Sunday, October 9, 2016

In the first episode we saw Will fatally injure a killer with lots of bullet shots

In the first episode we saw Will fatally injure a killer with lots of bullet shots and in the second episode is all about the impact on the rather unstable FBI consultant. The episode opens with Will in a shooting gallery - to blow off some steam (so it seems), which is rather difficult because of his hallucinations. It does not help that his elimination of the assassin and rescue the daughter of the murderer is seen as an act of heroism. Will is a complicated person and does everything to radiate it - but also to be appointed.
Yet he can not escape the much needed therapy. FBI head needs him for further research, but asks that Will is diagnosed as unstable, in this case Dr. Lecter. Hannibal would like no one else can understand the complex mind of Will and smart enough not to kick in when the FBI consultant tries to sabotage the therapy.

Between therapy sessions through must, however, also murders are solved. Jack Wills also take you to a log cabin from which the killer would do its job. The ominous place that is well stocked with antlers late Jack noticed that the daughter of the killer might well have been the accomplice of her father. Will does not want to and there is remarkably confident that the father alone murdered. Anyway, there are six missing victims where the FBI is looking for and that should be found.
Dr. Lecter seems particularly interested in the motives and guilt of Will. Though Lecter does not appear too much in the episode, he again steals the show. Topacteur Mikkelsen knows a few words to increase the tension and even though you know you're dealing with a psychopath, he puts you in all his pronouncements thinking. Why let him know to Will that he feels responsible for the daughter of the slain murderer? Will he want to convince you that they are not much different, or is it part of a larger plan?
The second episode also introduces two new elements: a brand new serial killer and a bad journalist. Coincidentally these elements dots on the strength and the weakness of the show. The serial killer shows the mindset of both Will and Dr. Lecter an extra dimension. Both men seem to identify with the serial killer and feel it a little too easy at. Just because Will is doing his best to have a hard time (because as we know, he is very complex).

The nasty journalist is just put down to extreme, making the series feels a bit too American. The journalist in question, Freddie Lounds literally go over dead bodies to get around her story, and that's simply not credible. When three boys encounter in a forest in a row of hands stabbing the ground, what appears to be a mass grave of people covered by mushrooms (which you may best when reading a euphemism, the scene is quite sinister) , you are immediately alert. When Freddie contrast especially interested in making pictures of the crime scene and then also cares little for the serial killer can escape through her fault, then you still have difficulty recognizing the viewer into the character.

No comments:

Post a Comment