@@LearningaboutMovies I'm glad you liked that, and if not so many young people are not watching, it is a shame, as it has so many quotable lines in it! That and the idea of a doomsday weapon the Soviets keep secret because...it's a secret?! I can see why the president was irritated, LOL. Just a fun film to watch over and over, to the point my two teens are into it now.
@noname-bk7bc3 жыл бұрын
He'll see the big board!!!
@rakeemkoroma2398 Жыл бұрын
@@williamcurry4606 dw i’m in my early 20s and I love Kubrick’s films and watching analysis videos on them, always trying to learn! I hope you believe the younger generation can make a difference ❤️
@TheDailyMemesShow Жыл бұрын
I will definitely watch it this weekend thanks 👍
@Visitor2Earth2 жыл бұрын
"Peace Is Our Profession" was the real, actual motto of SAC (Stratgic Air Command). It was created by SAC's first commander, General Curtin LeMay.
@mikejennen31172 жыл бұрын
I was going to point that out. You said it perfectly. Former SAC Boom Operator here.
@tonyc9452 жыл бұрын
Of course the better motto is "Peace through Strength" Roosevelt and Reagan implicitly understood that.
@No1gangster5 ай бұрын
"Peace is our profession. War is only a hobby." This was the secret motto among enlisted men in SAC. I say secret because if the brass ever heard you say it, you might end up immediately transferred to Burpleson Air Force Base!
@OroborusFMA3 ай бұрын
LeMay was a maniac. Leaving aside his firebombing campaign against Japan (which at least was after the last US declaration of war) he pressured JFK to bomb Cuba during the Cuban Missile Crisis - which would have led to a nuclear holocaust in the United States.
@mybachhertzbaud30743 ай бұрын
Although his name was "Curtis", Perhaps for a whole lot of people ,would say Curtains might be more accurate.😜
@gregmattson22382 жыл бұрын
ok, disagree that this movie was simply mocking or had no ideas to solve it. Its like the ultimate hactivist product. Like hactivists which try to break into computer systems to show those system owners that it is possible and to force them to fix it, this movie really stuck it to the military industrial complex saying that they needed to fix their systems as well - and really hammered the point home that we only get one chance at this, that one 'single slip-up' is enough to doom us all. As a result, the government in the US (and probably other governments) really took it to heart. They changed their codes for launch from 000000, instituted tight controls on who could fire them (lower level echelon commanders), instituted dual key and triple key systems, etc. etc. etc We may have survived intact because of this movie, full stop. So Kubrick really did a big public service here by making it.
@LearningaboutMovies2 жыл бұрын
good point, thank you.
@propstano1 Жыл бұрын
"This is it, boys? Nuc'lr combat toe to to with the rooskies!!"
@guccimanlips3 жыл бұрын
Just watched this yesterday. As a gen z film watcher this is my 2nd favorite Kubrick behind Eyes Wide Shut.
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
excellent, thank you.
@anakinsolo45294 ай бұрын
The first view it’s a war drama, next view it’s some perverse view of politics, the third view it’s a comedy and by the fourth view it’s the funniest movie ever made. This movie has aged better than any. Kubrick got the best movie in every genre. Guy is a god in film. No one touches him
@alanwatson42493 жыл бұрын
Peter Sellers a great comedian - he had a really good grasp of the absurd. Sterling Hayden is a favourite actor - so good and a good man who saw through Hollywood - 'The Killing'.
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
yes!
@alanwatson42493 жыл бұрын
@@LearningaboutMovies The film supposedly had the effect of the USA and Russians initiating even stronger failsafe mechanisms than those already in place.
@lukeconzo3 жыл бұрын
Probably my all-time favorite film.
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
excellent!
@jaym42903 жыл бұрын
Yes same here
@SoupLagoon3 жыл бұрын
Love this movie. I wish more modern/younger audiences were aware of it. The story may seem dated or irrelevant now, but the themes are timeless. While Paths of Glory is probably my favorite Kubrick movie, Dr Strangelove is definitely a close 2nd. (I will admit that 2001 is probably his best movie, it’s just not my favorite).
