Since recording this reaction I've heard there are other Hannibal movies... what do you think? Are they worth watching? ALSO: please consider signing up for a FREE trial of Aura! It really helps me and the channel! aura.com/cristyreacts
@MYS.MVP.Ай бұрын
The sequel to this one is pretty good if you don't mind a little more blood or gore
@havok6280Ай бұрын
The movies are hit or miss. I particularly like Red Dragon. But the TV show is excellent.
@andyspark5192Ай бұрын
📌 Now you're ready to watch Hannibal television series from 2013
@RMBittnerАй бұрын
I’ve only seen the immediate sequel to this one, which I saw in the theater. To me, it felt much more like a standard horror movie than the singular classic that SOTL is. I didn’t like it enough to ever give it another watch.
@jcolson1138Ай бұрын
Why are people posting SPOILERS? Seriously, why ruin the viewing experience for her?
@Rofyle-e4vАй бұрын
I read the book the movie is based on. In the book it is mentioned that Hannibal never killed blue collar working people. This was because none had ever made the mistake of thinking they were smarter or more clever than him, and so they always came across to him as polite. He despises rudeness above all else. He finds wealthy, educated people unbearably rude.
@lethasatterfield9615Ай бұрын
Lecter could be quite charming if he found someone interesting. When he was free, people that were courteous, clean and well-mannered probably didn't need to worry about him. If someone offended his unique sensibilities in some way, they were toast...or, as in the case with the police, someone got in the way of him achieving some objective. Even though his character is a psychopath, he does have his own code, and I believe he was genuinely fond of Clarice. If you read the books, you'll get a better insight into him. Of course, he's capable of just about anything and more intelligent than pretty much everyone.
@coldwhite4240Ай бұрын
Good analysis. The crazy and frightening thing is, there are of course killers like that in real life, who are in institutions and have been convicted of various heinous crimes, but have their own bizarre "code" by which they show respect or even affection for others who they feel some affinity for. For example, what Lecter did to Miggs was punishment for the disrespect and obscenity that Miggs had shown to Starling. Hannibal considered he was protecting Clarice and it was 'justice' to mentally torture Miggs so that he effectively died of fright.
@eTraxxАй бұрын
Dr. Lecter is what is called a functioning psychopath .. they don't understand what we feel .. not really .. but they are smart enough to "fake it". I remember a book by Robert Heinline where a surgeon admits to being such a person .. that he got his .. "kicks" during surgery .. he knew that to act otherwise would put him in prison.
@windsorkid7069Ай бұрын
Jodie Foster said in an interview that she completely avoided Anthony Hopkins for the duration of filming the movie because he stayed in character the entire time and that terrified her. After the wrap she finally talked to him and said he was one of the most sweetest gentleman she ever met.
@sheertАй бұрын
Not her fault entirely as he was locked in a cell on set before she needed to be there.
@windsorkid7069Ай бұрын
@sheert No, you're locked in a cell.
@MsCatmandoАй бұрын
That's true i heard dad too
@windsorkid7069Ай бұрын
@@MsCatmando You heard your dad? No wonder you're scared.
@vudujl83Ай бұрын
definitely recommend the movie Se7en if you want an intense psychological thriller…
@matttorrence2900Ай бұрын
“I still haven’t seen ONE lamb!” - Cristy
@yourlifeisagreatstoryАй бұрын
Came to make the same comment but wanted to see if someone else caught it. I’m going to think of that line every time I watch this move haha
@vahaneloyanАй бұрын
There’s a lamb in the drawing…😂😂😂
@veggiesarefruitsАй бұрын
Yeah, that was cringe. Never thought it was probably a metaphor? Even if it hadn't mentioned a lamb, many books and films use descriptors that aren't literal.
@elbrucesАй бұрын
The lambs are in the director's cut.
@sluglife9785Ай бұрын
"She's so young here." Jodie Foster has been acting since she was 3! You can see her as a 12 year old in Taxi Driver (1976).
@krusty9570Ай бұрын
You’re damn good at this! Great job!
@Kenyon712Ай бұрын
She was intriguing to him. She was a little female, but so determined, and brave, and wanting to save victims. She didn’t let the sexism, disrespect, or fear get in the way of saving the ‘lamb’. He wanted to know what made her that way. It was satisfying to him the know her story.
