Metacritic Film

Hannibal Rising

Starring Gaspard Ulliel, Rhys Ifans, Li Gong, Helena Lia Tachovska, Dominic West, Aaron Thomas, Kevin McKidd, and Richard Brake

MPAA RATING: R for strong grisly violent content and some language/sexual references

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Drama  |  Suspense/Thriller
117 minutes | Color
France / UK / USA
Released In Theaters February 9, 2007

In "Red Dragon" we learned who he was. In "Silence of the Lambs" we learned how he did it. Now comes the most chilling chapter in the life of Hannibal Lecter -- the one that answers the most elusive question of all -- why? (MGM)

WRITTEN BY
Thomas Harris (also novel)

DIRECTED BY
Peter Webber

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

35 / 100

Critic Reviews

75 San Francisco Chronicle
Hannibal Rising isn't a classic, but it's entertaining and a surprisingly fitting addition to the franchise.
63 Premiere Jenni Miller
The story's beginning is in a rush to get to the the killings, which get more and more disgusting.
63 New York Daily News
This strikes me as the final nail in the franchise's coffin. I can't name an actor who could have made young Lecter as interesting as the older one, but Ulliel does not come close.
63 TV Guide
It's a handsomely mounted but poky thriller undone by a fatally miscast lead.
60 Film Threat Mark Bell
This is essentially a by-the-numbers revenge film with some attempts at deeper characterization. The difference between this film and, say, "Batman Begins" is that Bruce Wayne, upon finding the tormentors of his youth, never tried to kill and eat them.
58 Portland Oregonian
It's a handsome film, but the pace is continually gummy and the set-ups stiff and artificial. Most crucially, nothing in it vanquishes the sensation that we're being sold something superfluous -- like a service contract for a carton of eggs.
50 Philadelphia Inquirer
What Hannibal Rising is, mostly, is a hoot.
50 Village Voice Jim Ridley
This comically fastidious telling of the Hannibal Lecter origin story completes the extreme makeover of grindhouse fare that "The Silence of the Lambs" started 15 years ago. Meaning: Respectable audiences who wouldn't be caught dead at a (sniff!) horror movie still want severed heads; they just want the bloody meal served on Royal Dalton china.
50 Variety
This upmarket slasher is a well-produced but slow-moving thriller that never quite roars to life.
50 Baltimore Sun
Most of the movie makes too much sense and is no fun at
42 Christian Science Monitor
Thomas Harris adapted his own bestseller and Peter Webber, who previously directed "Girl with a Pearl Earring," had the unenviable task of trying to give this glop, which is too gruesome to be campy, a high gloss. It should be called Man With a Severed Head.
42 The Onion (A.V. Club)
Director Peter Webber can't do much about what's missing from the story: a soul or a sense of purpose.
40 Chicago Reader
Ulliel, the meek missing soldier in "A Very Long Engagement," makes such a tedious Lecter that this quickly becomes a chore, though Dominic West ("The Wire") is good as a French detective on the madman's trail.
40 New York Magazine
Hannibal Rising is basically a Steven Seagal vigilante movie with a hero who eats the people he kills. At least it's ecofriendly.
40 Washington Post
The movie streamlines much of Harris's book. It's a shame, because it results in the movie's fundamental flaw -- the one-dimensionality of Hannibal.
40 Empire
Gong Li is welcome as Hannibal's Japanese aunt-in-law/mentor, Gaspard Ulliel isn't a bad young Lecter and Webber's direction is intermittently classy -- but this is a footnote rather than a film.
38 Boston Globe
For better and worse, the movie is more attractive and competently assembled than its schlock peers. That's refreshing, but it hardly excuses the appalling lack of suspense, intermittent tastelessness, or shockingly low camp quotient.
38 Charlotte Observer
Errors in logic will delight the attentive.
30 Austin Chronicle Josh Rosenblatt
Who would have thought mass murder and cannibalism could be so dull?
30 Los Angeles Times Sam Adams
Bad as Harris' Hannibal Rising screenplay (his first) is, at least it's an improvement on his dreadful book, streamlining its convoluted action and discarding large chunks of unspeakable dialogue.
30 LA Weekly
This Hannibal is a stick-in-the-mud altogether lacking in the wit, gourmet appetites and romantic flair required of any surrogate for Sir Anthony Hopkins. By the end of two full hours, it's only Harris' head you long to see on a plate.
25 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Not just a bad film, Hannibal Rising is downright dull, which is a far worse crime.
25 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
Not quite repellent enough to avoid tedium, Hannibal Rising is both too familiar in portraying Hannibal as a Dracula-like aristocrat monster, and crud in its exploitation of wartime atrocities.
25 Entertainment Weekly
Hannibal Rising reduces this great creature of the pop imagination to a Eurotrash Boy Scout throwing a homicidal snit fit.
25 Chicago Tribune Phil Vettel
A sort-of combination of "Lambs," "Batman Begins" and "The Joy of Cooking," Hannibal Rising ostensibly dramatizes the atrocities that turned Hannibal Lecter from loving child to serial killer. But this film is larded up with so many food references that I'm undecided whether this story belongs in a film compendium or a recipe file.
25 ReelViews
The funniest movie of the year - a true laugh riot. Viewers will be holding their sides to contain the laughter. Forget Borat - if you're looking for something hilarious, this is the movie to see. What's that? It's not supposed to be a comedy. Oops.
25 Miami Herald
For the first time in the film series, Harris wrote the screenplay himself, which means the movie is practically identical to the book. In other words, they both stink.
25 New York Post
Dull and dreary prequel.
20 The Hollywood Reporter
It's all quite a mess, with awkward performances, worse dialogue and a painfully protracted running time conspiring against any chance of enjoyment, even in a so-bad-it's-good guilty pleasure way.
10 The New York Times
Silly, slack and unforgivably tedious, Thomas Harris's screenplay is padded with interminable flashbacks and a bombastic score that telegraphs every emotion Hannibal represses. And there are a lot of them.

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