no say in how Lecter was presented, but his silence about the show doesn't seem an endorsement of the direction the character took. As the part is too "juicy" to leave forever, we'll probably see Lecter again someday (it would be fun to play "flip the part" and have Johnny Depp play him after Mads got his part in "Fantastic Beasts") and have him carry on by different actors like the Joker. Time will tell. Bon Appitite...
The TV show with Mikkelsen expands on this, I think. It clearly shows Hannibal's narcissism. He thinks of himself as smarter and more sofisticated than the common people, enjoying fine art adn food, and you see him visibly disgusted by people's weakness multiple times. When meeting Will, he believes he found someone of similar intellect and believed Will had an inner killer as well. He forcibly tried to turn Will into basically an extension of himself, so he could freely share his dark side with a like-minded indivdual he deemed of near equal standing and worthy of his attention. He wants that intimiacy here too. As for the other criminals, I think he merely finds them psychologically fascinating while also primitive in their actions. To him they are easily manipulated and he often eats them afterward to show his dominance. He talks about dark subjects all the time, hinting at his secret with the detective, playing with him, but also testing to see who really has a dark side like him. I think, while he feels superior, he also craves some connection, if not in a twisted way. It's just that regular people bore him and he wants that intellectual challenge, which is why he very much enjoys playing the game of wit with Will. He loves seeing himself in Will.
Great video! I found Hannibal and Hannibal Rising to be entertaining but unnecessary; Red Dragon & TSOL were quite sufficient. Hell, TSOL could've been the only film and it still would be an all-time great. And I liked Brian Cox's interpretation of Lecter in Manhunter (a very good film, but not as good as TSOL in my opinion). Lecter is an evil genius, and both Cox & Hopkins portrayed that well. Hopkins did a better job in my opinion, but Cox's performance was a worthy effort. Cox emphasized the evil a bit more, whereas Hopkins played up the genius aspect. Just my opinion. You've gained a new subscriber!
Those sequels are amazing, pure fan service of what society demands, the most intresting charachter of all time, surpassing micheal corleone in my opinion
I think that the things that Hannibal rising added didn't really help the character and to my understanding Harris didn't want to do it but the movie was going to be made regaurdless so he decided to write it
By the time he wrote the Hannibal book I think Harris liked the Hannibal character too much and started portraying him as an anti hero rather than the villain he was in Red Dragon and Silence. Giving him the stupid backstory of Nazis killing his sister, feeding him what was left of her and him ending up liking cannibalism because of that further ruined the character. The more mysterious character he was in the first 2 books who told Clarice that nothing had happened to him but he'd happened was better.
@@Xehanort10 More of an anti-villain, since Lecter is never the antagonist in the plots in any of Tom’s novels. But you are correct. I think Tom was genuinely afraid of Lecter but grew to enjoy exploring his world.
@@Xehanort10 - I quite agree with you. The childhood traumas Harris invented for poor widdle Hannibal undermined the power of the character. I doubt the doctor Harris met in that Mexican prison had been born in a castle or had been fed his sister. Portraying what Arendt well tagged as the banality of evil would have been far more compelling to read and watch.
A true legend of acting in his finest role. I have to say I was also very impressed with the more recent Tom Cavanaugh as Eobard Thawne (The Reverse Flash) in the The Flash Barry Allen tv show. Particularly in the first season and his cameo episode in season 2. He is a very interesting type of psychopath. It’s almost as though he has bonds and connections with others but still completely disregards those and kills without emotion and even at times with sadistic pleasure. It makes for a very unique experience, because we get to feel the fatherly connections he forms with the others as Dr. Wells, and then see that some of those emotions were actually real, yet he still kills just as coldly, and in that story, the character is actually far more cunning and intelligent than Lector, because he literally uses his own knowledge and understanding of quantum mechanics to create his own reverse speedforce to give himself superhuman speed that he learns how to manipulate to go back and forth through time and erase people from ever having existed to rewrite history to his liking. He manages to manipulate the viewers, much like Hopkins as Lector, with the subtlety of his expressions and mannerisms to indicate that the monster is indeed there under the surface even when he seems so fatherly and caring. It gives that same sense of knowing that he is always the most powerful one in the room. Not just because of his powers, but mostly because of his incredibly razor-sharp mind.
I’d say it was Dr. Lecter’s charm - the way he winks at Clarice while turning the page of the questionnaire for example…he has an innate ability to make himself very likeable
My daughter very much enjoyed seeing Lecter's childhood and watching his metamorphosis, in fact feels Hannibal Rising is the best of the four stories, but I purposely never watched them. I saw most of Red Dragon because I happened to walk in on it but otherwise avoided them. I have a vivid imagination and coming up with my own back story is half the fun. It can change and twist as I rewatch or reread something and notice a new detail. That gives me an infinite supply of side stories. Sometimes the reader/viewer needs to be left to mentally deal with the nonanswer. It's generally much more disturbing because of how personal it is. Very Lecteresque.
In Silence of the Lambs, in one exchange with Clarice, Hannibal tells her she will find no pathology in his background growing up. I wish Harris had kept this for the origin story. It then becomes more of a Bad Seed type story which imho is a far more interesting story. That movie came out before the code was dropped. So they added the lightening strike at the end, but subsequent remakes show that evil lives. Missed opportunity.
