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Extras: Alternate Ending, Deleted and Alternate Scenes, Breaking the
Silence (5 Featurettes), 3 Multi-angle featurettes, Marketing Gallery
featuring Trailers, TV Spots, Rare Production Stills, Unused Poster Concepts,
Easter Egg, Director's Commentary
Director:
Ridley Scott
(1492: Conquest of Paradise, Alien, Black Rain, Blade
Runner, G.I. Jane, Gladiator, Legend, Thelma and Louise, White Squall)
Producer:
Ridley Scott, Dino De Laurentis and Martha De Laurentis
Screenplay:
David Mamet and Steven Zaillian
Music:
Hans Zimmer
Cast:
Dr. Hannibal "The Cannibal" Lecter: Anthony Hopkins
FBI Agent Clarice Starling: Julianne Moore
Mason Verger: Gary Oldman
Paul Krendler: Ray Liotta
Inspector Rinaldo Pazzi: Giancarlo Giannini
Barney: Frankie Faison
NOTE: This review contains a screenshot from the film which may spoil the
plot for those who haven't watched it. If you don't want to see the picture,
turn off images from your browser menu and click 'Reload'.
One of Hannibal's opening scenes
shows a bungled FBI raid on an HIV+ female drug-dealer, for which the organisation
is to be brought to book after enough cock-ups to make even Denis Norden blush
that stretch all the way back to the Waco incident in Texas in 1993.
But there's a way out for Agent Clarice Starling (this time played not by
Jodie Foster, as she had other things to do, but by
Magnolia's
Julianne Moore). In return for her name being left out of the firing
line, with a little help from man from the justice department Paul Krendler
(Ray Liotta) - and you can tell there's something shady about him from
the off - she must reinvestigate the case of Hannibal "The Cannibal" Lecter (Anthony
Hopkins), as there's a man who has some vital new information.
That man is wealthy and perverted Mason Verger (an unrecognisable Gary Oldman),
Lecter's fourth victim and the only one who survived, albeit ending up
horrifically disfigured and when you find out how it happened it'll turn even
the hardest stomach.
However, not all the info is there and she requires the help of Barney (Frankie
Faison), a psychiactric care worker who was employed at the hospital that
has held Lecter for six of the past ten years. Of course, he's gone missing
since then, so where could he be?
Meanwhile, in Florence, Italy, Inspector Rinaldo Pazzi (Giancarlo Giannini),
a once-celebrated cop after the "Il Mostro" case but has since come down in the
social standing of life, is rather concerned with a man claiming to be Dr Fell,
the latter of whom evades the question of explaining the disappearance of his
predecessor...
Anthony Hopkins acts in the same style as he did last time and does so
apparently effortlessly, while Moore is okay as Clarice but, apart from the
occasional throwing in of a Southern twang in her voice and other people
mentioning her meetings with Lecter last time, it could just as easily be
another character in the role.
Overall, Hannibal is a very well-written and competent thriller,
but like the prequel, Silence of the Lambs, it probably won't stand up to repeated
viewings as well. What is surprising though is that for a film based ten years
after, it's actually been filmed that length of time later as well. Compare
that with the ridiculous premise of 2001's The Mummy Returns being made a mere
two years after the previous film, yet also being set ten years later.
Ray Liotta starts to lose his head.
Ridley Scott defies his usual convention of a 2.35:1 aspect ratio and plumps
for 1.85:1, in keeping Silence.... He still
manages to make every shot look splendid and note early on, the brilliant
opening titles with Hopkins' face appearing as the pigeons settle on the
ground. Subtle, yet extremely effective, right down to the twinkle in his eyes.
Hpwever, this anamorphic print suffers from grain in some scenes - and even
some flickering in a couple - which is rather a shame given that from the age
of the film it should be perfect.
The average bitrate is a high 7.75Mb/s, often peaking above 9Mb/s.
The sound is in Dolby Digital 5.1 and DTS 5.1. Very rare that we get both
versions on the same disc, but that explains why the extras are on disc 2.
It's certainly worth it, though, with the shocking moments delivering enough
power and the softer ones coming through perfectly clear, usually with the
classical music that soothes the savage beast that is Hannibal Lecter.