@yinzinnatiАй бұрын
I think so many people fail to realize the first patient behind bars was played by an actor named Don Brockett. For those of us in Gen X or prior , that’s none other than Chef Brockett from Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood!
@IGirt1Ай бұрын
That’s crazy. Such a throwback
@DW.StrangemanАй бұрын
That's a cool bit of trivia to remember and I'm also gen x but from England and as far as I'm aware that show never played here. Even though I've heard of it I don't know any of the characters but that could be the winning answer in a pub quiz.👍
@IGirt1Ай бұрын
@@DW.Strangeman It was a great children’s show I watched growing up. I actually lived a block away from Mr Roger’s childhood home. Good ol Latrobe Pennsylvania, home of Arnold Palmer, the first professional football team, and the birthplace of the banana split.
@naysay02Ай бұрын
29:49 a fascinarting theory I read is that senator martin presents herself as a senator, groomed, confident and in a position of authority. she isn't a mother distraught for her child, her external trappings mattered. That is why Lecter lost respect for her and taunted her.
@jeffsetter213Ай бұрын
Cereal cannibals are very rare. The last documented case was in 1983 when "Count Chocula" had a bowl of 'Cap'n Crunch" I remember it like it was yesterday. I still have nightmares. Condolences to the Crunch family.
@CristyReactsАй бұрын
LOL
@forthrightnightАй бұрын
That matching lip liner move @40:53 earned my subscription. Cheeky. First time viewer of the channel. Big reaction fan.
@CristyReactsАй бұрын
Welcome aboard!
@terryhughes7349Ай бұрын
perfectly executed movie. Great book, great adaptation. Fantastic reaction.
@CristyReactsАй бұрын
Thank you for watching with me!
@SFOlsonАй бұрын
This is such a great movie, and it’s so effective at building tension slowly throughout the movie without being ham handed about it, but at 45:55-46:08, it looked like your brain was buffering a little bit.
@alexlim864Ай бұрын
18:20 I always did feel sorry for the cat. First, it sees her servant captured and carried away, after which it spends a few days starving and getting dehydrated. And then, when its servant returns, it has with her a (ugh) smelly. Dirty. DOG! 😾
@CristyReactsАй бұрын
Poor kitty!
@DylansPen18 күн бұрын
I've seen this movie many times and never noticed her sweatshirt said FBI Academy. Yeah this is one of those great movies.
@Redd21481Ай бұрын
Check out Hannibal you get to experience Hannibals personality more😂Awesome show there ma'am 👏 Keep up the terrific work 👌 👏 👍 😀
@tubbywonderАй бұрын
Anthony Hopkins performance in this movie is so good. He won best actor even though he was only in the movie for 16 minutes.
@Limerick98Ай бұрын
I thought I was the only one who imitated the MGM lion. Now I know better.
@thecelticblogАй бұрын
The taunt to Senator Martin is a reminder of what Hannibal is. He fully intends to string them along for his own ends; he enjoys to watch human beings suffering. He taunts her by evoking a strong personal memory of her daughter and then basically asks her to think about how she'll feel when her daughter is dead. It's nothing more than pure malice. "Never forget what he is," is what Jack Crawford tells Clarice. This is what he meant. Hannibal is urbane, sophisticated and intelligent. But he IS a monster, and that's the most important thing to know about him.
@mmhdataАй бұрын
It's so great to re-experience some of the greatest films by seeing them through the eyes of a first-time reactor. There have been several film adaptations of the Thomas Harris 'hannibal' novels. Manhunter and Red Dragon, and a sequel to Silence of the Lambs which was just called Hannibal.
@insertname193Ай бұрын
50:59 the movie won 5 out of 7 of its Oscar nominations: best picture, best actor, best actress, best director, and best adapted screenplay
@blastingweevil2968Ай бұрын
there is no one else who could have played hannibal so well sir anthony hopkins was born to play him.. he makes him seem soo real and sooo Creepy without ever being explosivly violent he is so calculating and quiet.. love the movie.
@corymccarty8603Ай бұрын
I love your work so much Cristy. You are so expeessive with your eyes. Your reactions are so intense and entertaining. Top notch. Keep up the great work and I'll keep watching.
@CristyReactsАй бұрын
Thank you so much!!
@corymccarty8603Ай бұрын
@@CristyReacts You're so welcome. Thank YOU for the great videos! Lots of fun!!