Yes, exactly. Trauma does not explain criminality. Far more people are traumatized than commit crimes and some of the most traumatized live their lives with boundless compassion. Further, the traumas Harris concocted for Hannibal are ridiculously overblown, I guess on the theory that since Hannibal is really extra bad something really extra bad had to have happened to him. But his power as a villain is his enjoyment in being evil, the power he's found in it, and how as the years of his life went by, he took it further and further to keep wringing pleasure out of it.
The novels, Red Dragon and The Silence of the Lambs, gripped me more than any novels I've ever read. I've not read many thrillers - I study English literature, so my required reading eats up my time, but I've not encountered anything else like them. I'd love to though for sure. Hannibal didn't do it for me at all, and I've not had the time or desire really to read Hannibal Rising.
When I first saw Silence of the lambs by myself I thought who is this man who has such a violent back story yet he is acceptable and even appealing had he been free and wasn't going to kill me he'd would have been a great friend because he's manipulated the situation from fear of him to liking him to a degree as to where you end up rooting for him when he escapes via probably one of the most ingenius ways that I've ever seen next Shawshank, by wearing the guards face and uniform and gets a free long distance ride in the ambulance and in the end is walking in a brand new white suit right behind his former captor in the sunset is outstanding, I could talk about this character all day because there are so many things about him that are captivating
I subscribed cause your analysis was brilliant I have only watched one of his movies. And I like lamb and then goat. Human meat just doesn’t seem very appetizing!
Clarice Starling came to interview Dr Lector with some questions from the FBI. Dr Lector immediately takes full control of the interview and makes it all about Starling.
I enjoy/ed Hannibal Rising despite what's mostly been said 😁. I think the cast and everyone did a fantastic job overall. Although it was weird seeing Gong Li there, having grown up watching her in other roles. Plus, she was a household name in my household 🤭😄.
I don't watch this genre of movie or read books designed to frighten my psyche/mind. When climbing the spiritual ladder the more your mind is purer, the easier it is to have genuine spiritual experiences and go into deeper meditations. I thank GOD for keeping me safe from at least 7 serial killers (that I know of) in my midst thus far. More about that in my upcoming 📖 BEHOLD THE FEAR MACHINE & it's succession plan.
Harris called this man Dr. Salazar to protect his identity. Unfortunately I suspect this person is long since deceased and we will never know his true name.
According to the Daily Mail, Vice, and other online sources, it was Alfredo Balli Treviño, who died in 2009 or 2010 at 81. He was convicted of killing his male lover, also a doctor, in 1959 and chopping up the body, burying the pieces in an attempt to hide the murder. He was referred to as the Wolfman of Nuevo León.
Mads embodies the Charming side of Hannibal, like Lucifer trying to tempt someone to sin Hopkins embodies the unexplained uncanniness and horror of Hannibal, like death. Unexplained, unpredictable.
There are different Hannibals. Brian Cox is the most realistic. Cold, merciless, totally sociopathic. Hopkins is Grand Guignol, Gothic, he is Dracula, Van Helsing, Holmes, Moriarty, Jekyll and Hyde all at once. In this respect I prefer him in Hannibal. No pretence of realism. In another decade he would be an ideal role for Vincent Price. Mikkelson is a smooth reinterpretation of that Gothic vision too. More Christopher Lee than Vincent Price. Romantic, seductive, tasteful. The literary version is more like Darth Vader. He is trying to repair his inner world by replacing his eaten sister. He is a scarred hero. His victims from his point of view were deserving of their fate because they in someway spoiled his appreciation of life. Either by ruining a moment or by being a hypocrite.
one slight problem - the following order was right with red dragon done by different characters and director and producers it was called Man Hunter directed by Michael Mann released in 1986 although it did not have Anthony Hopkins but it was BRIAN COX in this Version as DR Hannibal Lecter in which he did a fine job as well . William Peterson of the CSI fame played WILL Gramm . and the Soundtrack Music was Amazing done by Tangerine Dream ! the script was pretty much verbatim from the book . but i did see you places some stills and clips of MANHUNTER
Interesting video, but there are a few errors. Manhunter was the first film version, even if it bears a different title than the book. Also, Hopkins’ performance was indeed short, but 16 minutes is oft cited incorrectly. It’s closer to 23 minutes.
What makes Hannibal Lecter so hard to understand is his system of values. Most people base their system of values on morality and ethics. Not so in Hannibal Lecter’s case. Notice the preoccupation he has with art work and classical French cuisine. Thus his value system is based not on morality and ethics but on aesthetics. Aesthetics being the value of beauty and art. This is why, yes he is a serial killer, but he has to take the body parts and use them and transform them with French cooking methods. The ugly art of homicide becomes something of aesthetics and beauty by transforming parts of the body with French cooking methods. Tom Sisson
He devours you; mind, body, and soul. He may as well be a vampire, but it's that he's human that makes him terrifying. If he _were_ a vampire, it might even be considered too on-the-nose.
Manhunter was put before Silence of the Lambs. It was remade almost beat for beat as Red Dragon. Manhunter bombed, so we're very lucky to have gotten Silence of the Lambs.
It might seem strange now after so many serial killer films and TV shows but when SotL came out Hopkins performance was genuinely disturbing and frightening.
