@@owensmith3995 no, he was right the first time. or haven’t you heard? Hopkins is tooootally a cannibal in real life. i mean, i’m saying it on the internet, so it has to be true, right?
It's what's called false sense of security. I remember seeing that in SAVING PRIVATE RYAN, as Pvt Mellish is getting stabbed by the nazi. SSShhhhh. Sshhhhh.
I mean, funny glib comment I guess, but overlooks that Dr. Lecter enjoyed associating with intelligent people, and in his psychosis he actually does not want this victim to feel pain, and as he explains when people go into shock it operates to a degree to mitigate the sensation of pain.
I have a feeling that book was put there with the intention the detective find it, if you see the rest of the items they are all correctly positioned except that book, oddly standing out, he even leave him for a while like expecting him to see it, the perfect trap to stab him, eat his heart and end the chacing.
@ivipovi666 You're definitely reading way too much into it. Graham didn't suspect lector at all until this point. Lector could have killed Graham in a million less contrived ways, he just genuinely enjoyed his company in his own twisted way (not to mention the insider information on the investigation) and had no desire to until Graham was starting to catch on.
@@Ilasperr I don't think they're reading too much into it. Graham was very close to figuring out that Lecter was the killer, but as Lecter later says, he failed to act on his instincts until it was too late. And it's not too contrived to think that Lecter would leave such incriminating evidence out in the open. It happens often with serial killers: they leave clues or evidence out because part of the thrill for them is the possibility of getting caught.
the orchestra conductor is the great Lalo Schifrin, an Argentine pianist and composer responsible for classics such as: Mission: Impossible and Mannix, as well as the scores to Cool Hand Luke (1967), Bullitt (1968), THX 1138 (1971), Enter the Dragon (1973), The Four Musketeers (1974), Voyage of the Damned (1976), The Eagle Has Landed (1976), The Amityville Horror (1979), and the Rush Hour trilogy (1998-2007). Schifrin is also noted for his collaborations with Clint Eastwood from the late 1960s to the 1980s, particularly the Dirty Harry series of films.
Yes. They did a good job on this. Harris doesn’t go into a lot of detail on this incident in the book. In ‘Man Hunter’ Will infers that it happened at the university Lecter was working at.
I love Ed Norton and couldn't stand his wooden and withdrawn performance here. It's like he didn't want to be in the film. Apart from this scene, all the rest of his are so drab. Hopkins, of course, kills it again. William Peterson nails it in Manhunter and after watching both several times now, I think the first adaptation is superior.
@@dameinoferrall2400 Manhunter is actually far superior. Only things Red Dragon does better is that Fiennes' Dolarhyde is closer to the books than Noonan's and Red Dragon kept the books ending which is better than Manhunters shootout ending. Not only is Norton reluctantly sleepwalking but in my opinion Hopkins gives his worse Lecter performance and is overacting in most of his scenes.
And also one of THE staple repertoire of orchestra flute, which makes the flutist's mistakes more egregious: this piece is supposed to be the bread butter of all orchestral flutists. It's like wood worker who can't build a box right.
the orchestra conductor is the great Lalo Schifrin, an Argentine pianist and composer responsible for classics such as: Mission: Impossible and Mannix, as well as the scores to Cool Hand Luke (1967), Bullitt (1968), THX 1138 (1971), Enter the Dragon (1973), The Four Musketeers (1974), Voyage of the Damned (1976), The Eagle Has Landed (1976), The Amityville Horror (1979), and the Rush Hour trilogy (1998-2007). Schifrin is also noted for his collaborations with Clint Eastwood from the late 1960s to the 1980s, particularly the Dirty Harry series of films.
When Lector is taunting him later in the movie, saying he didnt beat him but rather got lucky. He agrees and says Lector was at a disadvantage. Lector asks what he means and he reaponds you're insane. Lol
@@dougbrowne9890 i love manhunter but when edward norton tells lector that , anthony hopkins face looks much more angry inside. manhunters he just starts ramblin
@@derpingolatrouse Right. They just grind movies out now like sausages with marketing strategies and content formulas that appeal to a certain demographic to rake in huge profits. Sad.
The carving of the hand with the extra digit is a nice little Easter egg. In the novels, Hannibal was born with polydactylism but had the superfluous finger removed not long after his birth.
