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10 best movies to watch this Election Day

Anthony Weiner and Huma Abedin in Weiner.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

What do we do when we can’t stand to watch what will surely be razor-thin election returns? One solution: We revert, as always, to the warm bosom of cinema, where (novelty of novelties!), the good guys usually win. These politically minded films are sometimes hopeful, sometimes not, but they are all entertaining and will keep your mind off of the 2024 election.

We also have guides to the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, the best movies on Amazon Prime Video, the best movies on Maxand the best movies on Disney+.

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The Manchurian Candidate (1962)

The Manchurian Candidate (1962) - I Wanted a Killer Scene (11/12) | Movieclips

John Frankenheimer’s politically batty thriller, the only significant film to emerge out of the Korean War, concerns a Medal of Honor-winning veteran of that conflict, Raymond Shaw (Laurence Harvey).

Shaw was brainwashed by Chinese Communist agents during the war, and his mother (Angela Lansbury, in an Oscar-nominated performance of surpassing camp) takes advantage, programming him to kill a presidential nominee to advance the career of her husband, the vice presidential candidate (James Gregory). The film portrays politics as a farce, a front for the real machinations going on behind the scenes.

The Manchurian Candidate is streaming on Tubi.

The War Room (1993)

George Stephanopolous and James Carville in The War Room.

Documentary master D.A. Pennebaker (Original Cast Album: Company) co-directed, with his wife Chris Hegedus, this defining political doc. In 1992, chief strategist James Carville and communications director George Stephanopoulos masterminded the extraordinary presidential campaign of then-Governor Bill Clinton, and Pennebaker and Hegedus were flies on the wall for much of the race.

The War Room is a tale told in mumbles, occasional bursts of rage, and, most strikingly, an enduring mood of political optimism that feels utterly alien today.

The War Room is streaming on Max.

Long Shot (2019)

Seth Rogen and Charlize Theron wave hi in Longshot.
Lionsgate

Adept and underrated romantic comedy director Jonathan Levine, who started his career as an assistant director to Paul Schrader, helms this nimble political rom-com. Much of the humor is derived from the mismatch between the leads: schlubby journalist-turned-speechwriter Fred Flarsky (Seth Rogen) and supermodel-beautiful secretary of state and presidential candidate Charlotte Field (who else, Charlize Theron). But their chemistry is so pronounced that the joke suggested by the title feels beside the point. More interesting is the scandal that nearly derails Field’s campaign – Flarsky caught on tape masturbating to one of Field’s speeches. It’s got nothing to do with her, and yet, naturally, it’s her fault – a snapshot of the maddening standards set for female politicians.

Long Shot is streaming on Hulu.

Weiner (2016)

Anthony Weiner in Weiner.

Those of us who were in and around New York City in the summer of 2013 remember the bizarre truth that disgraced ex-Congressman Anthony Weiner was, for a shockingly long time, the frontrunner for mayor that year. In revisiting that strange time, Josh Kriegman and Elyse Steinberg’s utterly superb political documentary never fails to startle.

As the second of many sexting scandals begins to destroy Weiner’s campaign, Kriegman and Steinberg are granted unprecedented access and are in the room as Weiner argues with his wife, Huma Abedin. They’re also alongside him at his lowest moments. “Why are you letting us film this?” the cameraman asks at one point. Why? Because Weiner is an exhibitionist. And that makes for a fascinating subject.

Weiner is streaming on Plex.

Game Change (2012)

(L-R): Jamey Sheridan, Julianne Moore, and Woody Harrelson in Game Change. 

How naïve we were in those days when we believed Sarah Palin was the worst it could get! Jay Roach’s 2012 HBO drama about John McCain’s (Ed Harris) selection of Palin (Julianne Moore) as running mate in 2008 is notable in its refusal to resort to caricature – indeed, as if to drive the point home, one key scene shows Moore’s Palin watching Tina Fey’s Palin on SNL.

Moore, Harris, and Woody Harrelson as Steve Schmidt, head of operations on the McCain campaign, form a telling triad – the former a self-serving savant, the latter two essentially honorable men utterly bewildered by the way the political winds are blowing.

Game Change is streaming on Max.

Duck Soup (1933)

Harpo, Chico, and Groucho Marx in Duck Soup.
Paramount Pictures

The single funniest political satire ever filmed is this 1933 Marx Brothers comedy. It’s a riff on the most dangerous power of the presidency – the ability to make war. Groucho Marx plays Rufus T. Firefly, a con artist whose patron, Mrs. Teasdale (Margaret Dumont), loans $20 million to the bankrupt European nation of Fredonia in exchange for making Firefly President. (Though some film historians consider Fredonia a stand-in for the fascist dictatorships of the era, Fredonia’s national anthem, which winkingly refers to Fredonia as the “land of the brave and free” as opposed to “the land of the free and the home of the brave,” drives home that we’re in a mirror-image of America.)

