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"Apéritif" is the first episode of Season 1, and overall the first produced hour of Hannibal. It originally aired on April 4, 2013.

Plot

The head of the FBI's Behavioral Analysis Unit, Jack Crawford, calls on profiler Will Graham to help the team catch a serial killer. The killer has now kidnapped eight women, all similar in appearance and always on a Friday. His most recent victim is Elise Nichols. Graham has been teaching at the FBI academy and isn't too keen on going out into the field. He is particularly empathetic and has a tendency to get far too involved in these types of cases. Crawford arranges for a well-known psychiatrist, Hannibal Lecter, to work with him and ease the stress. It seems Lecter has his own plans for Will.

Synopsis

Ap1

A graphic double murder has taken place in a residential neighborhood. Will Graham, a brilliant but socially awkward savant, is examining the crime scene. Putting himself in the mind of the criminal, Will uses extreme focus to hone in on the details of the murder. Every bullet was shot with expert precision. The killer tapped the phones in the house a week prior in order to record a conversation between one of the victims and her security company. When the murder was committed, the culprit played her voice back to keep the authorities at bay. Whoever did this was a professional.


At the F.B.I. Academy in Quantico, Will Graham lectures trainees on the unsolved crime. Afterwards, he is

Ap2

approached for help by the lead of the Behavioral Science Unit, Special Agent Jack Crawford. Over the past eight months, eight girls have been abducted from Minnesota campuses. The most recent abduction occurred only moments before Jack introduced himself. Will thinks one of the eight is a "golden ticket" and the rest are just "candy bars" who the criminal is using to mask his true obsession. Jack and Will go to Minnesota to investigate.


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Will and Jack visit the home of the latest victim's family. Her parents are distraught, but hold on to the frail hope their daughter Elise is still alive. Will asks the parents if their cat has been acting odd since the abduction. When she disappeared, Elise was due to come home to look after the family cat. When Will finds out the cat was acting normally, Will knows Elise fed him before the crime and concludes the abduction occurred at the family house. When Will enters Elise's bedroom with her father, he finds a deceased Elise lying tranquilly in her bed. Her father drops the cat. The killer brought her corpse back.


Will uses his powerful imagination to get inside the mind of the killer and see exactly how the crime took place.

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The killer bore down on Elise's ribs much like a deer would to stun its prey and then proceeded to strangle her. Before Will can finish his process, Beverly Katz, a forensics specialist, interrupts him. She's found antler velvet in two of the dead girls' wounds. Will tells her that antler velvet promotes healing and he thinks the killer must have placed it in her wounds as a means of undoing as much of his crime as he could. It's why he's brought her back. For some reason, whatever he did to the other seven victims, he just couldn't do to her.


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Later, when Will's driving at night, he comes across a stray dog. Will takes the dog home with him, introducing the animal to the other eight canines he's taken in. Sleeping fretfully, Will has a nightmare that Elise's corpse is sleeping right beside him. He snaps out of the dream in a cold sweat. His work as a profiler is starting to take a real toll.


Jack's concerned that Will's becoming somewhat unstable. Will admits this

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killer has tested everything he knows about criminal profiling. Will fears the killer will act again soon. Will's colleague Alana Bloom tells Jack she thinks Will keeps a large amount of fear suppressed while on the job and suggests Jack keep him away from that kind of environment. But Jack knows the stakes are already too high.


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In the autopsy room, forensics specialist Beverly Katz reveals metals traces from the crime scene. Will realizes what the metal was used for - the killer mounted the victim on hooks. When one of the specialists mentions he took her liver out and then put it back, Will realizes the worst. The killer's a cannibal. There must have been something wrong with the meat. One of the examiners says the victim had liver cancer.


Hoping to help Will cope with the stresses of chasing the killer, Alana refers Jack to her mentor, Dr. Hannibal Lecter,

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an expert in the field of psychology. Jack brings Hannibal to Quantico to brief him on the case; it is here that Lecter first meets Will. Hannibal notices Will is uncomfortable with eye contact; his burgeoning neurosis is peeking through. It's a somewhat rocky start, but nevertheless, Hannibal is confident he can help.