"I don't want you to feel any pain" as he's got a knife sticking in his guts. But at the same time, humane and creepy that he didn't want him to suffer more than he had to before he was gonna be eaten.
@@dvader3000 Brian Cox is possibly one of the most realistic psychopaths ever put to screen. Hopkins can veer into pantomime levels of horror and be terrifying, but Cox's take was that of a pure psychopath who could truly carve up people and not even blink
I've seen this scene many, many times and just realized that Graham tells Lecter "You don't strike me as a man who makes very many mistakes.", not only because he's starting to suspect him, but because he wants to see if he can get a read on him. He looks him directly in the eye when he says it in a clear challenge to Lecter. When he feels his suspicions are confirmed you see how uncomfortable he becomes. Great micro facial expressions in this scene from Norton. I didn't pick up on this for a while. It also makes more sense when Lecter calls him brave because he confronted his worst possible fear head on. One last thing is I wonder if he did tell someone, anyone, he was going to see Lecter so that if he did die, Lecter would become a prime suspect.
Yes it’s the service! He feels it as his duty. Very obligated. I think even special agent Graham starts to realize Lectors sense of obligation to doing the right thing. Just fascinating intellect.
As a kid I watched sotl quite a few times, never understood it but just like the visuals and atmosphere of the movie. When I was old enough to follow along with the story I couldn't help but watch the others. They're not all homeruns but all certainly are very much worth watching. I want to say I read one of the books as well but it was so long ago I can't remember if I have. I also enjoyed the Hannibal tv series, surprisingly good.
As a CCW carrier for many decades, I have carried multiple firearms for many years. I once accidentally ejected the magazine of my Glock 30 onto a tile floor. The magazine base popped off ejecting all of my rounds save the one in the chamber and the magazine spring in every direction. As I gathered up my rounds, the baseplate, and spring and reassembled the magazine, it occurred to me how deadly inconvenient this could be in a gunfight or a ground pound situation. Most grapples end up on the ground and are horrifically difficult to extract from without serious injury or death. Especially if one is elderly or injured. My pocket carried Keltec P32 would be a welcome little surprise to an attacker instead of finding myself with a very expensive one shot Glock. I often carry a K-Bar TDI knife on my weak side as "ditch weapon" or if my gun hand is compromised or someone attempts to wrestle my pistol from my hand.
Red dragon was by far a better book than silence of the lambs, easy to see that got made into the film first though as it's more Lecter focused than Will Graham
As the years pass by and we grow older ...we're able to recognize those insane small details that at first you don't pay attention to while he's in that "Role"... then all of a sudden you're in absolute awe how he's able to personify the magnetic genius of pure insanity.
Trivia: sir Anthony Hopkins did write a walz which was played by the orchestra of André Rieu. He even attended a concert of Rieu. Imagine looking beside you and seeing Hannibal Lecter sitting there…..
starting to watch hopkins movies is always like a new journey all from the begining. I promised myself I will never fall into this trap again. I have no enough time nowadays.
I once analysed a crime, a burglary, and concluded that the perfect suspect was...me. I didn't do it but everything pointed to me. I was very embarrassed as I laid this out to the victim, my friend.
@@carpballetI think you misunderstood his question, which I interpreted as “are we supposed to believe all of that awesome looking interior was in that building in the initial shot” - to which the answer must be yes. And I agree the grandiose interiors don’t match with the exterior shot.
I'd vote for him at this point............ Can you imagine Kim Jong Un or Putin deciding what to do? The first thought through their heads would be "What if he decides he wants to have Korean or Russian cuisine tonight?"
Director of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra: "Well, you're horrible, and can't seem to string more than a few notes together without a mistake--but what the hell, we need another flautist. You're hired."
Why would he write 'Sweetbreads' on it? imagine you understand a language and you go to make a pork pie, why on earth would you circle the word 'pork'?
@@CodeNameV13Not really. It's a gastronomic term that doesn't translate easily. You have to have lived in France or gastronomy to know that word in French.
