| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Directed by | D. W. Griffith |
| Starring | Walter Huston, Una Merkel, Kay Hammond, Ian Keith |
| Genres | Historical Drama, Biopic |
| Runtime | 96 minutes |
| Language | English |
| License | Public Domain – watch, share, and screen freely |
🧵 Synopsis
Blindly ambitious, Abraham Lincoln (1930) is the first silent film by rich, legendary director, D. W. Griffith, to enter the sound. It is an ambitious biographical film that follows the life of Lincoln, the humble storekeeper who led the nation through years of civil war that defined it to become a presidential candidate, his tragic love with Ann Rutledge and his assassination at the Ford theatre.
The movie features one of the first significant parts of Walter Huston, who tries to make Lincoln a human being, mythologizing him in the process, which is an unusual blend of fact, fiction, and frontier myth.
🌟 Why This Film Matters
Uneven though it is, and old-fashioned according to modern standards, Abraham Lincoln is:
The earliest film with sound of the legendary president.
One of the few talkies by D. W. Griffith, the author of such silent epics as The Birth of a Nation and Intolerance.
An early Hollywood time capsule, with acting, pacing and production values of early thirties.
The depiction of the emotional life of Lincoln, his despair, death, and ambivalent love.
It also has Una Merkel in her second speaking part as the unfortunate Ann Rutledge who died leaving an emotional wound to the soul of Lincoln.
📜 Plot Summary
🌾 A Railsplitter To Revolutionary.
The movie begins on the frontier of Kentucky where its author dramatizes the early life of Lincoln: a rough background, schooling by torchlight, and working in shops at New Salem. He becomes in love with Ann Rutledge, but her early death plunges him into a tail of misery and depression.
Several years on Lincoln woo and marries Mary Todd in Springfield, gets into politics and takes part in a heated debate with Stephen A. Douglas who is falsely depicted as a source of Southern secession when the fact is the actual problem of slavery.
⚔️ The Civil War Years
Lincoln, as president, acts as a man who wades through the dangerous secessionist and civil war, which is described, in broad strokes, yet has historically dubious aspects. The movie concludes with the surrender of Robert E. Lee, and the dramatic assassination of Lincoln at Ford Theater where Griffith takes poetic license to have the president give a mash-up of the Gettysburg Address and the Second Inaugural Speech a few seconds before he is shot.
M ℊ Historical Accuracy and Creative License.
Although the film does capture certain facts about Lincoln in his early years in a surprisingly accurate way (such as his depression and his broken engagement), it also distorts history to the sake of dramatic impact:
Claims that Lincoln was the only nominee to be president because of the Lincoln debates with Douglas.
Inverts the Fort Sumter assault (however, meaning that it was the North that fired first).
Mocks General Winfield Scott, who was in reality a prophesying strategist.
Makes major speeches one last, fictitious speech when Lincoln dies.
Nevertheless, regardless of all inaccuracies, the movie remains the mirror of 1930s opinion on the national unity and myth-making.
🎭 Cast Highlights
Walter Huston as Abraham Lincoln – a stoic, brooding acting.
Una Merkel as Ann Rutledge – pitiful and sweet.
Kay Hammond as Mary Todd Lincoln- emotionally complex.
E. Alyn Warren as Stephen A. Douglas / General Grant.
Ian Keith as John Wilkes Booth- shivery and dramatic.
Hobart Bosworth in the role of General Robert E. Lee.
Colonel Marshall is played again by Henry B. Walthall (of The Birth of a Nation).
🎞️ Behind the Scenes
The author of this is a collaborative effort with poet Stephen Vincent Benet who is known as the author of the John Brown Body.
One of the rare two talkies Griffith ever did.
The film was released by United Artists, but was a box-office failure.
Subsequently featured in The Fifty Worst Films of All Time -but that is more about changing tastes rather than actual failure.
📺 Watch Abraham Lincoln Free
📥 Download – Public Domain Classic
📺 Stream Public Domain Version – HD Available
Available on HD and HD (Stream Public Domain Version).
🧭 Final Thoughts
Abraham Lincoln (1930) is not a contemporary masterpiece, yet it is a very intriguing artifact the example of early sound filmmaking, American mythology, and the last aspirations of D. W. Griffith. It is a must-watch with historical footnotes to the students of the film history world, as well as the biopics, or even to Abraham Lincoln himself.
🔖 Tags
abraham Lincoln, D.W. Griffith, Walter Huston, Public domain Films, 1930s, cinema, early sound, American Presidents, Civil War, Biopics, historical drama, classic hollywood.