Broseph44
Witness Me
- Joined
- May 26, 2012
- Messages
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As for Dolarhyde coming to Will's home, I always liked it. It is the first, subtle glimpse that Harris gives the reader of Lecter's ability to manipulate situations, even from behind bars.
Dolarhyde was such an insecure character and Lecter picked up on it instantly. His approval became paramount to Dolarhyde, more important than his "becoming," more important than Reba, more important than anything. It was the approval that he so desperately sought from his grandmother. And Lecter was able to pick up on it, play it, and changes his focus into the singular goal of killing Will (and finally extracting Lecter's revenge).
I think Noonan has really ruined either Ralph Fiennes or Armitage as Dolarhyde for me. Too attractive! Be uglier!
I didn't care for the Abigail scenes. They were well done enough, but ultimately just unnecessary. We gained nothing new from them, no new insight on any character of importance. It just didn't feel necessary. It felt like a waste of time.
Same with the Alana scenes. They really aren't all that necessary. Hannibal is going to kill her. We get it. It is just laying it on so thick. Red Dragon is such an amazing story. We don't need filler with Abigail and Alana. I get that the writers want to incorporate the title character into the show, but I really feel like less is more for this arc.
I gotta agree with this. This is my biggest problem with this season. Alana should have died in the season two finale. She just is there. She felt like such a waste of space in the first part of this season. I just think that whole thing with Verger, Margot could have plotted herself. Those scenes with Mason and Alana felt so damn superfluous.
But doesn't Dolarhyde say in the novel that ultimately Hannibal doesn't understand him, and was slightly offended when Hannibal suggested that Will Graham was a threat?
Hey Moddy Matt, you know it's Bryan Fuller and not 'Fueller' right? You keep adding an E and it's totes weirding me out, you sassy beast.
I gotta agree with this. This is my biggest problem with this season. Alana should have died in the season two finale. She just is there. She felt like such a waste of space in the first part of this season. I just think that whole thing with Verger, Margot could have plotted herself. Those scenes with Mason and Alana felt so damn superfluous.
But then we lose the "spitters are quitters" line and we can't have that.Those scenes with Mason and Alana felt so damn superfluous.
Kind of a funny complaint coming from someone who has been defending this season of True Detective.![]()
Fuller wanted to address complaints about Alana's reduced role as a love interest in S2 probably by making her a conspirator with Mason. I'm personally fine with the decision, but can see how others might view it was extraneous, especially considering the nature of the show which, like TD, is supremely focused on its leads.
It's simple it's just the matter of taste. Though I do stand I find all the characters in True Detective worthwhile compared to Alana Bloom of Hannibal. Everyone else in this show is fine. It's vice versa with some people with how they see the two shows though. No point in comparing otherwise we'll be here all day with no end.
I quite liked Alana in the first two seasons (more so season two) and in season two she felt like an actual independent character. Alana felt more like just a love interest in season one. Then they just made her a lesbian this season. Or is she bi-sexual? Why the hell don't they ever explain these big character changes?As if they're pretending she's always been one of these two things? The lesbian thing was so out of nowhere if not to acknowledge Margot's lesbianism in the books. I forget is Margot said to be a lesbian in season two?
I get your criticisms of True Detective and I'm fine with them, but like you with that, this season of Hannibal isn't doing it as much for me as the last. Alana Bloom just happens just to feel like a waste of space just standing there and talking all fanciful to Mason Verger in her Beetlejuice outfits. I mean they just stood around and agreed on things because they shared the same plan. I'm not learning anything new about Alana this season. Anything enough where she's justified to be kept around this long. Alana's place in the plot is something that could have gone to other characters. Everything she did could have went to Margot in the first half and everything she's doing now could have easily gone to Chilton. She just feels like a redundancy.
I'm honestly not sure why it needed to be explained. We saw she liked Will, we see she likes Margot, she's bi. I'm not sure why it really comes out of nowhere, to be honest. Again, maybe it's just me.And I don't think they did, I seem to recall someone somewhere criticizing them for it.
I'm honestly not sure why it needed to be explained. We saw she liked Will, we see she likes Margot, she's bi. I'm not sure why it really comes out of nowhere, to be honest. Again, maybe it's just me.And I don't think they did, I seem to recall someone somewhere criticizing them for it.
Eh. To each their own I guess.
I guess I'll just stand alone in loving both then...?
But it seemed to be at the convenience of the plot. If she's bi-sexual, that's something that's inherently part of someone and should kind of be there from the beginning. It's NEVER mentioned or hinted at in the previous seasons. It just reminds me of a Willow situation. Not much foreshadowing to it at all until "Wait, she's having sex with a woman now!" It just came out of nowhere so just so she could team up with Margot. Now they're having a baby together as if this has been part of Alana the whole time. It comes off as mere improvisation.
It's just very inconsistent and they've only now settled on who Alana should be. But I think it's too late.
I still haven't seen a convincing bi-sexual character yet in television. Bi-sexuality doesn't seem like an actual part of someone yet in terms of character, rather it seems determined in writing by the confusion of how a character should fall on either side because lesbianism is easier to accept on a superficial mainstream level or is just more thought of as opposed to bi-sexuality. Again, it just seems like it's the writers not really figuring out of a character and improvising. Therefore, that inconsistency makes them come off as bi-sexual and gives writers that excuse when it was never really there to begin with. There's a disingenuous nature to that when all is said in done, even if it isn't meant to be.
You can't simply add on to things like that when it comes to sexuality as per the convenience of the plot and then claim them to be bi-sexual like they were the entire time. Unless they're growing up and it's them accepting it but when it's a grown adult like Alana Bloom, that's something there that needs to be set in place from the beginning.
No none of it NEEDS to be set in place. You just don't like the way it's playing out. I hate when people take their opinions and try to justify them by saying that something isn't being done right. Like it HAS to be done a certain way as if that's a fact, for it to work. Just because you don't like the way it is playing out doesn't mean they did something wrong by not setting it in place in the beginning.