Bruna. 28. Bisexual. Brazil. I've got a film degree.
Sometimes I post mature content, so I'll ask to only follow me if you're 18+.
This is a multifandom blog. Expect lots of Hannibal and Star Trek. Also Vampire Chronicles. Lots of movies. There will be on occasion rock bands and singers. Also books and TV shows and random stuff.
Check my About Me and the links in the navigation page to see more info.
‘There were scenes in Hannibal’s second and third seasons that made
blood, food, and unclothed bodies seem like alternating courses in the
same never-ending feast. The close-ups of Hannibal Lecter’s culinary
creations, his handwork as a killer, and his rivals’ gruesome gallery
installations built of human bodies were all lit and shot in ways that
stylized them and made them seem like parts of the same continuum…
After watching the first four episodes, I can say that I don’t love
American Gods the way I loved Hannibal. This is partly because Hannibal,
for all its cool bloodletting and prankish humor, was a much warmer
series — no doubt because of the physically unconsummated love between
Mads Mikkelsen’s Hannibal and Hugh Dancy’s Will Graham. The relationship
between those two characters and the individual cases they investigated
served as a through lines connecting all the blowout scenes of horror,
violence, and seduction. American Gods is deliberately disjointed, like
tracks on an album.’
Viola Davis, winner of the Best Supporting Actress award for ‘Fences’ poses in the press room during the 89th Annual Academy Awards at Hollywood & Highland Center on February 26, 2017 in Hollywood, California.