A couple weeks ago, Washingtonian published a bracket of 64 movies about our region and the people who inhabit it, with the goal of getting readers to settle on determining the “most Washington movie ever.” Remember: This not an assessment of cinematic quality, but a test of each film’s “Washington-ness”—the degree to which they understand DC and its residents. Still, the first round yielded few upsets. Sentimental favorites and unambiguous classics mostly topped their quirkier challengers, especially in the quadrant squaring off movies set in or around the White House.
The top seed in this group, All the President’s Men, took down the 1996 Sinbad-led “classic” First Kid like a buzzsaw. Though beloved by several Washingtonian staffers, First Kid got walloped by nearly 78 percentage points. The split between two Abraham Lincoln biopics was nearly as gory, with Steven Spielberg’s stately Lincoln driving a garlic-crusted stake through Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter.
Washingtonian readers, it appears, are very firm when it comes to opinions on fictionalized presentations of Oval Office shenangans. The Bill Clintonian farce Wag the Dog trounced the Hillary Clintonian political thriller The Contender, while Dr. Strangelove nuked Clint Eastwood’s conspiratorial caper Absolute Power. The Butler, a decade-spanning biopic based on the life of real-life White House butler Eugene Allen, easily toppled Murder at 1600, which did not put up much of a fight, even with its B-plot about surface-level parking lots. Back on the Nixon front, readers widely chose Oliver Stone’s claustrophobic biopic Nixon, rather than the cynically peppy Dick. And movies written by Aaron Sorkin launched a three-for-three run: Cuban Missle Crisis flashback Thirteen Days was no match for The American President’s Democratic idealism. Ninth-seeded Dave overwhelmed eighth-seeded Head of State.
Now it’s time for the round of 32. In the presidential quadrant, it’s All the President’s Men versus Dave, Wag the Dog versus The American President, Nixon versus Dr. Strangelove, and The Butler versus Lincoln. It’s not about what movie should have won the most Oscars, it’s about what movie gets this city most accurately. Voting closes Tuesday, March 10 at 11:59 PM.
Benjamin Freed joined Washingtonian in August 2013 and covers politics, business, and media. He was previously the editor of DCist and has also written for Washington City Paper, the New York Times, the New Republic, Slate, and BuzzFeed. He lives in Adams Morgan.
Vote: The Most Washington Movie Ever, Round 2
Which of these movies about the White House will advance?
A couple weeks ago, Washingtonian published a bracket of 64 movies about our region and the people who inhabit it, with the goal of getting readers to settle on determining the “most Washington movie ever.” Remember: This not an assessment of cinematic quality, but a test of each film’s “Washington-ness”—the degree to which they understand DC and its residents. Still, the first round yielded few upsets. Sentimental favorites and unambiguous classics mostly topped their quirkier challengers, especially in the quadrant squaring off movies set in or around the White House.
The top seed in this group, All the President’s Men, took down the 1996 Sinbad-led “classic” First Kid like a buzzsaw. Though beloved by several Washingtonian staffers, First Kid got walloped by nearly 78 percentage points. The split between two Abraham Lincoln biopics was nearly as gory, with Steven Spielberg’s stately Lincoln driving a garlic-crusted stake through Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter.
Washingtonian readers, it appears, are very firm when it comes to opinions on fictionalized presentations of Oval Office shenangans. The Bill Clintonian farce Wag the Dog trounced the Hillary Clintonian political thriller The Contender, while Dr. Strangelove nuked Clint Eastwood’s conspiratorial caper Absolute Power. The Butler, a decade-spanning biopic based on the life of real-life White House butler Eugene Allen, easily toppled Murder at 1600, which did not put up much of a fight, even with its B-plot about surface-level parking lots. Back on the Nixon front, readers widely chose Oliver Stone’s claustrophobic biopic Nixon, rather than the cynically peppy Dick. And movies written by Aaron Sorkin launched a three-for-three run: Cuban Missle Crisis flashback Thirteen Days was no match for The American President’s Democratic idealism. Ninth-seeded Dave overwhelmed eighth-seeded Head of State.
Now it’s time for the round of 32. In the presidential quadrant, it’s All the President’s Men versus Dave, Wag the Dog versus The American President, Nixon versus Dr. Strangelove, and The Butler versus Lincoln. It’s not about what movie should have won the most Oscars, it’s about what movie gets this city most accurately. Voting closes Tuesday, March 10 at 11:59 PM.
Benjamin Freed joined Washingtonian in August 2013 and covers politics, business, and media. He was previously the editor of DCist and has also written for Washington City Paper, the New York Times, the New Republic, Slate, and BuzzFeed. He lives in Adams Morgan.
Most Popular in News & Politics
Most Powerful Women in Washington 2025
How Much Worse Can This Government Shutdown Make Federal Workers Feel?
Can Abigail Spanberger Make Politics Boring Again?
Trump’s Shutdown Antics Vex Republicans, Ireland Hopes to Sell Its DC Embassy, and Renaissance Festival Sues Most Foul Varlets
Washington DC’s 500 Most Influential People of 2025
Washingtonian Magazine
October Issue: Most Powerful Women
View IssueSubscribe
Follow Us on Social
Follow Us on Social
Related
Want to Live in a DC Firehouse?
DC Punk Explored in Three New History Books
The Local Group Fighting to Keep Virginia’s Space Shuttle
Alexandria’s “Fancy Pigeon” Has a New Home
More from News & Politics
New Anacostia Market Is a Dream Come True for Community
Photos: The Caps’ “Red Carpet” Start to the Season
Senators Vamoose as Shutdown Pain Increases, Trump’s Campaign for Nobel Peace Prize Foiled, and the DC Streetcar Is Toast
Guest List: 5 People We’d Love to Hang Out With This October
IRS Tells Furloughed Feds They’ll Get Back Pay After Trump Says They Might Not, Trump Lands a Big Peace Deal, and Publix Is Coming to NoVa
The Best DC-Area Private High Schools to Enroll Your Child In
Trump’s Shutdown Antics Vex Republicans, Ireland Hopes to Sell Its DC Embassy, and Renaissance Festival Sues Most Foul Varlets
Want to Live in a DC Firehouse?