Who is the crippled guy in hannibal




















Perfume Expert Kelly Piper Perfume Expert Bruce MacVittie Verger's Fingerprint Technician Andrew C. Police Officer Kenneth W.

Police Sergeant Judie Aronson News Reporter Tom Trigo News Reporter Sam Wells News Reporter Ricardo Miguel Young West Jr. News Reporter Roberta Armani Theatergoer Johannes Kiebranz Konie Bruno Lazzaretti Dante Danielle de Niese Beatrice Rest of cast listed alphabetically: Marianella Bargilli Amazon uncredited Livingstone Beaumont Doctor uncredited Ray Bullock Extra uncredited Heidi Burger Shopper uncredited Robert Randolph Caton Upscale Business Man uncredited Douglas Crosby Reporter uncredited Gano Grills Swat Team Leader uncredited Raymond H.

Chauffeur uncredited Jalil Jay Lynch Shopper uncredited Leo Rogstad Metro-Goer uncredited Franco Maria Salamon Italian Detective uncredited Robert Shepherd Reporter uncredited Derrick Simmons Evelda Drumgo's Bodyguard uncredited Cassandra Smith Italian servant uncredited Brian Smyj Newspaper Vendor in Florence uncredited Peter Theo Italian Market Vendor uncredited Anthony Wanzer Jogger uncredited Guss Williams Moore as Elaine Offers Daniele Perosillo Moore Sam Sainz Hochschartner Teresa Kelly David Pash Italian Unit Adam Somner Drew Fuller Tony Trotta Patrick Storey Baker David A.

Connell III Dimuro Jessica Gallavan Hemphill Philip A. Negrete Dan O'Connell Voice Actor Andrew Schmetterling Shuman Nick Smith Nicholas Atkinson Steve Barnes Tim Burke Gregory Creaser Greg Fisher Katherine Granger Verger later wished he had tried to have Lecter assassinated in prison.

When Lecter escaped custody, Verger became obsessed with getting revenge on Lecter. Twelve years after his attack and realising he would never walk again, Verger went on hiring an elite gang of Sardinian kidnappers and using his company's resources to create a special breed of gigantic, vicious wild boars, intending to have Lecter captured and then slowly eaten alive. A corrupt Italian police inspector, Rinaldo Pazzi , attempted to collect the latter bounty by assisting Verger's men in kidnapping Lecter from Florence, but ended up being killed himself.

Lecter then sent Verger a letter, chiding him for his men's clumsiness, reminding him that he ate his own nose during his ordeal, and promising, "before you die you will see my face.

Verger succeeded in luring Lecter to the United States long enough for his men to kidnap him. While in the barn, Verger described his plan to Lecter. Verger intended to feed Lecter feet first, then twelve hours later his face, then the rest of Lecter. Margot went to the barn and reminisced over the past, where Lecter told her to kill Mason and that he would take the blame.

Before he could be eaten by the boars, Lecter was rescued by Starling, who had gone rogue from the Bureau. Verger retreated to his house, but was killed there by Margot, who removed Verger's pet moray eel from its tank and shoved it into his mouth. The eel bit off Verger's tongue, and he drowned in his own blood.

Before killing him, Margot used a cattle prod to stimulate Mason's prostate and extract a small measure of his sperm to impregnate her lover, since Molson Verger's will left the family fortune to his next-living male relative in the event of Mason's death.

Lecter sent a tape to the FBI gloating how he enjoyed killing Verger. In the film, Margot does not appear. Instead, Lecter convinces Verger's physician, Dr. Cordell Doemling , to turn on his abusive and ungrateful employer and push him into the pit of wild boars, saying that Cordell can always put the blame on Lecter. Convinced, Cordell pushes Verger into the pen before leaving, and Verger is last seen being torn apart and eaten by the boars. According to Will Graham , in Red Dragon , at the time of that novel, Hannibal Lecter had killed nine known victims, and attacked two others who didn't die.

One of these victims was a permanent resident of a sanitorum, and one was on a respirator in Maryland. Neither of these living victims was named in the novel, but the latter is presumably a reference to Mason. On the back covers of some versions of Hannibal , Mason was Lecter's sixth victim.

This seems to be a contradiction, as Red Dragon states that Lecter's sixth victim was the bow hunter, killed in the style of Wound Man. What's more, Hannibal's progress closely parallels the evolution of the wider phylum of cinematic serial killers. The serial killer in pop culture vaguely shadowed these types with "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre," in which the villain was a social misfit, an overweight geek. Our modern screen serial killer didn't truly arrive in American culture until the s, with "Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer.

Henry Michael Rooker's debut performance was a psychotic simpleton, a figure inspiring fear, hatred, and disgust in the audience. But as Hollywood began to crank out more and more serial-killer movies over the ensuing two decades, the monster began to morph. The serial killer got smarter and more physically powerful.

He became a mastermind who toyed with lesser mortals. In , Lecter became the new gold standard for serial killers, and by , when the charismatic Russell Crowe starred as the computer-generated super-killer SID 6. A legion of movie serial killers ceased to be human and became near-omnipotent demi-gods. They migrated from our world into the realm of myth where it is impossible to pass judgment on them.

Lecter is now no more evil than Lex Luthor. So while you're shielding your eyes from "Hannibal"'s graphic mutilations, know that its glorification of violence isn't what makes the movie ugly. It isn't even that we are pulled to a place where good and evil are hard to distinguish. What is truly pernicious about "Hannibal" is that it puts us in a universe where the very notions good and evil are laughable. It sends us one yard closer to the abyss, to the end of history.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000