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Netflix's 'Death By Lightning' Director Matt Ross Interview
TV & Streaming

Netflix’s ‘Death By Lightning’ Director Matt Ross Interview

by jummy84 November 13, 2025
written by jummy84

[Editor’s note: This interview contains spoilers for “Death by Lightning.”] 

We all only have one wild and precious life to live, and while James A. Garfield couldn’t spend any of his watching a Netflix miniseries, director Matt Ross wants any story we do spend two or four or 10 hours on to be worth it. Ross immediately knew he’d found such a story on reading Mike Makowsky’s script for “Death by Lightning,” which follows both Garfield (Michael Shannon) and his eventual assassin Charles Guiteau (Matthew Macfadyen) from the former’s surprise nomination for President at the 1880 Republican National Convention through the latter’s hanging for murder. He wanted to take on the challenge of making the visual storytelling feel as immediate, surprising, and modern as Makowsky’s script read. 

Poker Face

Much of that work, Ross told IndieWire, has nothing to do with the cinematic apparatus itself. “I want to be taken away and not the whole time think, ‘Oh, great shot. Oh, that’s an interesting costume choice. Oh, why did they choose to shoot it that way?’” Ross said. “I want to have an intellectual and emotional response.” 

The intellectual and emotional response to “Death by Lightning,” for Ross, is all wrapped up in people — and in picnic tables. “[The script] wasn’t a history lesson. It was through the prism of these two men who I think represented very polar opposites of a desire for legacy — a thing men probably, historically, had more of a desire for because of women’s lack of agency in patriarchal societies, right? There’s this desire to matter,” Ross said. “The meaning of the entire thing is the last scene with Crete [Betty Gilpin] and her children… These two men are left with nothing. They’re both dead. The actual legacy is our friends and our family — the love we share, the people we connect with while we’re alive.” 

Ross’s task for “Death by Lightning,” then, was to realize a group of people and make their surprising complexity be the thing that matters far more than any turn of the plot — which is, after all, just a Wikipedia article away. Knowing that thematic idea is the destination the series is driving toward allowed Ross to build a team and direct accordingly.

Death By Lightning. (L to R) Michael Shannon as James Garfield, Betty Gilpin as Crete Garfield in episode 103 of Death By Lightning. Cr. Larry Horricks/Netflix © 2024
‘Death by Lightning’LARRY HORRICKS/NETFLIX

When thinking about Garfield and Guiteau, Ross wanted to bring on actors who could flex new sides of themselves and slightly play with an audience’s expectation of their personas. It is a testament to Matthew Macfadyen’s acting chops (and awful haircut) that you really do believe no one in the Oneida free love commune to which Guiteau belonged for five years wants to have sex with Mr. Darcy. Michael Shannon has a history of playing, shall we say, rather intense individuals; “Death by Lightning” was a chance for him to embody much more of a Clark Kent than a General Zod. 

“ I try and cast, personally, the same way one casts in theater — which is to say, you’re assuming that this person can do anything. So what have they not done recently that might be fun for them to do, you know?” Ross said. “Then it just becomes a conversation of how you illuminate the humanity of the characters, because for me, I didn’t want Garfield to be a one-note good guy. I wanted him to be grumpy and complicated and angry at times, frustrated, and have his own maybe nascent ambitions.” 

Ross gives full credit to the actors — “I learned like 35 years ago, and it’s true, that there’s a misconception about an actor/director relationship that somehow a director is getting something from an actor. I think that’s a negation of an actor’s talent. I don’t get anything from them that they don’t want to give me,” Ross said. There’s only the work of collaborating on the right levels on the day, trying something a little more or a little less, or experimenting with different eyes, and there is the small, invisible work that Ross does behind the camera to properly focus the audience on an actor’s performance. 

