I loved the
first season of “Hannibal,” both for the visual excesses and the intelligent
utilization of an infamous cinematic villain. While some of the elements remain
the same, such as the cast and the stylistic choices in cinematography and art
direction, the very fact that the first season allowed the narrative to
progress outside of the serial-killer-a-week formula also ensured necessary
changed in the second season. While I still enjoy the actors involved, much of
the second season of “Hannibal ”
begins to feel like the writers painted themselves into a corner with season
one’s finale.
After being
framed for the copycat murders, Will Graham (Hugh Dancy) has been locked up in
the dingy mental hospital. Although he has more than just a suspicion that it
was Hannibal Lecter (Mads Mikkelsen) who framed him, to cover up the fact that
he was the serial killer in question, Will has a difficult time gaining the
trust of his former colleagues. This is truest with Will’s former mentor, Jack
Crawford (Laurence Fishburne), though a flash-forward sequence in the first
episode of the season lets us know that his eyes will eventually be opened to
the truth about Hannibal .
I was honestly
quite skeptical about a Hannibal
series, though the choice for Mikkelsen in the role was inspired enough to draw
my attention. The other element that won me over was creator Bryan Fuller
(“Dead Like Me,” “Pushing Daisies), who has a long history of visually
spectacular shows that have a dark sense of humor. While the visuals and the
dark elements are here, there is not much humor to be found. Instead, all of
the over-indulgent stylizing has gone into the horrific and grisly murder
scenes. Few shows on any network have managed murder quite so creatively
gruesome, much less one that isn’t on cable. Regardless of the 10pm slot, I am
shocked at how disturbing NBC allowed this show to get in the first season.
Surprisingly, season two takes a step back, though this is mostly over a
preoccupation with other plot developments over new serial killers every week.
The Blu-ray
release of season two includes all thirteen episodes on three discs, along with
plenty of extras. There are commentaries for episodes, webisodes with Scott
Thompson, deleted scenes and even a gag reel. Also included are several
featurettes and a documentary, most dealing with the style of the show.
Entertainment Value:
8/10
Quality of
Filmmaking: 8.5/10
Historical
Significance: 7.5/10
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