Do you let him in? (☉ ☉)
Acquired Stardust
i don't do bad sauce passes
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noise dept.
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Keni
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Mike Driver
almost home
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Not today Justin

roma★
DEAR READER
Jules of Nature
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Show & Tell

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cherry valley forever
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@ronnyaschk
Do you let him in? (☉ ☉)
Some Clarice and Hannibal doodle i made, cause i just love them sm in the book
Im on my Clannibal era please look away
canon event
Between iron and silver [clannibal]
clannibal stuff part…i lost count
Um, his eyes are higher, darling
Hehehehe I think I definitely liked the process of this ( ͡°‿ ͡°)
So tiny but so problematic...
Well, let's wish Clarice good luck! ⚆‿⚆
Let's GOOOO
When Hannibal [NBC] fans hate Clarice or just try to replace her with Will in everything, it just makes me angry. Like, what are you gonna do, erase the original, canon, actually sailing ship? Erase a great female character, written by a man yet well done, just to make Hannibal gayer?
Like you can like the show and Hannigram if you wanna. But the show and the books are completely separate universes... Not to mention, if we have to consider one of the two as canon, it's the books. It's the foundation, the spine of it all, where every Hannibal and the other related characters are rooted in.
And people saying "they made him straight 🤢". No. Hannibal wasn't made straight in the books, because he already was. And if he wasn't, Thomas Harris never let us know, and only showed him having a romantic/sexual interest in women throughout the tetralogy.
Hannibal was made gay in the show, when he originally wasn't, and his character was twisted to make it a toxic yaoi yandere fanfiction/tv show. His personality, his attitude towards characters like Will —who, in the books, he absolutely hates and does not fall in love with—, his decisions regarding murders —NBC Hannibal kills more freely and often, when he's mildly upset or finds someone to be standing in his way, whereas book Hannibal is more measured, has different methods, be it manipulation, murder, and others, that don't always involve murder—...
And don't get me started on how he treats women. Book and movie Hannibal, we know, respect women. Book Hannibal punished a man for smacking his aunt's rear and for insulting her with his words, too. He punished Paul Krendler for the things he'd done to Clarice, the harassment and making her job hell, preventing her from achieving progress and all. And damn, even if he hurt a woman —we only ever know he swallowed a nurse's tongue, but she lived—, he never killed her AND she wasn't a minor.
NBC Hannibal? As far as I recall, he killed Abigail Hobbs —who was, at the time, around 17-18, so technically still a minor, still "vulnerable"—. He's killed many other women, I know. But couldn't there have been another way? Because book Hannibal knew ways of removing stones from his shoes without having to kill anyone just like that, as a first option.
Yes, in the book Hannibal "tries to brainwash Clarice", you'll say. He didn't. He misinterprets love because the most intense, true and devoted love he's felt was decades ago, with Mischa, and she died. He thinks his love for Clarice must be like the love he felt for Mischa, he values her integrity, her "worthiest place", thus misunderstanding his own feelings as he has never really processed this and thinking he wants to bring Mischa back through Clarice... But then he has sex with her, they become lovers... He can tell the difference now.
And even if he had brainwashed her, let's indulge the excuse for a moment... How is that worse than what Hannibal from NBC does to his Will?
Hannibal knew of his encephalitis, hid the diagnosis from him, brought out the worst of him, framed him for his murders, killed someone Will loved —perhaps not truly, perhaps just the ideas he projected onto Abigail, but the fact remains—, among many other wrongs... Manipulated Will, expressed his feelings in the worst ways possible... He hurt Will. A lot.
I'm not saying Will didn't hurt him, but we're talking about what Hannibal does to his lovers in the book and the show. If you compare it, he never harmed Clarice. Thomas Harris specifically states that the drugs she took were for therapeutic purposes only, and that they no longer have a part in their lives since years ago, in the epilogue. Whereas with Hannigram, the manipulation is constant, from both sides, the harm, everything.
In the book, he is all protective over Clarice, though he knows and respects that she is more than capable of taking care of herself. In the show, it's almost as if toying with Will's mind in a destructive way amuses or even arouses him, whereas in the book, Hannibal can't seem to stand the thought of harming Clarice neither physically nor psychologically. Talk about big differences.
