Lincoln -- Movie Review
Lincoln
Directed
by Steven Spielberg
This movie has been hyped and promoted far out of proportion
to its merit. Even Lincoln scholars have
gotten on the bandwagon heaping praise on this mythologizing propaganda. At first I was puzzled by this. I couldn't understand why so many scholars
would throw their support behind this film in the public way that they
have. Are they just afraid to set
themselves against something that is so popular and has so much money behind
it? But after thinking about it for a
few days, I realized that the scholars are actually the problem. Steven Spielberg consulted them and probably
followed their advice. He didn't make
this up out of his head, and he didn't do all the research himself. The community of Lincoln scholars is largely
beholden to this idealized, honorific, and in many ways, false conception of
Lincoln that the film presents. This
film is a correct reflection of the way Lincoln is perceived and reconstructed
in mainstream American society, and this in turn derives from the scholarly
community that has created and perpetuated this Myth. This Lincoln could have come out of Leave It to Beaver. He's a genial, storytelling, wholesome, fatherly
figure. Everyone says Daniel Day-Lewis
plays him so well. I don't get it. He's nothing like I imagine Lincoln to be. Lincoln was depressive. Melancholy.
He was forbidding and aloof. He
was indecisive on the one hand, and stubborn on the other. He had human compassion and a crude sense of
humor. He was a very astute politician,
he had a talent for making deals, and an appetite for power. Psychologically, he was very complex and hard
to gauge. He did tell stories, but his
stories tended to be earthy, if not vulgar.
They served the purpose of entertaining people and making himself the
amused center of their attention. At the
same time, they served a defensive function in that they enabled Lincoln to
conceal himself. Lincoln the story teller remained an elusive,
private, enigmatic man. The film implies
that the story telling was didactic, that he told parables like Jesus to teach
people moral lessons. He might have done
that. He won some court cases that way,
but for the most part Lincoln the story teller was a man hungry for attention
and approval. He was a politician
looking for support and good will. This
movie simplifies him and turns him into a warm, friendly cupcake. It is an apology, an attempt to elevate him,
beatify him. It's a feel good movie, to
make Americans feel good about themselves, about America, about the Civil War, and
about Lincoln. It starts out with
soldiers quoting the Gettysburg Address back to Lincoln, as if the common
soldiers were fighting out of a sense of idealism and dedication to the cause
of liberty and freedom. Then there is a
shot of Lincoln raising an American flag, and a scene with him and his wife, Mary,
in private having an intimate conversation like a married couple that is
getting along well and has good communication.
It's a lot of nonsense. The
biggest lie of all is the portrayal of Lincoln's marriage and of Mary
Lincoln. This is an attempt to rehabilitate
Mary Lincoln from the corrupt, mentally ill woman she was, who was the bane of
Lincoln's life, and make her appear to be some strong, influential participant
in his decision-making and private deliberation. Sally Field is completely unconvincing as
Mary Lincoln. This is a very contrived,
incredible role that has nothing to do with the real Mary Lincoln. There was one scene that felt real and that
was when Lincoln and Mary had a screaming argument over their son, Robert's, enlistment
in the Union Army. They even have
Lincoln slapping Robert in the face at one point -- a very unlikely scene that
illustrates how far afield they are of Lincoln's true character. In a couple of places the word 'fuck' is used as
a curse word. This is an anachronism. 'Fuck' did not become widespread as a curse
word in American English until the late 19th or early 20th century. They can get away with it, of course, because
not too many Americans know this and they don't teach it in school. The rest of the movie was manipulative,
annoyingly distorted, and mendacious. The
predominant content of the movie is actually the drama surrounding the passage
of the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which abolished slavery,
rather than about Lincoln himself. This
is also a rather simplified, sanitized, honorific reconstruction. I thought the acting was rather poor in
general. Everyone was overplaying and
the characters and scenes seemed simplified and cartoonish. This whole movie is just annoying from
beginning to end. And it is rather dull,
I have to say. I found myself waiting
for it to end. I couldn't get interested
in anything they were doing. They have
taken an extraordinary time and an incredibly interesting person and turned
them into something mundane and ordinary.
If you haven't seen it, don't go.
Watch Ken Burns Civil War
series instead.
If you want to learn about Abraham Lincoln for real, take a
look at Edgar Lee Masters, Lincoln the
Man. It was originally published in
1931 and the U.S. Congress actually tried to ban it. That speaks well for it right there. Of the many biographies of Lincoln, which
tend to be redundant and hagiographic, Masters is my favorite, because it falls
well outside this mainstream tradition. Most
biographies of Lincoln deal overwhelmingly with the last five to ten years of
his life, and they focus on his policies and actions as President rather than
his personality or his character.
Masters has his flaws, like they all do, but it strikes me as more
realistic and it takes more interest in Lincoln as a person. C. A. Tripp's The Intimate World of Abraham Lincoln
(2006) details Lincoln's affinity for same-sex relationships. My paper, "Was Abraham Lincoln
Gay?" (2010) Journal of
Homosexuality 57:1124-1157, draws heavily on Tripp, and examines Lincoln's private
life and the 19th century sexual culture in which he grew up and lived. Lincoln
and Booth: More Light on the Conspiracy
(2003) by Donald Winkler, is a fascinating study of the assassination of
Lincoln and John Wilkes Booth's relationship to the Confederacy's intelligence
network. David Donald's Lincoln is informative and probably
accurate in its facts, although it tends to fall into this apologetic,
mythologizing tradition, and is heavily weighted toward the last four or five
years of Lincoln's life as President.
One of the best books you can read on this subject is Lincoln in American Memory (1995) by
Merrill D. Peterson. This is an
excellent study of the growth and evolution of the Lincoln Myth in American
culture, which this present film perpetuates and promotes. Peterson explains how Lincoln was transformed
from this ineffective, indecisive, much hated, vilified president that he was
into this godlike icon of American goodness.
It is important to understand this because it enables one to see why it
is well-nigh impossible today to get a balanced, "realistic"
understanding of Abraham Lincoln. One's
position on Lincoln will be heavily influenced by one's take on American
history since Lincoln, and where one stands socially and politically in
contemporary society. There is no such
thing as "objectivity" when it comes to Lincoln. He has become almost a religious myth. It is an annoying myth to me. It is a false myth that embodies a saccharine
view of American society and its history, that is conservative,
self-congratulatory, glosses over unsavory developments, and is sometimes invoked
to justify highly offensive policies, like the expansion of executive power and
the abrogation of basic constitutional liberties. This film falls squarely in that mythological
tradition, and I think was subtly crafted to resonate with some of the recent overreaches
of executive power in the conduct of warfare and the bypassing of due
process. I'm not going to make the case
in detail, because I would have to watch the film several more times, and I am
loathe to put myself through that. But I
remember having that feeling several times as I watched it that I was being
bamboozled and that it was really referring to our time, rather than being an honest
historical piece.
Steven Spielberg has made a film that he knew would make people feel good and that they would be willing to pay money to see, not something that would disturb them and make them question everything they had been taught about Abraham Lincoln and American history. He has succeeded very well and will undoubtedly be well rewarded for it. But count me as a NO! I am not taken in by it.
Steven Spielberg has made a film that he knew would make people feel good and that they would be willing to pay money to see, not something that would disturb them and make them question everything they had been taught about Abraham Lincoln and American history. He has succeeded very well and will undoubtedly be well rewarded for it. But count me as a NO! I am not taken in by it.