I should
have known that I would never again write anything of what I had planned in my
blog but might instead write an endless sequel on “Hannibal”. Though, in a way,
I might already be “through” with it, which is of course a real pity. But I
enjoy the experience of writing these things “as they come”, watching it again.
I know it would have been better to watch the first and second series before
taking the third up again, but I was too keen on seeing this again and checking
on my first reading. And I am not quite sure if I’ll buy the first and second
series though I’ll probably want to see the “beginning” of Hannibal Lecter. But
I already spoiled it, as I knew I would, watching the third series first. I
enjoyed watching the first episode again, more than I did before, because then
I hadn’t understood ANYTHING. And for another reason which this blog will be
about. But watching the second episode was a set-back because I realized that
the main story, about Hannibal Lecter and Will Graham, had already become stale
and predictable. Which is what usually happens to series – maybe one of the
reasons why they are such a good “substitute” for real life. But, as I said, I
enjoyed the first episode immensely, and it provided me with one of the
climactic moments of my reading-experience.
I wrote
that I loathed the way people talked, but I have got used to it by now and, of
course, understand a great deal more. Watching the first episode again I was
rewarded for REALLY listening because the dialogue partly works “in two
directions”. That is, there are DIRECT messages to the audience “hidden” in it.
(At least I suppose that there are more of them, but I don’t know yet.) The
moment I discovered this was when Hannibal Lecter is about to kill a young man
who has found out that he is an impostor, and his “partner” Bedelia inadvertently drops
in. And only just now I realized that this scene is the culminating point of a
strand of irony which was a special treat even after having been spoiled. I just
finished “Vanity Fair” – for the first time! – which is 800 pages of the purest
and sanest irony I ever came across, so, practically “reading in heaven”. If I
still needed an answer to the question why an intelligent person with a refined
taste of humour might enjoy this series I have found it.
The
“strand” I am referring to starts when Hannibal meets this young man again in
Florence and perceives that he is dangerous because he knows that he is not who
he says he is. He invites him to his house for dinner, and they dine together
with his wife – who is no more his wife than he is professor Fell but his
ex-therapist who stepped into the role of Mrs. Fell. The guest remarks on her
diet, and she answers that her husband is very particular about how she tastes.
Which induces him to ask if it was “that kind of party”. And Hannibal Lecter
answers that no, it was not THAT kind of party. The irony of his reply isn’t
even visible on the surface because “the innocent” doesn’t get killed and eaten
right away. It lies almost exclusively in the incomparably matter-of-fact
Danish way Mads Mikkelsen says that sentence. Which cannot be honoured here, of
course. But he certainly knows then that he will kill the young man and is
looking forward to it. - When it finally happens Bedelia is just coming home
and becomes a witness of Hannibal killing a man, probably for the first time. And
he asks her if she is “just watching or PARTICIPATING?”- It wasn’t just the
cute Danish accent which instantly made this word ring in my ears. (To do him
justice, he doesn’t have much of a DANISH accent in this series. As Hannibal
Lecter is Lithuanian he is supposed to have a strange accent of some sort, but
“participating” suddenly reminded me of what
he sounds like in Danish.) Right! I thought, even before I grasped his
explanation of what he meant. Right! I am not just watching, I am
PARTICIPATING.
His
explanation of “participating” I remembered right away, and I don’t have to
check on it. He didn’t mean that she should actively partake in the slaughter. But
“just watching” would have been despicable in his eyes, I think, being
submerged by feelings of dread, horror, sympathy maybe. (Just what “average”
people would feel – and the “average” audience of course!) Whereas “participating”
means to have YOUR OWN expectations about what might happen, being conscious of
YOUR OWN PART (feelings, reactions, expectations …) in what is going on, and to
enjoy a feeling of achievement when
these expectations are met. (You win, or loose sometimes as well, but you are
DOING something.) “THAT IS PARTICIPATING.”
And that
is what my blog has been about – the “bigger” half of it. I couldn’t have described it any better – to tell the truth,
I could’t possibly have described it as well as that. Which might already be
the main reason why I enjoyed watching this so much. I was thrilled that I
EXPRESSLY was given that freedom to decide for myself how much I would get
involved. I don’t think I understand half of what happened yet, but, whatever
it was, it worked, as I was never “submerged” by whatever amount of blood or
beauty they “threw” at me, and, on the other hand, I never “dropped out” but invariably
stayed “on the inside”. From the beginning, everything was part of an
aesthetical experiment - even MY OWN FEELINGS were! In that way I can “have”
them as much as I want, which is: AS FAR AS THEY GO. Without any danger of
getting involved in something I shouldn’t get involved in – which means:
something that would only “throw me back onto myself” and make me miserable. I
have known now for some time that I know how to do this, but I am constantly
trying to find the ways and means for doing it over and over again.
And I
don’t find it strange anymore that one of my three favourite moments so far was
rather a low-key moment. It was a little speech the blind woman makes after she
has escaped from the “dragon”. I don’t want to “jump ahead” now and check on
it, but I remember that she kind of complains that people always take advantage
of her and think they can do whatever they want with her. It is more THE WAY
she says that, and, of course, the context, which makes it memorable. She is
one of the people who, through no fault of their own, have no idea of what is
going on. And, due to the dodged, miffed, and strangely confident way she says
it, it doesn’t read as self-pity. It reads as: “I know that I am damaged and
have no real value for anybody. But this is who I am. I know it, and I stick to
it.” - I was strangely delighted, and, though it is impossible to translate my
feelings at that moment, I’ll try: “How ignorant she is”, I thought, “and how
persistently stupid – and how RIGHT!” And this was probably the moment I “dropped
out” and leaned back, and watched the big slaughter at the end quite relaxed.
And I
think there will be a different story like this for everybody who has taken the
bait at one point and “participated”. Of course it is like this with every
text, to a certain degree, but “Hannibal” is certainly the kind of fiction that
actively encourages such intercourse. Not least through the character of
Hannibal Lecter himself whose perception of freedom is completely uncompromising
– a freedom he achieves for himself by making people fall under his spell! There
will probably be an INDIVIDUAL place for everybody who liked watching it where
they became “captivated”, and probably an individual place, or places, where
they dropped out. And I think this is great.
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