Extreme Foodiness
Dead Like Me had Der Waffle Haus,
Pushing Daisies had The Pie Hole, and
Hannibal has the good doctor’s
kitchen. Rather than dwelling on
greasy-spoon breakfast food or mouthwatering dessert, Hannibal is all about ostentatious gourmet fare. True, it’s all made of people, but it looks amazing, and Hannibal is the most
verbose TV foodie since Rube.
Sumptuous Visuals
Because
it’s not as brightly-colored as Fuller’s other shows, Hannibal’s visual feast is subtler than that of its fellows. Still, the attention to color, detail, and eye-catching
mise-en-scène is undeniably there. Look
at the saturated sunlight when Will imagines himself fly-fishing and the
twisted beauty of the macabre murder tableaus.
Speaking of which…
Inventive Deaths
While I’ve
yet to see anyone on Hannibal die from
a water-cooler bottle or a scratch ‘n’ sniff bomb, the killers in the D.C. area
are a creative bunch. There’s the human
mushroom garden, the corpse totem pole, and the color palette of dead bodies
used for a mural. Hannibal himself gets
in on the fun regularly. My personal
favorite is the man turned into a human tree, with his torso opened to show that
his organs have been swapped out for precisely-arranged flowers.
Psychological Themes
Jaye saw
Dr. Ron, Chuck baked antidepressants into pies, and Reggie visited child
psychiatrists after George’s death. Hannibal, meanwhile, is full of psychology. In addition to Hannibal (therapist and psychopath – a twofer!) we have Drs.
Bloom, Chilton, and Du Maurier, along with a plethora of psychopaths and people
with other disorders. Plus, Will works
with the FBI’s behavioral science unit. Hallucinations,
hypnosis, and psychoanalysis, oh my!
Exceptional Dialogue
Like
the visuals, this parallel is less obvious.
Hannibal doesn’t use the whimsical
wordplay of Pushing Daisies, but the
dialogue is remarkable in quieter ways.
Will and Abigail’s extended metaphors on hunting and fishing are
excellent, and I don’t think I’ve heard a more plaintive description of cancer
than Bella’s story about a stray cell that got lost and is simply doing what it
does best. More recently, Margot’s
explanation of having “the proclivity for the wrong parts” artfully says
everything you need to know about her sexuality and her family’s opinion about
it.
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