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
I agree.
@NoahSpurrier3 жыл бұрын
Everyone forgets Barry Lyndon.
@larceon50593 жыл бұрын
Imo a clockwork orange is his best but he really only makes good movies everything he puts out I’m a fan of
@donrickles8452 жыл бұрын
@@NoahSpurrier it’s a great movie. I saw it twice in a week and while long, was very goid
@swankybutters83712 жыл бұрын
Nothing, and I mean no movie ever, in the history of movies, is as good as Dr Strangelove... None... Full Metal Jacket is a good second place...
@australiasfirstmate1556 Жыл бұрын
I watch it twice a year on CD and watched it in the cinema 60 years ago as it made me feel "safe," and not be in so much "fear" of nuclear war because of the satirical nature of the topic by Kubrick. The film made people "lighten up" about atomic war and "the bomb!"
@pokor5791 Жыл бұрын
This movie and Fail Safe should be a double feature to show the thoughts of people in the 50s and 60s. Both movies are about the same thing but take very different approaches. Both came out the year I was born and I never really understood the attitudes from the time, these really put it into perspective.
@jimslancio5 ай бұрын
Question for discussion: as a double feature, in what order would you present these two movies?
@pokor57915 ай бұрын
@@jimslancio If you really want the most impact, I would say Strangelove and then Failsafe, ending without laughs will do that. Although either order is good viewing. For pure comedy gold, there is another double. Enter The Dragon and the sub-movie of Kentucky Fried Movie called A Fist Full Of Yen. If you watch Fist first you will laugh and be someone confused but laugh uncontrollably at Enter. Watching Enter first you won't laugh but you might piss yourself laughing watching Fist.
@anakinsolo45294 ай бұрын
Holden, Scott, Sellers,Sellers,Sellers! Wow! you’ll never see a triumphant like that again! And that’s 5 characters. The levels of impressive that this movie is are insurmountable
@noname-bk7bc3 жыл бұрын
This is in the conversation when I think of my favorite movies of all time, and it's definitely one of my top three comedies of all time. Another great pick, thank you for the review. My wife is a millennial with very little history background, and she loves this movie Also, it's my favorite Kubrick movie. I think the Shining and Full Metal Jacket are stronger visually, but this is the far better movie
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
you're welcome.
@linkbiff10543 жыл бұрын
Yeah, this is one of Kubrick’s weakest looking films. But still a masterpiece
@jizzfreeficus3 жыл бұрын
What is funny about it? I just watched it and I chuckled maybe once.
@lukestone41643 жыл бұрын
@@jizzfreeficus it’s satire. if you can’t grasp what it is they’re making fun of, then you’re going to miss out on what is ‘funny’. it’s not the usual slapstick comedy with obvious jokes
@mrrrl7953 жыл бұрын
This is one of my favorite movies. It's amazing to think that this came out at the height of the Cold War and really highlighted how absurd it all was.
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
and still is. all that Russia-fear in the US recently was psy-ops stupidity.
@mrrrl7953 жыл бұрын
@@LearningaboutMovies dont even get me started on all the "RussiaGate" nonsense from the Trump administration. At this point, it borders on conspiracy theory that people believe to be true despite the findings of the Mueller Report.
@alanwatson42493 жыл бұрын
@@mrrrl795 Don't forget the dodgy MI5 involvement from us in the UK.
@aneubeck40532 жыл бұрын
@@alanwatson4249 and that shady company from Ukraine. Ever wonder why the us gives a rats rear end about Ukraine? It’s where all the corrupt us officials do their dirty work.
@josephpetrosino8029 Жыл бұрын
Good vid, except I so very strongly disagree with your opinion of a "happy ending". This movie is a warning, and that type of typical Hollywood ending would have wasted the significant opportunity to hit us over the head with the danger we all really do face. It clobbers the viewer into realizing this really can happen, and the hope is that this masterpiece can accomplish that.
@LearningaboutMovies Жыл бұрын
thank you
@HarborLockRoad Жыл бұрын
I am absolutely flabbergasted, NOBODY noticed the FIRST on screen appearance of James Earl Jones??? My god, how could you miss that voice???
