Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter Movie May 2026

Not a great film, but a genuinely interesting one. Rated C+ for execution, A- for ambition.

Wait—the railroad? Yes. The film argues that vampires fear moving water (a traditional trope) and the industrial might of united states. The railroad, built by immigrant and free Black labor, represents a new national economy not based on blood-feudalism. In a startling monologue, Lincoln tells his best friend (a free Black man, played by Anthony Mackie) that killing vampires one by one is “the old way.” The new way is infrastructure, legislation, and total war. abraham lincoln vampire hunter movie

The film’s most haunting image is not an axe swing. It is a shot of Adam standing in the U.S. Senate in 1865, looking at Lincoln’s empty chair, and walking away unharmed. The message: vampires don’t die easily. They change forms. They become lobbyists, corporate raiders, gentrifiers. The film ends with Lincoln’s assassination—by a human, not a vampire—but the closing narration reminds us that the fight continues “in every generation.” Not a great film, but a genuinely interesting one