With Election Day over, it's a fine time for exhausted voters to kick back and pop in a movie about elections and the U.S. presidency.
And when you do, what will you find? African-American presidents. Female vice presidents. Heated campaigns, scrappy politics, negative advertising. Barack Obama's victory was one for the history books, but movies got there first. For several decades now, filmmakers have pictured such a twist on the executive branch, filling the screen with charismatic U.S. leaders of assorted shapes and colors.
This list isn't comprehensive, but it suggests a few clear themes. The first reflects a common fear that any African-American who makes it to the White House is in danger of being assassinated. The second is a tendency, pronounced among mega-budget disaster films, to feature a black president in times of global calamity. And a third is the fact that African-Americans and women more frequently assume power in the realm of science fiction, where authors often imagine what humankind has yet to achieve.
"Rufus Jones for President" (1933)
The premise: Small African-American boy runs for president, sparking satire, fabulous music and discomfiting watermelon stereotypes. The politician: Rufus Jones, a toe-tapping tyke in a double-breasted suit, played by 7-year-old Sammy Davis Jr.
"The Man" (1972)
The premise: A freak building collapse kills the president and Speaker of the House. The vice president, who's old and frail, declines the presidency. The politician: Douglass Dilman (James Earl Jones), the Senate president pro tempore who gets bumped into the hot seat.
"Air Force One" (1997)