Friday, May 30, 2014

Hannibal Season 2 Finale: The Ultimate "Design" ~



Listen to this while reading, you will feel the harmony between sound and word .. 


It has been exactly a week now since Hannibal’s shocking and blatantly eventful final episode from the jaw-dropping season 2. I wanted to write something about this exceptional series and the unexpected turn of events of the last episode as I believe I just got out from the seven days state of denial that the beautifully wicked Mr Lecter has immersed me in.

Three possible deaths are the culmination of this intellectually and psychologically provocative season. Surprisingly, the victims are three of the fundamental characters of the entire series: “Will Graham” .. Is he a killer in transition, in disguise, by proxy or unconsciously .. No one knows .. Yet.  

The second victim is the innocent and caring Jack Crowford and the third one is the gullible Dr Alana Bloom. If one is to expect a common pattern between all these probable deaths, one is to be disappointed ! I do not know if this violent hastiness in the killing process is done on purpose or is simply the result of a lack in preparations as the fatal visits of these three characters was unpredicted by Hannibal The Cannibal .. Or perhaps he made it look like he was surprised at their breaking in into his sacred and ritualistic dinner preparations.

Every reading is possible at this point .. His reckless behavior when dealing with the attacks signals an astonishment at their coming. However, the reiterative focus on the knife when it smoothly slays the meat, accentuates the idea that his Mind’s Eye is at work here, for it is the knife, the cannibal’s tool, which mirrors the invading and threatening faces of the ominous victims.   

Now, the fashion according to which he handles the life of his victims can either manifest a prominent degree of dexterity or an unusual degree of rashness .. An act, of course, that does not become the minutely calculating mind of Hannibal Lecter.

With his sharp cooking knife, he cut the throats of both Jack crowford and Abigail Hobbs. Perchance, there is a latent pattern in the slaughtering act after all. Moreover, Alana’s the throat was cut in the same way by the helpless Abigail Hobbs. This undecidability still persists, however, when the viewer examines the way Hannibal attempted to end Will’s life. While Alana and Jack were swiftly cut, Will Graham was pierced right through the stomach by his “friend” Hannibal.

Logically, as such, the release of the soul will be slow and painful. Does he desire to internalize the last breathing moments of the friend he loves and engrave them in his memory ? Is Hannibal Lecter becoming a voyeuristic ? Perhaps he already is ! He does relish in the aesthetic ways of death he designs. Following this, Hannibal rejoices in both process and result of assassination. He enjoys the while and the post, maybe because the “post” reminds him of the “beauty” of the “while” and the “while” paves the way to the gratification of the “post”.

The question that remains at the end, did Hannibal honor them by such mundane and plain forms of murder ? Is there a tale to tell behind them ? Was there an ancient ritual executed in the process ? Was there a philosophy underlying them ? Did he intend to immortalize them in so usual a murder ? Is there an ultimate design or does the design lie in the no design ?

 Why does he “eternalize” anonymous people and rewards the people he knows and loves with a normal death ? Is it because he knows them ? Perhaps he wants to remember them as living creatures and not as a set of peculiar exhibitions of Life and Death.

 “I gave you a rare gift, but you didn’t want it.” He says to Will Graham while the latter is lying on the floor gasping for breath. One can argue that he is talking about his unappreciated friendship, or, more far-fetchedly about the “honor” of dying like a normal human being.

Ideas are painfully irreconcilable when it comes to Dr Hannibal Lecter .. Cognitive provocation, visual amazement and psychological angst are what he offers you, yet we, the wretched viewers, continue to watch awe-inspired and impressed. These paradoxes make of Hannibal a series to watch, rewatch, brood over, study and even teach ..      



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