@sfermigier3 ай бұрын
There are many deep themes in the movie, that go beyond mere satire, and are still relevant in 2024. To list just a few: The absurdity of war and deterrence strategies Technological determinism and loss of human control over systems Leadership, agency and bureaucratic failure Human fallibility and irrationality Nihilism and existential powerlessness Masculinity and power dynamics Ethical implications of survival and eugenics And ultimately, fragility of modern civilization
@ronggearrob96222 жыл бұрын
Thanks for reviewing, I love this film (and yes, I was born in the '60's). I do think it is Kubrick's masterpiece if nothing else other than Peter Sellers amazing performances. It has a lot going for it - great use of satire, well written, good pacing, excellent acting, beautifully shot (although still in that cold Kubrick way) and unfortunately still relevant. I've watched this film over and over again and never tire of it.
@LearningaboutMovies2 жыл бұрын
you're welcome.
@captlazer55092 жыл бұрын
Kubrick and the set designer Ken Adams had to show the US government where they got the interior designs of the B-52 because it was classified. It was some good guessing apparently.
@WoodgemanX Жыл бұрын
'Peace Is Our Profession' was the motto of SAC(Strategic Air Command).
@erikabimbo7555Ай бұрын
I just watched it a couple of days ago for the one thousandth time on YT. Free with ads. Great movie.
@billybaugus12492 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1986 and it's one of my favorite movies
@heidibarker9550 Жыл бұрын
Before I saw this film, I knew about the War Room line (one of the best lines in cinema history) I knew Dr. Strangelove was a former nazi and I knew about the infamous riding the bomb yahoo yahoo scene. The film was a bit different than I expected but I could still 'read' the film the way I had intended, and that it is a showcase of the madness that consumes the men whi have to make the decision of setting of these nuclear weapons and how these mass destructions will break the sanity of any human. We can't handle the act of killing that many people in just a push of the button.
@marshmarshall4619 Жыл бұрын
The fact that there is NO positive "feel good" way out of the MAD is THE strength of this movie - When Kubrick first started work on the screenplay, his original intention was to "play it straight" But he quickly realised that the MAD policy that supposedly existed between the US and the Soviets was complete lunacy and could only be played as a black humour satirical farce - All it needed was one loose screw and that loose screw portayed so brilliantly by Sterling Hayden was the Jack D Ripper character, who was in turn based on a real life **** general, Curtis Lemay - Lemay at one point seriously wanted to nuke 200 Russian Cities !! - Even on the Manhatten Project the scientists and military were not certain that there would not be a 100% certainty that exploding their bomb could cause a chain reaction that would in all probability blow up the world - They were only 80% sure that it wouldn't, leaving a 20% possibility that it could - But they went ahead with it anyway !! - So who is nuts ?? - Jack D Ripper, Curtis Lemay or the Manhatten Project crazies ?? - That is why this film is both hilarious and terrifying and brilliant - Because it COULD still happen...
@petem711814 күн бұрын
I seem to remember that Peter Sellers said that he was supposed to play another character in the movie but told Stanley Kubrick he couldn’t, I think it was Slim Pickens character that was the one Sellers was also asked to play….. however I think Slim nailed it for his character and his final scene….!
@thomasj8965 Жыл бұрын
Yes. It`s a masterpiece! It should be seen today by every person. To see the insanity we live in today. Peace on earth!
@michaelnaretto34096 ай бұрын
Slim Pickens character Major Kong comes across as a hayseed, but he is a very good pilot and knows his way around a B52.
@jimslancio5 ай бұрын
He played it straight, not knowing that the film would be a black comedy.
@robzilla7306 ай бұрын
This movie is even more relevant now than then...
@DylanMorisson2 ай бұрын
My dad was US Navy. Sub hunter patrol squadron during the Cold War. I'm a millennial but knowing what was going on not to long ago makes me still care.
@gregoryknox444411 ай бұрын
I grew up at Offutt AFB lol. Dad was a 28 year USAF Chief Master Sgt. I love the movie. I thought of it when I went to Nuclear Warfare School.
