I'll allow it.
I'll allow it.
Hannibal definitely wants to help Will get off. (nudge nudge)
nooooooooo
Do it! More men need to dress like Hannibal. Step it up, guys.
I think the problem was the courtroom setting. It puts us in a legal drama state of mind, which makes us want to analyze everything logically. The murder of the judge was also like a locked room mystery, so we also want to coldly pick apart the clues like Sherlock Holmes. Hannibal usually operates in surrealism-land,…
Of all the souls I have encountered in my travels, his was the most… human.
Your grandfather is a hero.
Sad? That sounds awesome. Now I want pizza. In my tummy. Me so hungy.
The only thing funnier than Zeller this week was Aaron Abrams' live tweets every time he was on-screen. He was on fire (figuratively — i know we have to specify when it comes to this show).
He only specializes in creepsters in American movies. Watch some of the Danish stuff. His range is incredibly impressive.
So many questions about this show can be answered with this interpretation.
noooooooooo
Glitter. The killer was Rob Huebel. *glitter bomb*
Not my favorite episode – felt like a deep breath before the real action begins. But then again:
B for the same reasons. I have a feeling it'll seem better in context, but I sadly do not have the entire season to marathon at the moment.
"Seriously, is Dr. Chilton this unctuous, slimy and self-aggrandizing in the books?"
"The judge dismissing an entire line of defense just, um because, sat wrong with me."
It's 13 episodes, isn't it? Don't cheat me out of episodes!
Mason's a good guess. He has connections, and Hannibal could have talked him into becoming Will's admirer in therapy. (Hannibal can talk that guy into a lot of things.) But I remember reading that the Vergers aren't showing up until the second half of the season, so maybe not.
Haha, a tad harsh, but I know many lawyers and so get where you're coming from. How should things have gone in the courtroom? Lay the expertise on us, brother.