Dr. Strangelove: The Humor in Horror

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  • Опубликовано: 2 июл 2024
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    In Dr. Strangelove, Kubrick shows how denial can make people justify doing terrible things. He humorously brings this idea to it's logical conclusion in one of the best dark comedies of all time.
    This video has been monetized by Sony. The footage from the movie is copyright protected content, so of course I won't dispute it, but I will say that I don't intend to run ads on my videos, and if any do appear, it's because a third party has monetized them.
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Комментарии • 127

  • @seraslain962
    @seraslain962 4 года назад +414

    From the looks of it, this entire movie can be summed up with the phrase "I bet he's compensating for something"
    Oh yeah, and I swear with each scene the cigar gets longer and longer.

    • @mattmorehouse9685
      @mattmorehouse9685 3 года назад +21

      Considering how often our media conflates sex and violence I think this is the ultimate example of that. Also, apparently Dr. Strangelove is rated PG. Weird for a movie about ending the world due to sexual impotence.

  • @funnyfella8198
    @funnyfella8198 4 года назад +230

    I thought this was a James bond film for the longest time

    • @Mikewee777
      @Mikewee777 3 года назад +14

      Casino Royale ended the same way as multiple James Bonds sabotaged the other James Bonds in a war against Austin Powers.

    • @1fanoforange
      @1fanoforange 3 года назад +9

      I think you’re thinking of “Doctor No” and “From Russia With Love”

    • @beepboop9464
      @beepboop9464 3 месяца назад

      I did to! 😅

  • @jweilage
    @jweilage 4 года назад +380

    looking through your backlog of videos, I will never understand how these videos didn't get views when they were uploaded and how they still don't have views today. your videos have always been quality and I'm so happy I've found them

    • @franl155
      @franl155 3 года назад +1

      I only found this vid by accident and now I'm off to check out the rest

  • @sergeantmarcusstackerM1903
    @sergeantmarcusstackerM1903 3 года назад +107

    To give a nutshell explanation to someone on this movie, its 300 IQ sex jokes

    • @mattmorehouse9685
      @mattmorehouse9685 3 года назад +4

      Considering our current entertainment, I don't think that's all that out of place. Look at music, or HBO.

    • @pyrofyrestudios2615
      @pyrofyrestudios2615 2 года назад +2

      Helluva Boss, but it's a warning about Nuclear Armageddon

  • @parkerlincoln49
    @parkerlincoln49 3 года назад +65

    I know this video is a little old, but I think another theme of the movie (albeit a more minor one) is conveyed with the last line. Strangelove, a Nazi scientist, describing how this group of men, all white, will get to mate with a hand picked group of woman, chosen specifically for their sexual characteristics, is effectively laying out what amounts to a eugenics plan. Not only that, but he is laying out a plan of eugenics in the midst of a nuclear holocaust. His last words are "Mein Fuhrer, I can walk." The man, who is explicitly noted as a nazi in the movie has a plan for eugenics and works and theorizes about how to best perform a genocide. He regains his ability to stand to show that Nazism, in all but name, is still alive in America, and its thinking is the foundation for the arms race and the cold war.

  • @cipherclone2661
    @cipherclone2661 3 года назад +152

    Watched this movie in class to talk about irony, it was really funny

  • @00oa4
    @00oa4 4 года назад +84

    I feel so dumb for not recognizing the significance of the title until now...

  • @lilcritic3260
    @lilcritic3260 3 года назад +66

    I think this is one of my favorite endings to any movie MIEN FURHER! I CAN WALK!

  • @brushfuse
    @brushfuse 2 года назад +9

    I'm glad Kubrick didn't finish with the food fight in the war room. The last line spoken by Strangelove is just so iconic. It was destined to be the end of the film.

  • @johnbeauvais3159
    @johnbeauvais3159 3 года назад +61

    I recently finished reading Catch-22 and I have to say that book makes this movie substantially more hilarious. For instance in your statements about the cigar, in C22 Colonel Cathcart has a long ebony cigarette holder and he’s constantly wavering on if this gives him an aristocratic masculine look to the men or if it makes him looks like a working girl.
    The idea of bureaucracy and the absolute incompetence of elements in this vast web creates a feeling I can only describe as “Frustratingly funny”. What I mean is that there’s this constant hang up that leads to this belief that if you go up the chain far enough you can fix your problems only to have this not work either.