@jonhinson5701 Жыл бұрын
To me, Barry Lyndon is his masterpiece.
@dustin242311 ай бұрын
The Shining
@vivangreco17102 ай бұрын
This is a masterpiece. An absolutely perfect film.
@jezebel85513 ай бұрын
There are so many GREAT scenes in this movie. Peter Sellers, George C. Scott, Sterling Hayden and Slim Pickens (for the bomb ride alone!) were simply hilarious. To me it is the best comedy ever made. Nothing even comes close to it.
@jetjr1ussr2 жыл бұрын
With the "Cold War"/nuclear war annihilation, as a back drop theme for my childhood ( my father worked at Rocketdyne, in Neosho, Mo. where they built and test fired the Atlas rocket engines for ICBM's ) , "Dr. Strangelove" movie fascinated me. Growing up in the 1950's & 60's at school, Boy Scouts, TV, movies, Mad magazines, etc. all had reminders we lived under a nuclear war nightmare that at anytime could become a harsh reality that would make Nagasaki & Hiroshima look like a sneak preview of the main event. Today that harsh reality is even more present and possible. May God have mercy on us and our children. ( I posted this at another "Strangelove" commentary video )
@LearningaboutMovies2 жыл бұрын
thank you.
@Cosmicblast772 жыл бұрын
This movie is on my 10 best movies list of all time. Sellers is a genius.
@ChubbyChecker182Ай бұрын
Going to see the play version of it tomorrow... Steve Coogan is doijg the Peter Sellers roles.
@Asphodel27oneАй бұрын
I saw the play this week - outstanding!
@windalfalatar3333 жыл бұрын
I think you miss the point when you say that there needs to be an alternative to the realist or cynical inevitable conclusion of the film. That is the whole point. The movie is in equal measure a comedy and a tragedy. And if your recall the classical definition of a tragedy, that regardless of the actions of its participants the story will end in sadness, this is a case in point. Regardless of the best intentions of everyone (including Gen. Ripper) a nuclear annihilation is inevitable. Since this is realistic, the movie's insistence on the inevitable end without providing an alternative is what makes it poignant and true to our world.
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
I get that. And yet, no artist has come along with great solutions to present horrors. That is what I am wanting, and yes, I do wish more of Kubrick. He wasn't the person for that, which is fine.
@vivangreco17102 ай бұрын
"Hell, a fella could have a pretty good weekend in Vegas (Dallas) with all that stuff!"
@joelok48 Жыл бұрын
Kubrick's inescapable point is there is no way out of the arms race. He's obviously telling us that we are doomed. That is why the movie, even though a satire, is still terrifying today. Man has never failed to wage war with the latest and greatest weapons. The phrase "only one life to give for my country," is the fatal one in all human history.
@dougo8913 жыл бұрын
We must not allow a mineshaft gap!!.🤩🤩
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
Not even a gap gap!
@keshavlamsal69822 жыл бұрын
by looking ongoing situation of the russia and ukarine this movie totally relevant now
@jimslancio5 ай бұрын
One of my favorite moments is where the general asks if it's a "kraut" name, and the reply gives a German translation of "strange love."
@unreliablenarrator664925 күн бұрын
It is best to view Dr. Strangelove in contrast to Fail Safe - both released in 1964 with similar plots (subject of a lawsuit) both brilliant, one deadly serious and the other a brilliant parody. If you have not seen Fail Safe, watch it and then consider a re-take.
@fairybuddy-angel20353 жыл бұрын
There is no way to change or reform when you are hardwired into the military industrial complex, which is which by it remains in place decades after this. Kubrick was correct. If there was a way out Spielberg would have remade Dr Strangelove. A masterpiece from a maker of several masterpieces.
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
thank you.
@badguy5554 Жыл бұрын
B-52 crews, then, and still today, do not have the luxury of being able to ruminate over whether they should drop the "big one" or not. They are trained to react, when directed, to bomb their targets. (A former B-52 pilot.)
