The Manchurian Candidate (1962)
Wild political conspiracy theories aren't anything new. They've been around forever. Take John Frankenheimer's harrowing political thriller, which stars Laurence Harvey as Raymond Shaw — a Korean War hero who has been brainwashed by Chinese Communists in league with his own domineering mother (a lip-smackingly sinister Angela Lansbury) and shaped into an unwitting assassin. Her ambition is to get her empty-suit husband elected to higher office using her son as a rifle-wielding pawn. Frank Sinatra, as Shaw's former captain, races against the clock to deprogram him before he can pull the trigger. The melodrama is through the roof on this one, but so is the paranoia and tension. The 2004 remake starring Denzel Washington is also worth checking out.
Watch it here: The Manchurian Candidate, on Amazon Prime, Fandango Now, iTunes
Wag the Dog (1997)
On the eve of his reelection, the U.S. president is about to be swept into a sex scandal. But before the news can break, his strategists come up with the ultimate distraction — they invent a fake war in Albania to take the public's mind off of his personal life and glued to their TV screens. A crazy-like-a-fox Robert De Niro plays the mastermind of the whole phony war ruse, and Dustin Hoffman steals the satirical show as a leathery, scruples-free Hollywood producer brought in to add some razzle-dazzle to help sell the whole bit. Sure, Wag the Dog is silly, far-fetched fun. But beneath all of the broad guffaws is a scary kernel of truth.
Watch it here: Wag the Dog, on Amazon Prime, Fandango Now, Google Play, iTunes, Vudu, YouTube
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And of course, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939)
Now here's a movie that both sides of the political aisle could stand to watch every election cycle. In this red-white-and-blue Frank Capra classic, James Stewart plays a hick Wisconsin senator who storms into the nation's capital as a messenger of American values and decency just in time to remind his cynical peers that democracy is worth fighting for. If that sounds corny on paper, well, on screen it will put a lump the size of an apple pie in your throat. Claude Rains and Jean Arthur are both perfection as the frozen hearts that most need melting. A masterpiece.
Watch it here: Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, on iTunes, Vudu, YouTube
Michael Murphy as Jack Tanner in "Tanner '88."
HBO/Courtesy Everett Collection
Tanner ‘88 (1988)
Long before HBO kickstarted the era of prestige TV, it bankrolled this ambitious miniseries from director Robert Altman and Doonesbury cartoonist Garry Trudeau. The two basically created a fictional presidential candidate from scratch named Jack Tanner (played by Michael Murphy) who wove himself into the 1988 race for the White House. In this revealing and radically inventive 11-part series, you get to see him blur the line between fact and fiction alongside such real-world politicos as Gary Hart, Bob Dole, Jesse Jackson, Ralph Nader and Gloria Steinem. It's fascinating. Also fascinating: future Sex and the City star Cynthia Nixon plays his daughter.
Watch it here: Tanner ‘88, on Amazon Prime
Head of State (2003)
Chris Rock for president? OK, maybe not. But his State of the Union addresses sure would be entertaining. In this skewed riff on Bulworth, Rock plays a low-level D.C. public servant who's tapped to run for the Oval Office and sees his straight-talking, no-B.S. style win over skeptical voters tired of being lied to. The high-concept comedy is thin and breezy, but the stand-up's jokes come at a rat-a-tat clip and conceal the barbed sting of truth.
Watch it here: Head of State, on Amazon Prime, Fandango Now, Google Play, iTunes, Vudu, YouTube
Game Change (2012)
When John McCain picked an obscure Alaskan governor named Sarah Palin as his vice presidential candidate in the 2008 election, it was so far-fetched that even Frank Capra couldn't have dreamed it up. And once she opened her mouth, she immediately became a deer caught in the headlights to some and an instant media superstar to others. A movie about her overnight rise could have been an easy-target hit job, but thanks to Julianne Moore's layered and empathetic portrayal, Palin comes into focus in a way she never did on TV and in the papers. She becomes human. Only in America, folks. Only in America.
Watch it here: Game Change, on Amazon Prime, Fandango Now, Google Play, HBO Now, iTunes, Vudu, YouTube
The Ides of March (2011)
George Clooney goes behind and in front of the camera for this sharp, cynical inside-baseball drama about an idealistic young press spokesman (Ryan Gosling) whose belief in his boss, a charismatic governor with his eye on the White House (Clooney), is dashed after discovering that while his mentor talks the talk he doesn't necessarily walk the walk. Based on a play by Beau Willimon (who created the American version of House of Cards), The Ides of March is named after the date when Julius Caesar was assassinated. It was also when ancient Romans settled all of their debts. Considering all of the backstabbing and score-settling on display here, it's easy to see why Clooney went with the title for his film.
Watch it here: The Ides of March, on Amazon Prime, Fandango Now, Google Play, iTunes, Vudu, YouTube
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