Hannibal (Blu-ray) R
Out of Print:
Future availability is unknown
on most orders of $75+
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Brand New
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Also released as:
Hannibal (4K UltraHD + Blu-ray)
for $36
Hannibal (Blu-ray)
for $26.70
Blu-ray Details
- Rated: R
- Run Time: 2 hours, 11 minutes
- Video: Color
- Encoding: Region A
- Released: September 13, 2011
- Originally Released: 2001
- Label: Mgm (Video & Dvd)
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | Anthony Hopkins, Julianne Moore & Ray Liotta | |
Performer: | Gary Oldman, Frankie Faison, Giancarlo Giannini, Željko Ivanek & Francesca Neri | |
Directed by | Ridley Scott | |
Edited by | Pietro Scalia | |
Screenwriting by | David Mamet & Steven Zaillian | |
Original story by | Thomas Harris | |
Composition by | Hans Zimmer | |
Produced by | Dino De Laurentiis, Martha De Laurentiis & Ridley Scott | |
Director of Photography: | John Mathieson | |
Executive Production by | Branko Lustig |
Entertainment Reviews:
Rating: 4/5 --
Scott does justice to The Silence of the Lambs and the character of Hannibal in general, even without a few key pieces, and despite toning Harris's novel down plenty.
Full Review
Father Son Holy Gore
...Handsomely staged....[The] presentation is mournfully beautiful; rarely has a director used so many variations on midnight blue...
New York Times
Rating: 5/5 --
A dark and complexly entertaining ride, highly generous to multiple viewings.
Full Review
eFilmCritic.com
Rating: 2/4 --
Doesn't work as its own individual, self-contained cinematic entity.
Full Review
TheMovieReport.com
...Tantalizing, engrossing....HANNIBAL imparts its own pleasures by painting a portrait of a man of ultimate civilized refinements whose dark side always threatens to lurch out violently...
Variety
Rating: B- --
The near-impossible taks and insurmountable problems have been handled by Scott in a proficient if unexciting way. Aware that he can't possibly meet viewers' expectations, Scott has made a different film, more florid, baroque, and tongue-in-cheek.
Full Review
EmanuelLevy.Com
Rating: 6/10 --
Part of the appeal of the Hannibal Lecter novels and films is the complexity of the principal character, who is at once a reprehensible murderer and a moral force for justice.
Full Review
TheArtsStl
Product Description:
After a decade in abeyance, the courtly cannibal, Hannibal Lecter, returns to the screen, again played by Anthony Hopkins, under the direction of Ridley Scott. When F.B.I. Agent Clarice Starling (Julianne Moore) is blamed for a botched drug bust, her boss Paul Krendler (Ray Liotta) makes a media circus of her humiliation, which catches the attention of Lecter. Now a hardened veteran, she begins receiving letters from the twisted genius, who remains obsessed with her. Yet she's not the only one interested in drawing out the psychopath, now lecturing on the Renaissance in Florence. Italian detective Pazzi (Giancarlo Giannini) hopes to impress his young wife by nailing the reward for his capture, and wealthy pedophile Mason Verger (Gary Oldman) is eager to take revenge against the cannibal for leaving him with a hideously deformed face. But they're no match for Hannibal's coyly satanic ubiquity, which bewilders his quickly narcotized foes before he administers a punishment sufficiently grotesque to suit his sense of amusement.The odious Krendler, in particular, learns to use his gray matter for, perhaps, the first time in his life. However, all is prologue to his fated rendezvous with Clarice. A banquet for the splatterati, reveling as it does in gore and dismemberment, the film features brilliant work by a stellar cast, and the kind of meticulous art direction and lushly magnificent photography that one has come to expect of one of Scott.
Keywords:
Cannibalism
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Suspense
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Thriller
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Killer
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On-The-Run
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Murder
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Theatrical Release
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Sequel
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Serial Killers
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Violence
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FBI Agents
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Based On A Novel