A look at what restaurants opened in February
The best Hannibal Lecter movies and TV shows, ranked
February was not a big month for restaurant openings in the Memphis area. Between the ice, snow and boil water advisory, it is no surprise.
Three chains did get restaurants open last month — two are national, while one is Memphis-based.
Here is a look at what’s new.
Captain D’s
9607 U.S. 64; (901) 386-4411; captainds.com
On Feb. 1, Captain D’s opened its 10th Memphis-area restaurant.
The new franchised location for the nation’s leading fast casual seafood restaurant is at 9607 U.S. 64. The opening makes it the 74th location for the brand in its home state of Tennessee.
Joe Springer, operating partner of Nufish, LLC, is the multi-unit franchisee behind the new Cordova location.
With nearly two decades of restaurant experience, Springer has become one of Captain D’s largest multi-unit franchisees since first signing on with the brand in 2009. Over the course of 12 years, Nufish has grown Captain D’s presence throughout Arkansas, Mississippi and Tennessee, with the new Memphis restaurant marking the operating group’s 19th location.
Open 10 a.m.-10 p.m. Sunday-thursday and 10 a.m.-11 p.m. Friday-saturday.
Freddy’s Frozen Custard & Steakburgers
4700 Poplar Ave.; (901) 590-2068; freddysusa.com
Freddy’s Frozen Custard & Steakburgers opened a new restaurant at 4700 Poplar Ave. on Feb. 11.
“This is such a great area,” franchisee owner Tim Heeren said. “It is the best of all worlds — Poplar is extremely well traveled, it is near schools like White Station High School and the University of Memphis, there are businesses in the area and it backs up to a neighborhood.”
It is the sixth location in the Memphis area for this burger chain. There are also Freddy’s restaurants in Cordova, Bartlett, Collierville, Olive Branch and Horn Lake.
The restaurant chain is known for its burgers and sundaes made fresh to order.
Open 10:30 a.m.-10 p.m. Sundaythursday and 10:30 a.m.-11 p.m. Fridaysaturday.
Red Hook Cajun Seafood & Bar
1433 Union Ave.; (901) 672-8147; redhookseafood.com
Red Hook Cajun Seafood & Bar opened its seventh restaurant on Feb. 24.
The newest location for this Memphis-based seafood boil chain is in the historic Nineteenth Century Club building at 1433 Union Ave. The building was most recently a Red Fish Sushi & Asian Bistro.
The menu’s focus is on Cajun seafood boils. Guests can customize seafood boils, choosing from items such as blue crab, shrimp, snow crab claws, lobster tails and mussels.
The owners of Red Hook Cajun Seafood have transformed each restaurant into a space that feels like an upscale version of a Cajun seafood shack you would find in Louisiana. There are crab cages, fishing gear and even sharks hanging from the ceiling above the dining rooms.
The new location is no exception, but the owners want everyone to know they went to extensive lengths to preserve the historic building. All the nautical décor is removeable.
Open 11:30 a.m.-10 p.m. Sundaythursday and 11:30 a.m.-11 p.m. Fridaysaturday.
Jennifer Chandler is the Food & Dining reporter at The Commercial Appeal. She can be reached at jennifer.chandler@commercialappeal.com and you can follow her on Twitter and Instagram at @cookwjennifer.
Last month, CBS premiered “Clarice,” its moody procedural spin on FBI agent Clarice Starling, starring Rebecca Breeds in the role made famous by Jodie Foster in 1991’s Oscar-winning “The Silence of the Lambs.” The series (Thursdays, 10 EST/PST) is the latest in a slew of film and TV adaptations of Thomas Harris’ novels about infamous cannibal Hannibal Lecter. The cultured yet calculating ex-psychiatrist first appeared in Harris’ 1981 book “Red Dragon,” and was memorably played by Anthony Hopkins in three movies (including “Lambs,” released 30 years ago).
Here’s how “Clarice” ranks with the best (and worst) Lecter fare.
