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Hannibal is a 2001 film, directed by Ridley Scott, adapted from the Thomas Harris novel of the same name. Set ten years after The Silence of the Lambs, we find that one of Dr. Lecter's surviving victims, the wealthy Mason Verger, is out to torture and kill him. The films begins in Italy and moves to the United States; one of the final scenes shocked audiences and critics alike.PlotFBI Agent Clarice Starling is disgraced after killing five people in a botched drug raid. One of the people killed by Starling was a female drug dealer, Evelda Drumgo, who is HIV positive and was holding a child at the time she was shot. (Drumgo shoots Starling with a submachine gun; Starling is saved by her bulletproof vest.) Following a hearing on her conduct she is sent to interview Mason Verger, having learned that he has information regarding Hannibal Lecter.Mason Verger--a faceless millionaire confined to a bed-- tells his story: he was under a court order to have therapy sessions with Lecter after being convicted of child sex abuse charges. During a social call, Dr. Lecter requested Mr. Verger to inhale amyl nitrite fumes ("poppers"); once Verger was high, Lecter convinced Verger to rip his own face off with a glass shard and then hang himself (Lecter fed the remains of Verger's face to Verger's dogs). Meanwhile in Florence, Inspector Rinaldo Pazzi is investigating the disappearance of a library curator. Here he meets Dr. Fell, the interim curator, whom he discovers is none other than Dr. Lecter. Inspector Pazzi turns this information over to Verger for a reward, who prepares his revenge. After a discussion at the library, Dr. Lecter murders Pazzi by disemboweling and hanging him from the Palazzo Vecchio, a fate that Pazzi's ancestor, Francesco Di Pazzi, suffered 500 years before. Lecter escapes to America. Starling learns that Justice Department employee Paul Krendler is also working with Verger, using Starling as bait to lure Dr. Lecter out of hiding. Lecter is captured by Verger's henchmen and is taken to a barn, where he is anxiously awaited by several large, man-eating boars. Starling tries to rescue Lecter and is shot by Verger's bodyguards; Lecter, however, has already freed himself of his confines and has been awaiting the last moment to escape. After saving Starling by killing Verger's bodyguards, Lecter convinces Verger's doctor that Verger doesn't deserve to live. Verger's doctor feeds him to the boars, with the assurance that Lecter will take the blame for the crime. In the climax of the film, Lecter takes the wounded Starling to a lake-front house and performs surgery on her to remove the bullet. When she awakens, she finds that Lecter has dressed her in a cocktail gown. She comes downstairs, calling the police on the way, and discovers that she's in Paul Krendler's house. Lecter, incensed that Krendler tried to get Starling fired, has kidnapped and lobotomized him. As Starling watches in horror, Lecter removes the top of Krendler's skull and feeds him a small portion of his own brain after it has been sauteéd in butter and herbs. Starling tries to apprehend Lecter, but is only successful in handcuffing him to herself. Lecter offers Starling the chance to run away with him, asking if there is any possibility that she would ever love him. Starling says no, which is the answer that Lecter had expected. Informing her "this is really going to hurt," he chops off his own hand with a meat cleaver and escapes. In the final scene of the film, we see Lecter on a plane full of Asian people, with a small boy asking if he can have a taste of the meal Lecter brought along with him: Krendler's brains. Impressed with the boy's refusal to eat airline food, Lecter happily obliges. CastAnthony Hopkins: Dr. Hannibal 'The Cannibal' LecterJulianne Moore: Clarice Starling Gary Oldman: Mason R. Verger Ray Liotta: Paul Krendler Frankie Faison: Barney Matthews Giancarlo Giannini: Inpector Rinaldo Pazzi Francesca Neri: Allegra Pazzi Zeljko Ivanek: Dr. Cordell Doemling Trivia
[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Hannibal (film) ] Some related entries: Sword in the Moon | Votergate | House of 9 | Boxclever Films | Homicide | Disintegrator ray | Secretary | Hanussen | Little Man | Belarusfilm | Fantasia Festival This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Hannibal (film); it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | Searches on eBay
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