Death by Lightning. (L to R) Matthew Macfadyen as Charles Guiteau, Shea Whigham as Roscoe Conkling in episode 101 of Death by Lightning. Cr. Larry Horricks/Netflix © 2025
‘Death by Lightning’LARRY HORRICKS/NETFLIX

An example of this is the scene where Guiteau is hanged for Garfield’s assassination. The setup is quite simple. We follow Guiteau across the prison yard from the front (the better to see the poem he has written for the grand occasion) and behind, two other views of the crowd (spotty) and the gallows (simple). Once on the gallows, Ross mostly sticks to a pretty straight-on medium closeup of Guiteau as the noose is put around his neck. We get the most devastatingly silent “Wow, is this thing on?” reaction shot from the observers after Guiteau sings “I’m Going to the Lordy” and laughs, thrilled at his own handiwork. It’s all perfectly serviceable, invisible filmmaking. 

Then just as simply and invisibly, Ross tightens the visual noose. The camera slowly pushes in on Guiteau’s face as he absorbs the silence, and lets out an “Oh” so horrified you can almost hear the italics. “We thought that would be powerful,” Ross said. “Matthew and I talked about what that would be — I mean, here’s a man who was in prison for murder and he was writing a manifesto and trying to solicit a wife and all this craziness, and he thought it would change everything and that he would be saved and loved and he was making jokes on the way to the gallows, but… would it not be profound for this man, if at the very last moment, he realizes his insignificance.” 

A dance between performer and camera like that one requires a clear, shared vision for the emotional intent of a scene, a willingness to play and experiment, and trust that the story is, in fact, worth the four hours. “I could spend an hour discussing what each actor brought, whether it’s, you know, the emotional power that Betty brings or Nick [Offerman, or Shea Wigham], but with each person, I just want to illuminate them and their work. We’re only as good as the people with whom we play, and they all brought their A game and were so willing to explore and to try to push the characters in different ways.” 

“Death by Lightning” is now streaming on Netflix.

November 13, 2025 0 comments
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'Death By Lightning' Netflix Editors on Garfield and Guiteau Showdown
TV & Streaming

‘Death By Lightning’ Netflix Editors on Garfield and Guiteau Showdown

by jummy84 November 13, 2025
written by jummy84

[Editor’s Note: This article contains spoilers for “Death By Lightning”]  

Before we see anything that leads the failed lawyer and frustrated Republican job-seeker Charles Guiteau to shoot President James Garfield, the Netflix miniseries “Death By Lightning” tells us that history forgot both of these men. Fans of “Assassins” may bristle at that a little, but the statement acts as a tragic leveler, bringing both the show’s Guiteau (Matthew Macfadyen) and Garfield (Michael Shannon) onto the same volatile playing field. 

This parity between the show’s protagonists was essential for the “Death by Lightning” editing team, which consisted of Joseph Krings and Joe Leonard over the course of production and initial picture cuts, then Anna Hauger and Michael Ruscio, along with additional editors Derek Desmond and Bridget Case, for the remainder of post. It enabled the true engine of the series to be the movement between Garfield and Guiteau over the course of the former’s surprise Republican nomination and brief anti-corruption-focused administration. It also demanded that the editors really find empathy for both president and assassin, and imbue that feeling into how they cut the series. 

PARADISE - The Man Who Kept the Secrets - Xavier and Robinson race to find President Bradford’s murderer before it’s too late. (Disney/Brian Roedel)STERLING K. BROWN

Nowhere is that clearer than in the scene that both Hauger and Krings told IndieWire hit them the hardest. In Episode 3, “Casus Belli,” Guiteau finally worms his way into a meeting with the man he feels he’s helped elect president, angling for a consul post in Paris or Vienna (he’s learning both French and German!). But standing before the object of all his obsessive hopes, Guiteau can’t come out and say what he wants. He has to tell Garfield, first, how much he feels he knows him, and how much Garfield means to him, and a plea almost bursts out of his chest: “Help me!” 

It is, to use the parlance of a different age, a big yikes. 

