Attention fans of Major Kong’s atomic bomb cowboy ride. Here’s your chance to see Stanley Kubrick’s razor-sharp satire “Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb” anew, ...
If you're looking for validation of the line from songwriters Peter Allen and Carole Bayer Sager that "everything old is new again," you need not go further than a movie that premiered in New York ...
Once upon a time: On a remote Air Force base, a mad U.S. commander orders a nuclear strike against the Soviet Union, whom he believes is behind a plot to pollute our "precious bodily fluids." Quickly, ...
“Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb” debuted in theaters 60 years ago this January. Stanley Kubrick’s totemic examination of the intersection between Cold War ...
The beauty of legendary filmmaker Stanley Kubrick’s Cold War satire Dr. Strangelove is that 50 years after the initial release, the jokes cracked are relevant today. We are long past the Cold War ...
No one who saw the 1964 movie, “Dr. Strangelove” can forget Jack D. Ripper, a paranoid, intellectually-challenged Air Force general who launched an unprovoked nuclear attack on the Soviet Union. The ...
Everett CollectionPeter Sellers in Dr. Strangelove, 1964. Stars: Peter Sellers, George C. Scott, Slim Pickens, Sterling Hayden. Director: Stanley Kubrick Distributor ...
The premiere of Dr. Strangelove was a landmark event in the annals of modern dread. Nothing before or since has distilled Cold War anxiety—not to say absurdity—like Stanley Kubrick’s sick black comedy ...
The Oscar-winning documentarian, who interviewed Trump 15 years ago, recently used a "Dr. Strangelove" scene to describe him. If the mark of a true cinephile is how accurately they quote a Stanley ...
The best way to tell if something is genius-level satire is if it no longer seems funny. And a prime example of this, “Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb,” screens ...
If you're looking for validation of the line from songwriters Peter Allen and Carole Bayer Sager that "everything old is new again," you need not go further than a movie that premiered in New York ...
Hollywood discovered nuclear war fifteen years ago. The Bomb has since provided stupendous finales for countless films which would have otherwise decomposed more slowly on their own. Stanley Kubrick, ...