Now that
I am definitely “through” with “Hannibal”, and able to step away from it, I am
still wary of drawing any conclusions – and maybe don’t like those I have
already drawn. What was good, of course, was that finally watching the whole
series in a row was actually the best instance of watching it. I was a bit
afraid that the last part about the Red Dragon might have lost its fresh glow
in the light of what I had understood by now, but on the contrary: Finally
understanding “everything” it appeared even as if I could see every colour more
vividly and savour every tiny bit of it. It is certainly one of the most
beautiful things I have ever seen, maybe the most beautiful. At least I don’t
remember anything of this insanely pure beauty since I watched “American
Beauty”, 17 years in the past, and saw this scene with the video of the
“dancing” white plastic bag. And there it was just a “bite”, whereas this is
clearly a feast. But, at the same time I was overwhelmed by beauty, I kept noticing
what a load of bullshit it is, and, even though I could almost SMELL the fear
and every tiny drop of emotion that was there, I was constantly smiling, even
laughing, at the thought of this daring and incredible bullshit. Making a long
series out of one novel has to have this effect that it evolves into its own
world where the insanity of the book increases … As I said, the experience was
still unbelievably good – even while I was arriving at the conclusion that the
whole thing is almost exclusively ABOUT KILLING.
In fact,
why I spent such an insane amount of time watching it, which I totally loved,
is that it took me so long to understand the relationship of Will Graham and
Hannibal, or rather to ACCEPT that it is about killing. Of course there are a
few other things to take your mind off killing for short periods of time, like
cooking, or dying, or romance. But a lot of the cooking and the romance is “about”
killing as well.
I
realized for the first time that they have something like “Standards and
Practices” in American television, and nobody is happy with it, of course. But
when I watched the series again I became even more aware that, in this case, I
am mostly grateful for it. Especially when I realized that they could show
atrocious violence only for split-seconds – not long enough for somebody like
me to really “take it in”. Which was good. And even the absurd “standards”
about sexual activities might have turned out good in this case – though it is
a pity you can’t really SEE what the actors have done. But I think it kind of
forces the producers to make something special of it – if you can’t see “the
real thing”. Which you can’t anyway, in television or films, so it mostly
turns out boring and wouldn’t have matched the standards for aesthetics and
“naturalism” which, in this series, are incredibly high.
Of
course, watching horror, you have already accepted it to be about violence and
killing. And I could accept it the more easily as they always made it
“aesthetically acceptable” and supremely entertaining – even where it probably
shouldn’t be. But at the same time I was aware that this is a means to insert
the REAL horror of it in always deeper and deeper levels of consciousness –
which I deliberately enjoyed. I enjoyed “being” so destructive, without letting
the destructiveness get anywhere near MY life … But I became aware as well that
it was now time to stop. Just when I had decided to hit the emergency brake I
realized that I hadn’t even watched most of the “specials”, and I at least had
to watch the “making” of the final part about the Red Dragon which was tremendously
interesting. Especially when I became aware that I had been right about the
fact that Richard Armitage deliberately didn’t get involved with the story
“outside” his own character – partly for strategic reasons, but partly for
reasons of self-preservation. It is understandable that he didn’t want to see
Ralph Fiennes play Francis Dolarhyde. I always understand why actors don’t look
at the former versions. (Though I became aware that I probably should – maybe
finally reading the book and at least watching the film with Ralph Fiennes will
make for a long Halloween next year … And I expect it to become a more
genuinely painful and much less “beautiful” experience.) But he said that he
had to tread carefully when he approached this character because he got into this
habit of kind of DREAMING about what is in the character’s head. This was
something I had suspected, and in fact I remember him having said something
like this concerning “The Crucible”. I still hope that “kind of” meant
DAY-dreaming, but I am afraid it doesn’t. It was appealing, and slightly
uncanny, how “sane” he looked when he said this – but it was obviously
something that he is aware of can become insane. There must be a set-back to
always doing everything a hundred and fifty percent … Well, I think I WATCHED
this a hundred and fifty percent – which I have probably never known how to do,
and which was great. But it might have “done” more to me than I am currently aware
of. I mean, how should I determine that I am still sane? Maybe somebody else
can tell me when they read this …?
