Saturday, June 06, 2026

My 1964 Oscar Ballot

We are officially hitting our 33rd My Oscar Ballot, which given that we just had the 98th Academy Awards, I am officially also a third done with this project (for the uninitiated, there are links to all of my past contests at the bottom of this article).  If you missed it, we already did the 1964 Oscar Viewing Project, where I see all of the films that Oscar nominated, but this is my turn-where I turn the tables and pick the films that I most liked from 1964, seeing dozens of films above-and-beyond the Oscar Viewing Project.  While I see all of the Oscar-cited films, I don't (and can't) see all of the films (I'd never finish the project if I did...hell, I'd never finish 1964 if I did), and so if there's one title missing below, make sure to ask in the comments before assuming I'm committing a massive snub.

This is the first year of the 1960's I've done (we now only have the 1920's & 1950's left in terms of decades I haven't hit, the former a year I suspect we won't get to for a very long time as I plan on ending the series with 1927-28, so 1929 is my only option, and the latter we should get to later this year after I complete our next two years, 1990 & 1985).  Given the 60's is a transitional decade for Hollywood, I'm kind of glad I'm leading with one of the quintessential transition years for Oscar, with sturdy studio system fare like My Fair Lady competing against chic, groundbreaking work like Dr. Strangelove.  Overall, I like both of these styles, and free from the shackles of having to prove myself either cool or supportive of the system (I always make these decisions in a vacuum, as that's the whole point of the My Ballot project-to pick solely based on who is best without consideration of spreading-the-wealth or taking into account an artist's personal life), I ended up nominating both.  This is definitely a list that I feel is cooler than Oscar; you'll see films from filmmakers as cutting edge at the time as Sergio Leone, Masahiro Shinoda, & Jean-Luc Godard), but also features some Hollywood fare, including genre pictures (horror, westerns, & even rock-n-roll show up below).  You also will see first-time nominations for several major Hollywood stars like Ingrid Bergman, Audrey Hepburn, & Jimmy Stewart, starting off their My Ballot run but undoubtedly not getting their only citation.

Note about eligibility: Oscar played far faster and looser with his rules in the 1960's & 70's, which resulted in several movies being nominated in two separate years, including several in 1964: The Umbrellas of Cherbourg & Women in the Dunes.  The rule when this happens (in place by me) is that I will nominate the year that they received the bulk of their nominations, which in both cases is 1965.  So while both of these movies (today) feel more like "1964" movies in common parlance, they will not show up below because they're 1965.  The same is true for other films that sometimes feel like 1964 movies, but were nominated exclusively in 1965 (The Train & Kwaidan being the examples that stick out most in my brain).  On the flip side, a film like Marriage-Italian Style which was cited in 1964 for Best Actress but for Foreign Language Film in 1965 at the Oscars is eligible in 1964.  For films that don't have Oscar nominations (so I match up to the OVP as much as possible), I stuck with the year they're associated most with, not necessarily their Oscar eligibility window (a good example of this is A Fistful of Dollars, which was not released in the United States until 1967, but is by pretty much everyone's definition a 1964 movie).  As ever, I largely stuck to Oscar's categories, but I didn't include a breakout of Black & White films, and I also have categories for Makeup & Dance Direction because I think both feel relevant so that my My Ballot as consistent as possible.

Picture

Band of Outsiders
Diary of a Chambermaid
Dr. Strangelove (or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb)
A Fistful of Dollars
Goldfinger
A Hard Day's Night
Mary Poppins
My Fair Lady
Pale Flower
Seance on a Wet Afternoon

Gold: In a year where a lot of these films were just as much about mood as they were about plot or ideas, an unlikely picture fit that path more than anything.  A Hard Day's Night is indescribable, filled with four artists in their pop star god mode, forever untouchable and filled with youth and energy.
Silver: The surprisingly beautiful Dr. Strangelove, Stanley Kubrick's legendary, black-as-pitch comedy made at the height of the Cold War, is a testament to the follies of male supremacy (and the realities of male fragility).
Bronze: The start of Sergio Leone's most famed trilogy, A Fistful of Dollars, is as good as pretty much anything he's done (which is to say, yet another masterpiece in a career with an impossibly high batting average), a gorgeous western with an unknowable Clint Eastwood smack-dab in the center.

Director

Luis Bunuel, Diary of a Chambermaid
Stanley Kubrick, Dr. Strangelove
Sergio Leone, A Fistful of Dollars
Richard Lester, A Hard Day's Night
Masahiro Shinoda, Pale Flower

Gold: One of the things about making these in a vacuum is you get the sense of which people are going to get a LOT of medals, when you might have otherwise spread the wealth.  Of course, then you cannot properly identify the legends, which is what Stanley Kubrick (now on his third Director medal already, and his first gold...and he's only been eligible three times) is, giving us a taste of the paranoia (both ridiculous and terrifying) that ravaged the world in the 1960's.
Silver: Sergio Leone is also a favorite, and man is his work here exceptional.  The way that he crafts the legend of the west into an Italian setting, making you forget about the dubbing the visuals and storytelling are so compelling, is a miracle, and something he'd spend much of the rest of his career duplicating with success.
Bronze: The one director on this list I knew the least about is Masahiro Shinoda, but after Pale Flower you can bet  I added a half dozen of his films to my Letterboxd Watchlist immediately.  A sinful, seductive look at gambling and the criminal underworld in Japan in an era where their filmmakers were not just borrowing from film noir but sometimes eclipsing it.

Actor

Richard Attenborough, Diary of a Chambermaid
Richard Burton, Becket
Rex Harrison, My Fair Lady
Peter O'Toole, Becket
Peter Sellers, Dr. Strangelove

Gold: I mean, in some ways Peter Sellers is not playing with a fair deck.  Against a very good (and very Oscar-y, especially for this category) lineup, he has the advantage of not just playing one memorable character, but three.  But his comedic genius is so essential to the core of Dr. Strangelove, and its bizarre otherworldliness that even with just one role, he'd surely be at the top of this heap.
Silver: Becket features our first outing in the My Ballot with two of Oscar's most noted bridesmaids, and of the two I think I favor Peter O'Toole, who has a slightly bigger range as the King clearly in love with another man, but whose pride (and belief in his divinity) ensures that they will never be together as friend or more.
Bronze: Close behind O'Toole is Burton, though (I really liked Becket, way more than I was initially expecting).  Burton's work here is extraordinary; it's hard to nobly and convincingly play a doomed man as if he's not doomed, but he does it with an enormous, Shakespearean grace.