@CanadaDan22 күн бұрын
2 questions, how did Hannibal get the pen? I think the only way would be if Barney gave it to Hannibal, that's why he didn't kill Barney when he escaped. How did Buffalo Bill get the girls down the well? There isn't any lower levels, maybe a ladder but it'd be kinda silly.
@argantyr51547 сағат бұрын
Remember this is from 1991, and the Book is obviously older, most likely being written in the 80's and that can explain why certain Men in the Movie looked upon Women in certain careers.
@nicksykes4575Ай бұрын
The reason he knows what soap and skin cream Clarice uses, and the fact she was bleeding on her second visit, is he has a heightened sense of smell.
@IGirt1Ай бұрын
Lair Du Temps is a perfume not a soap
@IGirt1Ай бұрын
And the heightened sense of smell is a symbol of him being like a predator. Increased sense of smell for hunting prey
@alicestevens8291Ай бұрын
The mentalities of all the characters are so well established. I feel for better or worse like I actually met these people by watching this.
@mostaley5049Ай бұрын
Great reaction to a great movie , excellent screenplay and acting, 😊👏👏 Goodbye horses. 😂😂 He’s tucking it. 😂😂
@RMBittnerАй бұрын
Loved your reaction to this great film. I think your outro really nailed all of the key points, which is kind of amazing to me. You picked up on points I didn’t see until after several viewings. But maybe that’s *my* issue! 😊
@DriverbillyBАй бұрын
Great reaction. Loved your whispering Dr Lecter at the end . 😁❤️
@charlesbarnes6912Ай бұрын
Fun fact: there was a serial killer Ed Gein caught in the 50s in Wisconsin, the horrors they found in his house like a human skin lamp shade and a belt made of nipples (pics on the internet) help to inspire this book, and the Texas chainsaw massacre and original psycho 😂😂😂
@jmsmys13ifyАй бұрын
Buffalo Bill was a composition of Ed Gein, Ted Bundy (the faking an injury tactic), and... one other I'm not going to bother googling right now. I just know he had an actual pit in his basement. And I'm pretty sure it wasn't Dahmer or Gacey.
@chrisbanks665927 күн бұрын
Highly recommend you read the book. And the follow-up, Hannibal (which is also a movie worthy of reaction) - Just a different actress (Julie Ann Moore playing Clarice), but she does a good job. I read 'Lambs' about 3 or 4 years before they made it a movie & thought this would be a great movie! For once, how right I was.
@CristyReacts26 күн бұрын
Nice! I'm actually recording my reaction to Hannibal (the movie) today!
@MsCatmandoАй бұрын
In the beginning, she was told not to tell him anything about her.Yet she is
@davidpyorkshireАй бұрын
Im glad you highlighted how Clarice had to deal with a male dominated environment. Lecter was the only one who really respected her for who she is and was genuinely fascinated with her. Hence he told her that he wouldn’t come after her to ease any worries she might have.
@5calambresАй бұрын
Exept Crafford later apologized to her and explained it was the easyest way to get the police chief out of the room. The two bug experts, the fbi instructors and the storage owner... everyone was respectfull.
@matttorrence2900Ай бұрын
I can’t believe Cristy forgot the word handcuffs!
@Jeffagarcia6622 күн бұрын
You should see Manhunter with original CSI cast member William Peterson it has that 80s vibe and has a different actor portraying Hannibal Lector . There is also To live & Die in LA its unrelated but features William Peterson Willem Dafoe and has a amazing car chase on the LA freeway just wild!
@drchaos2000Ай бұрын
great reaction... using that lipstick just as buffalo bill does was really great
@charlize1253Ай бұрын
Think about how the movie opens: with Clarice running through an obstacle course, foreshadowing how she has to navigate through men leering at her, making passes at her, and not taking her seriously. Structurally, this is a variation of a vampire movie (the guard asks whether Hannibal is a vampire), but every man in it is a vampire to Clarice.
@richardlaswell463Ай бұрын
20:25 notice that she used her West VA accent to make them relate to what she is saying.
@TerryJ-zf5zpАй бұрын
That has to be the best reaction to this movie I have ever seen, I have watched 50-75 reactions to this movie. What made your reaction great was your physical response, both voice and body. I also appreciated your desire to just react to the movie as it progressed, a lot of reactors try to guess the plot of the movie or responding to the different actors in the movie and listing the other movies they have seen with this actor bah bah bah. Yours was just a pure reaction, keep up the great job.