@RobRyan-c3v I learnt French in Australia during my apprenticeship under a French/Algerian chef. I knew when I was in the shit before I knew the cookery terms
Are you telling me that a musician happens to disappear like that? No, he orchestrated it! Hannibal! But not our Hannibal.. Couldn't be our precious Hannibal.. And he gets to be a forensic psychiatry? What a sick joke!
Oh this movie with the benefit of hindsight from the order of its release following Silence and Hannibal, the way this whole opening plays out is just masterful and tense
Can anyone explain how he found out Lector is the serial killer he was looking for just by reading a cookbook with "sweetbreads" scribbled on it? Like that's literally what a ris de veau is called
Remember this is the Same AnthonyHopkins , who refused when a sailor offered his body may be used , hopkins said he will not descend to cannnibalism as it was beyond humandignity even if he had to part with his life in mutiny on the bounty.
According to the Larousse Gastronomique, sweetbread is "the culinary term for the thymus gland (in the throat) and the pancreas (near the stomach) in calves, lambs and pigs."
The agent put two and two together. Before, the agent had mentioned that the killer was eating sweetbreads- coincidentally, the very parts of the body the killer had been cutting out of the dead. The agent realized something had been overlooked. The doctor had been cooking sweetbreads as a substitute for the meat in the recipe. At that moment,the agent knew the doctor was sabotaging the investigation. So the Dr must be the killer
@@shazanali692 cept the agent never mentions sweetbread (he mentions liver tongue kidney thymus etc.) so why would reading a common cooking term like "sweetbread" pike his attention? the fact the doctor highlighted that term could simply mean he likes to cook like a lot of people do. especially since that term never came up in the agent's conversation with the doctor so sounds like a huge leap of logic
flesh missing from either side of the back. they oysters. takes me back to silence of the lambs where the girl found in the river had to diamond shaped cuts on both sides of the back .
The arrows fall down inside the bag, with Will's forearm resting on the feathers. Suddenly Will's somehow grabbed the arrows much lower down, pulls them out of the bag (without moving his shoulder), and stabs Hannibal. In the next shot, the bag is missing. 🤔
When i see sir Hopkins i always think of captain bligh from muntiny on the bounty when mr christian (mel gibson) says "the crew don't want to go around the cape horn" Bligh "rumblings is there, whose the captain of the bounty " 😆 incidentally mel rocked an even more aggressive ponytail in that movie .... Gave me rumblings for days
I grew up and now currently live in the serial killer capital of the world. We have had the most evil people plaguing us in the nicest scenery. (Pacific Northwest)
That ponytail is the most evil thing Hannibal ever did.
No eating his sister rather than starving was the most unhinged evil action
Welcome to the 90s bish
💯
@@thetruthinknowledge8554ah yes, when Hannibal had a French accent in his younger years.
@@thetruthinknowledge8554 That's no biggie.
Several missed notes strikes one’s ear just as painfully as that pony tail of Hannibal’s strikes one’s eye.
Touche 😂
Demure😂
Well put. I wasn't feeling that ponytail either. 😂😂
Its just a ponytail.
the woman at the end was holding the fork in the right hand...
Flautist, having a bad night and missing his notes: "ouch. That was awful. Ah well, nobody will remember a bad performance, I'm trying my best"
I'd be scared to cough if Hannibal was there.
😂🎉@@caesarjergens
JAJAJAJA
“How I’d love to get you on my couch”
*Hey woah woah woah calm down Hannibal*
And ironically Hannibal was the insane one.
@@robinmessing530 Lecter doesn't eat junk food, he probably rather be executed than eat J.D. Vance.
Your a sad person
Bahahaha.....that's great
There will NEVER be another Sir Anthony Hopkins.
You don't say 🙄
Damn right!
You liked saying “sir” did you not?
@whynottalklikeapirat - I did actually. And he deserves the respect
@@PaleHorse68 There you go. Shame Dr. Lecter is fictional you could have had fun with that too …
Anthony Hopkins was sitting in the theater thinking I can’t be the only one who wants to eat this guy 😅
Hannibal, not AH
@@owensmith3995 no, he was right the first time. or haven’t you heard? Hopkins is tooootally a cannibal in real life. i mean, i’m saying it on the internet, so it has to be true, right?
You mean 'kill' not 'eat', surely?