Actress

Julie Andrews, Mary Poppins
Ingrid Bergman, The Visit
Audrey Hepburn, My Fair Lady
Jeanne Moreau, Diary of a Chambermaid
Kim Stanley, Seance on a Wet Afternoon

Gold: There's always an internal wager I have about whether Best Actor or Best Actress will have the better lineup, and in 1964 I have to give it (slightly) to the ladies.  And so the actor that comes out on top is also the world's most famous nanny (or at least in that contest she's competing with herself), the charming and practically perfect Mary Poppins, played by the truly perfect Julie Andrews.
Silver: This means that in one of the most famous Oscar matchups that never was, I do pick Andrews over Audrey Hepburn's Eliza Doolittle, and yes it's the singing that probably breaks the tie.  But unlike Oscar I had the good sense to at least nominate her, as her charming, eventually enchanting flower girl is the stuff of breezy, effervescent movie magic.
Bronze: In a complete departure from these two musicals, we have Kim Stanley with the bronze.  Seance is one of those 1960's horror films that is truly creepy even today, and a big part of that is Stanley, who starts the film with us so confidence in our expectations of her, and then subtly moves away from them, us not knowing all that is beneath the surface until she's ready to reveal.

Supporting Actor

Georges Geret, Diary of a Chambermaid
Sterling Hayden, Dr. Strangelove
Stanley Holloway, My Fair Lady
George C. Scott, Dr. Strangelove
James Stewart, Cheyenne Autumn

Gold: He might not be willing to accept, but George C. Scott gets the gold here for his totally unhinged portrayal of bravado and machismo in Dr. Strangelove.  I love the way that the film is perpetually poking fun at him, but he never lets on, making the joke that much better (and more realistic).
Silver: In one of the weirdest nominations I've done, we have Jimmy Stewart's first citation (coming from a movie that is almost never name-checked as one of his best.  But while the rest of Cheyenne Autumn is just okay, the way that he plays his hilarious, fumblingly awesome Wyatt Earp steals the picture (and contains the promise of a better one).
Bronze: The political underbelly of Diary of a Chambermaid is where its genius lies, and you can't have that genius without the work of Georges Geret in the critical role of Joseph, the fascist chauffeur who is treated by those around him as a joke...even though he seems himself as very real.

Supporting Actress

Diane Baker, Marnie
Glynis Johns, Mary Poppins
Angela Lansbury, Dear Heart
Ann Sothern, The Best Man
Ann Sothern, Lady in a Cage

Gold: Unlike Oscar (used to), I actually allow myself the ability to give actors multiple nominations in the same category, and in this case that double nominee comes out on top.  Ann Sothern's work in Lady in a Cage is something else-a woman who has "seen it all"...but she's never seen this.  
Silver: Diane Baker, decades before Hannibal Lecter loved her suit, is the quintessential definition of a Supporting Actress nominee, playing a woman on the edge of a relationship, one with secrets & ulterior motives, yet as trapped as anyone in Marnie by what's to come.
Bronze: At the time, there was a lot of Oscar buzz for Sothern in both of these roles-it's bonkers she didn't get in for one of them.  We're finishing the acting field out with her here, with The Best Man in a showy role (that, weirdly enough, I saw her fellow nominee Angela Lansbury play on stage), one that gets her a look at both the unusual role that women were (and weren't) allowed to play in politics of the 1960's.

Adapted Screenplay

Becket
Diary of a Chambermaid
Dr. Strangelove
Mary Poppins
Seance on a Wet Afternoon

Gold: I tend to favor plotting, which this film admittedly has, more than simply dialogue or quotes when it comes to deciding which scripts I'm going to favor.  But man, you can't deny the endlessly quotable lines of Dr. Strangelove.  Whether it's "you can't fight in here...it's the War Room!" or Sterling Hayden's deranged monologues, it's a movie you can always trot out at dinner parties.
Silver: But if we're going to go with plotting, you can't go wrong with Diary of a Chambermaid.  Years before the (very different) Cabaret, the movie inspires it (and borrows to some degree from Rules of the Game) to create a taut, sophisticated mystery that is also a cautionary tale.
Bronze: Seance on a Wet Afternoon gets much of its power from its twists, the way that it plays with our expectations of these two kidnappers, and what they are up to as the picture moves us into uncomfortable conversations about grief, greed, and the power balance in marriage.

Original Screenplay

A Hard Day's Night
The Naked Kiss
One Potato, Two Potato
Pale Flower
Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow

Gold: By 1964, film noir had basically drowned in Hollywood, and we were a few years away from Arthur Penn & Roman Polanski creating it for a new generation of moviegoers.  So it was left to the international cinema, and in particular Japan, to carry that torch, which it does beautifully in the dreamy Pale Flower.
Silver: On-paper A Hard Day's Night is no one's definition of a writerly film.  Indeed, the movie at times reads like a quasi-documentary, following John, Paul, George, & Ringo around as they are mobbed by screaming fans.  But that's the greatness of Alun Owen's script-he makes you feel like you're actually spending time with a charming, engulfing rock band...so much so that it feels like it's not scripted.
Bronze: A now-forgotten look at biracial marriage in the 1960's, One Potato, Two Potato eschews many of the pitfalls of an "issues" film by giving us realistic depictions of love, acceptance, race, and the cruelties of having a child who can't understand any of them...even if she has to live them.

Sound Mixing

Fail Safe
A Hard Day's Night
Mary Poppins
My Fair Lady
Seance on a Wet Afternoon

Gold: I say this too often in these write-ups for it to feel true anymore, but I don't just automatically default to musicals when it comes to this category (something Oscar frequently did), but with these nominees (and medalists) we're going to get a shocking amount of musicals.  The first is My Fair Lady, which has not only grand orchestral work, but also perhaps the most seamless case of dubbing in the history of cinema with Marni Nixon.
Silver: Blending the screaming hoards & classic pop ballads, A Hard Day's Night is able to craft something truly magical.  We get a sense of them performing this both in person and clearly in recording, which is not an easy task, and it feels authentically true even in the comedic bits, where you are organically pulled in through the sound of the era.
Bronze: We're finishing with one more musical (I wasn't kidding), and of course in this case it's a situation where we're putting sound on top of visual effects on top of the sounds of a studio lot London, all to bring the magic together for Mary Poppins.

Sound Editing

Dr. Strangelove
Fail Safe
Goldfinger
A Hard Day's Night
Mary Poppins

Gold: The tech gadgetry in all James Bond movies is a large part of why 007 has stayed iconic long after Sean Connery's heyday.  You see that in the action set pieces, and the most thrilling of scenes (such as the laser work) that couldn't be possible without the sound editing team carrying the day in the background.
Silver: As I said above, the genius of A Hard Day's Night is the freshness of the film, the way that it blends in pre-existing recordings (like these brilliant songs), to make something that resembles at once a musical and a pioneering music video.
Bronze: Nuclear explosions, tense plane conversations, and Slim Pickens riding a warhead into oblivion, Dr. Strangelove is heightened by what it's aurally putting into the viewers ears.  The omnipresence of sound in some scenes while we get a pin-drop in others mirrors the world's thoughts on the Cold War...that it's always there, but could stop at any moment (and not in a good way).

