







Peter Sellers carries more roles in this film than some slackers could count.
This along with Barry Lyndon are my favourite Kubrick pair of films. Making good use of classical music it has a nice opening sequence and is relaxing and is darkly funny from start to finish.
Yes the effects may be a little dated but we get to see "Voice of Vader" James Earl Jones in his first main supporting role even if Slim Pickens steals the show as daddy war bucks. Really this is a half a dozen set film and has a relatively cheap feel now, but like Blackadder II and beyond it punches above its weight.
The main blink and you'll miss it plot development is about Flouridation, male menopause and the disenfranchise of old generals. But there is food for thought too as the Nazi's willingness to please no one but themselves triumphs over monogamy at the end.
Shame they never included food fight scene in the war room. I'm sure that would have been great!
PS Dr Strangelove is based upon John von Neumann and Werhner von Braun; a pair of Mephistophelean side kicks if ever there were any!
Director Stanley Kubrick's masterpiece satirical comedy about the horrors of nuclear war. Painfully funny mostly because of the hilarious three performances by Peter Sellers who plays an ubër polite RAF officer, the frustrated yet hapless US President and the titular Dr Strangelove, the President's scientific advisor with a dark nazi past. If you watch carefully you'll notice other cast members suppressing their laughter in some of Seller's scenes. The film makes fun of the Cold War and the nuclear arms race positing that mistakes could happen and yet everyone will jump around trying to deny such mistakes. Here an insane US Airforce General (Sterling Hayden), obsessed with protecting his vital bodily fluids from communist influence, has his bombers sent to bomb the USSR. The President finds that he can't stop it and is advised to take advantage of the situation to proceed with the attack, a position pushed by the manic General Turgidson (George C. Scott) and the sinister Dr Strangelove. With a cracking support cast including Keenan Wynn, Slim Pickens (who gets a final iconic cinematic scene), James Earl Jones in his film debut and British actor Peter Bull as the Soviet Ambassador this is a film that never fails to give more and more. The laughs come thick and fast and often found in the smallest of details. It's endlessly quotable too with famous lines like "You can't fight in here, this is the war room". The magic here is that the film could just as well have been a serious one but the caricatures become believable and the conflict between the military and the politicians reminiscent of events that even resonate today. Overall this is one of the great film comedies. A wonderful film, clever, intelligent and uproariously funny. It's a must see.
It’s one thing to satirise the Cold War, another entirely to dance merrily on the brink of nuclear annihilation. Kubrick manages both, and makes it look easy. Each viewing reveals another sly. Joke or a deadpan gem, all pitched with the precision of Slim Pickens riding that atomic bomb. Peter Sellers is having the time of his life in a triple performance, but George C. Scott’s gurning general almost steals the show, forever torn between outrage and childish glee.
The scary brilliance is that the film feels more relevant with every passing year; its absurdities barely exaggerated next to modern headlines. This is black comedy sharpened to a razor’s edge—no matter how often I watch it, I find myself nervously laughing at how easily humanity can trip over its own stupidity. It’s hilarious, bleak, and frighteningly clever, the sort of comedy that can only be made by someone deadly serious. If the apocalypse does come, at least we’ll have a damn good chuckle first.