By Hollywood.com Staff
Story
It's been 10 years since America's favorite maneater got away in "Silence of the Lambs" - now we get to see what he has been up to a decade later. In this third installment of author Thomas Harris'
Hannibal Lecter trilogy, our antihero is living comfortably in Florence, Italy, as an art scholar. Mason Verger, Hannibal's one surviving victim and archenemy, is determined to track him down - he wants revenge and will pay any amount to get it. When Hannibal gets wind about a bounty on his head, he hightails it back to the states to contact old chum FBI agent Clarice Starling. Starling, meanwhile, has been suspended for duty over a questionable police shooting by a corrupt Justice Dept. superior who resents her success.
Acting
The big question was whether or not
Julianne Moore could replace
Jodie Foster as Clarice in "Silence of the Lambs," and she does, quite effectively. Although perhaps any actress could have fit the bill - Clarice is made a secondary character, used as a pawn by everyone else. Once again
Anthony Hopkins is outstanding as the villain, combining cunning intelligence and wicked cruelty with a barely contained glee without venturing into camp. Gary Oldman, in an unbilled performance, is unrecognizable in horrific deforming makeup -- you're too busy wondering how he manages to talk with no lips to pay attention to what he's saying.
Direction
This film is really gory, and may cause even the heartiest moviegoers to gag, especially during the film's appalling final scene when Hannibal serves up a little revenge to the FBI. Director
Ridley Scott had sizeable shoes to fill after
Jonathan Demme's haunting masterpiece of a decade ago, but he pulls it off by delving deep into the characters' psyches. Compelling, dark imagery helps flesh out the killer's nature, too; gloomy interiors backlit by whitish light filtered through a window, rain outside -- even the score conveys
Hannibal's intelligent madness as sad, ethereal strains of opera waft behind gruesome, shocking ugliness.