@gsparkmanАй бұрын
Agreed! Christy stays focused on the film and doesn’t go off on tangents, or try to impress with suppositions of what’s going to happen next. I’d enjoy seeing a film with her. I guess that I just did. It was great.
@SparksDrinkerАй бұрын
Top 15, maybe top 10
@CristyReactsАй бұрын
Awww thank you! I loved reading this!
@kylereese5841Ай бұрын
Iconic movie.
@corymccarty8603Ай бұрын
Cristy: Skinning someone is crazy! Me: 😊. Yup... Kinda the point. 😅
@stormhawk3319Ай бұрын
Whether we want to admit it or not, we secretly want Hannibal to escape to freedom and exact revenge on Dr Chilton.
@HappyHarryHardonАй бұрын
I admit it.
@Terp311Ай бұрын
_if you insist._
@bigredtlc1828Ай бұрын
The film swept all the major awards at the Oscars. Best Picture, Director, Adapted Screenplay, Actress, Actor. Amazing for a psychological horror movie. I heard one "funny" story - years later Martha Stewart briefly dated Hopkins but she couldn't stop thinking about his performance as Hannibal, so the relationship didn't last long. That's how convincing he was in the role! Incredible performance by him.
@GrouchyOldBear7Ай бұрын
Thanks for the video. I enjoyed it.
@CristyReactsАй бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@henrytjernlundАй бұрын
Awesome reaction. Thanks.
@SparksDrinkerАй бұрын
32:32. because he doesn’t have cable, this is his only form of entertainment
@cjdewsbury7981Ай бұрын
I absolutely love how much this movie depends on your own mind to visualize the gruesome terror and brutality instead of actually seeing it. Amazing creative choice to allow true audience perspective and interpretation.
@NPX7Ай бұрын
Good reaction/ review, as always! You might consider watching the X-Files, just for your personal enjoyment, as Agent Scully is directly inspired by Agent Sterling. She, Agent Scully, is another strong female character who really carries her own and was a vital part of that amazing 90s show. And on a side note, my all-time favorite show ever. This film is a master class in story telling and character development...and of course the acting is truly amazing. All the best :D
@MsCatmandoАй бұрын
There was a part 2. Its called. Hannibal
@whoarocketАй бұрын
That is a frequent question people have of why Lecter is so fascinated by learning details of Clarice's life. We are left to guess, but I get a feeling it's something of curiosity. It's a new person you haven't met yet. It's like someone put a safe in the room with you. Wouldn't you try to see if you could open it to find out what's inside? And finding out what is inside usually gives you the power to make people unconformable or afraid of you. And The opportunity is different. The staff at the hospital don't have anything to gain by talking with him, so they won't share, and they ignore him. But Clarice is there for a reason. She clearly wants something, so Lecter knows he has leverage and can get her to open up, so it's worth pursuing. And that might be the point of it anyway: the game, the chase, the challenge.
@garethreid327Ай бұрын
When you said Mr lector a few he would have not liked that 😂
@CristyReactsАй бұрын
Haha yeah! I corrected myself
@normie2716Ай бұрын
He didn't spend four years in Evil Medical School to be called "Mister!"
@Dej24601Ай бұрын
Jodie Foster was 27 during the filming, altho she was 29 when the finished film was released.
@CristyReactsАй бұрын
she looks younger than 27!
@dennai7695Ай бұрын
In Spain the movie was definitely called "El Silencio de los Corderos", so I don't know where that "El Silencio de los Inocentes" came from. Edit: I just checked wikipedia out of curiosity. "El Silencio de los Inocentes" is how the movie (and the novel) was called in Latin America.
@CristyReactsАй бұрын
Fascinating!
@paulalexandredumasseauvan2357Ай бұрын
enjoyed your reaction 👍☺
@davidelmquist8670Ай бұрын
On to the sequels!
@flibber123Ай бұрын
"Would you be scared?" yeah I would be. Not scared of him doing anything right there in front of his cell. I would be scared of him seeing me, knowing i exist. Because now I'm a potential target. He's locked up...for now. But what if he escapes? What if he communicates with someone who is not locked up? That's a scary thought. I prefer to live my life without someone like that knowing I'm out here.
@CristyReactsАй бұрын
Solid point!