The
worst part of it was certainly the part about Will Graham. And there is very
little about it that struck me as beautiful – though Hugh Dancy as Will Graham
is certainly more beautiful than Richard Armitage as Francis Dolarhyde! But this
is clearly not what the beauty is about, in this case, so the “ugly” part began
to show as soon as I could myself bring to become involved with his story. That
is, to get past the impression that I didn’t find the character very convincing.
It probably took me some time until I could bring myself to finally find him
interesting – same as for him concerning Hannibal Lecter. And it still appears
more like a strategic choice. At first I thought Hugh Dancy might just be a bad
actor, but it takes a bit more of becoming involved than I probably wanted to
be, to “make” something of this character.
I have
written something about these characters being like fairy-tale characters, but
I was always aware that this was some kind of crutch to help me walk on this shifty
ground. So it was something important as well as unsatisfactory, and I recently
acquired the means to express it better, even though it is still just a simile.
When we were at Lago Maggiore the children played a new game called “werewolf”.
Everybody gets dealt a card with their character, and somebody else reads
instructions as to what the characters have to do. They are always the same
instructions, but the game turns out differently every time because it is about
strategically eliminating the werewolves who live incognito as members of the
community. They have to be brought to trial during the day, but during the
night they are able to kill those who accuse them of being werewolves. The game
made me aware that it was more useful to see these characters in the series as
characters in an elaborate game. If the game plays out well the characters
become naturalistic and believable, JUST BECAUSE what they are doing makes
sense within the context of the game. It is what I usually don’t like as much
as when the context is “naturalistically” embedded “in” the characters, as in “Shakespeare”,
or “Austen”, or “House of Cards”. This is usually much more my thing, but, when
I like the game, this set-up can create an enormous pull. And it helps to enjoy
the game, even when the things we are playing with are painful and
disagreeable, because “we” never take these characters completely seriously as “real
people”. At least I didn’t, except the very few characters who are entirely
believable as human beings AND occupy a certain function in the game. But, having enough specific features to play
with, all the principal characters turned out very special and can be taken
seriously – just because we accept them as the person who fills this specific
place. The only exception for me was Will Graham to whom I already assigned the
category of “everyman”. He is the only instance of the unspecific characters of
the game which are “just” members of the community, and whom the children
disrespectfully dubbed “Dorftrottel” (=village idiots).
I liked
the “village idiots” even better than “everyman” because it shows so well why
these characters are not attractive, even though they may be tremendously
good-looking. Nobody wants to be “just” the village idiot who has no specific
“talent” which assigns him an active role in the game, and his little spot of
power. Interestingly, Will Graham HAS ALL THIS. He has a very special talent,
and a very specific role in the “game”, and he is supposed to have all kinds of
specific features, like being exceptionally intelligent, socially inhibited to
the point of being borderline autistic, at least not any good where
relationships are concerned, and ARROGANT!!! This is mainly what other people
say about him, but NOTHING OF THIS actually SHOWS. He should be a fascinating and
strange character but he remains basically nondescript. This might very well be
seen as bad acting, especially when he does things like not looking anybody in
the eye in one scene where Hannibal refers to it, and in the next scene has
forgotten all about it. But this is almost too obvious to be “believable” as
bad acting! And the most important part about his talent of empathizing with
the murderers, reconstructing the crime through empathy, is, in the way it is
presented, the biggest bullshit in the whole series. Which is certainly not the
fault of the actor nor probably of anybody else because it is very likely IMPOSSIBLE
to present this audacious idea convincingly OUTSIDE A BOOK. And this is why I
suspect that Will Graham is not a failure down to bad acting – though there
were probably things that could have been dealt with more successfully. But
basically Will Graham is just one of these characters who only work “on paper”.
The reason for this is that what is said about him is unrelated to, or even
contradicts, what he actually does or what happens to him. To play ALL THIS
would mean for the actor to constantly contradict himself, and no actor can do
THAT!
