Sunday, May 5, 2013
Lincoln
Awesome
historically based film by Steven Spielberg; easily his best effort since Saving Private Ryan. I read that
Spielberg took great pains to make the movie as accurate as possible. I'm so
glad he took that extra time and effort, as it made the film realistic,
authentic and horribly engaging. I believe that it succeeds not only as a superb
piece of art, but also as an excellent educational endeavor/near-documentary.
If I were still teaching ESL, I would show this film along with Glory when introducing the Civil War to
my students. It is slow moving at times and the dialogue is occasionally hard
to follow. The audience has to pay attention to the words Lincoln and his
colleagues have to say—every phrase has important nuance and deep meaning. This is not a movie
to watch if you want to relax or enjoy a roller coaster ride. It's a serious
movie about slavery, morality, war and politics. If I had my wish, I would lock
President Obama, the Congress and the Senate into a large theater and make them
watch the movie over and over again until they learned their lesson and
promised to attend to the business of governing. Even though the split over the
issue of slavery was divisive and deadly, and the debates were ferocious and
ugly, the Congressmen of that day understood that to preserve the union they
had to vote and no matter which way the majority swayed, the nation had to move
on. Obama and our current government officials need to learn the same lessons
so we can solve the issues of deficit, health care, immigration, gun violence
and global climate change. I was delighted, however, that the movie was much
more than a history lesson and a political thriller. There was a story about a
father and a husband that jumped off the screen. The cast of characters was
spectacular. Daniel Day-Lewis was amazing as President Lincoln. He somehow
channeled the emotional, intellectual, spiritual and physical essence of the
man. I truly believed I was watching and listening to Abraham Lincoln. I
thoroughly enjoyed all two hours and 29 minutes! Bravo!
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