Hannibal with Anthony Hopkins: DVD Cover

    Hannibal Director: Ridley Scott Cast: Anthony Hopkins, Julianne Moore, Ray Liotta, Frankie R. Faison

    DVD - 2 Disc Set - Wide Screen / DTS Learn more

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    • DVD Release Date: 08/21/2001
    • Rating: Rated R
    • Sales Rank: 4,433
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    DVD - Wide Screen / DTS$22.99
     
    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
    • Cast & Crew
    • Full Product Details

    Scenes

    Features

    Disc One: Hannibal presented in widescreen 1.85:1 enhanced for 16x9 TVs; audio commentary by director Ridley Scott; Dolby Digital 5.1 and DTS 5.1 English audio tracks; Spanish and French Dolby Digital Surround audio tracks; Spanish and French subtitles. Disc Two: Deleted scenes; three multi-angle featurettes; five "Breaking The Silence" featurettes; still gallery; production notes; trailers.

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    Scene Index

    Side #1 -- Feature
    1. Barney's Observations
    2. Main Titles
    3. The Fish Market
    4. An Ugly Mess
    5. A Good Deal
    6. Mason Verger
    7. Hannibal the Cannibal
    8. Catching Up With Barney
    9. Dr. Fell
    10. Tracing Lecter's Scent
    11. Pazzi on the Case
    12. Krendler's Terms
    13. Possibly Illegal Action
    14. Family History
    15. Fingerprints
    16. Verger's Boys
    17. La Vita Nuova
    18. Lecter Found
    19. The Price of Avarice
    20. Pazzi's Destiny
    21. Starling in Distress
    22. Shopping Spree
    23. Deep Roller
    24. Cat and Mouse
    25. A Kidnapping
    26. Face to Face
    27. The Main Attraction
    28. Alone at Last
    29. Dinner
    30. That's My Girl
    31. In-Flight Service
    32. End Credits
    1. Rethinking the Novel
    2. Title Design
    3. Starling: 10 Years Later
    4. Connecting Verger to the FBI
    5. The Biltmore Estate
    6. Creating a Multifaceted Monster
    7. Purity and Corruption
    8. The Importance of Barney
    9. Dr. Fell's Backstory
    10. FBI Procedure
    11. Sustaining Audience Interest
    12. Casting Krendler at the Gym
    13. The Temptation of Pazzi
    14. Dr. Lecter's Dangerous Humor
    15. Animal Instincts
    16. Canadian Bacon
    17. Pazzi's Operatic History
    18. Crowd Control in Florence
    19. Dante
    20. Shooting Pazzi's Death
    21. Verger's Characterization
    22. Lecter's Motivation
    23. Cheats and Short Cuts
    24. Music and "The Third Man"
    25. Stunts, Scott Glenn and Cows
    26. The Screenplay
    27. "Gladiator's" Tigers vs. "Hannibal's" Pigs
    28. As If Underwater
    29. The Most Difficult Scene in the Film
    30. Hannibal's Sacrifice
    31. Off-Hand Comments
    32. Anthony Hopkins

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    Sir Anthony Hopkins returns for seconds as Hannibal Lecter, the celebrated psychopath he introduced to popular culture in Jonathan Demme's Oscar-winning Silence of the Lambs (1991). This third film culled from author Thomas Harris's series of books -- Lecter first appeared in Michael Mann's Manhunter (1986) -- finds Ridley Scott behind the camera, and the Gladiator director gives the horrific feast a European flair. Julianne Moore (Magnolia) takes over as FBI agent Clarice Starling, stepping into shoes made comfortable by Jodie Foster in Silence. Starling hasn't had it so well since we last saw her: A failed drug raid has resulted in her demotion, while Dr. Lecter has become a Renaissance man in Italy, surrounded by the finest of arts, fashion, and, er, food. But Lecter soon finds his fugitive vacation threatened by a triad of greed: Surviving Lecter victim Mason Verger (Gary Oldman, uncredited) wants revenge, Italian policeman Pazzi (Giancarlo Gianni) knows too much, and dirty FBI agent Paul Krendler (Ray Liotta) trades on Starling's access to Hannibal for his own political means. As Starling attempts to distill this less-than-gourmet stew, Hannibal once again functions as her confidant, his cat-and-mouse games from Silence dropped for an almost affectionate display as Starling's father figure. With a pulpy and grotesquely comical script cowritten by David Mamet and Steven Zaillian, Hannibal is much gorier than its predecessors; but thanks to Hopkins's mesmerizing way with the character, it still tastes good 'til the last bite. Patricia Kim O'Cone, Barnes & Noble

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    Customer Reviews

    This movie could have been better.by Anonymous

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    November 10, 2004: I believe that Hannibal could have been written a lot better. After reading the book, I watched the movie to see how closely the book and the movie were. That was a mistake. I ended up finding out that there were many plot holes and missing sections in the story. Even one of the characters, Mason Verger?s sister, who played some pretty important roles in the book, was absent from the movie. It did have some of the major events though. This movie really should have been made into a two-disc set so they could fit more of the scenes in, and follow the story line more closely. This movie was a real disappointment for me, and I wouldn?t suggest reading the book then watching it. If I had not read the book, it would have been a lot better.

    Try Something New !by Anonymous

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    July 11, 2004: How often do you do something you haven't done before? How often do you do something you have done before, but in a new way? Probably not very often. Humans are creatures of habit, establishing behavior patterns and then repeating them without thinking about it. Many of our behaviors are so 'automatic' that we could reasonably be described as 'automatons' (robots). This is unfortunate because these behavior patterns are limiting. They prevent us from achieving our full potential as human beings. Hannibal Lecter knows this. He also understands how to break free of these behavior patterns. Personal transformation is Lecter's specialty. The secrets of personal transformation (and salvation and authentic religious states of consciousness) are hidden within the Hannibal Lecter movies. If you would be free, if you would claim your birthright as a human being, if you would take your place on Mount Olympus, study these movies and learn what Hannibal knows. It will be difficult. But if all else fails, just do as Hannibal does and eat the rude (rood!).


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