The ending of "Hannibal" missed a great opportunity to tell an incredible love story. The sequels capitalized on the premise of Hannibal but failed to take the relationship with Clarise to the next level. Harris could have written the outline for the love affair on the back of an envelope. Still, not too late perhaps.
Fun fact about Anthony Hopkins: he liked Breaking Bad so much that he went out of his way to write to Bryan Cranston to applaud him on his acting ability
What a guy. Nice to hear of a great actor complimenting and encouraging another great actor. That's the highest praise for sure.
@@lynsey4224leaders do create other leaders
Bryan Cranston is the ultimate jerk at the end of Breaking Bad
@@badgirlhollywood9741 how so
@@dhirajkumargupta4151 Heisenberg
He is always a step ahead
He can predict your behaviour
He instructs your mind
He pokes around ur psyche, things u resist ''whats ur worst memory of childhood?"
Asserts constant control
Hes fascinated by human patterns, scent, behaviors
I get the sence that he's fascinated about what makes the good guy tick, about what in Clarice Starling's case what drives her as a straight arrow, Will Graham's ability to almost see through another person's eyes and is disturbed by it whilst Lecter is fascinated by it, and I like how Barney is the only person who is cordial with him, treats him with respect unlike Chilton
I resist ... you.. and containment or .. law ..or commitment being on time .. i resist patterns and people who come into my personal space ..i resist heavy strict intimidating people ..because i like myself ..im very small i like being small and i have to protect myself...from negative thoughts and negative toxic people.
My favorite is when he said, “Jack Crawford sent a trainee - to ME?!”
His face during the delivery was perfect.
Definitely one of the greatest performances in acting history.
Totally agree I watch this film every single year. I recently tried to watch manhunter and as much as I love that actor from the Escapist I was just thinking you're not even 10% as terrifying as Hopkins ... I've wondered how much was done in editing to make Hopkins so terrifying because I have seen all the documentaries and making of's and some of Hopkins delegated scenes seem a bit corny but thats WHY they got deleted lol
You can't have this anymore. Millennials write everything currently. What a truly neglected generation. Trying so hard to replicate what made things great. No room for character unless it's political.
Debatable, Heath's Joker...
People often ignore Ted Levine's absolutely brilliant performance as Buffalo Bill, truly Oscar worthy (yet, not even nominated; a true shame for the Academy).
Night and day@@sebas36balles
Your videos are high quality and insightful,keep up the good work
I think it's sequels distracted hannibal's appeal.
Only Hannibal tv show somehow capture the psychology of Hannibal as good as in TSOL.(thanks to brilliant writing and great cast)
Other Movies of the franchise ruined the TSOLs impact.
Fantastic video tho, loved it ❤️
YES
W take.
Agree.
The lion analogy is spot on.
❤❤❤
Hopkins definitely did a great performance and because of that I was so attracted to rewatch the movie. The psychology, the games and intelligence make it so interesting for me as I love psychology movies. Not necessarily the story of the movie but mostly the behaviour of some characters. Thank you for this channel
I actually find the sequel, Hannibal, to be my favorite out of Hopkins portrayal of Lector. In Hannibal, we see Dr. Lector actually free from his incarceration for the entire movie. We get to see more of his motivations and what he enjoys out of life. Which for the most part is still tormenting and eating people of course.
What? No! He mostly just minds his own business and lives peacefully. When people threaten him or his lifestyle, he claws come out! It's self - preservation 😊
Lecter*
the most L take there is.
possibly ever.
I love Hannibal solely bc watching him frolic around Italy is so funny like this scary ass cannibal murderer be going out for coffee and shit
I liked it because we get to see him outside of a cell he's not in restraints,no bars or mesh net like the novel cell, we see him on a kind of adventure outside in the world, my favourite segment in the novel is Lecter in Florence as Dr Fell, roaming the library's of the palazzo caponi, I like both the movie adaption as well as the book, though the book has more details of each character and Hannibal's formed memory palace where he can go and live inside his head if his surroundings are unpleasant and if he has to be confined in a plane, I love the little nod to silence of the lambs with Lecter and inspector Pazzi in his room while Lecter taunts him about his ancestor and Pazzi says: in fact I can't remember when someone brought it up,I love the film from start to finish I have a fun time every time I see it and the makeup on Gary Oldman was so good I had absolutely no idea it was the same person who was in the Harry Potter films, I actually tried to find a film with him in it just to see what he actually looked like haha after binge watching the Hannibal Lecter films when I was 17 in 2010 its such a great film to me from the beautiful shots of Florence and the contrast between Italy and the USA are fantastic
Your video is brilliant simply because you reference Harris’ encounter with “Dr. Salazar” in the prison. It’s unmistakeable the impact he had on Harris.
I remember (basicly) Everyone mentioned that Hopkins Never blinked during his scenes. As a young (well, I was atleast younger back then then today (no joke intended...) I rewatched the movie and I couldn´t find any blinking of the eyes. It was haunting in a way. Wrote this before the video started, I know there will be more deeper and more profound (??) thoughts about the character development on the study. This channel deserve so many more subs. Shame on you (take that lightly, but still) if you allready haven´t. Great study on all the movies that I have seen so far.