  • @olstar18
    @olstar18 3 года назад +41

    Wish there was a mention of the dual meaning of the bomber crews theme. It was a musical version of 'when johny comes marching home' but it is also the theme to a song with a very different meaning called 'johny I hardly knew ye.' When I found out about the different song with the same tune those scenes gained so much more meaning.

    • @elevenseven-yq4vu
      @elevenseven-yq4vu 8 месяцев назад +5

      Same with the scribblings on the bombs, one reads "Hello there" and one "Dear Johnny": One about sprouting hope, one about hope crushed.

  • @papapanara1774
    @papapanara1774 3 года назад +32

    you're criminally underrated

  • @rexnihilum7822
    @rexnihilum7822 3 года назад +87

    weirdly this reminds me of End of Evangelion

    • @kortomor8003
      @kortomor8003 3 года назад +1

      Lmao sort of

    • @rexnihilum7822
      @rexnihilum7822 3 года назад +11

      @@kortomor8003 for me it's the board of shadowy figures sorta like SEELE, what about you ?

    • @rexnihilum7822
      @rexnihilum7822 3 года назад

      @@kortomor8003 mate ?

    • @veleriphon
      @veleriphon 3 года назад +1

      I get the SELEE reference. Pretty spot on!

    • @mohitonon-alco4287
      @mohitonon-alco4287 3 года назад +13

      "Man wants to destroy the world to revive his wife" yeah pretty close

  • @M4ruta
    @M4ruta 2 года назад +8

    Interesting analysis.
    Another way of viewing the movie (aside from the overt sexual under/overtones) is that a lot of the scenes deal with mis- or non-communication. The planes carrying the bombs have shut down radio connections, people constantly talk passed each other, sometimes even through language barriers, people in the war room fight with each other rather than coming to an agreement.
    The scene at 2:22 is a great example of this: the military adviser is in the bathroom while his ditzy girlfriend tries to get the message between him and his superior through but does not comprehend the gravity of the situation. In an ever more complex world, clear communication is key, but at every step of the plot, there we see sender and receiver missing each other.

    • @elevenseven-yq4vu
      @elevenseven-yq4vu 8 месяцев назад +1

      It's notable how the military advisor is far more ditzy than his girlfriend. After all she is the one reasonably concerned with the situation whereas he brushes it off and can only think about ass while it is being communicated to him.

    • @M4ruta
      @M4ruta 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@elevenseven-yq4vu Good point.

    • @AndrewGivens
      @AndrewGivens 4 месяца назад

      To be completely fair to Miss Scott, she is being absolutely first-rate professional, despite lounging in the boudoir, pre-coitus, in her skimpies: she does not attempt to interpret the meaning of the message whatsoever (that's not her job, and would lead to a case of Chinese Whispers, with potentially disastrous consequences), but instead she conveys coolly - and gets him to the phone by successfully communicating the key facts. If anything, it's women who are the only ones not being straight-up lampooned in the film.
      This movie is absolutely about the stupidity of men, not mankind.

  • @seankim2743
    @seankim2743 3 года назад +17

    Thanks. I learned today for the first time the not-so-hidden meaning behind this movie - impotence and insecurity. Watched this more than three times and now I finally get it.

  • @lovaszaron3138
    @lovaszaron3138 3 года назад +30

    Not a comedy? It is advertised as a "light-hearted black comedy" here in Hungary. Yes, with the same ending where the entire world dies.
    We had similarly dark comedies for stage and movies.

    • @TheMrPeteChannel
      @TheMrPeteChannel 3 года назад +1

      I am told that there's always at least 1 person who dies in almost every Hungarian film.

    • @lovaszaron3138
      @lovaszaron3138 3 года назад +5

      @@TheMrPeteChannel Almost, yes. Comedies aren't keen on that but dark comedies regularly come with a death toll.

