hiss. Only I think this is better than the Silence of the Lambs experience. Maybe because I prefer watching Hannibal, this dedicated capture of Hannibal kept me focused throughout the film. This is more like a personal biography of Hannibal, with a large-scale carving and polishing of the characters, and he is really a perfect match for the Divine Comedy. The emotional line between him and the heroine is still very normal, and when he kills mad, he will always force a clear answer. Hannibal first asked if he would organize him to do these things. In fact, Sterling has been waiting eagerly. Just waiting for him to ask this question, listened to the recording of the criminal under handcuffs over and over again, and then raised her head cruelly. He said no, so the pervert shed a tear and still cut off his wrist. He said that Starling would really hurt this time. In fact, I have been guessing, I have been guessing whether Hannibal will kill Starling, the more he loves, the more he will kill, but he is still a mortal, a mortal with normal love, and the hand he cut off completely pulled him down. Altar, even if there is a sequel to Hannibal, it will not be as mysterious as the beginning.
It's not an emotion where the word "love" can be mentioned, but it's definitely the most captivating, deepest part of the whole movie, for me. In this film, Hannibal has been expressing his feelings for Starling clearly, but everyone, including the heroine, has never thought about or tried to face it and believe that she still thinks she is the cat like ten years ago. The mouse in the mouse game. "After Dr. Lecter was free, he wrote Sterling a letter in his own hand, full of his concern and his unique romance. As soon as the letter reached Sterling's hands, she was immediately used by her as a clue to hunt him down. , he sent her a letter from Europe, he has been following her news. Expressed his concern to her. But she is making it her mission to hunt him down." That sentence really touched me, it was not like It's what Hannibal would say, which probably means "I retired for eight years, and now you need to arrest me, then I will reappear for you." This is indeed Hannibal's most sincere confession, but There's nothing Starling can do not to think of Hannibal as a cat. She was always timid. Hannibal was too powerful and mysterious in her heart, and she was an unattainable existence like a god, so that she never thought that Hannibal would be interested in her outside the game of cat and mouse. Interest, I think, is a more appropriate description than love. "But he never deceived or hurt Sterling from beginning to end. She has always been the pure little girl in his mind, the girl who cried in dreams for the lambs on the farm." This may be the source of interest, and it is also very interesting to say it. It makes me laugh, the genius of the devil can be involved in such a common and cliché love, unable to maintain the most rational and genius judgment that he should have. It seems to be ripping off the altar, but I think this The best and most intense way to plump up a genius, cannibal, pervert, and devil into a flesh-and-blood Hannibal.
In the first and this one, I thought that Hannibal was playing a game of cat and mouse by not killing Starling, but at the end I realized that it was actually because of Hannibal's feelings for Starling, maybe it was love. Anyway, Hannibal's tension is so strong that I get goosebumps. Finally, I really like this white-skinned and long-haired heroine more than the heroine of the first part. She is too temperamental. This mature temperament is really charming, mainly because she is too obsessed with me, and at the same time it is very reasonable. , the inheritance of the first heroine with a hint of a newborn calf.
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