Be safe Everyone and have a great day.
Or else Lecter might.. no wait..
What made him stand out was his complete rejection of social norms, even if he used them at times. It's the thing that really makes him scary, you locked him up but you still have no control over him.
Fantastic video man
Your videos are AWESOME!!!
Please include captions on the next ones, it helps so much for people like me who is learning english as a second language. Anyways, thank you for this amazing content!!
Thank you. There are always English subtitles but no other languages as you have to upload the subtitles separately
Hopkin’s portrayal is masterful but I also really admire the aspects that Brian Cox and the script bring to the character in “Manhunter.” He still has the veneer of sophistication and charm but the facade is more apparent because he isn’t trying to manipulate and impress an inexperienced investigator like Clarice, and there are two important scenes where Graham reacts to Lecter’s world view. In the supermarket scene he makes it clear that his physical recovery after being attacked by Lecter was less difficult than recovering from adopting Lecter’s worldview during the investigation - “The thoughts hurt so bad?”
“They’re the ugliest thoughts in the world.”
In the final scene with Lecter, Hannibal grandiosely compares killing to being like God, and Graham moves the telephone receiver from his face in disgust as Lecter banally rattles off the death tolls of tragedies he read in the daily news. Cox’ Lecter only cares about vicariously enjoying suffering; everything else about him is a smokescreen.
Learning about the true story of the doctor in Nuevo León makes me wonder how good of a twist it could have been to have the first novel And first film follow the investigation of a serial killer, only to find out that the psyquiatrist helping the investigation had been responsible for far worse and numerous crimes.
After Sir Anthony Hopkins, if someone truly portrayed the subtle insanity of Hannibal then it was Mads Mikkelson.
It had a profound impact on me as a young teenager who watched all of it on TV when Netflix and all were not around. I still can't wait for a Season 4 or a reboot of the Hannibal Franchise with Mads returning to play our favourite psychopath.
Nah Brian Cox was way better than the femboy
@@chronic4632 😂 😂 I'm dying laughing of the thought of Cox playing an accent, or attempting an aristocratic sneer 😂
Great video as always bro, I actually learn a lot of real life lessons whenever I watch you content. Keep up the good work. 🙌🏿🙌🏿.
You didn’t mention Hopkin’s choice not to ever show Lecter blinking
Wrong. He’s blinking multiple times as he’s killing the guards.
I saw him blinking many times in this video.
Great analogy. His portrayal is truly chilling. Fantastic series of movies.
Great job on the video as usual. This channel is fantastic! Keep up the great work
Yes, the most enchanting villain and performance of all times.
another banger bro, Hannibal lecture is just such an intelligent, intriguing but yet despicable and terrifying character
Jodie Foster revealed on an interview with other premier actors that she never spoke to Anthony Hopkins during the entire filming. NEVER !!! He terrified her so completely. He was so Hannibal Lecter she would not go near him. He was Hannibal Lecter. The other premier actors were dismayed and visibly astonished, and uncomfortable at this admission. They these actors shifted gears and while watching them made a leap and made an artistic personal astonished realization we can't.. Jodie said on the last day Anthony Hopkins approached her and mentioned breifly he admired her performance. That is it, this was the only time they spoke. Imagine you watching this movie at a safe protected distance,and you are completely unnerved, seriously upset and uncomfortable at the horror's intimacy. Now be Jodie Foster live on set, right over there is the real Hannibal Lecter in the flesh. Even as an adult you can't wrap your head around it. Like the fear of knowing he's taken it too far. And maybe I should be afraid. Best wishes.
Excellent video, hope you blow up soon!!!
I personally didn't feel like the character Hannibal was "diminished" in the sequels, even the Origin made sense for him. His family was loving, and he cared deeply about his sister when he was a kid. But the upbringing of the monster within was due in large part because of the monsters that took his sister from him; he became worse than them without really realizing it til it was too late.
That scene involving Grutas and Hannibal, his aunt trying to convince him to walk away, and he says "He ate my sister", then Grutas laughs "So did you! You ate her too!" Hannibal is hit with a powerful betrayal, trying to deny it, but he knows Grutas isn't lying. "You have to kill everyone who knows, don't you? So why don't you kill yourself! Half-conscious. Greedy little lips on the spoon!"
In that moment, you knew, Hannibal was going to go super dark on him. Not only did he take his sister from him, but also fed his sister to him without him being aware. That level of psychological shock would break most people, but for Hannibal, it merely made the monster within him even worse.
Even his excuse for killing the Butcher made sense for his character "Rudeness is an epidemic". In all Hannibal's films, he has a deep animosity towards "rude" people. His mind games in the origin story also mimic his personality in the other films, he can read people really well, "You knew exactly what he wanted. That he wanted his crucifix to remain with his brain, not his heart."
And other people who saw the origin story act like he doesn't hiss, when it's like he definitely does, Anthony did hissing sound in all the Hannibal films. In truth, most don't like it because they misremember Hannibal, as though he's not as Menacing as he was in his origin story, even though he definitely is.
And besides, the other bits that weren't in his origin story that are in the other films is his analyzation of his prey. That can easily be explained with time. I didn't have the experience and knowledge when I was a kid or teen, I picked up that knowledge an experience later an over time. Same with Hannibal.