  • @Nosirrbro
    @Nosirrbro 3 года назад +13

    5:50 That's not quite right, the doomsday device would be a single, stationary salted bomb of some kind that releases a massive amount of nuclear radiation, probably a cobalt bomb. Basically just a nuke on the ground surrounded by a bunch material that turns radioactive when exposed to neutrons from the nuke. Thats why it would be necessary to create a nuclear powered underground bunker, because while normal nuclear radiation is bad its not nearly as long term as the radiation from a cobalt bomb, which would keep the surface uninhabitable for several decades. Otherwise a normal fallout shelter like the US already had would be just fine.

  • @DruNature
    @DruNature 3 года назад +13

    one of the most prolific inspirations in American media ever, I remember seeing Tom and Jerry cartoons riding on the bomb as a kid. KUBRICK IS A GENIUS!~

  • @Neo-st3su
    @Neo-st3su 4 года назад +21

    Man, you deserve the influx of new subscribers you’re getting - this shit is top tier

  • @Rotsteinblock
    @Rotsteinblock 3 года назад +61

    Regarding the ending of the movie, it is my understanding that the US launched a nuclear attack on Soviet mine shafts and possibly also nuclear arsenals. Reason for this is Dr. Strangelove proclaiming "I have an idea" in response to the "we cannot allow a mineshaft gap", furthermore the Doomsday device was desrcibed to be a single installation so there wouldn't be a need for nuclear detonations in different places around the world if the ending was just the Doomsday device going off.

    • @surfq9313
      @surfq9313 3 года назад +2

      ...and or some real footage of the 1950's Bikini Atoll atomic tests...

  • @supersteve1440
    @supersteve1440 3 года назад +4

    The mineshaft gap was a play on the "bomber gap".

    • @nigelft
      @nigelft 2 года назад

      ... then the missile gap, hence the idea behind the whole (and honestly, bonkers*) MX programme, which was eventually scrapped to just upgrading Minuteman IIIs warheads ... or so I gather ...
      [Edit: *= the reason why I call it bonkers is this:
      The concept, depending on which version, called for a large, Minuteman-esque missile, on a even larger TEL, which would be shuttled between about a dozen, hardened shelters, all connected by a paved road, or rail track. Instead of being launched directly out of a silo, the missile would fired from the TEL itself.
      The idea was, as the Soviets wouldn't know which of the 12 shelters it would be in, they'll have to hit all of them, expending a huge number of warheads, thus preventing, or so it was believed, a further retaliatory strike, after an American counterattack, after expending most, if not all their arsenal.
      Except, due to MAD (which was never exactly sane to begin with ...), it became quickly obvious that the Soviets would, and could 'account' for that, by simply increase their capacity, and capability, especially SLBMs (which created a mini-arms race itself between whom could build a submarine with the largest number of deployable missiles ...), only further ratcheting up both the number of missiles, and especially warheads, such as can be air dropped ... for a while their arsenal greatly exceeded the American's ...
      Honestly, the 1980's was a weird time to be an child-to-teenager, in Britan, caught between the two, especially between, in my experience, 1982-89, as you never knew when everything was going to go bang, especially whilst at school ... we didn't even have 'Duck and Cover', as, if you were that close to see 'the flash', you were good as dead ...
      Even the Russians knew that, going by a joke of that period:
      "Comrade, what should I do if nuclear war starts ...?"
      "Simple: Cover yourself with a white sheet, and make your way slowly to the nearest cemetery ..."
      "But why slowly ...?"
      "So not to panic anyone else ..."]

  • @definitelyhooman7939
    @definitelyhooman7939 3 года назад +16

    Obligatory comment for the algorithm because more people need to see this video

  • @0Chill
    @0Chill 2 месяца назад

    Congratulations. I’ve watched this movie a dozen times appreciating it in a different way every single time, and never thought about half the points you made in this essay. Very impressive.
    Idk if I’m heartbroken or thankful that Kubrick isn’t alive today to narrate the world currently around us. But damn, I’m glad people like you are. Kudos

