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| Dr. Strangelove Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb | ||||||||||
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| DR. STRANGELOVE OR: HOW I LEARNED TO STOP WORRYING AND LOVE THE BOMB is Stanley Kubrick's Cold War masterpiece. Based on the novel RED From Sharper Image for $17.99 Dr. Strangelove or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (Special Edition) From Amazon (US) for |
Pushing Buttons... Or How To Prepare For Doomsday (Rating: 5.00) Review : Director Stanley Kubrick's dark satire about nuclear war between the United States and Russia. Made in 1964, at a time when the cold war was at its peak, DR. STRANGELOVE remains one of my favorite films, made by the visionary filmmaker. Convinced that the Russians launched an attack on our country's resources, General Jack D. Ripper (Sterling Hayden) orders a nuclear strike. His aide, Captain Lionel Mandrake (Peter Sellers in the first of three roles in the film), is sure this is a mistake and tries to recall the proper code to abort the mission. At the same time, President Merkin Muffley (Sellers) tries to contact his russian counterpart, so that he offer apologies for the error. Enter Dr. Strangelove (Sellers), an advisor to the President, warns that the enemy has a doomsday machine that means the end of all mankind. Sellers is very funny in all three of his roles. Kubrick and his unique way of movie making only enhance the story and performances The film may not be everyone's cup of tea, as far as comedies are concerned...but I think it's a winner on all counts. The special edition is a vastly improved DVD over the movie only version. The documentary on Kubrick and his lesser known works highlight the extras. There's another featurette focusing on the making of Strangelove. The "split screen" interviews with Sellers and actor George C. Scott are rather funny in the way they that they were conducted. The rest of the extras include an advertising gallery, talent profiles, production notes, and theatrical trailers If you like dark comedies (even if they are about the end of the world) then this is worth it. If you like films by Kubrick, you probably already own this disc, and know just how good it is... Peter Sellers excels in three fine roles--as the Nazi braintrust Dr. Strangelove, as President Merkin Muffley, and RAF officer Lionel Mandrake. George C. Scott is hideously hilarious as a right-wing general whose predictions of "no more than ten to twenty million killed" sound horribly unrealistic. Keenan Wynn is also good as a misguided soldier who shoots out a vending machine so that Mandrake can make the all-important call to the Pentagon but tells him "You're gonna have to answer to the Coca-Cola company!" And Slim Pickens has the defining moment in Cold War political films as the pilot who rides his 20-megaton bomb to Doomsday. Though the Cold War may now be only a footnote in history, DR. STRANGELOVE still remains one of the most cutting movies of the time. It certainly won't appeal to the Rush Limbaugh/right-wing set because it is precisely their points of view that the apolitical Kubrick is skewering. But for those who appreciate comedy that is both cutting and even chilling, this sharp, stinging political satire is the ticket by a mile! I was pleasantly surprised. This is the type of film anybody can enjoy, it's seriously funny. It will probably have more meaning if you are familiar with the Cold War and the arms race, but if you don't know too much about that, the extras are a great help. There is one extra that deals with the making of the film, and how at the time of its production there was some subtle opposition to its release. Subtle in that the Air force was unwilling to lend it's expertise in the design of the B-52 bomber used in the film, and there was fear that its release at the time of J.F.K's death might have been seen as unpatriotic. Well that's all behind us now, and we don't have to worry about the bomb so we can enjoy it more as a comedy than as a political message presented as satire. I must say that Peter Sellers is a genius; I couldn't tell when I first watched it that he was playing three roles! There are so many funny parts in the film and I don't want to spoil it for you by mentioning any. George C. Scott is also excellent and has some very memorable lines. A bonus for me was that there was a language soundtrack in five languages; German, Italian, French, Spanish and English (off course) plus there were subtitles in more languages which is great for anyone trying to learn a new language. I would highly recommend this film to anyone who loves satire and who appreciates jokes that aren't always below the belt. Peter Sellers is magnificent in three roles: British Captain Lionel Mandrake, who almost saves the world from nuclear destruction; Adlai Stevenson-like Merkin Muffley, the decent but ineffectual U.S. President who can't control the insanity surrounding him; and Strangelove himself, the German genius who can't quite hide his naughty past, and who has his own plans for the post-nuclear world. As General "Buck" Turgidson, George C. Scott portrays a man more concerned with glory (A possible precursor to "Patton?") than with finding a sound solution to the real problem. And, of course, one cannot forget Slim Pickens as bomber pilot Kong, whooping and hollering as he waves his cowboy hat, suggestively straddling an atomic