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Frederick, Hannibal’s ally, spies on Will, and confirms that his main topic of conversation is Hannibal. There’s plenty else happening in the present: Jack is being investigated, begrudgingly, by the FBI, after Alana made a claim about his irresponsibility regarding Will. Perhaps Du Maurier said it best: obsession.
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Has Hannibal ever looked more positively giddy than when Beverly referred to him as “the new Will?” “I looked through Will’s eyes and saw death as I imagine Will sees it.” While Will is trying to connect with the black stag of his nightmares - Hannibal, of course - Hannibal is missing his … friend isn’t the right word.
#Hannibal season 2 review trial#
Locked up and anticipating a trial for Hannibal’s crimes, all pegged on him, he’s unable to recall the details of these murders, or just about anything, thanks to Hannibal’s manipulations and his, y’know, Will's brain inflammation.īut things are coming back, like the ear (which he quite literally regurgitated in the first season finale), and as they do, “there will be a reckoning.” Hannibal could have killed Will, and still could, but he feels a connection to him, as he explains to Du Maurier. Through flashbacks and exposition (through the prison visitations by Jack, Beverly, Hannibal and Alana - each of which illuminated some aspect of the story), we were reminded of where things stand with Will.
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There were three key things at play in “Kaiseki,” each tied in with the past, present and future.