How it distracts or detracts from him is an unknown to me, cause I don't see it. No one is born a monster, even Psychopaths can live in society without becoming a monster. And many monsters are not psychopaths.
Jim Carrey said that Anthony Hopkins based his performance on a spider and a crocodile. Waiting and striking.
Two years late but this is so spot on and subtly terrifying
I'm sure someone has already mentioned that Brian Cox was Lecter first, well the before Silence of the Lambs movie, in 'Manhunter', which was based on the Red Dragon novel by Harris. Cox's portrayal was much more like the novel, but as a short simplistic side story, used in the book and movie to emphasize Will Graham's emotional unbalance.
Brian Cox's portrayal of Lector was both more subtle yet more direct than Hopkins'. I still think it's the superior performance. Manhunter is one of those films that divides an audience - it is very 80s, but even during the 80s it made audiences uncomfortable.
Manhunter is on my list of movies to watch. I want to compare Manhunter and Red Dragon, see the similarities and differences.
Thank you for mentioning it, both Cox’s performance and the movie are very underrated, Manhunter is both a much better movie and book adaptation than Red Dragon. Also one key difference is that Cox plays maybe less elegant but more natural Lecter, one that wouldn’t stand out and would blend much easier than somewhat eccentric one by Sir Hopkins.
Jesus whom is the one and only true God and Creator came to earth 2000+ years ago to go to the cross to pay our sin debt in full. His sacrifice was sufficient to pay the penalty for the sins of the world (1 John 2:2). A created being could not pay the infinite penalty required for sin against an infinite God. Only God could pay such an infinite penalty. Only God could take on the sins of the world (2 Corinthians 5:21), die, and be resurrected, proving His victory over sin and death and that true and only God is JESUS! And He did all that because He loves us and wants to save us and have a relationship with us. JESUS is the only way to Heaven, only He can save us from sin and from hell ( Luke 5:32, John 14, Romans 6:23). Jesus is waiting for you to come to Him, He won't cast you away from Himself if you come to Him. He calls us all to repentance, He loves us and wants to save us. believe and have faith in God then the Holy Spirit will come in and lead you to repent of your sins and God will forgive you of your sins and cleanse you by the blood of Jesus and you'll get born again by His Holy Spirit and have His salvation, you will become a new creation (John 3:3-19). God bless
It's the tale of the Scorpion and the frog. The scorpion is telling the frog what it wants to hear, what it NEEDS to hear. But the scorpion can't being the scorpion.
Aye thanks for this video bro
Another influence on Hopkins characterisation, was an acting teacher called Christopher Fettes, who taught at RADA, & who would be absolutely precise when teaching his students
Yes, Hopkins played him in the first 3 mentioned here, but you can't ignore or forget that Manhunter was made in the 80's and Red Dragon was simply a remake of that.
Heath Ledger’s Joker, Javier Bardem’s Anton Chigurh, Daniel Day-Lewis’s Daniel Plainview and Christoph Waltz’s Hans Landa are all villain’s for ages, yet nothing has topped Anthony Hopkins’s Hannibal Lecter, and probably never will.
Great discussion, especially the inspiration! I'm so torn between the movies and the Hannibal show even now. Thank you for this video.
Im surprised you dont have at LEAST 100k yet
Well the channel is less than a year old so yeah that’s understandable
It sure is interesting
Lecter is the ultimate villain because he can see right through you, always one step ahead.
Great stuff...thank you...thoroughly enjoyed. Personally, the greatest acting is the ability to mesmerize just by speaking; Anthony Hopkins did such a remarkable job in Silence....just a man's face, speaking.....Of course, the script is essential, but I can't imagine anyone else doing a better job.
Great analysis.
Manhunter was Red Dragon under an alternate title. So it was the film to introduce the character.
Crazy that he only had 15 minutes screen time, feels like he is in the movie as much as Clarice..
I liked Silence best, but Rising is extremely good. I feel Rising offers a plausible explanation for his character, but nothing can really be known with certainty - it must remain a mystery.
Anthony Hopkins' performance of Hannibal in Silence is very much of a university professor lecturing his Master Class in Psychology, including the psychological games to get a better idea of who is deserving of passing grades on their thesis, who deserves to fail, while actually hoping to challenge someone to rise above and give a thesis worthy of an A, or at least a B.
Starling would get the B, but Lecter would give her the B+ because he actually likes her. The B is because she is intuitive, and knows her subject well enough to get lucky. But she doesn't have the intellect for an A.
I had a professor who was very much like this. Very insulting to the undergrads and playing psychological games with his graduate students. His subject was Geology, not Psychology or Criminology. He loved when students challenge him intellectually. He were identical clothing everyday just to see how long it took anyone to notice. Then to see if they could figure out he had a closet full of tweed, identical shirts, pants and ties. His shoes I expect he had a few pairs, but likely 5 of everything else. Maybe 10. It was a top university and paid professors much better than most schools. His favorite story ended with the geologist attempting to kill himself. He expected us to understand the lesson of running all the tests, especially the cheap test that gets the fastest result. But he advised us to use a larger caliber gun to be certain we kill ourselves rather than leaving ourselves a mental vegetable, as in the case study/story he had just told. Yes, a test was skipped because he was sure he identified the rock correctly. It resulted in the brand new dam failing just 2 weeks after filling. It killed. The geologist could not live with the guilt of those deaths, but went cheap with a 22 and lived, but would never think again. Professor recommended a 45. A 38 should do the trick, but poor handling by a novice may not kill. A 45 is almost guaranteed to kill. I am paraphrasing, it was long ago.