Score

A Fistful of Dollars
Marnie
Mary Poppins
The Pink Panther
Seance on a Wet Afternoon

Gold: Being iconic doesn't automatically equal that you are good.  A lot of icons are middling (just look at a good chunk of the history of pop music).  But in the case of Henry Mancini's delicious, smooth-as-silk jazz odes in The Pink Panther, it's a case where the hype is quickly lived up to-an absolutely outstanding mix of playfulness and mystery.
Silver: The music of Ennio Morricone in the westerns he made with Sergio Leone are amongst some of the best ever committed to celluloid, and that doesn't end in A Fistful of Dollars.  Glorious, paired with the wide expanse of the cinematography, everything about this film is creating its own mythology.
Bronze: Like Oscar, I'm occasionally a bit of a snob when it comes to musicals in this category-I have a Best Scoring category we can get to in a minute, and let's face it-most scores borrow so heavily from the original tunes that it's hard to really justify them getting into this category.  But color me delighted that Mary Poppins has a wonderfully spry, winsome bit of music to bridge all of those ditties.

Scoring

A Hard Day's Night
Mary Poppins
My Fair Lady

Gold: Maybe the most inevitable trio I've ever pulled together (certainly in this category), we have three all-timers just jockeying over position on the medal stand.  In this case, I'm going to give the gold to My Fair Lady, the only one without an original ballad, mostly because I think it does such a ravishing job of incorporating the music, and we have two iconic, juxtaposed singing styles between the heavenly Marni Nixon and the speak-sing cleverness of Rex Harrison.
Silver: That said, you'd be hard-pressed to have a movie with the kind of soundtrack that A Hard Day's Night pulls together.  Seriously-pulling out just an endless litany of Beatles' classics, most of them coming onto your screen for the first time in this picture...it's musical heaven.
Bronze: We conclude with what is surely the strongest bronze medalist in this article.  The thing about the songs of Mary Poppins is that they feel filled with wonder and wisdom.  Wonderful tunes like "Tuppence of a Bag" and "A Spoonful of Sugar" have the element of observation, something that sets Mary Poppins apart as a character.

Dance Direction

Mary Poppins
My Fair Lady
Viva Las Vegas

Gold: Mary gets her revenge in this one, though, as she glides to a gold medal.  The dance direction here isn't just Julie Andrews & Dick van Dyke sailing across a smoky English skyline, but also the insane visual effects on display to get them realistically dancing with animated penguins and plopping along through Disney's imagination.
Silver: My Fair Lady isn't a musical you'd automatically name-check as filled with a lot of dance numbers.  Harrison & Hepburn are not Astaire & Rogers.  But that doesn't negate the moments of whimsy here as Hepburn floats from room to room (as she could've, indeed, "danced all night"), or her signature ballroom moment-of-triumph later in the picture.
Bronze: We're getting back to that word "iconic" with our bronze medalist, and the gloriously choreographed dancing between Elvis Presley (who is pretty good) and Ann-Margret (who is revolutionary and basically inventing a new generation of swinging hips and thrusts that even Elvis can't compete with) in Viva Las Vegas.

Original Song

"Can't Buy Me Love," A Hard Day's Night
"Goldfinger," Goldfinger
"A Hard Day's Night," A Hard Day's Night
"A House is Not a Home," A House is Not a Home
"If I Fell," A Hard Day's Night

Gold: This category is CRAZY.  I mean-I have original tunes by Elvis Presley AND an entire classic Disney score I'm somehow leaving out, but whom do you cut?  Certainly not "If I Fell," one of the best and most gorgeously melancholy love tunes that ever came from the Fab Four.
Silver: Only peak Beatles could disrupt Shirley Bassey, ensuring you know there are a lot of notes out there and she's going to sing them all, in the opening medley of the signature Bond tune, "Goldfinger."  It's an unending crescendo, going up, up, up until it erupts with "he loves GOOOOOOOOOOLD!"
Bronze: We end with a second Beatles song, in this case me picking "Can't Buy Me Love" over A Hard Day's Night's title track, mostly because I feel like, even more than that song, it captures the fizzy youth of the picture, and what sets it apart as the most celebrated of the Beatles' multiple movies.

Art Direction

Becket
Dr. Strangelove
My Fair Lady
What a Way to Go!
Zulu

Gold: Realism is overrated.  It's pretty clear that My Fair Lady is shot on a soundstage, and that scenes like the Ascot Opening Day or Eliza walking down the streets of London are not actually being constructed in the real-world.  That they feel that way, that heightened sense of discovery, is because of the art directors, giving us exquisite detail and color to transport us into Eliza's universe.
Silver: I mean, when you have Cecil Beaton constructing towering odes to different men, you're going to end up with something spectacular.  The design and scale of What a Way to Go! is what makes it stand apart-sure it's funny, but it also has a marvelous sense of space & scale, reflecting each character succinctly because that's the only way the picture will work.
Bronze: The iconic war room is honestly enough to nominate Dr. Strangelove on its own.  The cold, impersonal use of space here is really an achievement-it's meant, even in its funniest moments, to remind you that we are closed off (think of how often these scenes, save for the war room, seem small in comparison to its scale).

Cinematography

Cheyenne Autumn
A Fistful of Dollars
I Am Cuba
Marnie
Red Desert

Gold: A Fistful of Dollars changed the way that we looked at westerns (and you can see that in comparing it to the nearly-as-strong bronze medalist here, the latter very much a product of the studio system lensing of the new frontier).  It doesn't really matter that this is very visibly not Mexico, but instead Spain.  The wide Techniscope expanses, giving us endless landscape, alternating with the close-ups on Clint Eastwood's enigmatic visage...it's perfect, and created the spaghetti western.
Silver: Maybe the tightest contest this year between Gold & Silver, I Am Cuba is a film that kind of has to be seen to be believed.  Gorgeous, ethereal looks at Havana and the rest of the Cuban countryside, the film's propaganda origins do not bely the fact that the camerawork (daring, modern, singular) is amongst the best of the 1960's.
Bronze: Cheyenne Autumn is not just the last grand-scale John Ford western, but it's also the last really important look at the Monument Valley-adorned view of the west.  After this, everything would modernize, and so it's wonderful to see the homages to classic westerns like Stagecoach here against a glowing testament to location shooting and the gigantic way that Ford's films would inform movies.

Costume Design

Marnie
Mary Poppins
My Fair Lady
What a Way to Go!
Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow

Gold: It's not just about Audrey Hepburn's big hat...though that's not not what it is.  My Fair Lady is a gorgeous tapestry of Cecil Beaton masterpieces, taking the most glamorous movie star of her era, and putting her in an endless series of perfectly designed, sample size dresses that inform her ascension...all the way to that giant hat.
Silver: Again, it's not just the scene where Shirley MacLaine shows up in a gigantic hot pink fake fur with matching hair...though that is the best outfit in this movie.  Indeed, Shirley has never looked more sensational, and the way that she uses her character's assimilation into the lives of men while still keeping some sense of herself, it's yet another example of how good at this Edith Head was.
Bronze: Another film where the lead actress had a signature look, but it's only part of the conversation.  I mean, you have that perfectly tailored blue suit, but you also get a sense of Mary's attitude toward (regimented) fun with her white-and-red dress to go into a world of make-believe, or the lovely looks of all of the Banks family, carefully-constructed but exterior.

