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 is kind of the feeling of falling in love, like, ‘Oh, my god, I see you. I really see you.’ Of course, the fact is he doesn’t see Hannibal at that point, but, nonetheless, whatever it is between them, is there from the beginning.’ ~ Hugh Dancy
The music which plays during Will’s fantasy in which he imagines a world in which he kills Jack in preparation to run away with Hannibal is Peer Gynt Suite No. 1, Op. 46: II. The Death of Ase, composed by Edvard Grieg. Peer Gynt is a five-act verse play by Henrik Ibsen, published in Norwegian in 1867 and produced in 1876.
It tells the story of Peer Gynt, a charming but lazy and arrogant peasant youth who leaves home to seek his fortune. Confident of success, he has one disastrous adventure after another.In one, he attends the wedding of a wealthy young woman he himself might have married. There he meets Solveig, who falls in love with him. He impulsively abducts the bride from her wedding celebration and subsequently abandons her. He then embarks on a series of fantastic voyages around the world, finding wealth and fame but never happiness. Finally, old and disillusioned, he returns to Norway, where Solveig, ever faithful and loving, welcomes him home, and he is redeemed. (x)
You sit in that chair, Will, as you have so many times before. It holds among its molecules the vibrations of all our conversations ever held in its presence.