@@tmajuru559 No he meant eat, as in eating his ass or something like that
The ability to survive mortal wounds is a common thread in this movie.
In The Whole franchise…
Alison Botha
I do wonder if Will can survive those wounds though
You'd be surprised what we can survive nowadays
@@SignOfTheTimes008 Did you look up Alison Botha?
“I don’t want you to feel any pain”
Proceeds to cause immense pain.
It's what's called false sense of security. I remember seeing that in SAVING PRIVATE RYAN, as Pvt Mellish is getting stabbed by the nazi. SSShhhhh. Sshhhhh.
thats the placebo effect shrinks love to use.
say something, do another.....can never trust them
😅
I mean, funny glib comment I guess, but overlooks that Dr. Lecter enjoyed associating with intelligent people, and in his psychosis he actually does not want this victim to feel pain, and as he explains when people go into shock it operates to a degree to mitigate the sensation of pain.
@@sliceserve234 Almost every single syllable of what you just said was wrong lmao.
Note to self: have zero items in your office lair that a potential victim can use against you in defense in the event they try to grab something.
I have a feeling that book was put there with the intention the detective find it, if you see the rest of the items they are all correctly positioned except that book, oddly standing out, he even leave him for a while like expecting him to see it, the perfect trap to stab him, eat his heart and end the chacing.
@ivipovi666 You're definitely reading way too much into it. Graham didn't suspect lector at all until this point. Lector could have killed Graham in a million less contrived ways, he just genuinely enjoyed his company in his own twisted way (not to mention the insider information on the investigation) and had no desire to until Graham was starting to catch on.
Thanks for the advice! I´ll keep my butcher knife collection behind thick glass from now on.
Those recipes were a nightmare to cook you know, you need to have it always at hand! Hannibal hadn't the luxury of smartphones.
@@Ilasperr I don't think they're reading too much into it. Graham was very close to figuring out that Lecter was the killer, but as Lecter later says, he failed to act on his instincts until it was too late. And it's not too contrived to think that Lecter would leave such incriminating evidence out in the open. It happens often with serial killers: they leave clues or evidence out because part of the thrill for them is the possibility of getting caught.
the orchestra conductor is the great Lalo Schifrin, an Argentine pianist and composer responsible for classics such as:
Mission: Impossible and Mannix, as well as the scores to Cool Hand Luke (1967), Bullitt (1968), THX 1138 (1971), Enter the Dragon (1973), The Four Musketeers (1974), Voyage of the Damned (1976), The Eagle Has Landed (1976), The Amityville Horror (1979), and the Rush Hour trilogy (1998-2007). Schifrin is also noted for his collaborations with Clint Eastwood from the late 1960s to the 1980s, particularly the Dirty Harry series of films.
I like the painfully pretentious dinner conversation. I kind of suspect concert committees actually do have this kind of conversation.
Perhaps Hannibal also thought they were pretentious twats which is why he took great delight in serving them up his 'special'.
My ex in-law family; horrible snobs who bragged about their knowledge of art and old music🤢
thats why people hate rich twats, they are never honest, even to your face
@@CirclingtheFringes Could be worse. Could be a bunch of people talking about Beyonce and Taylor Swift.
I kinda wanna watch a whole prequel to this with more pretentious dinner convos and Lecter helping Will with other cases.
Rare case where both the book and adaptation are phenomenal.
Yes. They did a good job on this. Harris doesn’t go into a lot of detail on this incident in the book. In ‘Man Hunter’ Will infers that it happened at the university Lecter was working at.
@@pedroiarules Yep. Added scene, but it served the film well.
@@jonathanc.gillespie4897 the show was better. By far.
I love Ed Norton and couldn't stand his wooden and withdrawn performance here. It's like he didn't want to be in the film. Apart from this scene, all the rest of his are so drab. Hopkins, of course, kills it again.
William Peterson nails it in Manhunter and after watching both several times now, I think the first adaptation is superior.
@@dameinoferrall2400 Manhunter is actually far superior. Only things Red Dragon does better is that Fiennes' Dolarhyde is closer to the books than Noonan's and Red Dragon kept the books ending which is better than Manhunters shootout ending. Not only is Norton reluctantly sleepwalking but in my opinion Hopkins gives his worse Lecter performance and is overacting in most of his scenes.