  • @thescreentroll8632
    @thescreentroll8632 3 года назад +4

    this essay got me to watch Dr. Strangelove and I absolutely loved it. Thank you

  • @silviareyes136
    @silviareyes136 5 лет назад +25

    Brilliant! 👏👏👏

  • @AndrewGivens
    @AndrewGivens 4 месяца назад

    Great analysis.
    -
    One beautiful little detail which eluded me until now, given the themes, is that the bomber is not only successfully penetrating the enemy defences (don't need to explain that one) to drop its payload (oh dear), but the act of using decoys to draw an enemy missile just far enough away from your own 'target centroid' to minimise damage to yourself at the last moment is called...
    -
    *'Seduction'*

  • @lemiwinks9124
    @lemiwinks9124 4 года назад +12

    Good movie and game analysis? Drew me in with the Prey analysis, but I've deff stayed for the Strangelove. subbed

  • @isabeamon1190
    @isabeamon1190 2 года назад +1

    Excellent essay! I thoroughly enjoyed your video. Keep up the good work.

  • @veleriphon
    @veleriphon 3 года назад +4

    This movie truly proves Kubrick's brilliance. Is there any current movie director/creator who can compare, and is still working?

    • @franl155
      @franl155 3 года назад

      These days what films are made is decided by suits with balance sheets; nothing like this would receive any backing, even if there were someone to write it and direct it.

    • @veleriphon
      @veleriphon 3 года назад

      @@franl155 Every movie needs a bankroll. These days though, it's either a sure thing or not happening.

  • @barsdogukankarakoyun8798
    @barsdogukankarakoyun8798 Год назад +1

    8:57. That pilot is literally a reverse cowboy.

  • @RoamingAdhocrat
    @RoamingAdhocrat 3 года назад

    I've seen the film a bunch of times, so the part where you recap the film in detail dragged a bit, but I really loved how you explained the meaning of the title - I'd never thought of that!

  • @LowSkillSurvival
    @LowSkillSurvival 3 года назад +1

    I just realised I have been watching your videos for far longer than I thought. Watched this one when it was uploaded. Huh.

  • @brandondasher261
    @brandondasher261 3 года назад +8

    damn I completely missed all of the subext when I watched this movie

  • @rapauli
    @rapauli 2 года назад

    Great summary -- best I have seen for this movie. Based on the stories of its production and especially the script wrangling it was not clear that Kubrick did not start out with making this movie ... there were tremendous dynamic changes during shooting that allowed this story to emerge. You seem to nail it perfectly.

  • @Playitsam
    @Playitsam 3 года назад +1

    Great essay! Keep it up

  • @TombomOfficial
    @TombomOfficial 4 года назад +2

    This reminds me a lot of Collative Learning's interpretation. Great video.

  • @EXMachina.
    @EXMachina. 2 года назад +2

    My interpretation about the movie was about a satire about American Ignorance at his finest, like my favourite bit being the shootout scene showing the US soldiers killing each other with a Big Billboard in the middle of the shot saying "Peace is our Profession".

  • @coffin7904
    @coffin7904 4 года назад +12

    your videos are great. hope to see you succeed.

    • @patrlim
      @patrlim 4 года назад

      100k, looks like he did

  • @DanMcLeodNeptuneUK
    @DanMcLeodNeptuneUK 3 года назад +1

    One of my favourite movies. Every time I watch it I gain some new insight about the film...

  • @uvbe
    @uvbe Месяц назад

    i waited 5 years until i finally crossed this movie from my watchlist so i can watch this video

  • @matthewmontgomery7764
    @matthewmontgomery7764 3 года назад +1

    Wow love the doom beat as the background noise!

  • @markcoupe5748
    @markcoupe5748 Год назад +1

    This is my favourite film and dont know of any other films of this length with only 1 female in it!

  • @bazillio69wotblitz5
    @bazillio69wotblitz5 3 года назад +3

    Was always waiting till my English level gets up high enough to understand this movie. Now i get, that I'm never be that good in foreign language. Cause reading comments made me know - there are plenty of things, that could be understood only for one who's in American/British culture for decades

  • @MrUltrabanton
    @MrUltrabanton 3 года назад

    You deserve more views dude

  • @detritus10001
    @detritus10001 2 года назад +1

    Our bodily fluids.