Film Editing

Band of Outsiders
Fail Safe
A Fistful of Dollars
A Hard Day's Night
Pale Flower

Gold: The manic energy of A Hard Day's Night is what makes it work.  The film intersperses fictionalized versions of real people, singing the real songs that made them famous, while also giving us characters that don't really exist.  All of that has to be spliced together with a series of great musical numbers, ones that will inspire countless radio plays & record sales.  That no one else has done this this well is a testament to how tight this movie plays.
Silver: Were it not for the dubbing (which is not great), A Fistful of Dollars probably lands the top spot here.  The movie takes an absurdly handsome & rugged Clint Eastwood, and has him in near constant crescendo, even if (in terms of characterization), we learn next-to-nothing about him as a human being.
Bronze: For me, the biggest reason to love Pale Flower are the gambling scenes.  The movie's editing is what's driving that, with us genuinely wondering not just who is going to win.  Even if you know none of the rules of Hanafuda (which I didn't), you're still glued to what's happening, and letting the cutaways tell you exactly who is winning.

Makeup & Hairstyling

7 Faces of Dr. Lao
Lady in a Cage
Marnie
The Night Walker
Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow

Gold: I have long said that I am totally open to giving this award to pretty people being pretty if it's unique & interesting (unlike Oscar, who tends to favor prosthetics and making things ugly), and that's definitely the case with Marnie.  The movie's hairstyling, overly-done and obsessively perfect patrician looks for actors like Tippi Hedren & Diane Baker gives it one of Hitchcock's most heightened aesthetic.
Silver: Sophia Loren, forever glamorous, inhabits three different women in Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow, and while she's always Sophia, the makeup team informs so much about the way that her characters treat themselves, giving her a strong chance to actually distinguish between the three.
Bronze: I''m ending a bit more in Oscar's wheelhouse, and very much in the world of prosthetics and actorly transformations.  The racial politics of this movie makes giving it a medal a bit problematic, I will own, but in terms of creation, you have truly stupendous figures (like Medusa) that are spellbinding makeup effects.

Visual Effects

7 Faces of Dr. Lao
First Men in the Moon
Goldfinger
Mary Poppins
Robinson Crusoe on Mars

Gold: Mary Poppins wasn't the first film to use a sodium screen (The Birds had done it the year before), but it's definitely the film that perfected it, giving us a new technology that continued to keep Disney (already the best game in town for visual effects) at the forefront of technology, with Julie Andrews & Dick van Dyke blending beautifully into animated worlds.
Silver: If Mary Poppins was a down payment on the future of this category, Goldfinger was showing what it could do at its peak in 1964.  A combination of miniature work, and practical effects (think of the laser sequence with Sean Connery pinned to the table, inches away from death both literally and figuratively without the men behind this category), it's one of the best action films of the 1960's for a reason.
Bronze: Our final medalist is here both because of the shocking realism of the effects, particularly toward the end of the film (though they are throughout), but also because of the way that Ray Harryhausen's creations & characters litter through First Men in the Moon with impressive stature.

Other My Oscar Ballots: 1931, 1948, 1957, 1972, 1981, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025

Monday, June 01, 2026

Saturdays with the Stars: Bruce Lee

Each month of 2026 we are looking at an actor or actress who found their fame in action films, fighting bad guys & saving the day.  Last month, we spoke about Steve McQueen, one of the quintessential figures of New Hollywood, and maybe the ultimate "cool guy" of the era.  With June, we are nearing the halfway point of our year, and also nearing uncharted waters.  In the first six seasons of Saturdays with the Stars, we would occasionally sneak in actors who would make films post-1975, when New Hollywood began to make way for the Blockbuster Era.  This season, though, we will be spending the entire back-half of the year with six actors that (though some made films before 1975) almost exclusively led movies in the post-Jaws era, most of them still working today.  So as a dividing line between the two, we're going to talk about a man who would fit neither of these positions, primarily because his best-known work is not in Hollywood, but in Hong Kong, where he would become less an action movie star and more a living deity, someone whose death at just 32 would enshrine him in a type of immortality that only a few actors ever achieved.  This month's star is Bruce Lee.

Born Lee Jun-fan, Bruce Lee is different than a number of our other stars in the past few months as he felt more at home in entertainment.  The son of an opera singer, he was born not in Hong Kong but in San Francisco while his father was touring with a stage company in Chinatown.  His mother's ethnicity has invited a lot of debate through the years (it is likely that she was biracial), and Lee was appearing in films as early as 1941, just a year after his birth, in bit parts due to his father's connections to cinema.  As a teenager, he began to study martial arts under Ip Man, one of the most storied martial arts grandmasters of the 20th Century, which led to him both becoming a skilled fighter and having run-in's with the law, eventually fighting members of crime families that led his parents to ship him to the United States (as he was born in San Francisco, he was eligible for US citizenship).  For much of the decade, Lee alternated between teaching martial arts and acting in random Hollywood productions that would make use of his fighting skills, specifically as Kato in The Green Hornet, the American production he is most known for today.

Lee is an interesting star, because in many ways his career mirrors that of James Dean, of someone who was incredibly famous in his life, but because of his young death (and the celebration of his movies that followed), he became an icon in a way he wasn't in life.  As we'll talk about this month, most of Lee's most well-known films like Enter the Dragon (adjusted for inflation, one of the most profitable films ever made) and Game of Death came out after he died.  We'll discuss that, and how these films in many ways caused Lee's acting career to appear bigger than it probably was, as well as talk a bit about his death, which more than 50 years later, is still surrounded in conspiracy & enigma.

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Assessing the Democratic Tea Party

This blog is old (if you look far enough back, you'll find posts that go back over 20 years), but I only started writing regularly on it in 2012.  That means that, for the large part, I avoided most of the Tea Party movement that sprung up in the GOP during the Obama administration.  I have talked about this a lot, but essentially for those unfamiliar-the Tea Party movement, championed by figures like Sarah Palin & Glenn Beck, had Republicans essentially going after establishment or more traditionally moderate-to-conservative figures and supporting incendiary pols in the party, ones who were less general election-friendly, but appealed to a base that could not understand the appeal of President Obama.  Ultimately, this led to the 2016 election and the MAGA movement, which would elect Donald Trump to two terms in the White House.  But in its infancy, the Tea Party movement was shorthand for a gift to the Democrats.  In 2010 & 2012, five Senate races (in Nevada, Colorado, Delaware, Indiana, & Missouri) saw establishment figures, including long-time incumbent Richard Lugar, lose their primaries and in the general election, saw winnable seats go to the Democrats.  This was a big part of how the Democrats held the Senate for six of the eight years that Barack Obama was president...through mistakes made by the Republicans.

