View Full Version : Movie Reviews: "Lincoln"


JamesG
11-09-2012, 07:42 PM
Movie Reviews: Lincoln


Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln opens in just 11 theaters this weekend, testing whether a film so conceived and so dedicated can endure when it opens wide next weekend.

If word of mouth is anywhere near as enthusiastic as the reviews it has received, it should have no difficulty at all giving even James Bond a run for the money.

Many of the critics focus on the performance of Daniel Day Lewis in the title role.





Roger Ebert writes in the Chicago Sun-Times that:

“he has a lock on an Oscar nomination.”





A.O. Scott in the New York Times writes that Day-Lewis:

“eases into a role of epic difficulty as if it were a coat he had been wearing for years.”





Says Joe Neumaier in the New York Daily News:

“This is no mere “Great Man” imitation and familiar profile– this is a portrayal of nuance and depth.”





Day Lewis, comments Michael Phillips in the Chicago Tribune, gives a:

“performance both iconic and gloriously human.”





Ty Burr in the Boston Globe writes:

“The performance carries the weight of history at the same time it’s rooted in the day-to-day exigencies of statesmanship. Day-Lewis lets us see how the war and the presidency have aged Lincoln while teaching him to think for the ages.”







Plenty of kudos are also bestowed on Spielberg and on screenwriter Tony Kushner.





Comments Betsy Sharkey in the Los Angeles Times:

“There is nothing bravura or overly emotional about Spielberg’s direction here, but the impeccable filmmaking is no less impressive for being quiet and to the point. The director delivers selfless, pulled-back satisfactions: he’s there in service of the script and the acting, to enhance the spoken word rather than burnish his reputation.”





Similarly, Joe Morgenstern in the Wall Street Journal remarks that

“Spielberg’s direction is hugely energetic and almost invisible, a fine combination.”





Claudia Puig in USA Today praises the Pulitzer Prize-winning Kushner for producing:

“the perfectly calibrated screenplay.”







However, several critics argue that the movie may be a bit too polished for its own good.


Rafer Guzmán concludes in Newsday:

“Overall, this finely crafted Lincoln offers everything you’d expect. But somehow, that’s a little disappointing.”





Lou Lumenick in the New York Post sums up:

“Easier to admire than love.”





Among the reviews in the major newspapers, there is only one outright slam, but Rex Reed of the New York Observer may not even have seen it all, as he himself concedes:

The movie, he writes, is “a colossal bore. It is so pedantic, slow-moving, sanitized and sentimental that I kept pinching myself to stay awake — which, like the film itself, didn’t always work.”

-IMDB News

AKA
11-09-2012, 08:34 PM
I've been looking forward to this movie since it was first announced. I'm going to try and see it before it leaves theaters.

Vahan
11-09-2012, 08:59 PM
A shame no audio recording devices existed during Lincoln's time.

Because of this, no one knows for sure how Lincoln talked like.

MrCleveland
11-09-2012, 11:44 PM
The Oscars this year may be interesting. It'll probably have "Lincoln" and "Skyfall" as nominees.

sunshinefizzy
11-12-2012, 09:31 PM
I can't wait for this one! I'm such a huge Abe Lincoln fan!