  • @ethanhainey3682
    @ethanhainey3682 3 года назад

    Great use of Mullein in the background, definitely works with this movie

  • @thesmilingman7576
    @thesmilingman7576 11 месяцев назад +1

    7:59 wasn't the survival kit scene earlier in the film

  • @norikofu509
    @norikofu509 3 года назад +2

    The most underrated movie.

  • @TooMuchSascha
    @TooMuchSascha 3 года назад +5

    Kubrick simply had no cap lmfao, he made stellar horror movies, stellar comedies, and incredibly important philosophical scifi films. What a madman

  • @prettycolors2
    @prettycolors2 3 года назад +1

    man I love this movie.

  • @haidenlotze7530
    @haidenlotze7530 3 года назад +5

    Might just be me not "reading into it" / "seeing it" due to being asexual (short of the blatant shit like the f l u i d s ), but i didn't get all that bit until reading the Wikipedia afterwards, and videos like these. Makes sense, just found it odd how i didn't see that.

    • @haidenlotze7530
      @haidenlotze7530 3 года назад +3

      9:40 I was just annoyed at this bit of his oddness distracting from fallout shelter design stuff lol i am the big d u m b

  • @mrlastos888
    @mrlastos888 3 года назад +2

    damm you need more views

  • @thepsplayer6039
    @thepsplayer6039 3 года назад +1

    I think that Dr. Strange love and Fail-Safe are almost anti-war movies

  • @blackroses6315
    @blackroses6315 3 года назад

    I love this movie

  • @atompunk5575
    @atompunk5575 3 года назад +2

    I have this movie on BluRay, such a great movie

  • @Mikewee777
    @Mikewee777 3 года назад +1

    Deep

  • @nigelft
    @nigelft 2 года назад

    Funny ...
    James Earl Jones, in perhaps his first movie, was a relatively junior rank in that bomber crew ...
    ... later he plays an Airforce General (Alice) in charge of the SAC Airborne Command Post, in that other nuclear war movie 'By Dawn's Early Light ...
    ... and, of course, Admiral, and perhaps Chair of the Joint Chiefs, in 'Red October' ...

  • @cartooncharacter9920
    @cartooncharacter9920 3 года назад

    good video, also whats the song at the beginning?

  • @brucemacmillan7128
    @brucemacmillan7128 2 года назад

    Yep. There's always another war just around the corner. Water wars anyone?

  • @kaljic1
    @kaljic1 3 месяца назад

    Sexual innuendos, hidden, throughout the movie. What else could we expect from a master who previously made Lolita acceptible to the mainstream?

  • @abcrane
    @abcrane 3 года назад

    This could also be called Dr Wilhelm Reich

  • @PsychOsmosis
    @PsychOsmosis 3 года назад

    Wow...

  • @insuficienciarenalcronica
    @insuficienciarenalcronica 3 года назад +1

    what music did he use on the intro?

  • @tagtag123
    @tagtag123 3 года назад

    very similar tone from Cat's Cradle

  • @xfirexrainx6668
    @xfirexrainx6668 3 года назад

    I thought this was a serious drama...

  • @angelogarcia2189
    @angelogarcia2189 7 месяцев назад

    She IS the girl in the playboy magazine.

  • @t4ky0n
    @t4ky0n 3 года назад

    I thought this was about moshi monsters

  • @iluvatar2239
    @iluvatar2239 3 года назад

    damn, MUCH LESS CLEVERLY!! jkjk

  • @KatieLHall-fy1hw
    @KatieLHall-fy1hw 3 года назад +1

    I didn’t think this movie was that funny. It felt too real

  • @hooty7179
    @hooty7179 2 года назад

    hey r u ok?

  • @Cephlin
    @Cephlin 2 года назад +2

    Doesn’t seem like a comedy at first glance? The whole thing screams comedy lol
    Maybe it’s a British thing to see it so obviously as a comedy?

  • @robzilla730
    @robzilla730 6 месяцев назад

    Its funny: in this movie, America has at best, 12hrs left to survive. How are they gonna get the mineshaft shelters set up and provisioned, much less hand pick the 10 beautiful women for each man in that time? Strangelove is completely delusional...

