In frustration, Lewis Rothschild (Michael J. Fox) smacks a can of Diet Coke across the room. At one time, Michael J. Fox was a spokesperson for Pepsi Co.
One of the few rare PG-13 movies allowed to keep its PG-13 rating despite the use of the word "fuck" three times (all within 15 minutes of each other), but none used in sexual context.
During one of his many visits to the White House, director Rob Reiner spent two consecutive days with President Bill Clinton, following him around as he went through his day.
Camp David is strictly off-limits to the public and the media. The production designer used someone's personal snapshots from the Richard Nixon Era and a lot of imagination when designing the set.
The last shot of the film where President Shepherd walks into the House of Representatives to give his State of the Union address was actually shot on a sound-stage with Michael Douglas walking an aisle with seats filled with extras on each side, set against bare blue plywood walls.
The main theme, by composer Marc Shaiman, can often be heard in the queue area of the attraction, Soarin' Over California, in Disney's California Adventure. The theme was also used as the background music in ABC television's coverage of President Ronald Reagan's funeral.
The music President Shepard and Ms. Wade dance to is the song "I Have Dreamed" from musical "The King and I" with music by Richard Rodgers and lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II. Ironically, Sydney had previously stated she had no intention of "Whistl[ing] a happy tune" (another King and I reference) when led by their President.
Before the movie starting shooting, Michael J. Fox was still keeping his Parkinson's disease a secret. He felt he would lose the role if Rob Reiner found out. During a basic and routine fitness screening, Fox was terrified that clinicians would detect the periodic shaking in his left hand and eventually connect it to Parkinson's. Fortunately for Fox, he took his medication in time to quell the shaking and the test amounted to nothing more than checking heart rate and blood pressure.
Produced by Rob Reiner's production company, Castle Rock Entertainment, which is named for a small town appearing in many works by Stephen King and the film adaptations thereof. It was the location of Reiner's own film Stand by Me, but this was not the first film to feature the town. It previously appeared in Cujo and The Dead Zone. The latter film featured Martin Sheen as a future Presidential candidate.