@JS-wp4gsАй бұрын
The tv series gets much more into what hannibal is really like and how his mind works. Its worth watching. Though its worth pointing out that the cannibal thing didn't just apply to him, he has a history of feeding everybody else parts of his victims at his dinner parties. He's also far more touchy about people being rude than he may have come off in the film. He's also somewhat sadistic and does things simply because he's curious what would happen But yeah, the stuff that happens in the film is tame compared to much of what he does in the tv series
@WarChief781Ай бұрын
the show was amazing..such a shame it get more seasons
@richardhepp8917Ай бұрын
See part 2 "Hannibal" a lot more of Lector.
@fernandodeleon7466Ай бұрын
Well, based in what you said in your reaction, Red dragon - an excellent precuel - should be your netx step.😊
@jmsmys13ifyАй бұрын
Demme, who also directed Philadelphia, had a directing style of utilizing a lot of intense close ups, as you can see. It was a choice to make it feel like they were speaking to you, as if you're embodying the character.
@geneaikenii1092Ай бұрын
Yes. Good job Clarice. And good job, Cristy. I like this film. Was there for it back in the day. Still here for it today with you. Your reactions to the Sopranos was awesome, too. Your super funny and smart. Big shoutout from this old hippy in the mountains of East Tennessee. See ya on the next. Why don't you start reacting to music, too. Just a thought. Much peace and lots of love and happiness to you and yours. Later, girl.
@MisterItchyАй бұрын
Yay! I didn't want to do anything right now and my notifications were empty! Your smile makes me happy!
@jeffreymcmahon3627Ай бұрын
41:42 Well, literally the scene before that, Crawford asked Clarice to find a connection to the 1st victim
@duanelavely5481Ай бұрын
"The Silence of the Lambs" (1991) won 5 Academy Awards (Oscars); Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Actress, Best Director, & Best Screenplay. A lot of your questions can be answered in watching the original Hannibal Lector movie "Manhunter" (1987) starring William Petersen as Wil Graham the agent who caught him & Brian Cox as Hannibal. And the prequel to "The Silence of the Lambs", "Red Dragon" (2002) with Edward Norton as retired Agent Wil Graham. Brought out of retirement to work with Hannibal Lector played once again by Anthony Hopkins to catch the "Tooth Fairy".
@danielmorency2242Ай бұрын
You don't know how hard it is for a french speaking person to pronounce the name Jorge... Hahaha!!
@mattgwinnАй бұрын
If you want to know more about Lecter's psyche and background you should really watch the TV show Hannibal with Mads Mikkelsen. It's some of the best TV ever made, in my opinion.
@DanielRamosMilitaryWizАй бұрын
Absolutely love your videos Cristy! Thank you again for watching these classic films. Even though Anthony Hopkins had so little screen-time, his performance as Hannibal Lecter is so iconic. This earn him an Academy Award for best Actor in 1991. Clarice correctly deduced why Hannibal wouldn’t come after her; “He would consider that rude.” She figured out a critical trait about him. Hannibal might be a killer, but he is a highly sophisticated killer who is deeply offended by rudeness. The people he goes after and kills are those he considers bad-mannered. In describing Hannibal Lecter, Anthony Hopkins said he is someone who “kills the terminally rude.” This is why he killed Miggs, the inmate who threw his seed in Clarice’s face. Hannibal viewed that as “unspeakably ugly.” Hannibal and Clarice don’t meet again until the 2001 sequel “Hannibal.” As you saw at the end of the film, what Hannibal really wanted was revenge against Dr. Chilton for all he did to him at the sanitarium. Clarice on the other hand was actually very courteous towards Hannibal, They developed a mutual respect for one another during their talks. The reason he asks Clarice so many questions is because he finds her interesting. Being a psychiatrist, Lecter likes to find out what makes someone tick. It’s further explained in the films and novels that Hannibal sees parallels between himself and Clarice as they both had tragic backgrounds involving the loss of family. Being locked away for so many years with very little human contact, Hannibal was bored and longed for some form of interaction.
@MrPaulb1982Ай бұрын
Watch the whole saga in order.... Manhunter (1986) Silence of the Lambs (1991) Hannibal (2001) Red Dragon (2002) Hannibal Rising (2007).
@norman97924 күн бұрын
You could have shown *that* scene, after all, he only tucked it in. (Which every man has tried if they've seen this movie btw)
@adamhigh98848 күн бұрын
Watch the show. It's brilliant.
