As with the great John Ford (Young Mr. Lincoln) before him, it would be out of character for Steven Spielberg to
construct a conventional, cradle-to-grave portrait of a historical figure. In
drawing from Doris Kearns Goodwin's Team of Rivals, the director instead
depicts a career-defining moment in the career of Abraham Lincoln (an
uncharacteristically restrained Daniel Day-Lewis). With the Civil War raging,
and the death toll rising, the president focuses his energies on passage of the
13th Amendment. Even those sympathetic to the cause question his timing, but
Lincoln doesn't see the two issues as separate, and the situation turns
personal when his son, Robert (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), chooses to enlist rather
than to study law. While still mourning the loss of one son, Mary (Sally Field)
can't bear to lose another. Playwright Tony Kushner, who adapted the
screenplay, takes a page from the procedural handbook in tracing Lincoln's
steps to win over enough representatives to abolish slavery, while simultaneously
bringing a larger-than-life leader down to a more manageable size. In his
stooped-shoulder slouch and Columbo-like speech, Day-Lewis succeeds so
admirably that the more outspoken characters, like congressman Thaddeus Stevens
(Tommy Lee Jones) and lobbyist W.N. Bilbo (James Spader), threaten to steal the
spotlight whenever they enter the scene, but the levity of their performances
provides respite from the complicated strategizing and carnage-strewn
battlefields. If Lincoln doesn't thrill like the
Kushner-penned Munich, there's never a dull moment--though it would take a second
viewing to catch all the political nuances.
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