History Class Just Got Fangs
Let’s be honest: you don’t walk into Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter expecting subtlety. This isn’t Schindler’s List — it’s Schindler’s Fist, if Schindler were six-foot-four, carried an axe, and decapitated the undead between speeches about liberty.
Directed by Timur Bekmambetov and produced by Tim Burton, this 2012 cinematic fever dream takes one of America’s most dignified historical figures and turns him into a top-hatted, vampire-slaughtering superhero. It’s absurd, it’s over-the-top, and somehow, it’s also glorious.
If you ever watched National Treasure and thought, “This needs more bloodsucking and beheadings,” then congratulations — your oddly specific wish came true.
The Premise: The Gettysbooo-rg Address
In this alternate history, young Abe Lincoln (Benjamin Walker) witnesses his mother’s death at the hands of a vampire named Jack Barts — because apparently, 19th-century plantation owners didn’t have enough moral failings already.
Years later, grown-up Abe vows vengeance. Along comes Henry Sturges (Dominic Cooper), a charming immortal who trains Lincoln in the art of vampire hunting, complete with slow-motion axe choreography and enough leather to open a Hot Topic.
From there, we follow Honest Abe’s double life: by day, he’s fighting for freedom; by night, he’s chopping the heads off supernatural slaveholders. The vampires, led by Adam (Rufus Sewell, clearly having the time of his undead life), are secretly using slavery to maintain a nationwide blood buffet. It’s 12 Years a Slave meets Blade — if Blade had a better grasp of 19th-century whiskers.
Benjamin Walker: The Axe of Emancipation
Benjamin Walker plays Abraham Lincoln with the perfect mix of presidential gravitas and monster-slaying fury. He’s tall, stoic, and perpetually looks like he just read a particularly moving passage from The Federalist Papers.
Walker nails the delicate balance between earnest heroism and ridiculous fantasy. He delivers lines like “I do not kill for sport — I kill to end slavery!” with such conviction that you almost forget he’s holding a silver-tipped axe drenched in vampire goo.
He’s not just fighting the Confederacy — he’s fighting supernatural moral decay. It’s as if America’s moral compass and a Cirque du Soleil stuntman had a baby, and that baby was wearing a stovepipe hat.
Dominic Cooper: The Dandy of the Damned
Dominic Cooper’s Henry Sturges is the kind of vampire who looks like he reads poetry, drinks absinthe, and occasionally eats people who interrupt him. He’s Lincoln’s mentor, a vampire who can’t kill his own kind, which is why he recruits humans like Abe to do his dirty work.
He’s suave, morally gray, and perpetually lounging in smoky bars — the undead equivalent of that one friend who insists on “just one more drink” but has been alive for 300 years. Cooper plays him with the weary charm of someone who’s seen too many centuries and far too many bad wigs.
If Abe is the muscle, Henry is the philosophy major who keeps saying, “Ah yes, but who is the real monster, Abraham?” before disappearing into mist.
Rufus Sewell: The Aristocrat of Arteries
Every good hero needs a great villain, and Rufus Sewell’s Adam is deliciously camp. He’s a 5,000-year-old vampire who looks like he should be lecturing at Oxford but is instead running a Southern plantation of doom.
Adam’s plan? Turn the entire United States into an all-you-can-eat buffet for vampires. It’s the kind of villainy so excessive it deserves its own Broadway number. Sewell chews the scenery with such gusto you half expect him to take a bite out of the camera.
When he faces off with Lincoln in the climactic train battle, he does so with the dignity of a man who knows he’s in a ridiculous movie and is absolutely thriving in it.
Mary Elizabeth Winstead: The First Lady of Fear
Mary Elizabeth Winstead’s Mary Todd Lincoln is far too talented for this nonsense, which makes her performance all the more delightful. She treats her role with sincerity, grounding the film whenever the CGI blood geysers threaten to drown it.
When tragedy strikes — her son bitten by a vampire in a scene that manages to be both sad and utterly bonkers — she doesn’t just weep. She avenges. By the end, she’s blasting vampires with silver bullets like she’s auditioning for Resident Evil: Reconstruction Era.
Winstead gives us a Mary Todd who doesn’t faint — she reloads.
The Visuals: Axe and the City
Director Timur Bekmambetov, known for his frenetic style in Wanted, brings that same unhinged energy to the 1800s. Every action scene looks like it was choreographed by a caffeinated vampire on a trampoline.
We get axe-fu, horse-stampede combat, and one of the most gloriously unnecessary slow-motion sequences ever filmed: Lincoln swinging his axe in the middle of a stampede, flipping over horses while decapitating bloodsuckers.
It’s absurd, excessive, and completely hypnotic. You don’t watch Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter — you let it hit you in the face like a silver-plated train car full of history homework.
The cinematography bathes everything in a moody, sepia-toned glow, as if the entire country is stuck in an Instagram filter called “Tragic Patriotism.”
The Metaphor That Accidentally Works
Here’s the wild part: beneath the blood and nonsense, the movie actually flirts with being profound.
The vampires represent America’s moral rot — the corruption feeding off human suffering. Lincoln’s crusade against them mirrors the fight against slavery. It’s ridiculous, but it’s also poetic in the most heavy-metal way imaginable.
When Lincoln melts down the nation’s silverware to forge vampire-slaying bullets for the Union Army, it’s less a history lesson and more a national therapy session. Forget “Four score and seven years ago” — this is “Four score and seven stakes ago.”
The Train to Nowhere (and Everywhere)
The film’s finale is a glorious fever dream of silver bullets, exploding trains, and airborne axe fights. It’s the kind of scene where physics takes the night off and patriotism grabs a flamethrower.
Lincoln, Speed, and Sturges lure Adam onto a train loaded with decoy silver. The trestle burns, the train derails, and our 16th President of the United States kills a vampire leader with a pocket watch.
It’s so magnificently stupid that it wraps all the way around to genius.
By the end, the vampires are defeated, slavery is abolished, and Lincoln declines immortality like the gentleman he is. Because really — eternity sounds exhausting when you’ve already survived Congress.
Tim Burton’s Influence: Gothic Americana on Acid
Tim Burton’s fingerprints are all over this movie — not literally, but you can almost smell the black eyeliner and brooding whimsy. The film’s world feels like Sleepy Hollow had a baby with The Matrix.
There’s an earnest theatricality to the absurdity. This isn’t parody; it’s poetry written in fake blood. The soundtrack by Henry Jackman pounds with drum-heavy patriotism, as if John Philip Sousa were conducting a band of goths.
Every axe swing feels like it should end with a mic drop.
Final Thoughts: Honest Abe, Dishonest Physics
Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter is dumb. Gloriously, unapologetically dumb. But it’s also stylish, thrilling, and weirdly respectful of its subject. It dares to ask the important question: what if history class was fun?
Benjamin Walker gives us a Lincoln we didn’t know we needed — part philosopher, part slasher hero, part motivational speaker. And somehow, it works.
This film isn’t trying to rewrite history; it’s trying to punch it in the neck and yell, “For freedom!” It’s patriotic pulp — the cinematic equivalent of a bald eagle wearing sunglasses and driving a monster truck.
So grab your stovepipe hat, polish your silver bullets, and remember: the only thing we have to fear… is undead Confederates.
Rating: ★★★★☆ (4 out of 5 silver axes)
Verdict: Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter is history’s most absurd remix — a Civil War fought with fangs, freedom, and fantastic nonsense. God bless America, and pass the garlic.