bomb in the ultimate Freudian Liebestod. From sexual obsessions and the eroticization of death (as in the opening sequence of a fighter plane refueling in midair), to the immature behavior of people deciding the world's fate (especially the antics of General Turgidson), to the telling lack of female characters (with the exception of Turgidson's scantily-clad secretary, who appears briefly and whom Turgidson urges to, "Say your prayers."), "Dr. Strangelove" packs more interest into ninety minutes than many over-extended films with lots of pyrotechnics and explosions. Of course, we cannot forget Kubrick's direction. He uses all the tricks: intricate detailing, the play of chiaroscuoro, bizarre camera angles, the use of music, etc., etc. And I cannot imagine it in anything but black and white (So hands off, Ted!). Although the American Film Insititute ranked it Number 26, I would at least place it somewhere in the Top 10, over some of the other films that ranked higher for what (I believe) may be sentimental reasons. This is a film where one of our greatest directors found his voice. And what a voice (or eye) it was! Think about it. The ideologies of the 18th century - dying for one's prince, duke or loot - seemed insane during the Napoleonic Wars, when nationalism became THE primary motivating factor. "Pure" nationalism - like the extreme gung-ho attitudes at the beginning of World War I - seemed rather distasteful to the Allied forces in World War II, who fought to liberate peoples from Fascism. The idea that Fascism would always endure, and was seriously in danger of taking over the world, seemed laughable during the Cold War. How does the Cold War look to us today? The McCarthy era; Americans truly believing the USSR and the Communists were veritable Antichrists; truly believing that DESTROYING ALL LIFE ON THE PLANET was a feasible prediction about life in the near future; that the world was, always had been, and always would be, characterised by a fight between Communists and Capitalists. *Sigh* Dr Strangelove (or: how I learned to stop worrying and love the bomb) is actually MORE funny - and disturbing - in some ways now than it was before. Admittedly I can sort of understand the immense impact of this film - could ANY politial satire have been more timely - but the fact that the "better red than dead" ideology nowadays seems as ridiculous as fighting for your Duke, means that this film can be seen in a new light. People actually believed that is was better to be dead than Red? (Yes they did). People actually believed fluoridation of water was a communist conspiracy??? (Yes, they did). The Russians actually contemplated building a Doomsday device? (Yes they did!!! Josef Stalin actually started research on such a device, which would have EXTERMINATED ALL LIFE ON THE PLANET for the sake of a politial dispute between Communist and capitalist that today seems absolutely laughable!) The passing of the Cold War era means that this movie is seriously disturbing. To a new generation, the all-annihilating power of the superpowers of the 1960s appears to have been based on disputes that appear petty in the extreme. Truly this movie makes us wonder what future generations will think of our fixation on modern ideologies; in an era that began three years ago with the late unpleasantness - and which is already making Francis Fukuyama's ideas, from the happy days of the 1990s, seem obsolete. He claimed that history was over; that free market ideology was the ULTIMATE ideology that would finally bring about an end to all future historical events by making us all live in peace. History is not over. Each generation seriously believes its own era is the ultimate era - that their own era is THE era whose disputes TRULY matter. Well, history changes, as Strangelove shows us. I seriously hope that this movie makes us moderns think a little further before considering annihilating the world again! At least over something like fluoridation of water... What makes Dr. Strangelove so brilliant is that is able to straddle that line between reality and absurdity without having each side cancel the other out. On one hand, the performances are so over the top that you not only laugh, you sigh with the relief that this is, after all, *just* a movie. (A weird cat like Dr. Strangelove could never exist in real life.) On the other hand, there's something about the way the film is directed where there's an eery and creepy feeling that something like this *could* happen-- not with these zany characters, of course, but with saner people in similar circumstances. In the end, no matter how crazy people like Turgidson and Ripper may act, the bottom line is that their underlying beliefs are shockingly similar to what a lot of U.S. military personnel in a position of power to push the button feel like. But then again, that was the point of the film-- on one hand to make people laugh, but on the other hand, to wake them up to the dangers of the Cold War and an entity like the military-industrial complex, that-- if not kept in check-- could one day feel itself powerful enough to perform certain reckless acts without consulting Congress or even the President himself. All in all, a terrific film, and a complete thumbs up from me. Directed by Kubrick, written by Kubrick and Terry Southern (Easy Rider), based on the serious novel Red Alert aka Two Hours to Doom by Peter George, and starring Peter Sellers, George C. Scott, and