So I guess
Hugh Dancy was in a fix, and had to find his way out of it and “into” the
character. And I think he did. Something about Will Graham obviously works,
otherwise the whole series wouldn’t work. What it is, I am still not sure. From
what I heard Hugh Dancy say in the commentaries he strikes me as an intelligent
and thoughtful person, so he is probably a more intelligent actor than I gave
him credit for and wouldn’t bother with something that wouldn’t really work. He probably got rid of these “paper” features and tried to focus on the essence
of Will Graham – the part that makes sense about him and which is not who he
is, or what is said about him, but what HAPPENS to him. He probably just tried
very hard, and somehow succeeded, to make these moments when something happens
to the character very intense and kind of ruminant, and unbelievably slow –
which is an aesthetical feature of the series I became very fond of, but Hugh
Dancy still beats everybody else. It is minimalistic, and really big at the
same time, and it works. And this is probably not intentional but what strikes
me as an outcome of this process: the only feature of his character that really
adheres to him is something I am very fond of, and which is best expressed by
an outdated German term: Demut. It would translate as “humbleness” but that is only
the smallest part of what this concept contains. It is something we have completely
forgotten about, maybe best expressed by an amalgamation of my favourite
“king-becoming graces” from “Macbeth”: “devotion, patience, courage, fortitude”.
It is something positive and active, rather than passive like “humbleness”. It
includes the ABILITY to accept our fate because we know how unimportant we are –
and how important at the same time. And it is the only way to BELIEVE in being
able to brave his fate for someone who has no power. And really believing in
something is always the first step. I think the only thing I really ever liked
about Jesus is the way he is taunting us with contradictions. For example when
he says that the humble shall(!) inherit the earth. But, if we are supposed to
believe it, this doesn’t mean that it will happen ANYWAY, whatever we do. It
means that we damn well should be looking for a way to make it happen. And Hugh
Dancy achieves it to make Will Graham somebody who is looking, and “believing”
– in a crazy und destructive world. - But who says that our world is less crazy?
At least it can very suddenly become a place where we cannot hide anywhere from
being destroyed, and where our everyday ethics don’t work anymore. - It is
certainly down to everybody what we make of the end of season three, but I
think that Will Graham is finally successful. Because he is the only one who
can get Hannibal on the “good” side. I am aware that this version of the events
is probably naïve and over-simplifying, but it is the first time Hannibal stops
a serial killer instead of helping him – and he definitely kills him at the
expense of his own life. So, whatever complexity I might have missed, he does
for once what HE IS SUPPOSED to do. And, I think, because Will Graham convinced
him that it is what he WANTS to do.
So I probably
have made up my mind about Will Graham nonetheless. I don’t know if it is an
interesting conclusion, but this wasn’t why I am writing still another blog
about “Hannibal”: to reach conclusions. It is because, reviewing the process of
reading it, I suddenly hit on something totally amazing.
In my
own estimation my blog is very much about what I am DOING when I am reading.
But in fact it never really was. Saying “a hundred and fifty percent” was how I
FELT about it, but it didn’t really mean anything when I wrote it. It cannot be
about what I notice, or understand, or appreciate, because even noticing,
understanding, or appreciating everything, if this was possible, would just be
a hundred percent. It is somehow about this process becoming so intense that I
noticed, understood, and appreciated things I had never noticed, understood or
appreciated before – and enjoyed it in a way I never enjoyed any reading before
that. I MEANT “in a way”, not “as much” because I have certainly enjoyed other
texts as much as this, in a different way, for example when I was reading
Shakespeare. But this was definitely a new dimension. And it shouldn’t have
happened because I shouldn’t even have READ it in the first place …
So, this
was something so different from what I had experienced before, FROM THE
BEGINNING, and I didn’t understand why. But one reason why it turned out so
amazing certainly was that the reading-process itself was so “perverse”, in a
way, that I became aware of ALL THE NATURAL CATEGORIES I use when I am reading.
This was
a totally amazing find, and my explanation for it at the moment is that the
reading-process was so much slowed down and somehow “perverted” by the way I
came to read it that I didn’t apply them all at once. Which is probably what
“we” usually do. And what I noticed about it was that the joy of reading came
from the active role I deliberately “assigned” myself in the process - “participating”!
- and what, I think, made for the hundred and fifty percent. The fun might in
fact have been mostly about becoming half-conscious of what I was doing for the
first time, which enabled me to make so much more of it.
Strictly
speaking, I cannot know if they are “natural” categories – which everybody
applies when they are reading. But this is what I believe. And they are
certainly not interesting AS SUCH, but it was extremely interesting for me to
observe WHAT HAPPENED when I applied them.