@drb6771Ай бұрын
Creepiest movie EVER!!!!!!👋👋🙌🙌✨✨🌠🌠🌠🌠🌠🌠🎃🎃🎃🎃🎃🎃
@ccowboysfan086 күн бұрын
Both Anthony Hopkins and Jodie Foster won for best acting. Awards for best acting best movie best director best everything It swept the academy awards.There are good follow ups to this movie but they are not as great as this one. They are good.
@ThanxNoАй бұрын
The reason Lecter changes his mind and helps Clarice after the Miggs incident is bc, as he says, he hates discourtesy, and he wants to provide her with something to make up for her experiencing that. That’s also why he kills Miggs.
@izzonjАй бұрын
Frederica Bimmel, the first victim, lived in Belvedere, OH. In Starling's first visit with Lecter, he showed her a drawing of a scene in Florence, "the Duomo from the Belvedere." Could be a coincidence, or more likely, it could be that Lecter knew all about Buffalo Bill and his crimes from the very beginning.
@KayQue-s3rАй бұрын
Wow! I've seen this film soooo many times and never caught that connection. Thanks so much!
@charlize1253Ай бұрын
And his last words to Senator Martin were, "Love your suit" while Buffalo Bill is planning to make her daughter into a skin suit. Hannibal is taunting everyone by dropping hints everywhere.
@alexspindler1Ай бұрын
Great reaction! And I loved your guesses and especially how you handled the really intense parts. The ending is such a tense situation. There's a FANTASTIC TV series that uses a different interpretation of Hannibal that is an amazing watch.
@stern12akachris32Ай бұрын
Other then Jack Crawford , Lector is the only one who doesn't lust for her but does love how smart and quick she is. Crawford is the one who caught Lector . There are two prequel movies based on the same book the better one is called Manhunter with a completely different cast . the other is Called Red Dragon which has some of the same cast. One reason that this is such a spectacular movie is that it stuck to the book which is such a great read. The Book Red Dragon is also a page turner. This could be one of the best Movie that was ever made.
@andrewreisinger6860Ай бұрын
I wouldn't say doesn't just after her. The other men in the film don't RESPECT her. The other cops kind of look down on her.
@andrewreisinger6860Ай бұрын
Yes. It is a masterpiece. Won the big five OSCARS: Picture, director, actor, actress, screenplay.
@kilroy987Ай бұрын
22:49 HA, that made me laugh. I dealt with a sociopath in my past. I read a small book about them - The Empathy Trap. My biggest take away from that book was that sociopaths get their stimulation off from screwing with people. Likely because of not enough affection when he was younger. That helped me reframe my experiences and made me realize that I didn't need to or fail to care properly for that sociopath. He was what he was by no doing of my own, and I did not make him worse by leaving.
@anthonyguadagnino2681Ай бұрын
It’s worth seeing the 1st movie in this series. Manhunter from 1986. A Michael Mann movie.
@jcarlovitchАй бұрын
I lost all respect for Hannibal Lecture for not knowing Shiraz wine is what you drink with liver.
@CristyReactsАй бұрын
Maybe chianti is better suited for human liver!
@nicksykes4575Ай бұрын
Maybe it compliments the fava beans!
@charlize1253Ай бұрын
@@CristyReacts I read somewhere that the reference to the liver, fava beans, and Chianti is a complex psychological joke by Lecter, something to do with when you're on certain psyche medications you're not supposed to eat certain kinds of beans or drink alcohol or else it injures your liver. It's explained by a doctor on the internet somewhere.
@blindlemonpledge2556Ай бұрын
I always liked the scene when Clarice is talking to Lecter and there is a close-up of Clarices' face with the reflection of Hanabals' face in the glass. Its a perfect representation of Hanabal getting into Clarices' head.
@michaelwatson266Ай бұрын
Hi Cristy 👋
@CristyReactsАй бұрын
Hi!
@jhilal2385Ай бұрын
Good mystery/suspense/thrillers: "Copycat" (1995) "Kiss the Girls" (1997) "Manhunter" (1986) "Mary Reilly" (1996) "Blood Work" (2002) Some more good movies with Scott Glenn: "Backdraft" (1991) "The Hunt for Red October" (1990) "Absolute Power" (1998)
@phillyphan1225Ай бұрын
The Bone Collector is another pretty good one😊
@charlize1253Ай бұрын
It's a variation of a vampire movie. The guard says to Clarice that people call Hannibal a vampire, and look at his makeup: extremely pale white skin, eyes that don't blink, blood red lips (after he bites the guard). His deal with Clarice is that he promises her the thing she desires most (immortality at the FBI), if she agrees to share her soul with him.
