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ABE LINCOLN: PUBLIC ENEMY NO. 1

ABE LINCOLN: PUBLIC ENEMY NO. 1
By Bill Walker

GENRE: Historical, Fantasy
LOGLINE:

When John Wilkes Booth shoots Lincoln with a bullet cursed by a voodoo practitioner, he unwittingly commences a chain of events extending far into the future.  Instead of killing Lincoln, the bullet puts the president into a coma for sixty-eight years, his body remaining limber and ageless.  When he awakens in 1933, Lincoln is a man out of time, a revered icon and a political pariah.  Afraid the news of his resurrection will tear the country apart, FDR and J. Edgar Hoover want Abe to retire to his Springfield home under permanent house arrest.  But their plan backfires, a federal agent is accidentally killed, and Lincoln is on the run—a fugitive from justice.  And when Lincoln hooks up with infamous bank robber John Dillinger, their troubles really begin.

SYNOPSIS:

When John Wilkes Booth shoots Lincoln with a bullet cursed by the notorious Chicken Man, a local voodoo practitioner, he unwittingly sets in motion a chain of events extending far into the future. Instead of killing Lincoln, the bullet puts the president into a coma for sixty-eight years, his body remaining limber and ageless. When he awakens in 1933, Abraham Lincoln is a man out of time, a revered icon...and a political pariah. FDR and J. Edgar Hoover not only do not want him around, they want him to retire quietly to his home in Springfield. But their plan to be rid of him backfires, a Federal agent is accidentally killed, and Lincoln is on the run, a fugitive from justice.

Determined to reach Chicago and retrieve the small fortune left in trust for him by his long-dead son, Lincoln discovers that Hoover has confiscated all his money, leaving him destitute. With Bureau of Investigation agent Melvin Purvis in hot pursuit, Lincoln befriends, Charlie, a young runaway, who agrees to accompany the former president back to Washington. There Lincoln hopes that Hannah Wheelhouse, the Chicken Man’s granddaughter, can help him find the peace he longs for.

Then fate deals Lincoln another strange hand when he and the boy end up as hostages to infamous bank robber John Dillinger. Instead of leaving them by the side of the road after the robbery, Dillinger takes a liking to Lincoln and invites him to join the gang, promising him he’ll get all his money back. With no other choice, Lincoln agrees with a condition: he won’t kill anyone.

With Charlie as the gang’s new wheelman, Lincoln embarks on a series of bank robberies with Dillinger and his gang, gaining notoriety as a robber who’ll only take money from the banks and not a poor man’s savings. Hoover, ever the publicity hound, is furious that Lincoln is becoming a folk-hero. He directs Melvin Purvis to intensify his search for the former president.

On an anonymous tip, Lincoln is arrested and extradited to Indiana to stand trial, but with his lawyer’s help, he makes a grand escape from the Crown Point Jail and is on the run again. Hoover is ebullient. Now that Lincoln is out of local hands and has driven a car across state lines, Lincoln is theirs for the taking.

In Washington, Hannah Wheelhouse is having nightmares. The Chicken Man’s granddaughter has been connected to Lincoln on a psychic level ever since her grandfather’s spell was woven and now she senses his pain. With her grandson’s help, she drives to Chicago and meets with Melvin Purvis. She wants to help end Lincoln’s suffering, and in a moment of enlightenment realizes this can only happen if Purvis shoots Lincoln with Booth’s Derringer. With the gun locked away in a government vault, Purvis talks his way inside the secure facility and removes the Deringer, replacing it with a replica. Now, all he needs is an opportunity.

Both Lincoln and Dillinger can sense their days are numbered, but neither wishes to run from his fate. On the night of July 22, 1934, Lincoln and Dillinger attend a showing of Manhattan Melodrama at the Biograph Theatre, accompanied by Judith and Anna Sage, the “Lady in Red.”

When the movie ends, Lincoln and Dillinger emerge from the theatre and Purvis moves in behind them. Both men sense Fate’s presence, and when Dillinger starts to make a break he is gunned down by one of Purvis’s agents. Purvis is certain that Lincoln will also run but, instead, the Great Emancipator kneels down and clasps Dillinger’s shoulder, saying goodbye to his friend. Purvis fires and Lincoln slumps to the pavement.

Judith holds Lincoln’s head in her lap, her tears and cries drowned out by the crowd pressing in on them. Purvis orders the body removed, already feeling the horror that will haunt him for the rest of his life. He hasn’t stopped a criminal—he’s killed Abraham Lincoln....

The body is placed in a room with a guard who, after a few hours, realizes the corpse has regained its color and is warm to the touch. Then, with a gasp, Lincoln begins breathing again, slow and regular. Knowing there is no other choice, the government returns the President’s sleeping form to his Springfield home, where he is under the care of his doctors even now...

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