³ÉÈËXÕ¾

SEATTLE NEWS ARCHIVES & FEATURES

“Lincoln” is fascinating but flawed

Nov 9, 2012, 7:46 AM | Updated: 7:57 am

YouTube video

In the wake of the presidential election, the timing couldn’t be better for a film about arguably America’s greatest president, Abraham Lincoln. And Stephen Spielberg delivers with a fascinating but flawed “Lincoln,” starring the brilliant Daniel Day Lewis.

First and foremost, it stands as a nice corrective to all those misty-eyed “mythic” portrayals of him that we’ve grown accustomed to. This is not the Log Cabin Lincoln or the Great Debater Lincoln. This movie is also not much about the travails of the Civil War or the eloquence of the Gettysburg Address.

Instead it’s about the nitty-gritty work of passing legislation. Spielberg’s Lincoln is one “great man” who wasn’t afraid to get his hands dirty for a good cause. As a one-time rival and admirer says in the film, rarely has more corruption been done in the name of an honorable man.

The focus of the film is Lincoln’s behind-the-scenes struggle to convince Congress to pass the 13th Amendment abolishing slavery. But an equally pressing issue also demanded his attention: the Civil War was coming to an end.

The question for the President was which issue should take precedence. As fascinating as that decision is, the extent to which Lincoln was willing to go to pass the Amendment is equally enlightening. And the source of much debate among his supporters.

Patronage jobs and cold hard cash were doled out liberally. The politics may indeed have been dirty back then, but for Lincoln apparently, politics was not a dirty word.

So much for the fascinating aspect of this film. As for its flaws, we can begin and end with the storytelling. It’s dramatically hit or miss. When it misses, it’s either wooden or schmaltzy.

Lincoln’s very first scene, for instance, in which he interacts with a handful of soldiers, seems awkwardly staged, more like a photo-op gone bad than any kind of real exchange. And his lengthy discourse to the Cabinet on the ambiguities of the War Powers Act – although interesting content – comes off as unnatural and dramatically flat.

As for the schmaltz, John Williams’ score is at times so heavy-handed that it undercuts rather than supports the emotional thrust of the film. (At the climax of the film, I wrote in my notes – “Did a Broadway musical just break out?”) And at the film’s end – when Lincoln magically appears inside a single lamp flame reciting his Inaugural Address – I realize Spielberg means for it to be stirring. But it just made me cringe.

These flaws don’t ruin the movie, they just limit its emotional power. And nothing can hurt the performances of Daniel Day Lewis as Lincoln – his high-pitched voice is off-putting at first but apparently accurate – and Tommy Lee Jones as the firebrand abolitionist Thaddeus Stevens who ends up being Lincoln’s best ally in the House. Don’t be surprised if both men win Oscars this year. And Sally Field may very well got nominated for her turn as the President’s wife Mary Todd Lincoln

Seattle News Archives & Features

Associated Press

Mountain lion bites 4-year-old on popular Olympic National Park trail, injuring child

PORT ANGELES, Wash. (AP) — A mountain lion bit a 4-year-old who was walking with their family over the weekend on a popular trail in Olympic National Park in Washington state, park officials said Monday. The child was injured during Sunday’s attack and flown to a trauma center in Seattle for treatment, according to a […]

20 hours ago

A wildfire burning near Lake Cushman has grown by about 200 acres over five days. (Map: Courtesy U....

Tom Brock

Bear Gulch Wildfire near Lake Cushman growing in size

A wildfire burning near Lake Cushman continues to grow in the Olympic National Forest.

2 days ago

Associated Press

Seattle man charged with string of burglaries at the homes of NFL and MLB stars

SEATTLE (AP) — A Seattle man was charged Friday with a string of burglaries at the homes of prominent current and former football and baseball players, marking the latest example of well-known athletes being targeted in home thefts. Earl Henderson Riley IV, 21, was charged with several counts of residential burglary in both occupied and […]

2 months ago

Associated Press

Campgrounds closed along Pacific Crest Trail in search for man wanted in daughters’ deaths

SEATTLE (AP) — Authorities have closed a wide swath of popular campgrounds and backpacking areas along the Pacific Crest Trail in Washington as they search for a former Army soldier wanted in the deaths of his three young daughters. Dozens of additional law enforcement officers from an array of agencies joined the investigation and search […]

2 months ago

In this undated photo released by the Thurston County Sheriff's Office, a cache of military weaponr...

Associated Press

2 arrested with arsenal and Nazi paraphernalia after base robbery were ex-military, prosecutors say

SEATTLE (AP) — Two men arrested in Washington state with an arsenal that included grenade launchers and body armor, along with Nazi paraphernalia, were former military members who attacked a soldier with a hammer while stealing gear from Joint Base Lewis-McChord last weekend, investigators say. Levi Austin Frakes and Charles Ethan Fields were arrested Monday […]

2 months ago

Associated Press

Authorities are searching for a Washington state father of 3 dead girls

WENATCHEE, Wash. (AP) — A Washington state father is wanted for murder after his three young daughters were reported missing and then found dead. Police on Tuesday asked the public for help in finding the father of the girls, Travis Decker, 32. He is wanted for three counts of murder and kidnapping, the Wenatchee Police […]

2 months ago

“Lincoln” is fascinating but flawed