@Sandy-dd4leАй бұрын
Good reaction! The film is well worth a rewatch. Lecter gives a number of clues to Starling and others through the film......"First principles, Simplicity" ...Simplicity is a brand, a company that sells sewing patterns. "That is The Duomo seen from The Belvedere"...Bill lives in Belvedere, Ohio.....there are a few more.
@magicbrownie1357Ай бұрын
It is a bit of a moody masterpiece. Frightening, challenging, intellectually stimulating, and that's just the plot. The performances and directing are Oscar winning and deservedly so.
@marcpoitras1785Ай бұрын
40:03 "He should starve them for longer. Three days is not enough to loosen your skin." Oof.
@StressBurgerАй бұрын
you noticed a lot of tiny details. "Why is he the only one behind glass and not bars?" "they said to not accept anything from him!"
@quicktasticАй бұрын
Jodie Foster not being involved in the sequel made it less interesting to me. Her interaction with Anthony Hopkins in this movie is one of the best in cinema IMO. I'm sure a lot of young women got interested in being in the FBI (and other similar agencies around the world) because of this movie. I think Hannibal like her courage. She became a kind of daughter to him, despite his obvious issues.
@farenvanwyk5587Ай бұрын
LOL I would do it because I'm dumb but she shouldn't. Really funny indeed 🤣
@CriticalThinker798Ай бұрын
Lecter is genuinely interested in Clarice. He's also fascinated by human behavior. He was a renowned psychiatrist whose help was often sought by the FBI. You notice when he asks Clarice questions it's very much like therapy. It's also a perverse form of intimacy he's seeking with Clarice, achieved through power and control of their interactions. He is a psychopath, after all.
@whoarocketАй бұрын
They do a fascinating thing in this movie. It's not directly part of the main plot, but they emphasize how difficult and uncomfortable it is with the constant looks and sexism she's having to deal with. It adds to the stress and pressure of the whole situation.
@CristyReactsАй бұрын
I loved how much of the story was framed around Clarice "sticking out" in a situation!
@DavidAntrobusАй бұрын
@@CristyReacts And it ties in with the theme of coveting.
@charlize1253Ай бұрын
@@CristyReacts The movie opens with Clarice running through an obstacle course, which cleverly foreshadows how she has to spend the entire movie navigating through men who leer at her, make passes at her, ignore her, or dismiss her, just to do her job.
@whoarocketАй бұрын
It also makes you wonder if it's why she pushed forward into Buffalo Bill's house at the end instead of running across the street or something to call for backup. Did she feel that pressure that she had to do everything better or more to achieve the recognition that a man would get? My wife talks about how that's a given that she's used to in regular corporate work world.
@lazyperfectionist2Ай бұрын
8:47 These guys _all_ need to be behind glass.
@lazyperfectionist2Ай бұрын
8:51 Especially _this_ guy.
@lazyperfectionist2Ай бұрын
11:50 And here's why.
@lewismaddox4132Ай бұрын
This movie has no actual lambs beyond mentions in an anecdotal story told by the protagonist and a metaphorical relation to the movie and story itself. There are also no grapes in The Grapes of Wrath. Ms. Foster was very young here but she'd already obtained an Oscar for her extraordinary work in The Accused.
@mosesfigueroafulАй бұрын
Look at Manhunter that came out in the 80s. That's the first movie about Hannibal Lecture
@maxpayne232Ай бұрын
It is a horror movie. Horror is a very diverse genre. Whoever suggested it's not is wrong. Plain and simple.
@CristyReactsАй бұрын
It's a comment I've seen a lot! But it was definitely scary
@charlize1253Ай бұрын
@@CristyReacts It's a variation of a vampire movie. The guard mentions to Clarice that people call Hannibal a vampire, and look at his makeup: extremely pale white skin, eyes that don't blink, blood red lips (after he bites the guard). His deal with Clarice is that he promises her the thing she desires most (immortality at the FBI), if she agrees to show him her soul.
@phillyphan1225Ай бұрын
Every time I watched Monk I heard “it’s puts the lotion in the basket” and every time I watch this I see Leland Stottlemeyer 😂