@LearningaboutMovies Жыл бұрын
interesting to use the word "luxury" when we are talking about planetary apocalypse.
@badguy5554 Жыл бұрын
@@LearningaboutMovies Being able to reflect on whether you should or should not drop a thermal nucler bomb that will likely kill millions of people IS a "luxury". A "luxury" that B-52 crews have neither the inclination or time to indulge in.
@randallmckinney51522 жыл бұрын
Read Daniel Ellsberg’s “Doomsday Machine-Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner” . He says it was more like a documentary.
@LearningaboutMovies2 жыл бұрын
yes, we know the movie depicts the imaginings of war-gamer planners, who thought they were being defensive and thoroughly preparatory. But when their imagined world is given to ordinary people, ala this movie, it does look insane. You could say that is one strong purpose of this movie, and a good one.
@OroborusFMA3 ай бұрын
What makes it great? "It would not be difficult mein fuhrer!"
@charleseskrigge82672 жыл бұрын
One of my favorite movies of all time
@nataliacruz62182 жыл бұрын
I watched this as a sophomore and definitely something still to worry about, they just don’t speak about it openly
@LearningaboutMovies2 жыл бұрын
There are many cold conflicts between countries that are armed. We're all hoping that rationality and the desire to be rich/free via trade will stave off the use of nukes. But, yes, it is a silent looming threat.
@wbiro4 ай бұрын
1964, and the movie has revealed that, though the technology has changed, the Russians have not changed in 60 years, and the Americans have only softened. That alone makes it a historically valuable movie. Then add the demonstrated perils of the nuclear age, the insightful monologues, and the timeless common sense (and Georve C. Scott's performance), and you have 'great'.
@phil69043 жыл бұрын
Another fantastic review. Thanks. The way in which the rationality (and morality) of human behaviour is distorted by their place in irrational structures, is exactly right, I think. The lack of a clear solution doesn’t bother me. Perhaps the only way out of a game you cannot win, is to stop playing? Still very relevant if a US President can ask ‘what’s the point having all these weapons if we never use them?’
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
thank you. yes, if they are still around, the likelihood is that they will be used.
@robertpearson8798 Жыл бұрын
It’s crucial that people realize that it’s a comedy before going in. Some seem to be unsure whether they should be laughing or not, at least at the first half of the film.
@theosoryuАй бұрын
I think it offers no alternative or solution because the film believes we are basically already in too deep. With all of these bombs on the earth there is no solution
@isntknow84365 ай бұрын
I think Kubrick not proposing an answer to critique is way more mature and responsible, there isn’t a rational proposal to correct individual rationality. We would have to exist in a hive mind to prevent that which is unattainable and would create its on issues if possible.
@ahguanchetok2 жыл бұрын
yes..it's getting more relevant today
@LearningaboutMovies2 жыл бұрын
it's true, and I really hate that it is true. Can't believe what I read yesterday regarding American political pundits floating the idea of "limited nuclear war."
@beerdrinker785911 ай бұрын
The movie is a Kubric master work! I love it!
@unreliablenarrator664910 ай бұрын
By not providing the solution you think it lacks, the film success to make you think.
@Mark_Ocain Жыл бұрын
One of the best movies ever made in my opinion. Sheer brilliance in black comedy.
@jarrowmarrow2 жыл бұрын
I read that many of the characters the movie portrayed where contemporary politicians serving office at the time it was released.
@LearningaboutMovies2 жыл бұрын
yeah, Curtis LeMay is the George C Scott character. He's worth looking up and reading about.
@ominous_melody22512 жыл бұрын
After Putin gave the N-threat, this movie becomes more relevant than ever.
@LearningaboutMovies2 жыл бұрын
yes, and very unfortunate that this is among the most relevant movies. surely Kubrick would wish that that weren't the case.
@49rango Жыл бұрын
The lack of concrete endings in Kubrick films is the whole point. It’s postmodern. There is no answer, there is no absolute truth. This is where we’re heading and there is no way to solve it. I think that’s his point
@joshuawoodson66202 жыл бұрын
I watched this movie yesterday for the second time and it was even better than the first. Easily my favorite Kubrick for sure.