When he said poor fellow, Hannibal looked at him like “Yes, and by the way; you’re eating him”
If anyone became a vegitarian after watching this scene, I can definitely understand why. 🤢🤮
and the woman at the dinner table was holding the fork in the wrong hand...
Person: "Hannibal, confess."
Hannibal: "She knows, it's over."
hahaha I get it hes the bay harbor butcher
Silence of the Lambs was incredible... pretty much a perfect movie, but Red Dragon was creepy as hell! I thought it was awesome!
Do you see?
The Hopkins version is great but there is a lesser known version where the good doctor has a phone in his cell and lol PHONES the criminal to warn him
Silence and red dragon the rest not worth bothering with... Actually you can get them both in one book... Well worth a space on your shelf
"I ss-SEee " 😭 👨🏼🦽🔥🔥🔥
Yes it's totally normal to scream when slipping into a warm bath 😂
Scherzo, A Midsummer Night's Dream
Musical composition by Felix Mendelssohn for anyone wondering
Thank you! I was about to run that through the shazamm app
Thank you!
And also one of THE staple repertoire of orchestra flute, which makes the flutist's mistakes more egregious: this piece is supposed to be the bread butter of all orchestral flutists.
It's like wood worker who can't build a box right.
the orchestra conductor is the great Lalo Schifrin, an Argentine pianist and composer responsible for classics such as:
Mission: Impossible and Mannix, as well as the scores to Cool Hand Luke (1967), Bullitt (1968), THX 1138 (1971), Enter the Dragon (1973), The Four Musketeers (1974), Voyage of the Damned (1976), The Eagle Has Landed (1976), The Amityville Horror (1979), and the Rush Hour trilogy (1998-2007). Schifrin is also noted for his collaborations with Clint Eastwood from the late 1960s to the 1980s, particularly the Dirty Harry series of films.
0:27 The director is Argentine composer Lalo Shifrin, who created the score for Mission Impossible.
And Enter the Dragon.
This movie is forever re-watchable
seek help
@@roberthooper8883 why…? It’s a great movie.
What a bizarrely stupid thing to say. Take your own advice.
@@roberthooper8883 Hannibal would love to get you on his couch.
@@mustchoosewisely I bet you right!!! He LOVES a good meal!!
When Lector is taunting him later in the movie, saying he didnt beat him but rather got lucky. He agrees and says Lector was at a disadvantage. Lector asks what he means and he reaponds you're insane. Lol
Scene is better in Manhunter.
@@dougbrowne9890 i love manhunter but when edward norton tells lector that , anthony hopkins face looks much more angry inside. manhunters he just starts ramblin
He looks hurt, disappointed, and angry all at once. Masterful that Anthony could present that with an expression.
@@Adam-r6s2c all of this, and at the same time no overacting at all. Some actors are just so good it's insane.
Some say Christopher walken is the best horror actor with charm. I will always say its Anthony Hopkins.
To me it's two totally different approaches. But they are definitely a couple of all time greats
Now you want to cover creeps with charm and panache...how many serial killer movies are out there.
I'd be terrified to be a woman on a boat with Christopher Walken and Robert Wagner
@2:18 this is where you see that Hannibal did genuinely enjoy their company.
The acting when being stabbed is superb here!!!
Witnessed a few (stabbings), have we? I'd give more kudos to the editing, foley and orchestral 'stabs' than the acting.
Just like when it happens in reality
A. Hopkins is one of the best actors in Hollywood. I enjoy all his 🎬
Empire believes he is the best ever. Not entirely agreeing but it just proves he is definitively one of the top 5.
Actually Kinda Poetic
"I do Admire you Courage. I think i'll eat your heart"
hold my slow-cooker 🤣
4:28 eideteker is the word Hannibal uses to describe Wills gift. It relates to eidetic memory, aka photographic memory.
Hannibal ate all of his servants and now has to clear the table off by himself... 2:44
Edward Norton does such a great job in this movie.
That is my one complaint, I found Norton, who is an excellent actor, to be entirely miscast in this movie.
@@sliceserve234 william petersen was better in that role
3:03 Was it on purpose that you timed the subscribe sound exactly when he blinked?