The scene lasts no more than three minutes and 30 seconds, but the “Death By Lightning” editing team makes every one of them an agonizing parasocial nightmare. Ruscio told IndieWire that the sequence felt like DeNiro and Pacino finally meeting in “Heat” — “You’re withholding it and then, when it comes, it really delivers at a point where the audience is craving and sort of been hungry for it. And it just delivers so beautifully,” Ruscio said. 

Part of the beauty is in how the edit continues to be just tantalizingly withholding. There are 10 different camera setups to capture the sequence: A couple of medium wide shots to establish the space, a close-up of them shaking hands, a medium shot of each man with the other out of focus in the foreground, then a closer medium of each, and a final devastating wide of Guiteau left alone in the doorframe at the end. The scene keeps lingering on Guiteau an awkward extra second, as his praise of Garfield doesn’t land with its audience, and in the moments of highest vulnerability and disappointment, the scene uses the shots that just show each man alone, unable to connect with each other. 

Death by Lightning. Michael Shannon as James Garfield in episode 101 of Death by Lightning. Cr. Larry Horricks/Netflix © 2025
‘Death By Lightning’ LARRY HORRICKS/NETFLIX

“I always like to go into an edit and into a scene or to an episode with a certain amount of empathy for every character,” Hauger told IndieWire. “When Garfield meets Guiteau, you really get this depth of understanding of Guiteau’s longing, and you also get the disappointment at the end when he’s not getting the answers that he wants from Garfield and it’s — Matthew Macfadyen’s performance in that scene is tremendous.”

The mark of great performers, though, is that they give the editors a lot of different colors of an idea or emotion to play with. “He’s so desperate when he’s finally engaging with Garfield, but you know, you can’t play a desperate character desperately. Matthew found a way to really get that humanity in there, and I think the work that we did was really honing in on the performances so everyone could key into who these men were,” Ruscio said. 

“Death by Lightning,” to its very great credit, shows that aspects of who these men were could be very funny. Garfield’s farm might be in Ohio, but he has a pretty Clark Kent role as the Good Man of the series, and so, in the scene with Guiteau and elsewhere, has to be quite straightlaced and unmoveably principled — much less fun than Bradley Whitford’s exasperated James Blaine or Shea Whigham’s ultimate dude take on Rosco Conkling. But not no fun, thanks to his wife, Crete (Betty Gilpin). 

“Betty Gilpin came with just such a spirit for play. Whenever she would have a scene with Michael, she would just do something weird and crazy and he’d have to react to it and it really opened up Michael to having more variations in his performance,” Krings told IndieWire. “Then he’s like, ‘Oh, OK, we can play here and we can be a little bit more comic and I can be more fun and open.” 

Death by Lightning. (L to R) Betty Gilpin as Crete Garfield, Michael Shannon as James Garfield in episode 101 of Death by Lightning. Cr. Larry Horricks/Netflix © 2025
‘Death By Lightning’ LARRY HORRICKS/NETFLIX

Even with the more outwardly buffoonish Chester Arthur (Nick Offerman), the editors felt that some of their job was to get out of the way every time he shouts for “Sausages!” but also some of it to seed little glimmers of someone more serious and more noble throughout, so that his arc feels earned when he finds himself with unexpected responsibility. “You go too far in one direction, and you’re going to have trouble balancing it with the seriousness of the show or the gravity of the show. So it was a really interesting challenge from the very beginning,” Leonard told IndieWire. 

For the editors, the moment between the two men in Episode 3 encapsulated the rich mix of humor, tragedy, vanity for fame, and longing for remembrance that are at the heart of “Death By Lightning” and make it feel immediately relatable to a contemporary audience. That is, very much, by design — from the writing, direction, and performances, of course, but also through how long the editors choose to linger on a face and let us understand and emotion, through when they decide to cut to a crushingly confused reaction. 

“We are always looking to find the connections and the parallels, but it was such a joy to get to work on something based in a really interesting historical [setting] that actually has these connections to what’s happening now,” Leonard said. “We’re naturally, as filmmaking people, going to want to work [towards] that. The story is being told right now, so it has a relevance to now,” Leonard said. 

