The untold
story that shaped America’s nation based on Seth Grahame-Smith’s “Abraham
Lincoln: Vampire Hunter” literary fusion of history and fiction will soon be
seen onscreen come July 4 in 3D and 2D cinemas nationwide.
A non-stop mad search for both the hunted and the hunter, “Abraham Lincoln:
Vampire Hunter” stars Benjamin Walker who plays the titular role of Abe Lincoln
resurrected onscreen as a vampire hunting politico who later became one of the
world’s most influential president.
Adapted for movie by highly-regarded genre-bending filmmakers Timur Bekmambetov
(directing) and Tim Burton (producing) , the birth of Smith’s pulsating
book came about in 2009 Seth Grahame-Smith was on a US book tour to
promote a new “mash-up” fiction book, “Pride And Prejudice And Zombies.”
As he travelled the nation's bookstores, from state to state, he noticed
two things. In the bicentennial of Lincoln's birth, every store had a
promotional table set up with biographies of the iconic president. And at the
height of the popularity of TWILIGHT, every store would stock a range of Young
Adult vampire fiction right next to it. He remembers thinking, “if you could
combine the two, surely you'd be onto a winner.”
“It began as a cynical observation, to be honest with you,” he admits. When I
read about and researched the actual man, I became fascinated and fell in love
with him and his trials and tribulations. Throughout his life he had every
disadvantage: no wealth and no connections. He was poor as dirt, and surrounded
by death. And yet, by the power of his intellect and his determination he was
able to not only achieve the impossible of becoming a lawyer, but to become the
leader of a nation tearing itself apart. And then he went on to save that
nation.”
In fact it
was, he suspects, the very first superhero origin story. “I began thinking that
in the American psyche there's really no greater superhero than Abraham
Lincoln.”
Weaving a
gothic horror tale into Lincoln's biography, and doing so in as truthful a way
as possible, came surprisingly easy for Grahame-Smith. Many moments in the real
Lincoln's life jumped out straight away as being ripe for re-imagining with a
vampiric twist. It began with the death of his mother when he was nine years
old. “Her death had a tremendous effect on his life. The determination to
escape his situation and better himself was borne of a desire to honor his
mother's memory. It was quite obvious to me that if it were a vampire that had
killed her, that would set him off on this path.”
The result of the marriage of truth and fiction at the heart of “Abraham
Lincoln: Vampire Hunter” is bounced through Timur Bekmambetov's very particular
prism. Says Ben Walker, who plays Lincoln himself, “This is a period
movie told in intricate and fascinating ways. It's the same material, the same
time, and we're being very true to that, but through Timur's imagination we're
getting to see the tiny minutiae that really make it special and fresh for us.”
Grahame-Smith
summarizes the point of this grand adaptation very simply: “The film is a
strange mix of absurdity and accuracy. The title makes an absurd promise, but
everything after that is delivered with absolute sincerity. We never wink at
the audience. We never play it as a joke. And whether it's the set design, the
costume design, or Lincoln's prosthetics – everything is accurate. Timur knew
early on that the more absurd the premise the more dedicated you have to be to
it to pull it off.”
“Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter” is from 20th Century Fox to be
available in 2D and 3D format and distributed by Warner Bros. in local
cinemas.
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