@JM-et3et5 ай бұрын
I just saw thet movie for thet first time. Could someone explain a few things about it (mostly the ending)? I'm not trolling , I genuinely interested in understanding it. I didn' get why the last plane couldn't be stopped either with the code which was transmitted successfully, or shot down like the others? So then the bomb goes down and then the doomsday bomb is activated and the world is ending. Then the people in the last seconds of their lives discuss some sort of a fantasy plan, which I guess is meant to be ironic since the world is already ending? what is the russian doing in the end scene? some posts I read said he is activating the doomsday device himself, others say he had another spy camera, but since the world is ending, whats the point? or is that suppose to be another ironic sentiment? why is the movie called dr. Strangelove? the character gets very little screen time (mostly at the end)? I guess he is the one who is delivering the last joky narrative at the end of the movie, but I don't get why the whole movie is named after him. Also, why is the alternate title how i learned to love the bomb? and who is the "I" in the sentence? I did like the cinematic aspect of the film and the acting is great too but many people say its the funniest movie ever made, etc. and I'm still trying to figure it all out. Any help is greatly appreciated. 🙏🙏🙏.
@SP-nt4srАй бұрын
Who's here after KZbin made it free this week!?
@JRBeast-nw3xg Жыл бұрын
Our bodily fluids are pleased by this movie
@ontarioshooter90484 ай бұрын
I’m sorry too Dimitri.
@conureron37923 жыл бұрын
Always suggest this one to the movie reviewers on KZbin. “We” got one couple to do A Clockwork Orange, so I am guessing Dr Strangelove will soon follow!
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
thanks. perhaps I will tackle Clockwork Orange one day.
@Alpha-oo82 жыл бұрын
I haven’t watched this film, but I am a big fan of Peter Sellers. Wish he hadn’t been taken from us so soon. Died 14 years before I was born, so much wasted potential.
@Jerlynvins9 ай бұрын
Have you ever reviewed the 1963 movie Ladybug Ladybug. It is a frightening cold war film with a shocking final shot.
@LearningaboutMovies9 ай бұрын
no, though thanks for the recommendation.
@denizcansevercevirileri Жыл бұрын
you wont believe me but ive watched this movie with my 7 year old brother and he loved it!( i explained the notion on movie)
@Javaboymk032 жыл бұрын
As an international relations student, i can say that this is one of the lighter, more cynical way, to learn about international relations. At least on subjects about cold war era politics
@derekroberts66543 жыл бұрын
Recently just saw “Don’t Look Up” on Netflix… I immediately thought of this movie.
@NightmareCrab10 ай бұрын
not his masterwork, but one of the best films ever :) so basically Kubrick is one of the GOATS
@ghostrider26642 жыл бұрын
I'd say it's pretty damn relevant now wouldn't you
@LearningaboutMovies2 жыл бұрын
yes
@anitago2 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately still relevent, perhaps will be relevant till the end. And I love this movie, an absolute masterpiece.
@noneofyourbusiness29972 жыл бұрын
Have you seen 'Catch 22'? A brilliantly funny movie about the military industrial complex.
@LearningaboutMovies2 жыл бұрын
Have not seen the movie, though have read the book a couple of times. Do they set the movie in WW2?
@HeffyG Жыл бұрын
George C Scott walked so that Tim Robinson can run
@dennisesplin32853 жыл бұрын
Watch Peter Bull. The Soviet Ambassador. He resists the urge to laugh at Sellers manic Dr Strangelove. A an old friend of Sellers. He just keeps a straight face.
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
excellent, thank you.
@dennisesplin32853 жыл бұрын
@@LearningaboutMovies Thanks. Graham Stark. PS best mate. Woken midnight. New Ferrari. GS in Pink Panther films. Met him charity auction. Gent. BW.