Take off the prison jumpsuit, dress him in tweed and they are practically the same. JK. That was years before workplace shootings became a regular thing in the US. Decades before school shootings or random shootings into crowds became a regular thing n the US. But guns are not the problem, even though places without widely available guns don't have random murders like the US. (Sarcasm.)
This Hannibal Lecter Psychological Profile is Awesome!
Anthony Hopkins Best Performance in All Memories.
What makes The Silence of the Lambs (1991) a Great Masterpiece, is the Rivalry between Clarice (the Hero) and Lecter (the Antagonist) Face to Face.🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆
Dr. Hannibal Lecter looks at you, like a Dragon fixes his Prey. Protecting his Treasure, Knowledge.🐲🐉
I may sound stupid, but I would be okay with being in the same room as this guy, having an intelligent conversation with him, hopefully talking about Florence, art and music, psychology etc. and not human meat
My two bits. Good essay, but I think it misses a couple of things, although to be fair this is made more explicit in the books, where he makes an interesting journey. (I'm ignoring "Hannibal Rising" - origin stories for psychos are bad ideas since it removes their mystery and power.) In "Red Dragon," Lecter has no problem killing innocent people, but he underwent a shift in "Silence," and maybe it was the shift from a male to female protagonist. In "Silence," in the book more than the movie, he actually functions more like a dark father, helping Clarice see that there are people around her who have no problems using Lecter's crimes to advance their own careers, making them, in some ways, worse than him. (Remember that Lecter doesn't kill Mason Verger, but his nurse does after Lecter tells him that he can kill him and blame it on Lecter.) In "Hannibal," it's made even more clear that although Lecter will kill anyone he sees as a threat, his real targets are opportunists and hypocrites. The movie also makes a critical change from the book, where Clarice joins him in the end as a companion after she's betrayed by the FBI. The less said about the tv series, the better. Mads is always watchable and it was certainly one of the strangest and goriest shows on tv; but it was overseen by a gay showrunner that reimagined the story as a gay love story where Lecter spent three seasons trying to seduce fluffy nutcase Will Graham away from boring heterosexuality. It also made it seem like Lecter does nothing but eat people from his well-stocked freezer, where in the films it implies that eating people is a special treat reserved for his enemies, his victory feast, so to say. Harris lost film and television rights to the character so he had no say in how Lecter was presented, but his silence about the show doesn't seem an endorsement of the direction the character took. As the part is too "juicy" to leave forever, we'll probably see Lecter again someday (it would be fun to play "flip the part" and have Johnny Depp play him after Mads got his part in "Fantastic Beasts") and have him carry on by different actors like the Joker. Time will tell. Bon Appitite...
Now do Mads's Hannibal
Hannibal the show was the best installation.
Thank you
The TV show with Mikkelsen expands on this, I think. It clearly shows Hannibal's narcissism. He thinks of himself as smarter and more sofisticated than the common people, enjoying fine art adn food, and you see him visibly disgusted by people's weakness multiple times. When meeting Will, he believes he found someone of similar intellect and believed Will had an inner killer as well. He forcibly tried to turn Will into basically an extension of himself, so he could freely share his dark side with a like-minded indivdual he deemed of near equal standing and worthy of his attention. He wants that intimiacy here too.
As for the other criminals, I think he merely finds them psychologically fascinating while also primitive in their actions. To him they are easily manipulated and he often eats them afterward to show his dominance. He talks about dark subjects all the time, hinting at his secret with the detective, playing with him, but also testing to see who really has a dark side like him.
I think, while he feels superior, he also craves some connection, if not in a twisted way. It's just that regular people bore him and he wants that intellectual challenge, which is why he very much enjoys playing the game of wit with Will. He loves seeing himself in Will.
this video is so underrated
The first movie to feature Hannibal Lecter was called Manhunter Lecter was played by Brian Cox. Manhunter was based on the red dragon novel.
Please do one for Anton Chigurh.
Very interesting decomposition of one of the best villain of all times. I am crazy enough to subscribe.
Great video! I found Hannibal and Hannibal Rising to be entertaining but unnecessary; Red Dragon & TSOL were quite sufficient. Hell, TSOL could've been the only film and it still would be an all-time great. And I liked Brian Cox's interpretation of Lecter in Manhunter (a very good film, but not as good as TSOL in my opinion). Lecter is an evil genius, and both Cox & Hopkins portrayed that well. Hopkins did a better job in my opinion, but Cox's performance was a worthy effort. Cox emphasized the evil a bit more, whereas Hopkins played up the genius aspect. Just my opinion. You've gained a new subscriber!
Try the tv series, Mads Mikkelsen is brilliant as Hannibal.
Those sequels are amazing, pure fan service of what society demands, the most intresting charachter of all time, surpassing micheal corleone in my opinion
That´s a very good analysis. I´m glad the tv-series and Manhunter only got shown once.
Loved all of the movies. Great video, books are great.