Until 2026, while Democrats have seen House races go poorly or be forfeited because of a left-wing candidate ousting a House member and then losing the general (most specifically OR-5 in 2022 and NE-2 in 2018, where wins by Reps. Kurt Schrader & Brad Ashford likely make those seats blue), mostly they've avoided this, even with the rise of a stronger left-wing.  Figures like Zohran Mamdani, Ilhan Omar, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, & Rashida Tlaib represent a leftist viewpoint on the national stage, but due to coming from deep blue seats, they all have kept these seats in Democratic hands.  This year, though, four races have come to the forefront that feel like they are truly serving as a harbinger of a Tea Party for the Democrats, complete with sacrificing winnable races (during a wave election) that could mean disastrous consequences, specifically for control of the US Senate.  I wanted to profile these races, and my read on both how likely it is that we get a truly bad candidate, and if they can win even with clear issues with their candidacy.

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms (D-GA)
Georgia Governor

The Moderate Candidate: Jason Esteves & Geoff Duncan
The Far Left Candidate: Keisha Lance Bottoms
Their Credentials: This race is actually over, as Bottoms already won the primary (which is not yet the case for the remaining three contests), but for posterity Bottoms is a former Mayor of Atlanta, while Esteves is a State Senator and Duncan a former Lieutenant Governor (and former Republican).
What's the Problem?: Georgia has not elected a Democratic governor since 1998, and not because we've run total gadflies.  In fact, we've run decent candidates multiple times, but the state (even as they've shown a willingness to elect a Democrat to the US Senate) simply doesn't seem capable of going blue for the State House.  That felt like it was going to change this year, as both Esteves & Duncan have the sort of moderate profile that Raphael Warnock, Joe Biden, & Jon Ossoff used to get to victory in the Peach State.  But Bottoms won, and with her came a tumultuous time as Mayor of Atlanta (including spikes in crime, as well as a dip in popularity during the Covid shutdowns).  Bottoms is considerably more liberal than any of the three men I just name-checked, and would be the most liberal Governor of Georgia...ever?  Additionally, big city mayors generally struggle to win governor's races, and that's really her only calling card.
Can She Win?: Unlike the other candidates here, Bottoms' problems are more aesthetic/political than ingrained into her campaign (she is easily the most talented of the candidates in terms of ability).  She's actually run a successful major campaign before, and has been better about trying to unite Democrats, joining quickly with Jon Ossoff (who is expected to win) to try and ride his coattails to a victory.  The Republicans are also making a calculated error in a blue-trending state with a run-to-the-right primary runoff.  I think Bottoms might be able to ride the tide and become the first Black woman to ever be governor in November, even if I will own that Esteves or Duncan would be the heavy frontrunner by now while she's in a tossup race.

Graham Platner (D-ME)
Maine Senate

The Moderate Candidate: Janet Mills
The Far Left Candidate: Graham Platner
Their Credentials: Mills is a former two-term Attorney General and two-term Governor, the only Democrat to win statewide in Maine in over a decade.  Platner is an oyster farmer and a Marine veteran of the Iraq War & War in Afghanistan.
What's the Problem?: We have talked ad nauseam about Platner, and my distaste for his campaign here, but suffice it to say he is not ready for primetime, and was badly vetted before entering the race.  He has a history of racist, sexist, & politically damning rhetoric online, has voted multiple times for the woman, Susan Collins, he's now attacking (in many cases for things she did before he stopped voting for her), and as was revealed this weekend, maintained a dating app and romantic correspondence with 6-12 women during the early years of his marriage (which, I'll be honest, were in the past few years as Platner hasn't yet been married three years yet, so this is shockingly recent history and proof he appears to have cheated on his wife for most of his marriage).  Platner has maintained a healthy lead in the polls, to the point that Mills is not technically a candidate even though she's still on the ballot & has refused to endorse Platner yet, but with all of this fire, it seems inevitable that Collins (who is smart) hasn't shared the worst yet (keep in mind that not a single of the dozens of Republicans who ran against Donald Trump found the Access Hollywood video before he was the nominee...Collins likely has stuff Mills didn't).  For example, what was contained in those correspondences with potentially as many as a dozen women (including, theoretically, sexually explicit material or photographs) have not come to light yet...but certainly will given Collins' impressive election skills.
Can He Win?: Maybe, but I'm doubtful.  Polls show he can, and this might be a case where Maine voters (loathsome of Trump) want to send a message, and this is the only way they can.  I've maintained on this blog for some time that Collins likely would've lost had her race against Sara Gideon been in 2018 instead of 2020.  But Platner's candidacy is toxic, and he has done nothing to win over Collins voters; while Platner can win solely with Democratic voters (Biden & Harris both won Maine), he'll still need about 40-70k voters who voted for Collins in at least one of her 2008/14/20 races, and are therefore comfortable with splitting their votes if he wants to win.  It's hard not to look at the mountain of scandals that have engulfed Platner, and not think that Collins is saving the body blow for when it's too late for Platner to drop out (in the same way Claire McCaskill did to Todd Akin in 2012), and will be able to use that to keep those Biden/Collins & Harris/Collins voters on her side one last time.

Health Director Abdul el-Sayed (D-MI)
Michigan Senate

The Moderate Candidate: Haley Stevens...but also Mallory McMorrow
The Far Left Candidate: Abdul el-Sayed...but also Mallory McMorrow
Their Credentials: Stevens is a 4-term US congresswoman, while McMorrow is a State Senator (since 2019) and el-Sayed briefly served as Wayne County health director, as well as ran for governor in 2018.
What's the Problem?: This is a weird race because it started with a very clear differential between Stevens (viewed by many as the moderate, including Chuck Schumer who has not been shy about his preference for her candidacy) and McMorrow/el-Sayed, both of whom are from the left of the party.  But the far left itself seems to have coalesced around el-Sayed, leaving Stevens getting much of the moderate wing and McMorrow in a bizarre position where she has voters from across the spectrum.  This is in part because McMorrow is objectively the best candidate in terms of actual quality (she's relatable, good in a debate, and would be a national figure pretty quickly if she won), but also at this point it's clear that McMorrow and Stevens are splitting their vote, and polling shows certainly Stevens (and probably McMorrow) could win in 2026, whereas el-Sayed does the worst against Mike Rogers.
Can He Win?: No, I do not think el-Sayed can win this race.  Stevens has shown herself to be abysmal on the campaign trail, and McMorrow has not handled some controversy over old social media posts super well, but both are going to beat Mike Rogers in a wave election.  Michigan is too blue, and they are not controversial enough, to actually lose here, particularly against a guy who just lost a Senate race.  But el-Sayed's support of Defund the Police, his embrace of controversial figures like Hasan Piker, and his statements about the death of Ayatollah Khamenei all add up to a candidate that is not ready for primetime, and that can be easily attacked by the Republicans.  If he wins the primary, Mike Rogers would be the heavy favorite to flip this seat in November.

