George Pelecanos's Washington DC

George Pelecanos

George Pelecanos

Award-winning mystery writer George Pelecanos talks about why there are no good movies set his hometown, Washington DC.

George Pelecanos is a man of all trades: an independent-film producer, an essayist, the recipient of numerous international writing awards, a producer and an Emmy-nominated writer on the HBO hit series The Wire, and the author of a bestselling series of Washington, D.C.-set novels – his latest, The Turnaround, is new in stores from Little, Brown and Company. He also is a life-long Washingtonian. As a man who has seen the District of Columbia from so many different angles, we asked Pelecanos what he sees when he looks at the nation’s capital.

First off, to get the record straight, did you grow up in Washington or Silver Spring?

I grew up in both. When I was young I lived in Mt. Pleasant, and then we moved to Silver Spring, but right over the district line. It was very easy to take a bus anywhere, and later a subway, to see movies.

Your dad ran a diner in Washington?

Yes. Our neighborhood was blue-collar and working class, and most of my friends were ethnic, and their dads worked the kind of jobs my dad did.

What were the first movies that you remember?

The ones that were most influential to me in the ’60s when I was a kid were the hyper-macho gun-shooting movies. The first one that blew me away was The Dirty Dozen. My dad took me to it, and that was at the Town Theater at 13th and York. It wasn’t a palace but it had huge auditorium. There were a lot of beautiful theaters -- the Loews Palace, the Trans-Lux Theater -- where I saw the James Bond films and the Sergio Leone films. A year later the riots happened and all of that started going away. And by the ’70s all of those places were either shuttered or torn down.

When you were a boy, did the Washington you saw in films resemble the Washington you knew?

Not at all. The movies made in Washington were not about the living city or the working-class city that I knew. They were always about the federal government or the Pentagon – some guy with his finger on the red button. It was a world that never touched me or my friends and family. There have only been a few films dealing with the real Washington, but they weren’t very good. One was Good to Go. Chris Blackwell tried to break go-go, our local music, the way he broke reggae [in The Harder They Come]. The songs that you would know are those of the godfather of go-go, Chuck Brown and his Soul Searchers. “Bustin’ Loose” was his big one. When Spike Lee made School Daze, he put E.U.’s “Da Butt” on the sound track. Chris Blackwell tried to make a movie about go-go, and what did he do? He cast Art Garfunkel in the lead. Go-go is black music for black teenagers, and he put the whitest guy in a movie about black culture. D.C. Cab only shot a little here, some second-unit stuff. But it was never right. It was supposed to have been filmed at the Georgetown Metro station, but there is no Georgetown metro station.

Ben's Chili Bowl

Ben's Chili Bowl

Are they any films that capture the Federal Washington?

There are certainly some good local films, many of those films from the early ’60s, but they were all filmed on sets. To my mind there is no D.C. film. Interestingly we had one of the strongest art-house audiences in the country here. There was one place in particular, the Circle Theater on Pennsylvania Avenue, that showed a double feature every day, and they changed it every two days. For fifty cents and then later a dollar you could get your film education.

I ended up working for those guys who ran the place, Jim and Ted Pedas. They eventually had eight screens around the city. Then they decided they might try their hand at distribution. They found [the Coen Brothers’ first film] Blood Simple at a film festival and bought it for distribution. They also immediately signed up with the Coen Brothers to produce their next three films, which were Raising Arizona, Miller’s Crossing, and Barton Fink. I went to work with them when they were making Miller’s Crossing. I had read in the trades that they had bought John Woo’s The Killer for U.S. distribution. I had seen that film at a film festival, and I was really jacked up about it. So I went to them and told them, “I want to work for you guys in helping to distribute this film and any other foreign films in the United States.” And after that I was producing films with them. We produced some films that were distributed by Sony Pictures Classics: Caught, which was directed by Robert Young, and a film called Whatever by Susan Skoog. From 1990 to 1999, I was in the independent film world but out of Washington.

So when did you start writing mysteries?

About 1989. I was writing books during my off hours.

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