  • @ohno8589
    @ohno8589 4 года назад +3

    The last famed words said by this very sexy man finally made me realize how horrible the Chinese Communist Government truly is,
    also foreshadowing
    Edit: For more information on this topic the yt channel, “serpentza” a white South African who lived in China, made a video called “is China DESTROYING Africa?” Discussing China’s Belt and Road(beat and rob) program

  • @OGTwistedDobermanXCVI
    @OGTwistedDobermanXCVI 4 года назад +14

    Might I suggest using a better quality mic, or possibly editing the audio so your voice'd sound clearer instead of getting drowned out by your bg music.
    Also, not offense, but you kinda started to ramble a bit... I'm barely a minute and 8 seconds in and i completely lost focus on the point you were trying to make.
    Some people have ADHD or generally shorter attention spans.
    If you practice improving the sentence structure of your script, emphasizing and highlighting key points of your subject matter, it'd be easier listening to it.
    By feeding us the information in bite sized chunks, your video would be a lot less overwhelming whereas shoving massively long paragraphs of words down our throats make it harder to follow and more likely to move on to a different video.
    Lastly, you should try to use your tone of voice to interest the audience and subconsciously entice them to listen. You sound very monotone, it's kinda reminescent of being back in a desk in high school during an Economics lecture... Not very invigorating or exciting if im honest...
    If you practice your reading your script in a recording and listen back to it, you can judge by your tone how interesting your input on the subject sounds. And typically, if your audience can feel your passion and interest in your opinion on a subject, they in most cases will be interested in what you have to say about that subject.
    I'm not trying to discourage you from making videos. I think you might have some potential. I'm just giving you a little friendly advice and constructive criticism. Hope it helps .

    • @Leadhead
      @Leadhead  4 года назад +11

      Oh yeah I had barely any experience doing any of this back when I made this one. Most of my old videos were kind of a mess. Thanks for the feedback regardless

    • @OGTwistedDobermanXCVI
      @OGTwistedDobermanXCVI 4 года назад +5

      @@Leadhead No problem. I like the commentary. It's just kinda hard to follow lol. Glad to help. :) I know I sure wouldn't be able to make a commentary myself, that takes speaking skills. I'm better at writing than speaking lol. Great job. 👌

  • @surfq9313
    @surfq9313 3 года назад +1

    The horror of this humor is the missing facts that weren't mentioned like the green felt Kubrick veneered the war room table with, even though its a black and white film it was a pure Kubrick touch of genius...also the fact that Peter Sellers was the only actor that Kubrick let work without a script in this film all of his 3 roles was pure ad lib acting, and he was even supposed to act in a 4th role as a member of the bomber crew, but was too sick to do those scenes due to a cold, and that James Earl Jones almost didn't get his speaking role, and fates humor is the about the only horrible fact about this film, the movie was scheduled to debut on Nov.22,1963 the day Kennedy was killed and that was filmed in color...
    Interestingly Kubrick later was hired to shoot the staged lunar landing films for NASA, ironically in the same year that 2001 came out? Mr. Kubrick still had the artistic tenacity to put his little innuendos on those films too, like in certain key frames ie. leaving in some shadows on the moon? Another funny fact is what was a mysterious and sadly uncredited camera man doing on the outside of the lunar lander waiting to film Armstrong's iconic ladder descent and not even a hint of dust specked on that camera lens?... and man those sixties moon helmets have great crisp sound for being an air tight helmet...blocks air, but not sound? At that distance, Are u sure? Try that with a 1960's or even a modern full visor motorcycle helmet for starters. So let me get this straight, in 1969 we could spend buku bucks to go to the moon, but somehow not even afford to use color cameras by Westinghouse to document that monumental leap in our human history? Now there's some humor for you.

  • @seansmith3058
    @seansmith3058 3 года назад +2

    For those who have never seen the film you have now spoiled it. For those who have you have offered no insight or perspective.
    Was there a point to this?

  • @curly_wyn
    @curly_wyn 2 года назад

    I honestly don’t get why people think this is a great comedy. I didn’t find it funny and didn’t laugh once.