Okay, I have liked everything that Spielberg and Williams have collaborated on and I did not see this in the movie theater. It came to our like town and only lasted a week. Well, I received it in my Easter basket, yes with children all in high school and college, my wife still wanted to do the baskets. I need help trying to get through this movie! I have started this movie 7 times now, 3 times from the beginning, the rest from where I last remember. I keep falling asleep!! This has to be the dullest movie I have ever seen! Do I just give up or is it really worth it? I did pick up the score CD (which is still sealed). My wife got the DVD for me because she wanted to see it, but she too feel asleep before it was over and had to finish it the next night. I hope this in not going to be the type of movies that Spielberg wants to keep doing. I have watched enough history films like this in my life and this is the worst one to hold my attention. Am I the only one that thought the Flying Nun was the wrong actress to play Mary Lincoln?Paul MacLean wrote:Lincoln
Eh...
Not a bad movie by any means. Some fine performances, from Daniel Day-Lewis and Sally Field in particular, but also Joseph Gorden Levitt, Hal Holbrook, David Strathearn and Tommy Lee Jones.
But, it's not an especially good movie either. For me it just had an emotional flatline. It's a sincere effort, but it just doesn't have any passion. Spielberg better examined slavery and racial inequality in Amistad (the best of his "serious" films IMO), while Michael Apted's underrated Amazing Grace told a similar story (England's eradication of slavery) with far-more dramatic resonance. One thing I did like was the scene near the end when Tommy Lee Jones arrives home and we learn that he and his black housekeeper are lovers. It's a touching scene, and a hint of what the rest of the film could have been.
Some of the casting of the smaller roles also made me chuckle a bit, like Jackie Earl-Haley, and Lukas Haas' brief appearance as a union soldier .
I didn't care for the look of the film either. The art direction was excellent, but again Januz Kaminski compromises everyone else's efforts with his genuinely bizarre photographic style. I actually started laughing during the scene near the end where Lincoln and Grant are conversing, and that bright light shines against the house and all those conspicuous "dramatic shadows" are cast on them from the people passing by.
I am going to try it like a mini-series, take it half an hour at a time.