The war scene at the beginning is also quite willing to invest.
However, it just couldn't convince me.
Why did the male protagonist want to eat people when he saw his sister being eaten by hungry people when he was a child?
It would be nice if the whole show didn't use Hannibal's cannibalism, but instead told a good story of revenge after the war.
Gong Li's Japanese woman in the play clearly taught the teenage Hannibal the most important skill in the show, killing. I didn't see anything about raw food, maybe it was edited out. When Hannibal put on the Japanese samurai jaw mask, it really cleverly overlapped his adult film and television image.
If it is not in terms of civilized ethics and morality, there is nothing wrong with cannibalism. Cannibalism is also not uncommon in the animal kingdom. The beauty of this world is only because we deliberately pursue such a world. One will go to help the other and not eat her.
Human flesh is not necessarily unique or delicious, and Hannibal's pursuit of cannibalism is not only for spiritual reasons that normal people like me cannot understand, but also some social reasons that ordinary people can understand.
For example, feeling like a higher human being.
Or on the contrary, they feel that the elegant people who eat together are just like eating others, so they drag down the abyss of sin together.
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