@tykjenffs8 ай бұрын
Dr. Strangelove is the spiritual successor to Oppenheimer ^
@wengyap2683 жыл бұрын
I recall watching this movie when it came out in 1964, and have watched it again recently. Perhaps the lapse of time and the different social milieu from today made me remember the film as being better than it actually was. The context of the cold war, the anti-bomb protest movements and the Vietnam conflict- wrapped up in the military-industrial complex- provided a strong focus for the film’s clever satire, taken up by later directors of films such as Catch-22. The eponymous Dr Strangelove’s comical mimicking of Nazi-recruited NASA scientists and his promise of selective post-nuclear survival would now be described as a “great reset”- and as a figure- his contemporary counterpart might be found by anti-globalists in the form of the Teutonic Klaus Schwab, the head of the World Economic Forum. Tapping into the theme provided by cold war spy genres - notably Ian Fleming’s Dr No- Kubrick’s film provided a sober and relevant reminder of the dangers of miscalculations and folly that could unleash nuclear war. But it also provided a simpler though no less deadly scenario for international conflict in what was then a bipolar world dominated by USA and Russia, without the complexity and subversion of contemporary cyberwar ( including social media manipulation and identity politics aggression) and international terrorism. What continues to appeal are the film's stylistic qualities: the closeups of the characters, the unhurried ironic monologues and the general absence of intrusive deafening incidental music that dominates many movies today. However, it is very much infused with the 1960s zeitgeist, and by today's standards, the film seems to me to be disingenuous and puerile in places due to its sexual allusions to phallic objects ( the aerial refuelling in the opening credits); and its sexist references to Colonel Turgidson’s scantily-clad mistress whose token likeness reappears in the bomber crew’s Playboy centerfold. In this satire, when you add Dr Strangelove’s assurance of harems of 10 women to every man, the perverse consequences of nuclear war do not seem so bad after all, at least for the surviving studs. But in 2021, times have obviously changed and the film raises an implicit question: would this satire with its gender roles and underlying themes of sexuality be permissible today in view of constraints of political correctness and feminism? I doubt it. But it was never intended to be updated as part of a serial franchise like the Bond films which in later iterations saw the new boss, M, cast as a female figure who on one occasion reproached Bond ( played by Pierce Brosnan, I recall) as a sexist cold war relic. Ouch. Time to grow up- or so the Bond producers would have us believe.
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
thank you. It's not as permissible, though certain people could get away with it.
@rustyknott-W.DАй бұрын
What gets lost is the dangerous insanity of "groupthink'. The scenes in the War room illustrate how the main objective can get lost while "intelligent" men discuss superfluous nonsense as if it were the most important thing. The bombs will begin to drop very soon and all they can get their minds around is not letting the Soviets get a "mine shaft gap"? "10 to 20 million killed, tops. Depending on the breaks." The only person in the movie who can grasp the horrible enormity of it all is Colonel Mandrake and no one is listening to him. I was in high school in the late '60s and they made the whole student body watch it in the school auditorium.
@ziggystardust4577 ай бұрын
This goes so well with Fallout lol
@davidshepherd39710 ай бұрын
The alternative is to accept the doomsday device and plan to come out first to reclaim control. "Animals can be raised and slaughtered". This is the king of black comedies in my opinion
@LearningaboutMovies10 ай бұрын
or you could agree to get rid of them.
@davidshepherd39710 ай бұрын
@@LearningaboutMovies Then the question is who do you trust? Putin? Biden? the Chinese dictator? the Indian PM? and now countries like Iran that want their own nuclear weapons?
@tntlord101 Жыл бұрын
I don’t think Kubrick is offering a solution because there is no solution to nuclear proliferation. Like what alternative is he gonna offer? I think any notion that nuclear powers would ever give up their weapons would be childish, hence why Kubrick didn’t explore a solution.
@rktyler34702 ай бұрын
This movie is so much deeper than the arms race. It’s about male ego. Men that feel sexually inadequate hawk for war. Conservative men in particular. Potentially closeted gay conservative men even more particularly.
@LearningaboutMovies2 ай бұрын
does this have a scientific basis?
@emabhiza3 жыл бұрын
Why should Kubrick give us an answer ?
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
Truth beats modern cynicism.
