Stanley Kubrick is a solitaire in film history. His works are enigmatic, they stand on their own and elude any current references. With "Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Love the Bomb" (#DrStrangelove), however, things are a bit different. The film is a direct response to the Cuban Missile Crisis, albeit a very artificial and bitterly nasty one. Peter Sellers slips into three roles at once, including that of the title character, who wants to see the world burn and just can't keep his right hand still. But what does the film, which was released in 1964, still have to say to us today? After all, the Cold War is long over. But the nuclear threat is by no means - many countries continue to arm, and leading politicians still believe in the idea of #deterrence policy, which this classic blackly humorous exposes as an illusion.
More on this by Wolfgang M. Schmitt in the film analysis!