metalslimer
Member
Yeah as much as I actually like this season season 2 was a masterpieceI'm in the middle of a show rewatch, just finished episode 6 of season 2. Man, this show used to be masterful, in every way.
Yeah as much as I actually like this season season 2 was a masterpieceI'm in the middle of a show rewatch, just finished episode 6 of season 2. Man, this show used to be masterful, in every way.
I really don't understand all the negative reactions to this episode from the Thursday reactions, or the general negative thoughts on the Red Dragon arc. I thought it was a great episode, and they are killing this final arc. I'll post more thoughts on this and the last few episodes in the next couple days.
Yeah, same. I thought it was great. For what it's worth, it'sI really don't understand all the negative reactions to this episode from the Thursday reactions, or the general negative thoughts on the Red Dragon arc. I thought it was a great episode, and they are killing this final arc. I'll post more thoughts on this and the last few episodes in the next couple days.
So true. Honestly I think this Red Dragon arc has been pretty great. I really dig the focus on one killer. I think it's sort of what I wish Season 1 (and some of S2) had been, rather than the killer of the week stuff. It really sucks that the show's been cancelled just when it seems to be coming into its own. I think a Silence adaptation handled this way could have been something really special.Seeing what Fuller and Armitage have brought to Red Dragon makes me REALLY wish we could get Silence of the lambs more so than I did before they got to this arc. Would love to see what they could do with Buffalo Bill. How they would flesh that character out. And, Hannibals escape... Would he go after Will, or would he and Clarice (or her replacement) be a thing?
So I just sat down to watch my DVR'd episode of Hannibal and found a football game instead. How does one watch this episode legally? Do I have to buy it?
Thank you. I always forget to check On Demand; here's hoping Time Warner is as quick as Fios. I checked the NBC app and it only has last week's episode so far.If you have Verizon FIOS they usually put them up for free in the In Demand section. Also, the episodes go up here: http://www.nbc.com/hannibal/video
I can't tell if its the acting or the writing, but I've cringed many times this season when Bedelia has dialogue, which I didn't do the first two years. I think its an unfortunate combination of Anderson being fed the least natural, most clunky lines of any character combined with her lethargic, near monotone delivery. Its been one of my biggest issues this season and I always feel like her scenes are the low point of every episode.
I can't tell if its the acting or the writing, but I've cringed many times this season when Bedelia has dialogue, which I didn't do the first two years. I think its an unfortunate combination of Anderson being fed the least natural, most clunky lines of any character combined with her lethargic, near monotone delivery. Its been one of my biggest issues this season and I always feel like her scenes are the low point of every episode.
Chilton getting his lips bitten off...what the fuck? :x
and then Hannibal eats one of them lol
We need a gif of the moment he slurps it up.
And then the look afterwards was just incredible.
They really have gone too far with the overall look of the show. Before the Red Dragon was introduced I went back to S1E01 and the difference is surprising.Been rewatching S1 and S2, her "acting" is decidedly different this season. I don't know if she's been fed shitty direction or what. Then again, there is also too much of her this season. Watching S3 in the middle of a series rewatch, it just seems to me that not enough care was put into the show this time around. Most if not all episodes were tightly designed. The pace was great and they were well written, it used to be a entertaining to hear dialogue between two people. Now it's a complete chore. Not really sure what went wrong here.
Maybe adapting Hannibal and Red Dragon was just a serious mistake and stretching that material to 13 hours does nobody any favors.
A personal pet peeve about this season is that everything is just too fucking green. I don't understand what's up with that. The picture is excessively dark too.
I kind of felt that the character swap for that wheelchair scene, while fitting in poetically with the previous season, still felt like it was pandering. Like Fuller made the decision to make Lounds a female but didn't want to go through with burning her on air so opted with Chilton, a character we all hated.
That said, what the hell is the FBI doing that they set him up and allowed that to happen?
Pandering to who? Every time I see the word "pandering" in this sort of context, it looks like a slam against political correctness (i.e. trying not to treat historically marginalized people like shit).I kind of felt that the character swap for that wheelchair scene, while fitting in poetically with the previous season, still felt like it was pandering. Like Fuller made the decision to make Lounds a female but didn't want to go through with burning her on air so opted with Chilton, a character we all hated.
That said, what the hell is the FBI doing that they set him up and allowed that to happen?
What? Chilton is probably the most lovable character on the show, which is almost certainly the reason Fuller put him in Lounds place.
That's because of the history of women in media and society. It's not an equal playing field, and it's unfortunate that modern attempts to correct that are met with so much resistance. But I guess it's all a matter of perspective. When you don't perceive a problem with how women were and are treated, it can look as though a bunch of uppity people are scrambling for special treatment of women at the expense of men.I thought Chilton being the victim was great simply because the playful aspect of him basically being immortal on the show. To find out he was still alive was something special lol. Like, he literally can't die. And of course there's a reason why both Hannibal and Will would want him to suffer. Don't feel they hate Freddy nearly as much as they do Chilton.
I guess I can see the whole violence against women thing though, but I don't think that really went into the thought process of the writers. It is funny though how no one raises an issue with the male characters get brutally tortured and murdered but the second anything happens to a female character all hell breaks loose.
Pandering to who? Every time I see the word "pandering" in this sort of context, it looks like slam against political correctness (i.e. trying not to treat historically marginalized people like shit).
A lot of fans were broken up over Abigail and Beverly's fates, and also, based on interviews, I get the sense that Fuller wants to maintain a certain level of tact and restraint in portraying violence against women, to counterbalance the way that raping or otherwise brutalizing female characters is exploited freely for cheap drama in popular shows (see: Game of Thrones).
Fine with me. I'm glad I didn't have to watch Freddie go through all of that. I love Chilton's character too, but he didn't get a gender swap specifically intended to increase the show's female representation. Preserving Freddie for that reason isn't pandering, it's resisting the stupid trend of trying to make the audience squirm by tormenting women. Besides which, it makes perfect sense for the show's version of Chilton to end up where he did, considering his standoffish relationship with Will and Hannibal, his ineptitude, his unfortunate tendency to play checkers when everyone else is playing chess.
This is a show that killed two of their lead female characters and paralyzed another then turned her into a lesbian who will likely be killed.
This is a show that killed two of their lead female characters and paralyzed another then turned her into a lesbian who will likely be killed. While I do adore the show, the direction with those characters is more of a teenage male's fan fiction than anything else.
Not a slam against political correctness - but rather more of pandering towards their largest vocal audience, tumblr, which is predominantly female. (i.e. see the Supernatual effect) They even spelled out in the recent episode, "does Hannibal love me?" which tumblr will go nuts for.
You can't be serious with this.
Alana was always bisexual. Fuller said so on Twiiter. Plus he's gay, so there's no fantasy angle there.
Do you really think that a decision based so heavily on characterization, as I pointed out previously, is a result of basic number crunching so as to best get tumblr applause?
When they were writing, and then shooting, and then editing this, I don't think they were aiming for tumblr plaudits. I think they were just trying to make their adaptation as good as they could.
I think it's hard to make the argument that a show this self-indulgent gives a fuck what ANY aspect of its audience really thinks, much less cares so much that Fuller & Co. will sabotage their own storytelling for the sake of some gifs.
I think if it was done more tastefully and not "they gave each other a glance once" I would've accepted it more. Plus the pattern of female fates on the show and that aligns with awkward fanfiction