First Glimpse of Daniel Day-Lincoln

Some sneak peeks at the Spielberg Lincoln movie, courtesy of the Onion AV Club’s chief wag, Sean O’Neil:

Our patriotic hysteria over the British invasion of American history aside, we all pretty much agree that Daniel Day-Lewis is going to do a fine job as the star of Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln, right? We’ll take it from the indistinct murmurs now echoing through the streets of the nation that yes, you’re on board and/or lapsing into dementia. But as further argument that Day-Lewis is taking his usual immersive, Method approach to the role, consider this tweet from Variety’s Jeff Sneider: “Word around town is that Daniel Day-Lewis hasn’t broken his Lincoln accent since March. His real name doesn’t even appear on the call sheet.”
Obviously there’s no elaboration on whether he’s also been eschewing electricity and loudly expressing his paranoid bafflement at modern plumbing at home, but if so, that probably sucks for his kids.

I was excited to hear Daniel Day-Lewis had been cast over Liam Neeson: They’re both good actors but DDL is one of those immersive types who gets under the skin of the characters he plays. If anyone could do justice to Honest Abe, it’d be him. I’m officially excited.

Daniel Day Lewis in Lincoln beard

Daniel Day Lewis in Lincoln beard

NPR Interviews Eric Foner

I spent the summer in the company of Abraham Lincoln, or at least it felt that way. Consequently, there isn’t a lot to be gleaned from this interview with Eric Foner, but for those who haven’t immersed themselves in Lincolnia lately, it’s worth a look:

“Almost from the very beginning of the Civil War, the federal government had to start making policy and they said, ‘Well, we’re going to treat these people as free. We’re not going to send them back into the slave-holding regions,'” Foner says. “And the Army opened itself up to the enlistment of black men. And by the end of the Civil War, 200,000 black men had served in the Union Army and Navy. And envisioning blacks as soldiers is a very, very different idea of their future role in American society. It’s the black soldiers and their role which really begins as the stimulus in Lincoln’s change [with regard to] racial attitudes and attitudes toward America as an interracial society in the last two years of his life.”
http://www.npr.org/2010/10/11/130489804/lincolns-evolving-thoughts-on-slavery-and-freedom

Copper Theft

There’s been another theft at the Lincoln tomb, though this time it’s just some boring copper sword instead of the President’s body.

Someone clipped the sword off one of the statues decorating the tomb. The fact that it took people a few weeks to notice is a good sign that this incident wasn’t worthy of a press conference, but some Republican State Rep took the opportunity to push a personal interest anyway:

State Rep. Mike Unes (R-East Peoria) said the passage of his legislation aimed to end the rash of copper theft can no longer wait after the issue reached a new height when a historical copper sword was stolen from a statue at Lincoln’s Tomb.

“It is despicable that this issue has now interrupted the resting place of one of our country’s most admirable presidents, Abraham Lincoln. It is a disgrace that copper theft is now affecting some our most historical sites,” said Unes.

Note lack of impetus to fix the economy, which is so bad people are resorting to copper theft to get by. Priorities, priorities…

http://www.eastpeoriatimescourier.com/features_carousel/x745434636/Unes-holds-press-conference-on-Lincoln-tomb-copper-theft

**EDIT** The Onion provides some man-on-the-street reactions.

Bill’s Book

It seems Bill O’Reilly has co-authored a book on the Lincoln Assassination. After spending this summer reading James Swanson’s exhaustive (but not exhausting) Manhunt: The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln’s Killer and other readings related to the exhausting (in the boring sense) movie, The Conspirator, I feel like my Assassination needs are met.  These needs were met by some quality sources, too, which O’Reilly’s book seems not to be.  Salon.com is giddily listing the experts who’ve taken issue with the factual errors, and the factual errors themselves. I am no O’Reilly fan, and some of the complaints are, frankly, nitpicky, but one in particular stands out as a prime example of inattention to detail:

Steers adds that one entire passage of the book about co-conspirator Mary Surratt is flat-out untrue:

The authors write that she was forced to wear a padded hood when not on trial, and that she was imprisoned in a cell aboard the monitor Montauk, which was “barely habitable.” She suffered from “claustrophobia and disfigurement caused by the hood,” and was “barely tended to by her captors.” “Sick and trapped in this filthy cell, Mary Surratt took on a haunted, bloated appearance.” None of this is true. Mary Surratt was never shackled or hooded at any time. She was never imprisoned aboard the Montauk, but taken to the Carroll Annex of the Old Capitol Prison before being transferred to the women’s section of the Federal Penitentiary at the Washington’s Arsenal.

I won’t be adding this one to my library.

http://www.salon.com/2011/11/12/second_expert_trashes_oreillys_lincoln_book/singleton/

More Movie News

As I mentioned before, the Spielberg Lincoln project is on hold. Rising from the (un)dead, however, is a very different Lincoln film.  Seth Grahame-Smith – he of the Pride and Prejudice and Zombies “fame” – followed up his Austen meal by sharpening his teeth with Lincoln.  Sadly, my library’s Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter has too many holds for me to have yet indulged, but I’m sure it’s a hoot. (To begin with, Nancy Hanks Lincoln’s death is attributed to vampirism, with “milk-sickness” as a cover.)  The best part of this film rendition is that I won’t spend too much time wringing my hands at the historical inaccuracies.

http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2010/08/11/timur-bekmambetov-to-direct-abraham-lincoln-vampire-hunter-probably-next/

Lincoln Films

Civil War buffs have a film to look forward to, and one to hope for!  Premiering at next month’s Toronto International Film Fest is The Conspirator, dramatising Mary Surratt’s story.  Directed by Robert Redford, it stars Robin Wright Penn as Mrs. Surratt and James “Hot Scot” McAvoy as her attorney, Frederick Aiken.  (Unfortunately, that “directed by Redford” usually indicates a dull movie.)

Another film – one to which I had been casting a nervous eye – appears to be on hold again: Steven Spielberg has been adapting Doris Kearns Goodwin’s fabulous Team of Rivals, and had cast Liam Neeson as Old Abe.  Neeson has pulled out, though, apparently citing his old-erness, at 58, feeling unable to portray a man who died at 56.  I’m torn on this, as I’m anxious to see what Spielberg makes of the source material, but somewhat glad Neeson won’t be starring.  He’s a decent actor, but apart from his height has few commonalities in appearance with Lincoln.  The question now is, who will play him?

The best Lincoln I’ve ever seen was Gregory Peck’s portrayal in The Blue and the Gray.  It’s a shame Peck has gone to that great casting call in the sky – I’d have loved to watch him Linc it up again.

More Mac Bashing

I sometimes feel sorry for McClellan, given how his reputation has suffered in the past 150 years. Then I remember that he earned this reputation, and I don’t feel sorry at all.

I found a Lincoln quote last night that was brand new to me, and I’m enjoying it immensely:

Gen. McClellan and I are to be photographed… if we can be still long enough. I feel Gen. M. should have no problem. – A. Lincoln

Abraham Lincoln and George McClellan after Antietam

It appears he didn't.

EDIT: To commemmorate this awesome zinger, I’ve created a quote print.