Ah, maybe. Must watch the scene again.
Ah, maybe. Must watch the scene again.
I liked her! But I'm not a guy.
Maybe she starts to feel like Armitage's character is a threat to Hannibal? Actually I can think of a bunch of arcs for her, if they want to keep using her.
She clearly changed her mind since then, though I'm still not completely sure why. (That is, I am certain she has evolved her thinking but I can't explain it.)
Porch with Hannibal. He asked, "Will you watch over me?" and she answered yes, and "not in a cage."
:(( I liked spaetzle the one time I had it and I generally like both sausages and cabbage, but somehow put it all together and you get INTESTINAL DEATH.
Don't you want God to be looking back at you?
I think so too—the timeline fits—except I don't know how the baby was kept alive and gestated to the point it was at by the time they got it out of the pig. There would have had to have been a human surrogate at some point—which is by no means impossible, and that kind of logistical concern is the last thing the show…
MASON DIED BY CHOKING ON HIS OWN METAPHORICAL DICK, HELD UNDERWATER BY A LESBIAN COUPLE. HOW.
This is very fortuitous, since I literally can't remember what I had for dinner that night.
Will Graham: "NEAUXPE."
Yeah, it's a weird thing because on the one hand I trust Fuller on a level I rarely trust showrunners, but on the other where I read it was the kind of place where you often read true but unreported things. Lots of people there working in production (on a wide range of properties) who have inside knowledge. I still…
I once had dinner at a German restaurant while in the middle of a vegetarian period (i.e. my body was even less able to process German food than the normal non-German body) because I had no idea how to turn down a date, and I was absolutely useless for like two days.
I wouldn't be surprised if she showed up a couple times. They managed to bring Abigail back as recently as episode two of this season, when normal TV logic would dictate she'd be gone after at most the third episode of season 1.
She wasn't thinking rationally about Mason, because he succeeded in baiting her with the one thing she thought he'd completely eliminated: a child. (I don't think she cared emotionally about having a child when she tried to get one with Will—that was a power play—but once she'd started the process and had the option…
Upvoted just for the Price and Zeller love.
It's different when Hannibal does it, okay. It has symbolism.
I was really relieved someone said it (similarly, last episode I was relieved when Mason said "transubstantiation") because it had been so heavily telegraphed that at least all the characters who were present for the climax of last season's finale were kind of undead (or reborn, which still implies a death) that the…
As I understood it, the entire (absolutely nerve-jangling) closeup sequence of face-removal we got was actually Hannibal taking off Cordell's face, so I'd say he was. I mean, from Hannibal's perspective, why not keep him alive for that? It's what he was going to do to Will, and that's very rude.
The snowflakes recalled the fireflies from Casa Lecter, which I think really reinforces your point. It's like the sheer force of what she's been through alters reality around her to recreate the Hannibal-influenced world she knows, wherever she goes.