Firefly, a brazenly insulting know-nothing, is ripe for manipulation at the hands of an ambassador (Louis Calhern) from neighboring Sylvania, who goads the new Fredonian president into a pointless armed conflict. Groucho, and his brothers, Chico and Harpo, attain with Duck Soup the apex of their career-long comic thesis – that we are ultimately ruled by the craven and the clueless.

Duck Soup is streaming on Amazon Prime Video.

Inherit the Wind (1960)

Spencer Tracy and Frederic March in Inherit the Wind.
United Artists

One of the defining issues of this election season has been what should and shouldn’t be taught in our schools. No film has addressed this subject as a political issue more directly than Stanley Kramer’s 1960 film Inherit the Wind. An adaptation of the 1955 play of the same name, Inherit the Wind was inspired by the so-called “Scopes Monkey Trial” of 1925, in which a Tennessee high school teacher was put on trial for teaching the theory of evolution.

The trial became a cause célèbre, and though the names have been changed for the film, the real-life historical figures are essentially on offer: Spencer Tracy as defense attorney Henry Drummond (modeled after Clarence Darrow), Frederic March as assistant prosecutor Matthew Harrison Brady (modeled after former Democratic presidential nominee William Jennings Bryan), and, most memorably, Gene Kelly as a poisonously cynical reporter based on H.L. Mencken, who famously covered the trial.

Inherit the Wind is streaming on Tubi.

In the Loop (2009)

Peter Capaldi in In the Loop.
BBC Films

The DNA of two of the most popular American TV shows of the past decade – Veep and Succession – is in this foul-mouthed comedy of errors about American and British bureaucrats preparing for the invasion of Iraq. It is itself a spinoff of the British sitcom The Thick of It.

Co-written by Veep creator Armando Iannucci and Succession creator Jesse Armstrong, among others, and directed by Iannucci, the film reflects its director’s perspective (echoed by many in Washington) that even the most momentous political decisions are ultimately a result of private backbiting and horse-trading.

In the Loop is streaming on The CW.

The American President (1995)

Michael Douglas in The American President.
Columbia Pictures

Aaron Sorkin’s third screenplay, a romantic comedy with Michael Douglas as the titular widowed president and Annette Bening as the environmental lobbyist who captures his heart, is most notable for being the prime mover behind Sorkin’s The West Wing. (Sorkin later said he cobbled together much of the first season of the 1999-2007 NBC TV show out of material edited out of The American President.)

But it’s also a fleet, watchable romp, ably directed by Rob Reiner (who had also done Sorkin’s debut, A Few Good Men), and featuring a showstopping closing scene in which Douglas’s President Andrew Shepard publicly excoriates his political opponent for taking shots at his new girlfriend.

The American President is streaming on the Roku Channel.

A Face in the Crowd (1957)

Andy Griffith in A Face in the Crowd.

Elia Kazan’s genuinely remarkable film of Budd Schulberg’s screenplay is a keen indictment of the power of the press. TV everyman Andy Griffith plays Lonesome Rhodes, a faux-folksy singer and television host enlisted to promote the presidential candidacy of stuffed-shirt Sen. Worthington Fuller (Marshall Neilan). Rhodes is a salesman, peddling the Fuller candidacy just as he sells the worthless caffeine pills of his sponsor, Vitajex.

In the film’s most memorable scene, Griffith puffs out his chest like a rooster, claiming he’s undergone a Vitajex-infused transformation: “Oooh-wee, I am ready. I mean, I’m in the MOOD! My personality undergoes a STARTLING change!” It’s a prescient reminder of the power of hyperbole and intensity as a persuasive tool when facts fail.

A Face in the Crowd is streaming on Tubi.

James Feinberg
James Feinberg is a writer and journalist who has written for the Broadway Journal and NBC's The Blacklist.
3 underrated Netflix movies you should watch this weekend (March 7–9)
Tim Blake Nelson plays a guitar while riding a horse in The Ballad of Buster Scruggs.