7. ‘Hannibal Rising’ (2007)
Why can’t we just let baddies be bad? Harris rushreleased a novel and film about young Lecter (Aaran Thomas), tracing his dire upbringing in 1940s Lithuania, where his parents were murdered and his sister was cannibalized. Now grown, Lecter (Gaspard Ulliel) develops his own taste for flesh in a gruesome revenge-killing spree. It’s a hackneyed tale that robs the character of his chilling mystique.
6. ‘Clarice’ (2021)
A show that is somehow more lifeless than Dr. Lecter’s victims. Set a year after the events of “Silence of the Lambs,” the CBS drama follows Starling (Breeds) as she’s called back into the field to investigate serial killings. The series aims for nuanced exploration of Starling’s childhood trauma and PTSD from the Buffalo Bill case but is hindered by flat dialogue and heavy-handed storytelling. Most lethal of all, “Clarice” is unable to name or depict Lecter for legal reasons, leaving an obvious void that the show is forced to awkwardly tiptoe around.
5. ‘Hannibal’ (2001)
Strangely convoluted and unpleasantly gory, this high-budget sequel is set 10 years after “Lambs,” as a now-disgraced Starling (Julianne Moore) races to capture Lecter (Hopkins) before Mason Verger (Gary Oldman), his mutilated surviving victim, gets vengeance. Set in the U.S. and Italy, Ridley Scott’s film often feels like a grislier version of Dan Brown’s “Angels & Demons,” with a truly stomach-churning image of Ray Liotta’s exposed brain that will haunt us for a lifetime. But it’s a delight watching Hopkins turn up the camp as a bloodthirsty Lecter. And Moore tries her best to emulate Foster’s West Virginia accent.
4. ‘Red Dragon’ (2002)
Despite being a prequel to “Lambs,” this is the last of Hopkins’ Lecter movies, as his cannibalistic psychiatrist helps retired FBI agent Will Graham (Edward Norton) catch Francis Dolarhyde (Ralph Fiennes), also known as the Tooth Fairy killer. With a superb cast including Mary-louise Parker and Philip Seymour Hoffman, this stylish but familiar thriller is a step up from “Hannibal.” But Norton’s Graham lacks the tortured cool of William Petersen, who originated the character in 1986’s “Manhunter.” His interrogation scenes lack the spark of Foster’s Starling, who managed to go toe-to-toe with Hopkins’ Lecter even with glass separating them.
3. ‘Manhunter’ (1986)
With flickers of “Miami Vice,” Michael Mann’s neon-washed adaptation of “Red Dragon” was a critical and commercial disappointment upon release, but has since been reappraised as one of the better Lecter movies. Set to a pulsing soundtrack, the movie tracks Graham’s (Petersen) hunt for Francis Dolarhyde (Tom Noonan), an avid fan of Lecter (Brian Cox). Due to his towering physique and withdrawn demeanor, Noonan is in some ways scarier than Fiennes’ more feral take on Dolarhyde. And in a brief role, the legendary Cox (“Succession”) brings sinister charm to the first onscreen Lecter.
2. ‘Hannibal’ (2013-15)
One of the most visually stunning TV shows of the past decade, Bryan Fuller’s macabre NBC entry in the Lecter-verse was a squeamish feast for the eyes. And we couldn’t get enough of the delicious cat-andmouse game between criminal profiler Graham (Hugh Dancy) and Lecter (Mads Mikkelsen); their homoerotic thrills have been matched only by “Killing Eve” in the years since.
1. ‘The Silence of the Lambs’ (1991)
As if there was any other choice. Thirty years later, Jonathan Demme’s unlikely best picture Oscar winner still is an eerily spellbinding masterpiece: meticulously edited and strikingly shot, with an exhilarating final 40 minutes that’s unrivaled in its intensity. Foster’s Starling remains an all-time great protagonist, who approaches depraved killers and leering superiors with the same level of cool-headed resolve and intuition. Hopkins, as her intellectual sparring partner Lecter, looms over the film with a creeping menace, gradually exposing Starling’s vulnerabilities and forcing her to confront her father’s death.
A twisted love story and unnerving slow burn, “Lambs” is about the masks we wear to protect and hide our true selves: as a fresh-faced FBI trainee trying to succeed in a male-dominated field, or a cannibal literally wearing his victim’s face to escape custody. That’s well worth raising a nice chianti to.