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Another body, Cassie Boyle, turns up in a Minnesota field, naked and impaled on the antlers of a deer. The police are quick to identify the serial killer as the "Minnesota Shrike," a play on the bird known for impaling its prey on makeshift branches or wire as a means of saving their food for later. It's clear the killer is mocking Will and Jack. Whoever's committing these murders must have a daughter of similar age to the victims, whom he can't stand the thought of letting go. It's his "golden ticket." Elsewhere, in a kitchen far removed from the crime scene, Dr. Hannibal Lecter calmly cuts up a pair of human lungs and prepares them for consumption. As Will Graham puts the pieces of the crime together, Brian Zeller tells him that her lungs have been removed.


Although all three planned to meet, Dr. Lecter shows up at Will's hotel without Jack, whom he claims has been

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deposed to court. Hannibal's brought breakfast for them both. Lecter tries to break through Will's tough exterior, but Will doesn't budge. Hannibal asks about the most recent crime. Will explains to Dr. Lecter his thoughts regarding the murderer, that he thinks the killer views one of these victims as a "golden ticket" and may have a daughter of his own that's a similar age. Playing along, Hannibal continues to psychoanalyze Will.


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When Will and Hannibal visit a construction site in connection to the latest murder, Will finds something odd in one man's file. His name is Garret Jacob Hobbs, a pipe threader. In addition to some recurring absences, they notice that there's also no address on his letter of resignation. As they transport the files into Will's car, Hannibal purposefully drops one of the boxes and causes a mess. Will and the office secretary clean it up, while Hannibal sneaks back into the office to do some snooping of his own.


In the office, Hannibal uses a tissue to pick up the phone, and calls the residence of Mr. Garret Hobbs. His

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daughter answers the phone; she's eerily similar in size and look to the serial killer's previous victims. Garret, nervous, gets on the phone and speaks to Dr. Lecter. Under the pretenses of courtesy, Hannibal informs Mr. Hobbs that, "they know".


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The intensity of the case is starting to break Will down. He pops a few aspirin before approaching the house of Garret Jacob Hobbs, now the lead suspect in the case. Hannibal follows Will at a distance. As Will nears the door, Garret opens it and shoves his bleeding wife outside. Will rushes to her aid as Garret slams the door. His wife's throat has been slit, and she's bleeding out. Hannibal remains in the distance. Will rushes in, gun drawn. He fires a shot at Hobbs right as he's slitting his daughter's throat. As she falls to the ground, Will fires six more rounds at Hobbs, killing him. Hannibal rushes in and helps stabilize the girl's bleeding. She's rushed to the hospital. When Will goes to the hospital later on to check on the girl, she and Hannibal are both sleeping, his hand holding hers.

Extras

Trivia=

  • The episode's title, Apéritif, refers to an alcoholic drink that is normally served before a meal to stimulate the appetite.
  • The eggs and sausage meal takes place after Dr. Lecter enjoys his dinner of lungs.