The fantastically-detailed extras begin with Breaking the Silence: The Making of Hannibal,
a near-75-minute piece broken down into five separate featurettes: Development,
Production, Special Make-Up Effects, Music and Reaction. There's chat from
principal cast and crew members. The first part includes how Hopkins retired
from films in 1998 but would only be wooed back if the script and director were
right - and the surprise when Jonathan Demme passed on the film, while the
second takes us round Florence. For the next bit, would you believe the special
FX guys got their fake boar head by bidding for it on eBay?
The Music section finds it's Hans Zimmer's time to shine with his excellent score
and the last featurette gets professional opinions at the Los Angeles
industry screening held on February 1st earlier this year and the New York
Premiere held four days later. I'm quite glad I wasn't at the first one
(yeah, as if I'd ever get the chance!) because the audience don't half
whoop and cheer when something happens, which is why I prefer to watch films
on DVD at home without scores of people making a racket.
All of these featurettes are shot in 4:3 with letterboxed 1.85:1 clips
and 4:3-centre-cropped clips of the film, the former of which was making my
widescreen TV jump back and forth as the screen changed.
Three Multi-angle featurettes are included too. First one of the Art of
Storyboarding which features an exclusive 9-minute interview with Ridley Scott and you
can choose between the storyboard, a shot of the storyboard and the film scene
it portrays at the same time, or both together with Ridley in view talking.
It's best here to go for the second option (angle 3 on the DVD) so you can hear
him as well as seeing the clips in full view.
The multi-angle breakdown of the fish market shoot-out runs for 10 minutes
and shows the scene from four separate cameras, with a fifth angle option to
check out all four at once which is the one I selected. Finally, comes the
near-2-minute opening credits sequence broken down into four separate angles
and four separate audio feeds, each of which are interchangeable. The angles
are: Final Title Design, Original Teaser Cut, Shooting Pigeons, Nick Livesey's
Notebook (he being the creator of the sequence) and the audio feeds are: Final
Theatrical Mix, Original Teaser Mix, Commentary by Nick Livesey and Commentary
by Ridley Scott, the latter lifted from the feature-length director's
commentary.
There are fourteen Deleted and Alternate Scenes, each which can be played
with director's commentary or the original dialogue and totalling around 34
minutes in length, culminating in the alternate ending. I find the best way
to watch these is with the commentary on and English subtitles for the dialogue
so you can concentrate on both simultaneously. The quality of each of
these clips is mostly as good as those left in the film itself, but sadly all
of these are non-anamorphic and in Dolby Pro Logic sound only.
The Marketing Gallery section contains a 60-second Teaser Trailer
a 2½-minute Domestic Trailer and 19 TV Spots - 11 running
for 30 seconds and the other 8 for half that amount, all of which are in
16:9 non-anamorphic widescreen. There are scores of photos in the Rare
Production Stills gallery, indexed by scene and covering the majority of
the film and even the deleted scenes and also a selection of Unused Poster
Concepts from three different designers, although I think the one they
went with was the best of the lot as it's less busy.
Finally, there is the feature-length Director's Commentary as alighted
to earlier and an Easter Egg depecting "Flashframes", the brief bursts
of film exposed from the time a director yells "cut!" to the moment the camera
is actually turned off. The collection was assembled by associate editor
Wes Sewell into a 3-minute montage along with the backdrop of an original
song called "Clarice", written and produced specifically for this by the film's
music editor Mark Streitenfeld. This section can be found under the
"Breaking the Silence: The Making of Hannibal" section by clicking on the
two up arrows next to the word "Music".
For a Universal DVD released via Columbia we have more chapters than usual
with 32. Subtitles come in 12 languages :
English, Turkish, Danish, Hindi, Hebrew, Dutch, Finnish, Greek, Norwegian,
Swedish, Icelandic and Arabic, plus extra subtitles for the director's commentary
in both English and Dutch.
Most of the menus are static and silent, but the main one is well animated
and scored in keeping with the opening credits as well as the motion shown
between menus.
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish.Accept
Privacy Overview
This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.