He didn't reply to you well dont be sad
I’m pretty sure it was a coincidence, but a damn funny one
I will never be able to see anyone else than Hugh Dancy as Will Graham after the show.
When did Hollywood part ways with fine acting and settle to make up for it with overwrought sound-effects and horrendously loud dramatic music?
Woke people happened
it's what happens when money runs it. just need to create huge spectacles to impress and entertain
@@derpingolatrouse Right. They just grind movies out now like sausages with marketing strategies and content formulas that appeal to a certain demographic to rake in huge profits. Sad.
Pirating.
Around the time The Avengers happened
Incredible scene.
The carving of the hand with the extra digit is a nice little Easter egg. In the novels, Hannibal was born with polydactylism but had the superfluous finger removed not long after his birth.
"I don't want you to feel any pain" as he's got a knife sticking in his guts. But at the same time, humane and creepy that he didn't want him to suffer more than he had to before he was gonna be eaten.
Maybe he doesn’t want any more adrenaline dumped into his “steak”
@@Ok20002
Gamey and tough.
He considered Graham a "friend", just like he was "in love" with Clarice.
Even when Sir Hopkins didnt play the character first there will never be another Dr Lecter as scary as him
Mads Mikkelsen is right up there w/him IMHO!
Brian Cox
@@donnyannessa654 Mr Cox's portrayal is not scary at all
@@dvader3000 Yes it is. It’s quite chilling
@@dvader3000 Brian Cox is possibly one of the most realistic psychopaths ever put to screen. Hopkins can veer into pantomime levels of horror and be terrifying, but Cox's take was that of a pure psychopath who could truly carve up people and not even blink
I've seen this scene many, many times and just realized that Graham tells Lecter "You don't strike me as a man who makes very many mistakes.", not only because he's starting to suspect him, but because he wants to see if he can get a read on him. He looks him directly in the eye when he says it in a clear challenge to Lecter. When he feels his suspicions are confirmed you see how uncomfortable he becomes. Great micro facial expressions in this scene from Norton. I didn't pick up on this for a while. It also makes more sense when Lecter calls him brave because he confronted his worst possible fear head on.
One last thing is I wonder if he did tell someone, anyone, he was going to see Lecter so that if he did die, Lecter would become a prime suspect.
Wow dude, do you not realize it's just a dam movie, you people are so damn funny 😂
Eating a bad musician is like eating a poor cut of steak.. i would think Hannibal would have been more selective..
He was improving the sound of the Orchestra ❤😋😋
in the books its said that
Hannibal greatly preferred to feed on "The Rude"...being offensive was the primary quality of his prey.
You're missing the point dear!
Yes it’s the service! He feels it as his duty. Very obligated. I think even special agent Graham starts to realize Lectors sense of obligation to doing the right thing. Just fascinating intellect.
He wouldn’t want to eat good talent….
*"Ummm...It tastes like metal! I can hear the music in my belly."*
Sure, some are better than others. But i love every film in this franchise.
In his own sick way he cared enough abt will to say what will happen as he's dying
Agreed
As a kid I watched sotl quite a few times, never understood it but just like the visuals and atmosphere of the movie. When I was old enough to follow along with the story I couldn't help but watch the others. They're not all homeruns but all certainly are very much worth watching. I want to say I read one of the books as well but it was so long ago I can't remember if I have. I also enjoyed the Hannibal tv series, surprisingly good.
Hannibal was ruined by changing agent starling
All those shots Will fired and he didn’t hit that ponytail once
Morally of the story always carry 2 guns
As a CCW carrier for many decades, I have carried multiple firearms for many years.
I once accidentally ejected the magazine of my Glock 30 onto a tile floor.
The magazine base popped off ejecting all of my rounds save the one in the chamber and the magazine spring in every direction. As I gathered up my rounds, the baseplate, and spring and reassembled the magazine, it occurred to me how deadly inconvenient this could be in a gunfight or a ground pound situation. Most grapples end up on the ground and are horrifically difficult to extract from without serious injury or death.
Especially if one is elderly or injured. My pocket carried Keltec P32 would be a welcome little surprise to an attacker instead of finding myself with a very expensive one shot Glock.