The sheer volume of content on Netflix can feel endless and overwhelming—every fan knows there are hidden gems out there, but it's easy to get lost in the mix. While it's always fun to catch up on the latest blockbusters, there are numerous underrated movies on the streamer that are just waiting to be discovered. Despite delivering big on story and originality, these deserving films flew under the radar.
Whether you're in the mood for a quirky indie drama, a darkly comedic Western, or a mind-bending thriller, this list has something to make your weekend binge a memorable one. Sometimes, the best movie experiences happen when cinephiles dive into something genuinely unexpected. So get ready for a one-of-a-kind evening spent alone or with loved ones — you'll be glad you took a chance on these underrated picks!
We also have guides to the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, the best movies on Amazon Prime Video, the best movies on Max, and the best movies on Disney+.
The Squid and the Whale (2005)

Noah Baumbach, known for directing the more popular Frances Ha and Marriage Story, tells the story of a dysfunctional family in the criminally underrated The Squid and the Whale. Set in 1980s Brooklyn, the indie comedy-drama revolves around the Berkmans, whose lives change for the worse when parents Bernard (Jeff Daniels) and Joan (Laura Linney) announce their divorce. This negatively affects their sons: 16-year-old Walt (Jesse Eisenberg) and his younger brother, Frank (Owen Kline). The rift between the family worsens when Bernard's pretentious intellectualism and Joan's newfound independence cause even more friction.
Bolstered by a semi-autobiographical lens that draws from Baumbach's own childhood and the efforts of producer Wes Anderson, the 2005 film is unflinching in its tragicomic approach to its story. It's an honest portrayal of the messiness of divorce, fully embracing awkward and unfiltered moments experienced by its unlikable characters. The Squid and the Whale's often quirky and subtle humor may alienate most viewers, but any fan of similar intimate and character-driven portraits of imperfect families should add this one to their watchlist.

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3 underrated movies on Amazon Prime Video you need to watch in March 2025
Several workers with bags standing in a remote location looking scared in Severance.

What makes a movie underrated? It might be that critics have panned the film even though it has earned massive box office success and positive reception from audiences. Perhaps it’s the other way around, and critics love it, but audiences fail to see what’s so special. Some underrated movies are fantastic but simply didn’t get the attention they deserved and have slipped into the deep depths of streaming services, only to be unearthed by those who dare to find them.
The three underrated movies on Amazon Prime Video you need to watch in March 2025 fall into varying categories that qualify the movies as underrated. One broke records, yet critics refuse to give it two thumbs up. Another shares its name with one of the hottest shows streaming right now.
Need more recommendations? Then check out the best new movies to stream this week, the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, the best movies on Amazon Prime Video, the best movies on Max, and the best movies on Disney+.
The Super Mario Bros. Movie (2023)
The Super Mario Bros. Movie | Official Trailer

Even before it premiered, The Super Mario Bros. Movie was getting a lot of flak for the choice of Chris Pratt as the voice of the titular character. Following the debut of this adventure comedy film in theaters, critics still weren’t convinced that it was a hit. But The Super Mario Bros. Movie delighted fans and proved naysayers wrong.
The film explored an interesting dynamic whereby Bowser (Jack Black) was a softie with a deep love for Princess Peach (Anya Taylor-Joy). Of course, this brought us that lovely gem of a Peaches song that kids sang for weeks after. The movie's mixed reviews are no match for its tremendous box office success, not to mention the fact that it broke a Guinness World Record to become the highest-grossing movie based on a video game and became the first movie based on a video game to gross more than $1 billion. It’s incredible to learn that with all these huge numbers, The Super Mario Bros. Movie only has a 59% Rotten Tomatoes critics score.
Watch The Super Mario Bros. Movie on Amazon Prime Video. 
Severance (2006)
Severance (2006) Trailer | Danny Dyer | Laura Harris

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3 great free movies to stream this weekend (February 28-March 2)
The cast of The Hurt Locker.

It's Oscars weekend for Hollywood. After a long awards season, it culminates at the 97th Academy Awards on March 2. Will Anora complete its Cinderella story with a win for Best Picture? Will Adrien Brody join the rare two-time Best Actor club, or can Timothée Chalamet become the youngest winner in the category's history? Tune in Sunday night to see who wins.
This week's article about free movies to stream is about the Academy Awards. The three movies below all received Oscar nominations. Our picks include a sports biopic, a harrowing war film, and a David Fincher thriller. Note: All three movies will be available on Tubi on March 1.
We also have guides to the best new movies to stream, the best movies on Netflix, the best movies on Hulu, the best movies on Amazon Prime Video, the best movies on Max, and the best movies on Disney+.
I, Tonya (2017)

For those around in the early 1990s, the rivalry between Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan was must-see TV. The conflict reached a boiling point after the infamous attack on Kerrigan and the subsequent investigation that tarnished Harding's reputation. This notorious scenario is played out in I, Tonya, Craig Gillespie's underrated biopic.
Harding (Margot Robbie) grows up as the daughter of an abusive mother, LaVona Golden (Allison Janney). As she reaches her teen years, Tonya becomes one of the best skaters in the world and trains for the Winter Olympics. Then, Tonya meets her future husband, Jeff Gillooly (Sebastian), changing the rest of her life. I, Tonya depicts Harding as a tragic figure in this surprisingly effective biopic, backed by tremendous performances from Robbie and Janney, the latter winning the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress.

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