There is something oddly hopeful about that relevance, despite the tragic ending. All this has happened before, and all of this will happen again, “Death By Lightning” proves — but never meet your heroes. 

“Death By Lightning” is now streaming on Netflix.

November 13, 2025 0 comments
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bitchy | “The trailer for ‘Death by Lightning’ was released, and it looks good?” links
Celebrity News

bitchy | “The trailer for ‘Death by Lightning’ was released, and it looks good?” links

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

The trailer for Death by Lightning, a Netflix limited series about the assassination of President James Garfield (played by Michael Shannon). Matthew Macfayden plays the assassin. It looks surprisingly good, right? [Just Jared]
They made Donald Trump take another cognitive test. [Buzzfeed]
Pics from the Wake Up Dead Man premiere. [RCFA]
Addison Rae covers W Magazine. [OMG Blog]
Don’t call Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein a “horror movie.” [Pajiba]
The judge called Drake’s UMG lawsuit “logically incoherent.” [Socialite Life]
Review of the John Candy documentary. [LaineyGossip]
I always forget that Carrie Preston & Michael Emerson are married. [Go Fug Yourself]
A new season of Elsbeth is coming! [Seriously OMG]
A Breaking Amish’s star’s kids are in foster care. [Starcasm]
Danielle Jonas has Lyme disease. [Hollywood Life]

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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New Trailer for 'Death by Lightning' Series - Shannon, Offerman, Gilpin
Hollywood

New Trailer for ‘Death by Lightning’ Series – Shannon, Offerman, Gilpin

by jummy84 October 9, 2025
written by jummy84

New Trailer for ‘Death by Lightning’ Series – Shannon, Offerman, Gilpin

by Alex Billington
October 9, 2025
Source: YouTube

“What line of work are you in?” “Politics.” Netflix has revealed the first official trailer for their upcoming mini-series titled Death by Lightning, a fascinating tale of American history. It is the story of President James Garfield and his greatest admirer Charles Guiteau, the man who would come to kill him. It’s a look back at a turbulent time in the USA, after the Civil War, when James Garfield would rise from poverty to become the 20th president before being assassinated. The new series stars Michael Shannon as Garfield, Betty Gilpin as Crete Garfield, Matthew Macfadyen as Charles Giteau, Nick Offerman as Chester A. Arthur, Bradley Whitford as James Blaine, Shea Whigham as Roscoe Conkling. Death by Lightning is a drama series that brings to life the epic and stranger-than-fiction true story of Garfield. With many other guest stars. The title comes from an actual Garfield quote: “Assassination can no more be guarded against than death by lightning; it is best not to worry about either.” Quite prophetic. He was shot by a Republican officer seeker in 1881. This looks pretty damn good! Not only a fascinating look back at US political history, but also a kooky fun tale of men, power, fame, and politics. And of assassination, too, of course. View below.

Here’s the official trailer (+ poster) for Netflix’s series Death by Lightning, direct from YouTube:

Death by Lightning Series Trailer

Death by Lightning Series Poster

⚡ “Assassination can no more be guarded against than death by lightning; it is best not to worry about either.” –President James Garfield. Death by Lightning is a drama series that brings to life the epic and stranger-than-fiction true story of James Garfield, reluctant 20th president of the United States, and his greatest admirer Charles Guiteau — the man who would come to kill him. Death by Lightning is a series created by producer / writer Mike Makowsky, screenwriter on Take Me, I Think We’re Alone Now, and Bad Education previously. The 4-episode historical mini-series is entirely written by Makowsky. Based on the history book titled “Destiny of the Republic” by Candice Millard. With episodes directed by Matt Ross. Made by Bighead Littlehead Productions and Slater Hall. Produced by Olly Robinson, David Benioff & D.B. Weiss, Bernie Caulfield, Hameed Shaukat, Mark Taylor. Executive produced by former “Game of Thrones” creators David Benioff & D.B. Weiss; Bernie Caulfield & Matt Ross. Netflix debuts the Death by Lightning series streaming on Netflix starting on November 6th, 2025 this fall. Look any good? Anyone interested?