I often carry a K-Bar TDI knife on my weak side as "ditch weapon" or if my gun hand is compromised or someone attempts to wrestle my pistol from my hand.
Red dragon was by far a better book than silence of the lambs, easy to see that got made into the film first though as it's more Lecter focused than Will Graham
As the years pass by and we grow older ...we're able to recognize those insane small details that at first you don't pay attention to while he's in that "Role"... then all of a sudden you're in absolute awe how he's able to personify the magnetic genius of pure insanity.
Everyone else was enjoying the concert. Hannibal was hunting!!!
Trivia: sir Anthony Hopkins did write a walz which was played by the orchestra of André Rieu. He even attended a concert of Rieu. Imagine looking beside you and seeing Hannibal Lecter sitting there…..
Hopkins was made for that role. Great flick
starting to watch hopkins movies is always like a new journey all from the begining. I promised myself I will never fall into this trap again. I have no enough time nowadays.
I once analysed a crime, a burglary, and concluded that the perfect suspect was...me. I didn't do it but everything pointed to me. I was very embarrassed as I laid this out to the victim, my friend.
You positive you didn't do it? ;)
ah, a confession, wrapped in a denial.
Those dead eyes.. 😱
You mean to tell me all that awesome looking interior was in that little building in the initial shot?
No. All the interiors were constructed on a sound stage. A sound stage set is far more “malleable” for the purposes of filming.
@@carpballetI think you misunderstood his question, which I interpreted as “are we supposed to believe all of that awesome looking interior was in that building in the initial shot” - to which the answer must be yes. And I agree the grandiose interiors don’t match with the exterior shot.
What? That little building is Lecter's HOUSE, not the theatre.
It's Lecters town house, which should be obvious as the audio with dinner guests is overlaid
Well, Hannibal did eat 16 Czechoslovakians, guy was an interior decorator.
That flute player sure triggered his cannibalistic taste buds…..😂
So this is the late, great Hannibal Lecter we hear some candidate for the presidency rambling about?
I'd vote for him at this point............ Can you imagine Kim Jong Un or Putin deciding what to do? The first thought through their heads would be "What if he decides he wants to have Korean or Russian cuisine tonight?"
He hadn't even finished cleaning up from the dinner party yet.
This is actually my favorite of the series. SOTL is superb surely, but this one is my fav.
your comment, like so many on the internet, is empty.
Director of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra: "Well, you're horrible, and can't seem to string more than a few notes together without a mistake--but what the hell, we need another flautist. You're hired."
We truly are blessed for Hannibal content
Why would he write 'Sweetbreads' on it? imagine you understand a language and you go to make a pork pie, why on earth would you circle the word 'pork'?
Lecter was a polyglot. Writing English in the French cookery bible was a major plot hole
@@CodeNameV13Not really. It's a gastronomic term that doesn't translate easily. You have to have lived in France or gastronomy to know that word in French.
@RobRyan-c3v I learnt French in Australia during my apprenticeship under a French/Algerian chef. I knew when I was in the shit before I knew the cookery terms
The first and only scene we ever got to see Hopkins Hannibal in action pre prison era
Are you telling me that a musician happens to disappear like that? No, he orchestrated it! Hannibal! But not our Hannibal.. Couldn't be our precious Hannibal.. And he gets to be a forensic psychiatry? What a sick joke!
He defecated through a tuba !
He never had the makings of a varsity musician
@@brucecallas2655 He defecated through a tuba !!..
Is that a better call Saul reference?
@@crazypato3752 no, a JoJo one
Oh this movie with the benefit of hindsight from the order of its release following Silence and Hannibal, the way this whole opening plays out is just masterful and tense
Incredibly well done
Can anyone explain how he found out Lector is the serial killer he was looking for just by reading a cookbook with "sweetbreads" scribbled on it? Like that's literally what a ris de veau is called
He already suspected him before the conversation started.
It was right after the conversation where he had discussed missing parts and one of them he named was the thymus
Which wine is best served with human heart?
a sweet red... 😁
Barolo
The fact is, you don't get to perform in one of those orchestras without being good enough.
Hannibal casually surviving five arrows and two bullets to his torso.
I am so glad that Enthony doesn't run around with DeNiro and Woopey Goldberg.