Outstanding!! Go deeper please!!
Well done. 👏
Hopkins was superb as Lecter. However, Michael Mann's 1986 movie "Manhunter" was supposedly based on Harris's book "The Red Dragon."
I think that the things that Hannibal rising added didn't really help the character and to my understanding Harris didn't want to do it but the movie was going to be made regaurdless so he decided to write it
By the time he wrote the Hannibal book I think Harris liked the Hannibal character too much and started portraying him as an anti hero rather than the villain he was in Red Dragon and Silence. Giving him the stupid backstory of Nazis killing his sister, feeding him what was left of her and him ending up liking cannibalism because of that further ruined the character. The more mysterious character he was in the first 2 books who told Clarice that nothing had happened to him but he'd happened was better.
@@Xehanort10 More of an anti-villain, since Lecter is never the antagonist in the plots in any of Tom’s novels. But you are correct. I think Tom was genuinely afraid of Lecter but grew to enjoy exploring his world.
@@Xehanort10 - I quite agree with you. The childhood traumas Harris invented for poor widdle Hannibal undermined the power of the character. I doubt the doctor Harris met in that Mexican prison had been born in a castle or had been fed his sister. Portraying what Arendt well tagged as the banality of evil would have been far more compelling to read and watch.
A true legend of acting in his finest role.
I have to say I was also very impressed with the more recent Tom Cavanaugh as Eobard Thawne (The Reverse Flash) in the The Flash Barry Allen tv show. Particularly in the first season and his cameo episode in season 2. He is a very interesting type of psychopath. It’s almost as though he has bonds and connections with others but still completely disregards those and kills without emotion and even at times with sadistic pleasure. It makes for a very unique experience, because we get to feel the fatherly connections he forms with the others as Dr. Wells, and then see that some of those emotions were actually real, yet he still kills just as coldly, and in that story, the character is actually far more cunning and intelligent than Lector, because he literally uses his own knowledge and understanding of quantum mechanics to create his own reverse speedforce to give himself superhuman speed that he learns how to manipulate to go back and forth through time and erase people from ever having existed to rewrite history to his liking. He manages to manipulate the viewers, much like Hopkins as Lector, with the subtlety of his expressions and mannerisms to indicate that the monster is indeed there under the surface even when he seems so fatherly and caring. It gives that same sense of knowing that he is always the most powerful one in the room. Not just because of his powers, but mostly because of his incredibly razor-sharp mind.
I’d say it was Dr. Lecter’s charm - the way he winks at Clarice while turning the page of the questionnaire for example…he has an innate ability to make himself very likeable
Charm, charisma, intelligence and psychopathy at its “best” or “worse”
My daughter very much enjoyed seeing Lecter's childhood and watching his metamorphosis, in fact feels Hannibal Rising is the best of the four stories, but I purposely never watched them. I saw most of Red Dragon because I happened to walk in on it but otherwise avoided them. I have a vivid imagination and coming up with my own back story is half the fun. It can change and twist as I rewatch or reread something and notice a new detail. That gives me an infinite supply of side stories. Sometimes the reader/viewer needs to be left to mentally deal with the nonanswer. It's generally much more disturbing because of how personal it is. Very Lecteresque.
In Silence of the Lambs, in one exchange with Clarice, Hannibal tells her she will find no pathology in his background growing up. I wish Harris had kept this for the origin story. It then becomes more of a Bad Seed type story which imho is a far more interesting story. That movie came out before the code was dropped. So they added the lightening strike at the end, but subsequent remakes show that evil lives. Missed opportunity.
Yes, exactly. Trauma does not explain criminality. Far more people are traumatized than commit crimes and some of the most traumatized live their lives with boundless compassion. Further, the traumas Harris concocted for Hannibal are ridiculously overblown, I guess on the theory that since Hannibal is really extra bad something really extra bad had to have happened to him. But his power as a villain is his enjoyment in being evil, the power he's found in it, and how as the years of his life went by, he took it further and further to keep wringing pleasure out of it.
The novels, Red Dragon and The Silence of the Lambs, gripped me more than any novels I've ever read. I've not read many thrillers - I study English literature, so my required reading eats up my time, but I've not encountered anything else like them. I'd love to though for sure. Hannibal didn't do it for me at all, and I've not had the time or desire really to read Hannibal Rising.
hannibal series was lit af
When I first saw Silence of the lambs by myself I thought who is this man who has such a violent back story yet he is acceptable and even appealing had he been free and wasn't going to kill me he'd would have been a great friend because he's manipulated the situation from fear of him to liking him to a degree as to where you end up rooting for him when he escapes via probably one of the most ingenius ways that I've ever seen next Shawshank, by wearing the guards face and uniform and gets a free long distance ride in the ambulance and in the end is walking in a brand new white suit right behind his former captor in the sunset is outstanding, I could talk about this character all day because there are so many things about him that are captivating
I subscribed cause your analysis was brilliant I have only watched one of his movies. And I like lamb and then goat. Human meat just doesn’t seem very appetizing!
Clarice Starling came to interview Dr Lector with some questions from the FBI. Dr Lector immediately takes full control of the interview and makes it all about Starling.
Its definitely due to how its performed. All of Anthony Hopkins's performances in movies kind of lures you in.