State Rep. Francesca Hong (D-WI)
Wisconsin Governor

The Moderate Candidate: Sara Rodriguez
The Far Left Candidate: Francesca Hong...and also Mandela Barnes
Their Credentials: Rodriguez & Barnes both served as lieutenant governor, with Barnes giving up the seat when he ran for the US Senate (unsuccessfully) in 2022.  Hong is a state representative first elected in 2020.
What's the Problem?: Hong is the most obvious problem here.  She's a Democratic socialist, one who has pushed to abolish the police, and even has espoused getting rid of the prison system entirely.  In a state as moderate as Wisconsin, this is tantamount to political suicide, and makes her totally unelectable.  I know this in part because of Mandela Barnes' embrace of the Defund the Police movement in 2022.  Hong is actually doing some favors to Barnes in the primary, in part making him look more moderate by comparison, but it's hard not to remember that while figures like John Fetterman, Raphael Warnock, & Mark Kelly were winning tough races in a theoretically red wave in 2022, Barnes lost to Ron Johnson, the only major Senate race that the Dems couldn't sink the basket on that cycle.  Rodriguez, who is polling in third right now (in an under-polled race, so it's hard to get a read if she's really that bad) is the clear moderate choice and would be able to beat Tom Tiffany & hold this seat...but again, she's in third, and it seems unlikely that the powers-that-be are going to try and save her.  It should be noted that Milwaukee County Executive David Crowley is also running, but unlikely to win and will probably play spoiler.
Can She Win?: Hong cannot-if she wins, Tiffany will flip the governor's mansion, and Evers strategically-timed retirement (similar to Gary Peters' above) will look like foolishness.  Barnes is slightly different-it's not clear whether this is a case of the Democrats being able to ride a weak candidate in a better cycle (like, say, John Thune or Dave McCormick for the Republicans) and get a win here, or if he's also totally toxic.  I wouldn't say this is a lost cause if he were to win, but I do think it makes it much harder than it would be with Rodriguez.

Saturday, May 30, 2026

OVP: The Towering Inferno (1974)

Film: The Towering Inferno (1974)
Stars: Steve McQueen, Paul Newman, William Holden, Faye Dunaway, Fred Astaire, Susan Blakely, Richard Chamberlain, Jennifer Jones, OJ Simpson, Robert Vaughn, Robert Wagner, Susan Flannery, Jack Collins
Director: John Guillermin
Oscar History: 7 nominations/3 wins (Best Picture, Supporting Actor-Fred Astaire, Art Direction, Cinematography*, Film Editing*, Score, Song, Sound)
Snap Judgment Ranking: 2/5 stars

Each month, as part of our 2026 Saturdays with the Stars series, we are looking at the men & women who created the Boom!-Pow!-Bang! action films that would come to dominate the Blockbuster Era of cinema.  This month, our focus is on Steve McQueen: click here to learn more about Mr. McQueen (and why I picked him), and click here for other Saturdays with the Stars articles.

Steve McQueen's career hit its financial peak in 1974, when he starred with Paul Newman in today's film The Towering Inferno.  At this point, Newman & McQueen were two of the biggest names in movies, and there were quite a few arguments over who would get top billing in the picture (ultimately it was a draw, with McQueen's name first but Newman's name higher), but after this both would suffer career lulls.  Newman would rebound eventually in the 1980's with films like The Verdict and The Color of Money, the latter winning him his only competitive Oscar, but McQueen would never regain this position.  He'd make an ill-fated Ibsen film in 1978 (one that would basically disappear from public consciousness), and then a pair of pictures in 1980 (Tom Horn and The Hunter), both decent-sized hits that might have hallmarked a comeback, but that wasn't to be.  Just over three months after the release of The Hunter, Steve McQueen would be dead.

(Spoilers Ahead) But before we get into that, let's get into the height of his career, at least commercially.  The Towering Inferno was a landmark movie in terms of its box office in 1974.  In the previous years, films like Airport and The Poseidon Adventure had found a formula for success-put a bunch of famous stars, including at least a few studio system legends that can scoop up a supporting acting Oscar nomination, and place them in an insane disaster situation, one that will have at least a few of them die, but the audience can look on in horror as we wonder who from this insanely-stacked call sheet might be safe.  This film is no less than these, and arguably has the starriest cast  of the bunch, but is much more in the vein of Airport (which I did not enjoy) than The Poseidon Adventure (which I did enjoy, in large part due to Shelley Winters' solid work).  The film has the tallest building in the world on fire, and all of our characters, including architect Newman and firefighter McQueen, fighting to stay alive as more-and-more paths to the ground floor are forfeited.  Along the way, some live (including, surprisingly, conman Fred Astaire), and some die, most shockingly Jennifer Jones, who in a morbid twist would be flung from the top of a giant building in the movie two years before her daughter would commit suicide in exactly the same way.

If only the movie was any good.  Technically, this is impressive-the set design, effects, and especially the stunt work are out-of-this-world, but the film spends no time trying to develop the characters, giving us two-dimensional feats from genuinely talented actors.  It's not like someone like Faye Dunaway or Paul Newman can't add a bit of three-dimensionality to their work, but there's no call for it.  Our star of the month, Steve McQueen, feels almost ancillary to the plot of the picture even as he's supposed to be the hero.  Fred Astaire would receive his only competitive acting Oscar nomination for this movie, and man is it unnecessary-he barely has anything to do, other than shout for a dead Jennifer Jones toward the end of the picture.  It feels weird to live in a world where Fred Astaire (whom I love) never got a competitive acting nomination, but, like...over John Cazale in The Godfather, Part II or John Huston in Chinatown...let's not be ridiculous here.

As I said above, Steve McQueen would disappear from movies after this, having a bit of a nomad period where he just went out into the country in a motor home, in the process turning down parts in Close Encounters of the Third Kind and Apocalypse Now that might've dramatically changed his legacy.  But his health by the late 1970's was in terrible shape, and he developed mesothelioma (likely due to asbestos exposure from his time in the Marines).  The National Enquirer, at that point most famous for its ongoing coverage of the death of Elvis Presley rather than the right-wing attack ads that it would become known for to modern supermarket shoppers, broke the story that McQueen was dying shortly before his death (he'd been trying to keep it a secret), and McQueen attempted a number of experimental procedures, including a surgery to remove a tumor from his liver in Mexico, a procedure he couldn't have performed in the United States because no doctor would do it (since it would kill him).  12 hours into the surgery, the American doctors were proven correct, and Steve McQueen died at the age of only 50 from a heart attack.

Next month, we're going to talk about a man who was good friends with McQueen, even if they also had something of a professional rivalry during McQueen's early stardom.  Like McQueen, he also would die young, but unlike McQueen, that death would cement his legacy in a way that would in many ways outlast any films he made in life...and would become the source of near constant conspiracy theory in the decades to come, in ways that would haunt his family for generations.

Le Mans (1971)

Film: Le Mans (1971)
Stars: Steve McQueen, Siegfried Rauch, Elga Andersen
Director: Lee H. Katzin
Oscar History: No nominations
Snap Judgment Ranking: 2/5 stars

Each month, as part of our 2026 Saturdays with the Stars series, we are looking at the men & women who created the Boom!-Pow!-Bang! action films that would come to dominate the Blockbuster Era of cinema.  This month, our focus is on Steve McQueen: click here to learn more about Mr. McQueen (and why I picked him), and click here for other Saturdays with the Stars articles.

