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Dr. Strangelove or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (Special Edition)

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Dr. Strangelove or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (Special Edition)

Parental Guidance Suggested  - 93 minutes

Sony Pictures

2001-02-27

Region 99


Directed by:

  David Naylor
  Stanley Kubrick

Starring:

  James B. Harris
  Alexander Walker
  Leon Minoff
  Ken Adam
  Nile Southern

Format:

Black & White,  Closed-captioned,  DVD-Video,  Full Screen,  Special Edition,  Widescreen,  NTSC


Purchasing:

  Usually ships in 24 hours  $14.94  $9.99

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Ownership

Flixville:20(2.58% of users)
Facebook:20(3.44% of fb users)

Ratings

Flixville:7(avg 4.50 stars)
Facebook:7(avg 4.50 stars)

Description:

Arguably the greatest black comedy ever made, Stanley Kubrick's cold-war classic is the ultimate satire of the nuclear age. Dr. Strangelove is a perfect spoof of political and military insanity, beginning when General Jack D. Ripper (Sterling Hayden), a maniacal warrior obsessed with "the purity of precious bodily fluids," mounts his singular campaign against Communism by ordering a squadron of B-52 bombers to attack the Soviet Union. The Soviets counter the threat with a so- called "Doomsday Device," and the world hangs in the balance while the U.S. president (Peter Sellers) engages in hilarious hot-line negotiations with his Soviet counterpart. Sellers also plays a British military attaché and the mad bomb-maker Dr. Strangelove; George C. Scott is outrageously frantic as General Buck Turgidson, whose presidential advice consists mainly of panic and statistics about "acceptable losses." With dialogue ("You can't fight here! This is the war room!") and images (Slim Pickens's character riding the bomb to oblivion) that have become a part of our cultural vocabulary, Kubrick's film regularly appears on critics' lists of the all-time best. --Jeff Shannon

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