"Hannibal" Review/Recap: “Ko No Mono”
Adam Reynoso ’15 / Emertainment Monthly Staff Writer
After last week’s events, it was beginning to become unclear whose side Will Graham (Hugh Dancy) was actually on, but “Ko No Mono” has finally begun to shed light on a few different agendas and to where it could be going in these last two episodes of the season.
Since his release and resuming therapy with Dr. Hannibal Lecter (Mads Mikkelsen), Graham has been walking the line between Hannibal and Jack (Laurence Fishburne). He continued to work with Jack and help the FBI with their cases while maintaining his sanity in the process. But as seen in the last couple of weeks, it does seem that he’s been leaning more towards the dark places, having killed Hannibal’s former patient in the previous episode.
With this revelation, it also clued Alana Bloom (Caroline Dhavernas) into what has been transpiring as well. In this episode especially, she’s begun to realize how dangerous Will and Hannibal’s relationship is and that perhaps she doesn’t know Hannibal as well as she’s previously claimed. The entire time, she’s been on his side, but it’s only after realizing that someone had to be guiding Will–that it could in fact be Hannibal himself.
The thing with Mason is that while Hannibal is a dark, intelligent murderer, Mason is the opposite. His own motive is to keep himself at the top of the food chain and he abuses his power in any way he can. And that makes him dangerous, even to Hannibal.
But at the episode’s close, Graham confronts Mason for what he’s done to Margot and with a gun to his head, reveals that this is exactly what Hannibal wants. It goes back to Hannibal’s first meeting with Margot where he told her that perhaps she could get someone else to kill him.
The episode proved to advance the story and show what the layout for the next two episodes could be. And without any real killer of the week, it’s cleared the way for the development of the relationships between the characters, which has always been as beautifully constructed as the murders the show has displayed.
Overall Episode Grade: A