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Thursday, 16 August 2018
31 Things We Learned from Michael Mann’s ‘Manhunter’ Commentary
“This scene is suggested by Pillow Talk. I don’t know who’s Rock Hudson and who’s Doris Day.”
This week marks the 32nd anniversary of Michael Mann‘s Manhunter, and while the Anthony Hopkins-starring trilogy captured the public’s imagination more completely this first introduction to Hannibal Lecktor remains the best for many of us. It’s just a sensory delight anchored by style, intense performances, and Mann’s atypical approach to thriller pacing.
He cobbled together a director’s cut a year after its release in 1986, and Scream Factory released a solid Blu-ray in 2016 featuring both versions along with numerous extras. Among them? A rare Mann commentary track on his extended cut.
Keep reading to see what I heard on the commentary for…
Manhunter (1986)
Commentator: Michael Mann (writer/director)
1. Mann grew up in the same Chicago neighborhood as William Petersen and Dennis Farina.
2. This was Mann’s first collaboration with cinematographer Dante Spinotti, and they went on to make The Last of the Mohicans (1992), Heat (1995), The Insider (1999), and Public Enemies (2009). Curiously, Spinotti also shot Brett Ratner’s Red Dragon (2002).
3. He loves the opening beach-set scene as it drops viewers into the friendship between Will Graham (Petersen) and Jack Crawford (Farina) and leaves them to infer the state of their relationship.
4. The film was made before terms like “profiler” and even “serial killer” were truly part of the societal vocabulary.
5. One of the key things that drew him to Thomas Harris‘ novel Red Dragon was Graham’s path of self-destruction in the service of catching and stopping the killer. “It fascinated me so much it made this, to me, a totally unique detective story and one that had dynamics and complexities that I had never seen before.”
6. The beach-side house where Graham lives with his wife and son is located in Captiva, FL, and is owned by artist Robert Rauschenberg.
7. He added back the phone call scene between Graham in his hotel and Molly (Kim Greist) at their home to show what he’s having to hold at bay while he’s on the hunt.
8. Mann says there was an impulse during production to increase Hannibal Lecktor’s (Brian Cox) screen-time, but he resisted the urge. “I wanted the audience to almost not quite get enough of him.” The first meeting between Graham and Lecktor is extended for the director’s cut.
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