Sterling Hayden, Dr. Strangelove deals in a highly farcical and satirical manner the subject of nuclear proliferation, and proposed responses devised by men of power to perceived threats, whether they be based on reality, or founded from paranoia. The film starts off with Brigadier General Jack D. Ripper (Hayden), commander of Burpelson Air Force Base, initiating Attack Plan R to his group, a plan created to allow someone other than the president to launch a nuclear counterattack in the event the enemy has managed to disrupt the normal chain of command, thereby preserving our response abilities despite significant loss of leadership. Only problem is, there has been no offensive put forth by enemies of America, and it turns out this issuance was completely unprovoked and the result of one who has basically lost his mind. Group Captain Lionel Mandrake (Seller, in one of three roles), a British officer participating in a officer exchange program, and, subsequently Rippers 2nd in command, realizes this, and must act before the B-52 bombers reach their destinations within the Soviet Union and deliver their atomic payloads, in turn setting off a new doomsday device conceived by the Soviets due to the fact that they were unable to keep up the United States in terms of arms proliferation, which, if activated, would cover the planet in a radioactive cloud for 100 years, destroying all life on Earth. Pretty heavy stuff, huh? One wouldn't think there'd be much humor to be found in a situation like this, but then one would be wrong... The humor comes in the form of the absolute ludicrosity (it's not a word, as I just made it up) of the situation grown from the intense level of paranoia developed between democratic and communist powers after WWII and how, once things are set into motion, how safeguards meant to protect us basically work against that goal. It's really pretty funny to see what a mutated beast has been born of these fears, both perceived and real. Hayden Sterling is wonderful as the psychotic general with visions of communists infiltrating the very core of our democratic being, with his thoughts on 'precious bodily fluids', and conspiracies by the red menace to undermine and sap our strength. Peter Sellers is perhaps the standout in the film, playing three separate parts with such ability that I often unable to distinguish the actor from the characters within the film, seeing not an actor playing three separate parts, but only seeing three distinct characters in the British officer Mandrake, President Merkin Muffley "Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room", and finally ex-German scientist Dr. Strangelove "Of course, the whole point of a Doomsday Machine is lost if you keep it a secret! Why didn't you tell the world?", advisor to the President. One thing each of the characters does have in common is the Seller's comedic genius. His most memorable roles were those involving the bumbling Inspector Clouseau in the Pink Panther movies, but his skills shine through in his portrayal of three completely separate personalities, one straight-laced (Mandrake), another sort of bewildered but trying to maintain a sense of control (President Muffley), and a third hilariously over the top (Dr. Strangelove). Finally, there's George C. Scott's performance as the scheming, opportunistic, plotting and conniving, but all in the name of patriotism, General 'Buck' Turdigson "Mr. President, I'm not saying we wouldn't get our hair mussed. But I do say no more than ten to twenty million killed, tops. Uh, depending on the breaks". He completely reminds me of his lead role from the film Patton (1970), but in a very perverted, devolved manner. Great support roles include Slim Pickens Major T.J. 'King' Kong as the pilot of one of the B-52's, James Earl Jones as one of his crewmembers, and Colonel 'Bat' Guano as the leader of the force assigned to take control of Burpelson Air Force Base, and recover the recall codes from base commander General Ripper. All in all, Kubrick has just an amazing style for relating a story to the audience. From his use of different formats of film to evoke a particular mood or convey a sense of feeling, i.e. the documentary style use for the actual fighting footage at the air force base, to the choice of music to enhance the tone set in the various scenes. It all works perfectly to create mock realism in spite of the comedic nature, presenting the essence of a black comedy. The picture looks wonderful in this full screen format, and you will see that change from time to time as Kubrick used various aspect ratios in the film. As far as special features, there are quite a few of them, including a theatrical trailer, a featurette titled 'The Art of Stanley Kubrick: From Short Films to Strangelove', a documentary titled 'The Making of Dr. Strangelove', original split screen interviews with actors Scott and Sellers (this was done by having the actors answer pre-determined questions, and then local interviewers could be added in later asking said questions, making it look like they were interviewing the actors), promotional advertising gallery, and talent files. Some have called this 'The Greatest Black Comedy of All Time', and I would have little difficulty in arguing that... (...) |
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| Dr. Strangelove Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb | ||||||||||
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