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October 9, 2025 0 comments
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bitchy | A woman got electrocuted by her microwave during a lightning storm
Celebrity News

bitchy | A woman got electrocuted by her microwave during a lightning storm

by jummy84 August 27, 2025
written by jummy84


True story: I grew up in San Francisco close enough to the beach that there were signs on my street that read TSUNAMI EVACUATION ROUTE. Of course SF is primely situated on the Ring of Fire, home to 90% of the world’s earthquakes (which set off tsunamis). All that to say, I had plenty of school drills growing up for taking cover during a quake, but very little instruction on how to prepare for a thunder/lightning storm. One woman in Kentucky just learned the hard way that you should not use electrical appliances if your home is right in the thick of a lightning storm, and she’s sharing her story so other unenlightened folks (like yours truly) don’t suffer the same injuries she has. Last week Shelby Moore was getting dinner together for her three kids, when lightning struck the house at the exact moment she was pulling the microwave door open. The electrocution was so strong that she couldn’t remove her hand until the electricity was off, and she’s since had to miss work due to nerve and muscle damage.

A woman says she suffered a serious injury after touching her microwave at the exact moment her home was struck by lightning during a thunderstorm.

Shelby Miller of Louisville, Ky., was preparing dinner for herself and her kids the evening of Tuesday, Aug. 19, when the scary incident occurred, according to local news outlet WAVE.

The mom of three recalled that she reached for the appliance as usual when she was electrocuted.

“Next thing you know, my microwave is going off, I’m pulling the door open, and I’m being electrocuted,” she told the outlet in a video interview. “I couldn’t even let go of the microwave. My hand was stuck there until all electricity was shut off.”

“Once I was able to pull my hand away, I put ice on it immediately, and I felt tingling and numbness,” she added.

Shelby rushed to the emergency room at Norton Audubon Hospital, where tests revealed she had nerve and muscle damage to her left arm — and is now at risk of having a heart attack.

“I’m nervous,” she told WAVE. “I wasn’t expecting that I was gonna have to call off work for an injury. I wasn’t expecting to have any nerve damage in my arm. I use my arms at work […] so that really worries me.”

She continued, “How long am I going to be out of work? Is there going to be severe damage? Am I going to gain feeling back in my arm? I was told that I should, within a few hours, start to feel my hand again. The only thing that I feel is the numbness and the tingling. It started in my hand, and it slowly worked its way up.”

Shelby said she decided to share her story in the hopes that it might help spread awareness of the dangers of using electrical appliances during thunderstorms.

“You don’t think that you can’t use your home appliances during a storm,” she explained. “I was always told, ‘Don’t get in the shower during a thunderstorm.’ I didn’t know that I couldn’t prepare a meal for me and my family.”

“I know that, from now on, I’m going to unplug everything when I know a storm is coming,” she added.

[From People]

Egads! I’m thinking back to all the storms I’ve weathered living in NYC where I blithely noted lightning flashes out the window, all the while lounging inside with the lights, TV, and probably a fan if not the AC on. My heart goes out to Shelby, especially after watching her in the local news segment. Her anxiety over not being able to work was palpable — as mine would be given the current state of government disaster relief. (And yet Martha Stewart is in fighting form despite thrice being struck…) The National Weather Service is a great resource for what to do during a lightning storm. I found their “Myths and Facts” page particularly helpful, if a bit blunt at times, “You are NOT safe anywhere outdoors.” And indoors, definitely do not run or touch anything in the house that can conduct electricity, and stay away from the windows as lightning can come in through cracks. Be safe out there, bitches!

phtoos via Wave 3 News and Gentri Shop on Unsplash

August 27, 2025 0 comments
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