There are a long history of actors who largely got bored with being movie stars, and spent huge swaths of their careers basically just doing movie stardom as a side hustle.  Marlon Brando, Jean Seberg, Jane Fonda, & Sean Penn all clearly wished they could be full-time activists, rather than movie stars themselves.  Orson Welles spent his peak stardom years running across the country doing magic shows with Rita Hayworth & Marlene Dietrich.  Hedy Lamarr may have had the oddest side hustle, essentially inventing GPS.  For Steve McQueen, the coolest of movie stars, that side hustle was race-car driving, the coolest of sports.  McQueen frequently competed in car & motorcycle racing tournaments, and would incorporate his love of stunt driving into his films like Bullitt and The Great Escape.  No film, though, encapsulated his love of it quite like Le Mans, an expensive fictionalization of the famed French endurance car race that has been fictionalized in recent films like Ford v. Ferrari and Gran Turismo.

(Spoilers Ahead) Le Mans is a weird film to summarize, in part because it's not really a movie with a traditional narrative.  The film is about Michael Delaney (McQueen), who is about to race the 24 hours of Le Mans when he sees the widow Lisa (Andersen) of a driver that died in the previous year's tournament, and has flashbacks to the crash of his former competitor, whose death Lisa holds him responsible for.  This is one of several storylines that are told in an almost cross-plot anthology-style bit of storytelling, with everyone underlining the intoxicating nature of the 24 Hours of Le Mans, and how it is seen as one of the pinnacles of athletics, and how important it is for their sponsor (Porsche) to get a 1-2 finish that will make the company look like the fastest car in the world.

The movie is weird, though, because for long stretches of it nothing happens.  This is, I'm going to be honest, also my reaction to car-racing in general (I am not the audience for this picture), but I was struck throughout it that it was meant to be melancholy and almost Malick-esque before Malick was even a thing.  We get extended sequences with wordless dialogue, and not just looking at cars passing each other on a track...it's also random stares between Andersen & McQueen, which might be cribbed from a French New Wave picture if you're being generous, but in reality feels more so like they didn't know how to put a story in here, and the whole goal of the film is to watch Steve McQueen sexily driving around cars the average audience member couldn't even buy if they sold their house.

That being said, on a technical level this film works really well.  The editing, sound work, cinematography, and especially the stunt driving are top notch.  When you have the film in the throes of competition, especially toward the end, it really draws you in and you can almost get why people will literally watch a car drive for 24 hours on their television each year.  But those documentary-style touches (including footage from actual Le Mans races), are more interesting in a technical capacity, and only hold your attention for so long.

Saturday, May 16, 2026

OVP: The Reivers (1969)

Film: The Reivers (1969)
Stars: Steve McQueen, Sharon Farrell, Mitch Vogel, Rupert Crosse, Juano Hernandez, Burgess Meredith
Director: Mark Rydell
Oscar History: 2 nominations (Best Supporting Actor-Rupert Crosse, Score)
Snap Judgment Ranking: 2/5 stars

Each month, as part of our 2026 Saturdays with the Stars series, we are looking at the men & women who created the Boom!-Pow!-Bang! action films that would come to dominate the Blockbuster Era of cinema.  This month, our focus is on Steve McQueen: click here to learn more about Mr. McQueen (and why I picked him), and click here for other Saturdays with the Stars articles.

Steve McQueen, fitting of a man synonymous with both a sex symbol persona and a cool guy elusiveness, had both a lot of romantic conquests in his life as well as not a lot of press about them, save for his marriage to 1970's superstar actress Ali MacGraw, whom he costarred with in 1972's The Getaway (which I'd already seen, hence why it's not the movie today) and which spanned most of MacGraw's time as a major box office draw post-Love Story.  McQueen, though, would marry three times, including model Barbara Minty very late in his life (they were married less than a year before his death), and would have affairs with Mamie van Doren & Lauren Hutton.  But fitting a man whose onscreen personas rarely are ones that a "woman can tame," none of these relationships really defined his career in the way that Joanne Woodward's relationship with his peer Paul Newman would (or Warren Beatty's legendary bed-hopping would until he married Annette Bening).  

(Spoilers Ahead) I bring this up because the movie we're watching today is something of an outlier in McQueen's career.  The Reivers, based on a work by William Faulkner, is a tale of the South (like all of Faulkner's stories), but one with very little complicated plot and were it not for the presence of McQueen (then a massive star in a way the studio couldn't afford) and the presence of a bordello, there are moments in this that have the vibes of a Disney film, with an unlikely parental guardian in Boon (McQueen) looking after young Ned (Vogel), taking him on an adventure through the countryside along with their friend Ned (Crosse) in a bright yellow 1904 Winton Flyer.  The film itself has multiple chapters, but not a lot of common thread, and is told through a rose-colored nostalgic narration by Burgess Meredith, who plays a grown Ned through voiceover.

McQueen's part here is really uninteresting.  He's not doing anything special-this doesn't have the direness of Cincinnati Kid or the sophistication of Thomas Crown, and doesn't have the gravitas of a western (which McQueen would make three of during his run as a leading man, most notably The Magnificent Seven which we covered for a past season of this series with Yul Brynner).  His Boon is a cad, a likable one, but one who treats his prostitute girlfriend Corrie (Farrell) like garbage, even though he does end up marrying her in the end.  There's nothing really here-it's just blank space, and like I said, were it not for the heavy subject matter, lends itself to the two-dimensional drift of a live-action Disney movie at this time.

The film is notable for its two Oscar nominations, which is a big reason why I picked this one.  Rupert Crosse would become the first Black man to be nominated for Best Supporting Actor for this film (Sidney Poitier at this point had gotten two nominations in the lead category, but no Black person had somehow gotten into Supporting Actor).  His performance is just fine though-he in many ways has a scene-stealing role, but his performance doesn't have enough presence to really steal the scenes away from McQueen even on easy mode, and he likely got the nomination based on a late scene in the movie where he faces off against a racist Southerner.  Crosse would die relatively soon after this nomination from lung cancer, and really this is his only notable role.

The other nomination is from John Williams for Best Score.  Williams' work here is really fun (in many ways it feels like it's paying homage to Aaron Copland, which is not something you would oftentimes say about Williams, and proof of his versatility as a composer).  Williams was still in his Oscar infancy here, getting only his second nomination, and he had yet to win (that wouldn't happen for two more years), but it's also fun to think about the pre-Spielberg years given between this and his even better work in The Cowboys, he was doing a lot more playful stuff onscreen.  He correctly lost to Butch Cassidy, but it's fun to finally see one of his earliest nominations.

Friday, May 15, 2026

Denise Powell and the Quest for 100 House Democratic Women

Denise Powell (D-NE)
This past week, in something of an upset, political consultant and Democratic activist Denise Powell pulled off a win over State Sen. John Cavanugh in the race for Nebraska's 2nd congressional district.  Powell, who was running mildly to Cavanaugh's right in the primary, was able to run a rather savvy campaign (on honestly a night where smart politics was winning in the Cornhusker State (the state also managed to get a clear one-on-one race for Dan Osborn's independent Senate bid) focusing on Cavanaugh's ability to stop redistricting in the state legislature (we'll get to a redistricting article shortly, but I haven't had the time to manage it).