He's royally pissed at the flautist fucking up.
Ankle-carry backup revolver - it's not a want, it's a need.
Who is the heavenly woman seated to Lecter's left at the symphony???
Young Clarice who else
The appetizers
The moment when he didn't play it perfectly, made him a target lol
A man of such refined tastes as Hannibal would kill and eat himself for daring to wear that ponytail in public.
Wake up a large group of art curators ,go to bed a large group of cannibals
Remember this is the Same AnthonyHopkins , who refused when a sailor offered his body may be used , hopkins said he will not descend to cannnibalism as it was beyond humandignity even if he had to part with his life in mutiny on the bounty.
Like for real? In real life?
I think you might be blurring fantasy with reality.
The Bounty 😅
Can someone explain to me whats in ' sweet bread ' phrase that cought detective attention?
Veal's thymus.Very good stuff!
According to the Larousse Gastronomique, sweetbread is "the culinary term for the thymus gland (in the throat) and the pancreas (near the stomach) in calves, lambs and pigs."
The agent put two and two together.
Before, the agent had mentioned that the
killer was eating sweetbreads-
coincidentally, the very parts of the body
the killer had been cutting out of the
dead. The agent realized something had
been overlooked. The doctor had been
cooking sweetbreads as a substitute for the meat in the recipe. At that moment,the agent knew the doctor was
sabotaging the investigation.
So the Dr must be the killer
@@shazanali692 cept the agent never mentions sweetbread (he mentions liver tongue kidney thymus etc.) so why would reading a common cooking term like "sweetbread" pike his attention? the fact the doctor highlighted that term could simply mean he likes to cook like a lot of people do. especially since that term never came up in the agent's conversation with the doctor
so sounds like a huge leap of logic
LOL my finger was blocking the lower right side of the video so at 3:03 I thought that was part of the film and I was like wtf 😂
You know, it's bad, whwn Hannibal says:" Bon appetit.."🫣🤮😂
Remember, as long as you dont offend the good doctor, he wont eat you
flesh missing from either side of the back. they oysters. takes me back to silence of the lambs where the girl found in the river had to diamond shaped cuts on both sides of the back .
The arrows fall down inside the bag, with Will's forearm resting on the feathers. Suddenly Will's somehow grabbed the arrows much lower down, pulls them out of the bag (without moving his shoulder), and stabs Hannibal. In the next shot, the bag is missing. 🤔
Ah anthony hopkin..what an actor ..what an actor !!
Hannibal found his match at Last
Getting older teaches us that Clarice was the monster
Which version? Book or Film?
Gonna be honest will you all, I like Red Dragon more than Silence of the Lambs.
The dialogue (about the missing person) is so oafish in hindsight. Watching this movie as a kid i dont remember if i even connected THOSE dots 😂
Antony Hopkins is a wonderful actor respect🙏🙏🙏
Spoiler alert.....dessert is canceled
He's now trumps FDA head
That ponytail is lit. I wold have protected him but he shanked me so I had to grease him up rodeo style.
"You shot him with three arrows, then four bullets?"
I think the real crime, was the ponytail.
When i see sir Hopkins i always think of captain bligh from muntiny on the bounty when mr christian (mel gibson) says "the crew don't want to go around the cape horn"
Bligh "rumblings is there, whose the captain of the bounty " 😆 incidentally mel rocked an even more aggressive ponytail in that movie .... Gave me rumblings for days
Never except a dinner from a Cannibal
I went to dinner at a cannibals but I showed up late and he gave me the cold shoulder
I told him your wife makes a wonderful stew he says yeah but I'm sure going to miss her
He confided in me that he hates his mother-in-law so I told him to try eating something else
@@kevindavey7536 lmmfao
Incredible acting
What an opening sequence
Oh dear GOD, why did ya'll give him a pony tail on here?
They turned him into a cartoon after silence of the lambs
Anthony Hopkins, a true artist of his acting career. The male Meryl Streep
I grew up and now currently live in the serial killer capital of the world. We have had the most evil people plaguing us in the nicest scenery. (Pacific Northwest)
I lived there a couple of years. I used to hunt fossils in the Green River Gorge.
Norton remains brilliant . Such a talent
That divine-looking meal was the missing musician.........