To Americans who still felt like they were the good guys after swaggering to the rescue in the Second World War, Dr Strangelove must have felt like a brutal kick in the nuts. The portrait painted in ...
It must be hard to do superpower satire the day after a candidate for November’s presidential election is on television saying, unironically, “I’m the opposite of a Nazi”. For all my promises to ...
During the late 1950s and early 1960s, concern over nuclear annihilation peaked with mass membership organisations like the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) leading thousands on protest marches.
Steve Coogan stars in the first ever adaption of Stanley Kubrick’s iconic Dr. Strangelove, as the world premiere stage production prepares for a strictly limited run at London’s Noël Coward Theatre.
The distinctive result – as remarkable for its futuristic War Room design as its weapons-grade humour – brazenly evoked the madness of a world on the brink. It’s not hard to see why – when human ...
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The end of Stanley Kubrick's most dangerous film gives every single war movie a run for its money
Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, or simply Dr. Strangelove, is an iconic Stanley Kubrick film with an ending that rivals those of every other war movie. When it ...
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