Powell's win also puts her in a good position to be elected to Congress this fall.  Given the strong blue wave built off of a sluggish economy & unpopular war, an open-seat district that went for Kamala Harris by 4-points is going to be a sincere challenge for the Republicans to maintain.  Her win, taking the seat of Rep. Don Bacon also helps the math on not just a House majority, but also an historic benchmark that the party could well reach this fall, and something I wanted to talk about: getting 100 Democratic women into the US House.

For those who don't know, at one point (until the 1970's), the number of women in both House caucuses were roughly equal.  Democrats tended to have slightly more overall, but generally it was close to 50/50.  While the 1970's provided a sugar high (in large part due to the Democrats' support for the ERA), it wasn't until the wake of the Clarence Thomas hearings that the share of women in the House was always favored to the Democrats.  Since the start of the Clinton administration, the only times that the share has dipped below 65% were in the wake of the deeply red years of 1994 and 2004.  After the 2018 midterms, a reaction in many ways to the Women's March and the Trump administration, at least 70% of the House women have been Democrats every Congress.

All of this is to say that while at the start of this Congress there were only 30 Republican women (just under 14% of the caucus), over 44% of the House Democrats were women, a grand total of 97, just three shy of 100.  In that time, two women (Mikie Sherrill & Sheila Cherifilus-McCormick) have resigned while two women (Analilia Mejia & Adelita Grijalva) have since been elected.  Though there are a handful of openings, I find it unlikely the stars will align enough to ensure that the Democrats get to 100 before November.  After November, though, it's a different game, which we'll check out today by breaking out into four different categories.

Rep. Kathy Castor (D-FL)
1. Vulnerable Democratic Incumbent Women

It's worth noting that, in a normal year, we'd largely be sticking to no women in this category for Democrats.  Trump is wildly unpopular, and honestly with the 2024 maps, any Democrat that won probably also wins the general election.  This includes people like Nellie Pou, Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, Laura Gillen, & Susie Lee, who saw Trump perform well in their districts in 2024.

But there was a lot of mid-decade redistricting, honestly to the point where I struggle to keep up, and that has left a handful of women in the lurch.  With the new lines, it seems probable that both Kathy Castor & Marcy Kaptur will be in the toughest races they've faced in a while, and both would be extremely vulnerable for reelection.  Julie Johnson is sure to win her seat if she wins her primary, which is no guarantee against former Rep. Colin Allred (Jasmine Crockett won this seat in her Senate primary even as she lost the state).  The Florida redraw that endangered Kathy Castor might also cost either Lois Frankel or Debbie Wasserman Schultz their seats, though the musical chairs here makes me think that they're both probably going to stay on, and the vulnerable Democrats are going to be Castor, Darren Soto, and Cherifilus-McCormick's seat going to Wasserman Schultz.  There's still a real possibility that they redraw Alabama to the point where Shomari Figures & Terri Sewell are in a member vs. member race...but I would assume Sewell's long history in the state would deliver it for her.

There will likely be at least a couple of vulnerable incumbents to primaries (Frederica Wilson, should she run, would be toward the top of the list given her age & health), so let's assume from this bucket that the Democrats lose four seats from their 97 (for example Castor, Kaptur, Cherifilus-McCormick, & Johnson) and that they'll need a net gain of 7 in our next three to hit 100.

State Rep. Jacqui Irwin (D-CA)
2. Open Seat Democrats

There are currently 21 retiring incumbent members of the 215 Democratic House caucus members (not counting delegates); there is also the seats of David Scott & Eric Swalwell, bringing this total to 23 given Scott has passed away and Swalwell has resigned.  Of those leaving office, nine are women, so this would bring us down to 84 House members.  But of course, at least some of the 23 seats will be filled by women.

We know, for example, that of the 5 open seats in Illinois (all safely blue) 3/5 of them have nominated a Democratic woman, for a net gain of one.  In the remaining 18 seats, only two (CA-14 & CA-26) seem like very clear paths for women to win.  There are 6 seats where Democratic women have a path (sometimes a good one) with a quality candidate already running for the office (CA-11, MN-2, NH-1, NJ-12, NY-7, & GA-13).  But even if we assume that women take 6 of these 8 seats, that would still leave the Democratic women down three here, bringing them down to 90 as currently none of the other remaining seats that are open are likely to go to Democratic women, as either there's a clear Democratic man who is the frontrunner (or in some cases, already the nominee) for the seat, or these are seats that were impacted by redistricting where a Democratic man will be replaced by a Republican.  So essentially to make this happen, Democratic women will need to net at least ten pickups to have a shot at 100.

LA County Chair Hilda Solis (D-CA)
3. Flip Opportunities (Redistricting)

Unless the Democrats are able to pull off a miracle in Virginia, let's assume the only state where Democrats have a clear shot at picking up due to mid-decade redistricting are in California (specifically the 1st, 6th, 41st, & 48th districts) and Utah's 1st district, all currently held by Republican men and all widely expected to be held by Democrats in January.

Utah will be a man (the only prominent Democratic woman in the race recently dropped out), but California will likely have a Democratic woman elected to the 41st (or the trickle down of this being that Linda Sanchez wins here and then Hilda Solis wins in the 38th...either way a net gain with Solis), and they have a solid option in the 6th & 48th, with the 1st probably headed to a Democratic man even if there is a Democratic woman in the race.  So let's assume here they get 2 more Democratic women, and we get back to 8 seats that need to be picked up in traditional Tossup seats.

Rep. Elaine Luria (D-VA)
4. Flip Opportunities (Pickups)

There are currently 20 seats held by Republicans that are considered Tossup/Lean D/Lean R by Larry Sabato's Crystal Ball.  In order for the Democratic women's caucus to hit 100 seats, they would need not just Dems to win in 8 of these seats, but they'd need to win with women.  That's a tall order, but not an impossible one.  Ten of these seats (AZ-6, IA-1, IA-3, NE-2, NJ-7, PA-8, PA-10, VA-1, VA-2, & WI-3) the Democratic woman is very clearly the frontrunner, and in six more (AZ-1, CA-22, CO-8, MI-7, MI-10, & NY-17) the Democrats have a prominent woman running.

Getting better news for Democrats, of the 6 seats that are considered Lean R (as opposed to Lean D/Tossup, much easier gets), only three (VA-1, PA-8 and NY-17) are ones where a woman isn't the clear or possible frontrunner (all of the others are men), and honestly I think that the Democrats are closer to Tossup for those seats than they are Lean R, especially NY-17.  If we assume a decent environment, one where, say 65% of these seats (or roughly 13/20 of these seats go to the Democrats), it's probable that we're looking at about 9 or so Democratic women flipping seats here...just enough to get them over the threshold.  As of today, unless redistricting throws further wrenches into the race (or the Democrats under-perform), I would wager that there will be 100 Democratic women in the US House come January.