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Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb
Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb concerns an unhinged United States Air Force general who triggers a path to nuclear holocaust that a war room full of politicians and generals frantically try to stop.
6 March 1926, Chicago, Illinois, USA
1 June 1935, Cranbrook, British Columbia, Canada
17 January 1931, Arkabutla, Mississippi, USA
28 May 1932, Toronto, Canada
27 July 1916, New York City, New York, USA
21 September 1942, London, England, UK
24 March 1929, Kylemore, Saskatchewan, Canada
4 December 1926, New York City, New York, USA
8 September 1925, Southsea, Hampshire, England, UK
29 June 1919, Kingsburg, California, USA
21 March 1912, London, England, UK
26 March 1916, Upper Montclair, New Jersey, USA
17 July 1918, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
January 17, 1932 in East Molesey, Surrey, England, UK
June 30, 2016
'Dr. Strangelove' may have worked as a serious thriller, but Kubrick knew better.
December 09, 2014
...a decidedly underwhelming entry within Kubrick's increasingly spotty body of work...
July 25, 2016
The pre-eminent satire of cold-war paranoia, Dr. Strangelove is a hilarious and harrowing fable of systemised madness.
January 16, 2016
A slick satire of the cold war, and one that succeeds in brilliantly lampooning the hands that guide the world.
November 26, 2004
This landmark movie's madcap humor and terrifying suspense remain undiminished by time.
July 14, 2016
Dr. Strangelove does what so few comedies do today: it challenges us, provokes us, unsettles us while also making us laugh.
May 13, 2014
By a whopping margin, this is Kubrick's most radical film and greatest dramatic gamble.
November 18, 2004
Stanley Kubrick's blackest of black comedies.
November 05, 2004
Is Dr. Strangelove Kubrick's best movie? Along with Paths of Glory, absolutely.
January 26, 2006
Perhaps Kubrick's most perfectly realised film, simply because his cynical vision of the progress of technology and human stupidity is wedded with comedy.
May 08, 2007
Like most of his work, Stanley Kubrick's deadly black satirical comedy-thriller on cold war madness and its possible effects (1964) has aged well.