Again, back to my first point. Hannigram shippers hating on Clarice, wanting to get her off the books... You do realize that, without her or without Clannibal, your little ship wouldn't have material to be born from? True, Bryan Fuller could have made something up, with enough effort and creativity... But if he could come up with a whole show by his ideas alone, why are most of Will's and Hannibal's dialogues, be it with each other or about each other, just a copy paste of Hannibal and Clarice's own, if only a little modified or adapted?
How come you hate Clannibal, when your own little ship and your precious murder husband quotes about love, about the daily stab of hunger, about seeing everyday forever and remembering this time, are just adaptations of Clannibal moments? It isn't Clarice that needs to be replaced or erased. Because you might think that even if there was no Clarice in the books, Will could have become Hannibal's lover, you are terribly wrong.
Will and Hannibal hated each other. Will's morals and mind in the books are not like the Will's from the show. This Will actually is horrified by Hannibal's crimes, completely against them, and hates Hannibal. Same goes with Hannibal, who hates Will for catching him among other things, from taking his freedom from him.
Hell, Hannibal sent a fucking serial killer —Francis Dolarhyde— not after Will alone, but after his goddamned family —which he actually loves in the book—. His step-son and his wife. Thanks to what Hannibal does, he is terribly disfigured. He becomes an alcoholic, his life goes to hell... How is that going to become love, as you claim, when he has destroyed his life completely? Hannibal is controlled and composed, yes, but he still feels quite as much as anyone else, if not more. His hatred for Will Graham leads to this.
You can't hate Clarice Starling, finally, as a character or person regardless of your ship. She is an intelligent, strong, stubborn and resourceful woman who rose from the lowest she stood, from the loss of her father, from being sent away from her mother and siblings, from the trauma of the lambs, from the orphanage and poverty of her childhood... All to become what she truly believed in. A law enforcer who could actually do some good. Whose ideals and goals mattered more than greed or self advance.
Nowadays we criticize women written by men so damn much, because they're so plain, always the seductress or the damsel in distress, like a Madonna-whore complex. Yet when you are facing a strong, complex but coherent female lead, you can't seem to like her, be it for your preferences regarding characters or regarding ships...
It's rather interesting. Why is hating Hannigram homophobic, but hating Clarice Starling isn't misogyny? She is a strong woman making her way in a male-dominated field, in times were sexism and racism —which are still present— were, dare I say, even worse.
How come you can't stand a woman who actually earns her place, who doesn't bend down to corruption, who sticks to her values and her oath to serve justice?
And, for those who might not like Hannigram, but don't like Clannibal either because "it does wrong to Clarice's character"... Can you blame her for falling in love? For wanting better things in life? She finds the system as doomed, flawed from within, and if she can't change it... It doesn't make her become a criminal herself. It doesn't make her a killer or a complete opposite of what the idealistic heroine is. It simply frees her, opens her mind to the possibility of, for once, looking out for herself, pursuing something she wants, not obligated to duties anymore. For once, she allows herself to be selfish, to grant herself some happiness...
I don't think you can hate Clarice just because. I don't think she deserves it. She is a well written character, human, and not completely white, not completely black. She's a scale of gray, and I love that. She's not completely "good" or "ideal" because absolutely no human is. That's precisely the beauty of it all. She is so close to that, but still human.
And you can't hate Clannibal when you adore Hannigram, because Hannigram is a gay-fied, toxified version of Clannibal.
Will Graham in the show is far more like Clarice Starling than he is to the Will Graham from the books which he is supposedly based on...
So, like I said, it is irrational to hate Clannibal, as it is the source of the romance Fuller gave "Will" and Hannibal in the show. A house without a strong foundation falls apart, and Hannigram's foundation is Clannibal. You think about this...
Thanks for coming to my Ted talk.
missing my parents again
old hannibal ditty
Silence
hannibal being a 13 year old show but hannigram still making the top 20 ships i know thats right
Let Me Swoon Over You
[Swoon - Beach Wather]