Netflix has unveiled the first trailer for Death by Lightning, a limited series dramatizing the 1881 assassination of U.S. President James A. Garfield, and set November 6 as the global premiere. Michael Shannon plays Garfield opposite Matthew Macfadyen as Charles J. Guiteau, the deluded political hanger-on who stalked the president and ultimately shot him at a Washington railway station. The footage frames their collision as a psychological duel amid the rough-and-tumble patronage politics of the era.
The series runs four episodes and is created by writer Mike Makowsky with David Benioff and D.B. Weiss among executive producers, continuing Netflix’s push into prestige historical thrillers. Matt Ross directs. Supporting roles include Nick Offerman as Vice President Chester A. Arthur and Betty Gilpin as first lady Lucretia Garfield, with additional appearances by Bradley Whitford, Shea Whigham, and Vondie Curtis-Hall. First-look materials released earlier this year positioned the show as a character study of two men whose intersecting ambitions reshaped American politics in the Gilded Age.
The project draws on a well-documented chapter of U.S. history that exposed the risks of the spoils system. Guiteau, who fancied himself instrumental to Garfield’s election, sought a diplomatic post and turned violent when rebuffed; Garfield’s slow death, aggravated by medical missteps, helped catalyze calls for civil service reform that followed under Arthur. The trailer leans into that context with glimpses of back-room horse-trading, press scrutiny, and the era’s volatile street politics, while hinting at Guiteau’s messianic self-mythologizing.
Casting Shannon and Macfadyen sets up a study in contrasts between a reluctant reformer and an obsessive seeker of validation, a dynamic the trailer underscores through voiceover and courtroom flashes. Netflix’s marketing notes a contained run and a tightly focused timeline, suggesting an emphasis on performance and period texture over sprawling subplots. With the launch date now fixed, Death by Lightning arrives as a compact retelling of a presidency cut short and an assassination that accelerated a pivot in federal governance.















