Great video, Anthony Hopkins was great, but Mads Mikkelsen role in the tv show Hannibal was the masterpiece...
10:35 Visually Senator Ruth Martin reminds me of Clarice Starling?
I luv this channellllllllll
I enjoy/ed Hannibal Rising despite what's mostly been said 😁. I think the cast and everyone did a fantastic job overall. Although it was weird seeing Gong Li there, having grown up watching her in other roles. Plus, she was a household name in my household 🤭😄.
I don't watch this genre of movie or read books designed to frighten my psyche/mind. When climbing the spiritual ladder the more your mind is purer, the easier it is to have genuine spiritual experiences and go into deeper meditations. I thank GOD for keeping me safe from at least 7 serial killers (that I know of) in my midst thus far. More about that in my upcoming 📖 BEHOLD THE FEAR MACHINE & it's succession plan.
We never see him blink. That's what makes him unnerving and captivating.
Does anyone know the name of the doctor/surgeon whom Tom Harris interviewed in the Mexican prison? The one Hannibal is based on?
Harris called this man Dr. Salazar to protect his identity. Unfortunately I suspect this person is long since deceased and we will never know his true name.
According to the Daily Mail, Vice, and other online sources, it was Alfredo Balli Treviño, who died in 2009 or 2010 at 81. He was convicted of killing his male lover, also a doctor, in 1959 and chopping up the body, burying the pieces in an attempt to hide the murder. He was referred to as the Wolfman of Nuevo León.
Mads embodies the Charming side of Hannibal, like Lucifer trying to tempt someone to sin
Hopkins embodies the unexplained uncanniness and horror of Hannibal, like death. Unexplained, unpredictable.
My favorite Hannibal is Mads Mikkelsen. But I like sir Hopkins too.
Harris wrote Lecter like a magnificent "patchwork" of several serial killers.
Can you make a video about harry potter
There are different Hannibals. Brian Cox is the most realistic. Cold, merciless, totally sociopathic. Hopkins is Grand Guignol, Gothic, he is Dracula, Van Helsing, Holmes, Moriarty, Jekyll and Hyde all at once. In this respect I prefer him in Hannibal. No pretence of realism. In another decade he would be an ideal role for Vincent Price. Mikkelson is a smooth reinterpretation of that Gothic vision too. More Christopher Lee than Vincent Price. Romantic, seductive, tasteful. The literary version is more like Darth Vader. He is trying to repair his inner world by replacing his eaten sister. He is a scarred hero. His victims from his point of view were deserving of their fate because they in someway spoiled his appreciation of life. Either by ruining a moment or by being a hypocrite.
How about an observation of the TV Series with Mads Mikkelsen?
Kitch very kitch compared to Anthony's interpretation.
one slight problem - the following order was right with red dragon done by different characters and director and producers it was called Man Hunter directed by Michael Mann released in 1986 although it did not have Anthony Hopkins but it was BRIAN COX in this Version as DR Hannibal Lecter in which he did a fine job as well . William Peterson of the CSI fame played WILL Gramm . and the Soundtrack Music was Amazing done by Tangerine Dream ! the script was pretty much verbatim from the book . but i did see you places some stills and clips of MANHUNTER
Wow I am early
wrong order. Red Dragon came out first. Michael Man's Manhunter (1986).
What's crazy is that he wasn't even the main villain.
Interesting video, but there are a few errors. Manhunter was the first film version, even if it bears a different title than the book. Also, Hopkins’ performance was indeed short, but 16 minutes is oft cited incorrectly. It’s closer to 23 minutes.
What makes Hannibal Lecter so hard to understand is his system of values. Most people base their system of values on morality and ethics. Not so in Hannibal Lecter’s case. Notice the preoccupation he has with art work and classical French cuisine. Thus his value system is based not on morality and ethics but on aesthetics. Aesthetics being the value of beauty and art. This is why, yes he is a serial killer, but he has to take the body parts and use them and transform them with French cooking methods. The ugly art of homicide becomes something of aesthetics and beauty by transforming parts of the body with French cooking methods.
Tom Sisson
im sorry im still trying to figure out how the nurse from one flew over the cuckoos nest is 5th on the top ranked villains of all time
He devours you; mind, body, and soul. He may as well be a vampire, but it's that he's human that makes him terrifying. If he _were_ a vampire, it might even be considered too on-the-nose.
What happened to the "Manhunter 1986" version?
It was kitch compared to Anthony's interpretation.
Manhunter was put before Silence of the Lambs. It was remade almost beat for beat as Red Dragon. Manhunter bombed, so we're very lucky to have gotten Silence of the Lambs.
Silence of The Lambs, Manhunter, and , OK, Red Dragon are the only acceptable movies.
It might seem strange now after so many serial killer films and TV shows but when SotL came out Hopkins performance was genuinely disturbing and frightening.
5:28 which ones?
Very much inspired by the cultured villain of the classic short story The Most Dangerous Game. General Zoraff.
Check out Michael Mann's Manhunter 1986
The ending of "Hannibal" missed a great opportunity to tell an incredible love story. The sequels capitalized on the premise of Hannibal but failed to take the relationship with Clarise to the next level. Harris could have written the outline for the love affair on the back of an envelope. Still, not too late perhaps.