@slowerthinker3 жыл бұрын
Allegedly Kubrick had planned to make a straight drama about nuclear war, but quickly realised just how silly the whole thing was. A couple of the things you highlight as comedic devices were 100% true to post war US military - The slogan of Strategic Air Command *was* "Peace is Our Profession", war planners *did* coin and casually thrown around the term "megadeaths".
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
I believe it. that book that Buck Turgeson holds is real (iirc) or based on a real book, which I remember discussing in a college class on nuclear deterrence.
@josephmorales6522 жыл бұрын
This movie is relevant as ever. You have all sides practically begging the US to fight in this war.
@di3808 күн бұрын
Before there was Dr Strange there was Dr Strangelove 😂
@ilgarmahbooby51632 жыл бұрын
Great review
@LearningaboutMovies2 жыл бұрын
thank you.
@rychartist2 жыл бұрын
"Some men just want to watch the world burn"
@jean-pierrechoquet29096 ай бұрын
We are in 2,024 is it changing ??????
@erinobrien5472 ай бұрын
Master work and still revelent
@4gegtyreeyuyeddffvyt2 жыл бұрын
I think we should care about this movie now more than ever.
@chaimsamuels75533 жыл бұрын
Just watched it. Be funny. Kind of surprised how little dr strange was in it though 😂
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
not much!
@chaimsamuels75533 жыл бұрын
@@LearningaboutMovies its really cool to see ur channel blow up. i remember when it was at 900 subs. so keep it up
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
that's encouraging. thank you for being around for so long!
@chaimsamuels75533 жыл бұрын
@@LearningaboutMovies for sure
@roaminronin78183 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video. This is my favorite Kubrick movie even though I still give the nod to 2001 as his best overall. The madness of war.. personally I'm ok with no solution since the objective of the movie seems to be calling out the insanity of human nature (now with the power to destroy itself). For a more serious, less satirical (& perhaps cynical) look at the same subject, Fail Safe is highly recommended. Also General Buck Turgidson is one of favorite alltime performances, even if Kubrick coerced George C Scott into it at times. Fun to compare his range here with say Patton
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
yes, try Fail Safe. Thank you!
@aneubeck40532 жыл бұрын
Gonna get my head chopped off here, but 2001: didn’t hold up amazingly well. I’d say it was good at best.
@tylenoljackson93789 ай бұрын
In reality, the ending of this movie was put off for about 60 years.
@rohanmarkjay3 жыл бұрын
Yes this movie is about the Cold war, nuclear arsenals of the two countries and their leaders involved. But it is also and I think centrally. Stanley Kubrick's view on the Nazis. Stanley Kubrick was endlessly fascinated by the Nazis this group of diabolically evil totalitarian madmen. His portrayal of Dr Stangelove as this madman sums up Kubricks view of the Nazis that managed to take over a leading and high achieving western nation, Germany. Yes this movie is about the cold war. But the title of the movie suggests that this movie is also about Nazi Germany and the madmen that ruled it like Dr Strangelove. A great movie. Hilarious performance by Peter Sellers portraying the Nazi.
@FistfulOfGabagool2 жыл бұрын
not to mention what is suggested by the fact that he and many other nazis are high-ranking members of the us gov/military (operation paperclip). he's the most knowledgable person in the war room; when questions arise about computers, advanced weapons, strategy, etc. strangelove is the one brought to the stage to explain things and offer solutions. it's a nod to the fact that the "madmen" of nazi germany and their ideas didn't disappear but rather assimilated seamlessly into the united states.
@jennifershimkus4337 Жыл бұрын
It should be best movie of all time. I think Citizen Kane is behind Strangelove.
@VintageFenrir3 жыл бұрын
I feel like the only one who didn't see the comedy in this. Things felt odd, but that's about it. Maybe that's why I didn't really get much out of it. I often enjoy dark and dry humor, but nothing jumped out at me as trying to be humorous, just as critiquing human nature.
@LearningaboutMovies3 жыл бұрын
it is a subtle sense of humor that, perhaps, even a majority of people may not get. The old rule, I think, is that 25% of people do not even understand any humor at all (no joke!).