As I
expect this to become really long, I will stretch it out over more than one
blog. This is just about the beginning:
The
first category I became aware of was GENRE. I became aware of it as a category
for CHOOSING texts I would want to read precisely because it worked in a
negative way. Or it should have done. I wouldn’t have read anything which had
the label “horror” attached to it BECAUSE of this label. And this is how I
became aware of the first category that triggered my choice, and which has
become an extremely important category for me to choose texts that contain some
kind of performance. I obviously came upon the text because I learned that
Richard Armitage had played the Red Dragon in this series. So, PERFORMING ARTIST
is obviously an important category for dealing with this kind of texts, as it
is probably for many people who are fond of a certain kind of performance. So
important that it can overrule “genre” – or “threatened” to do so, in this
case. And I am usually aware of this happening, and very cautious that wanting
to see certain actors won’t make me buy something I don’t really want to watch.
I didn’t really WANT to believe that this might be the case, but I couldn’t
know. There was another performing artist though I was interested in: Mads
Mikkelsen playing Hannibal. And I didn’t know what the Red Dragon was, but I
knew who Hannibal was, and I could at least be certain that I wouldn’t be bored
or disgusted by this. So I think I kind of “displaced” my choice. And,
evidently, this choice, and this conflict, was very important for HOW I watched
it as well. I’ll probably come to that.
There is
another thing about genre, or rather about what I’d call “FORMAT”, that became
tremendously important for how the reading-process played out. I’d say it
obstructed it completely, distorted it – but not necessarily in a bad way. It
certainly made it last much longer. I usually love to buy series, and I hate
it, because I always have to buy the sequel for one or the other reason. In
this case I couldn’t watch the first season first because it is horror, and I
didn’t really expect I would enjoy anything about it apart from maybe Richard
Armitage and Mads Mikkelsen acting. In fact, it doesn’t make ANY SENSE to watch
the third season first: So I didn’t UNDERSTAND anything at first. And I think
this was what made the whole process complicated and obstructive and slower
than it needed to be. And that was why everything happened the way it happened.
And I really can’t say that I regret it!
The
strangest thing about it was probably that, understanding nothing, I couldn’t
apply any of the categories I usually apply, except of what comes “by itself”.
I didn’t understand what happened, I didn’t know who these characters were, or
what they were about. And, if I did, I didn’t like what I saw. I felt that
these characters were strange and that they talked strange, and that they were probably
talking bullshit all the time. And I think that, because I couldn’t read any of
this or didn’t really see the point of reading, I applied the categories that
come “naturally” – without any conscious efforts of “putting” the text
“together”. And these are, strange as this might seem, AESTHETICAL CATEGORIES.
The
effect was striking. Maybe even more striking because of what I EXPECTED. I
expected horror, and I saw beauty. I think that, after I had seen the first
episode, I was so relieved that it didn’t “hurt” that I became particularly receptive
for everything that was beautiful. Because, being able to see the whole thing
“objectively” now, there is as much horror as there is beauty, probably more.
But it is of course the first piece of chocolate I should have resisted: the
beauty made the horror kind of easy to swallow. I kind of dissolved it into
aesthetical categories.
Well,
maybe I should have been more critical – but I am glad that I wasn’t. And an
almost funny thing I became aware of is that, when I finally understood
something, which was from episode eight to the end, I continued to apply mainly
aesthetical categories, probably because I was in this vein anyway, and because
I had come to like it so much. I don’t really remember this but I infer it from
how I described my first impression of Richard Armitage as the Red Dragon in my
blog. As I mainly described his performance, and the aesthetical categories
adhering to the character, I suppose that is what I noticed first. I am sure I
noticed other things but I was still very suspicious of these characters, so I
probably left this in limbo until I could somehow confirm that I was “right” to
feel what I felt. Very strange – but I think that it was basically a good
thing.
I know I
watched the third season probably three times or more before I started on
season one. And my perception didn’t really change – except for the “Red
Dragon”-story which is more coherent without the complete context. But I fully
appreciated it only when I watched the complete series in a row – and this was
great! As I said, I fully noticed how beautiful it was – and what a load of
bullshit it was at the same time! – only just now. And, if possible, I noticed
every aesthetical bit even more than before. There were definitely things I
noticed for the first time that were quite obvious. But I didn’t notice them
because I didn’t understand the context completely – which I do now.
So it
definitely became a success-story – and my next blog will probably be about
what happened when I finally started with season one.
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