Book to Show=

  • The pendulum motif comes from a brief mention of a silver pendulum swinging in darkness in Will’s mind before he enters the Leeds crime scene in Red Dragon.
  • Thomas Marlow being shot while coming down the stairs echoes Francis Dolarhyde’s murder of Edward Jacobi in Red Dragon.
  • The specifics of Garret Jacob Hobbs’s killing spree and capture are largely consistent with the backstory given in Red Dragon, including Hobbs’s last words, although Hannibal was not involved in the investigation in the book. The show adds the detail that Hobbs was a cannibal, as well as his motivation for the crimes. The nickname “Minnesota Shrike” was not explained in the book, and the show adds the “impaling” element of the crimes. Hobbs’s daughter is unnamed in the book.
  • Will and Jack’s dialogue about the way Will thinks is slightly modified from dialogue in Red Dragon.
  • Will having written the standard monograph on time of death by insect activity is a detail from Red Dragon (in the book, it’s Zeller who brings it up).
  • Will and Beverly’s dialogue about Will not being “real FBI” due to the screening procedures references similar speculation by Freddy Lounds in a Tattler article in Red Dragon.
  • The recurring antler/stag motif may have its origins in a sentence about Will from Red Dragon: “He viewed his own mentality as grostesque but useful, like a chair made of antlers.”
  • Will waking up and seeing Elise Nichols’s corpse in his bed is inspired by a similar moment with Valerie Leeds in Red Dragon.
  • Will and Jack’s dialogue in the bathroom is partially taken from the beginning of Red Dragon, when Jack tries to recruit Will at his home.
  • Beverly saying “Gotcha” whenever she recovers a scraping is a detail from Red Dragon.
  • The initial scene betwen Jack and Alana is taken almost verbatim from Red Dragon (where Dr. Bloom is a man named Alan). The dialogue occurs in the book when Jack is planning to use Will as bait to catch the Tooth Fairy. (In the book, Alan Bloom teaches at the University of Chicago. In the show, this is changed to Georgetown, presumably to keep Alana closer to FBI headquarters.)
  • The use of Bach’s “Goldberg Variations” for Hannibal’s introduction references its iconic use in both the book and film The Silence of the Lambs, when Hannibal escapes from custody. The piece has subsequently appeared repeatedly in the franchise, in the book and film Hannibal and the film Hannibal Rising.
  • Hannibal having attended boarding school in Paris comes from the book Hannibal Rising, as does his internship at Johns Hopkins. (In the novel, Hannibal’s anatomical drawings earned him a scholarship to a French medical school prior to his Johns Hopkins internship.)
  • Hannibal dismissing psychology departments as being filled with “personality deficients” comes from The Silence of the Lambs.
  • The “layman” dialogue is modified from a memorable exchange between Will and Hannibal in Red Dragon.
  • Hannibal and Will’s back-and-forth when Hannibal initially psychoanalyzes Will is more or less verbatim from a portion of Red Dragon which describes Will’s psyche.
  • Hannibal’s line, “Perception’s a tool that’s pointed on both ends,” was delivered by Alan Bloom in Red Dragon.
  • Jack being absent because he is deposed in court is likely a reference to the novel Hannibal, wherein Clarice frequently has trouble talking to Jack as he is being deposed on many cases due to his approaching retirement.
  • On the audio commentary for this episode, Bryan Fuller says that Hannibal asking Will if he can enter is a reference to vampire myths. In the novel Hannibal, Thomas Harris implies that Hannibal may have more in common with Behavioral Science’s profile of vampires than cannibals, as he disfavors the cannibal’s nomadic existence.
  • Memorable Quotes

    • "Can I borrow your imagination?" (to Will)
    • "Then what kind of crazy is he?!" (Jack to Will)
    • "Everyone has thought about killing someone, one way or another." (during his psychoanalyzing class)
    • "Most psychology departments are filled with personality deficients. Dr. Bloom would be the exception."(Lecter to Jack)
    • "You won't like me when I'm psychoanalyzed." (to Lecter)
    • "He's eating them." (about what a killer does to the livers)
    • "My thoughts are often not tasty." (to Lecter)
    • "The Devil is in the details." (to Will)
    • "Will needs someone who can bring balance to an often unbalanced mind." (to Jack)
    • "I imagine what you see and learn touches everything else in your mind. Your values and decency are present, yet shocked at your associations, appalled at your dreams." (to Will)
    • "Perception is a tool that's pointed on both ends."
    • "The mathematics of human behavior...All those ugly variables." (to Will)
    • "Uncle Jack sees you as a fragile little teacup." (to Will)
    • "The mongoose I want under the stairs when the snakes slither by." (on how he sees Will)
    • "Peeking behind the curtain." (to Will about investigating a possible lead)

    Lung, Episode 1:

    According to Andres, the entire human body is consumable, and
    Dinning
    it's no coincidence the lungs are the first piece of offal we see Hannibal cook. They would be Andres' first choice to prepare from a human, as well. Specifically, the lungs of a smoker. "We're looking at a human being as a bioorganic crock pot that is smoking itself for our dining pleasure," explained Fuller. "It felt like it checked off all the boxes of Hannibal Lecter: [Smoking is] a rude habit and there's also an added benefit of that rude habit providing a unique smokey flavor for the tissue."
    Lungs
    But as appetizing and beautifully prepared as the lungs were, Fuller notes the ghoulish quality to watching Hannibal squeeze the air out during his prep. "We all sort of feel in horror movies and in these horror situations that tightness in your chest and that [feeling] like, 'Oh my
    Bf-bourguignonne
    gosh. That's so startling, I can't breathe.' Then we take that concept... and put in on the kitchen counter," Fuller said. "There's something about those things that go into adrenal overdrive when our life is threatened and then we see that they're just another beautifully prepared dish on Hannibal's table."

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    Season 1 Episodes

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