Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. DR. STRANGELOVE IS A BRILLIANT BIT OF CELLULOID GENIUS AND A TRUE CLASSIC in every sense of the word. Nominated for four Academy Awards® including Best Picture (1964), Stanley Kubrick’s black comedy about a group of paranoia-inspired, war-happy generals who manage to initiate an “accidental” nuclear apocalypse, is horribly frightening, delightfully funny and surprisingly relevant to ...

  2. Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb. Psychotic Air Force General unleashes ingenious foolproof and irrevocable scheme sending bombers to attack Russia. U.S. President works with Soviet premier in a desperate effort to save the world. IMDb 8.3 1 h 30 min 1964. X-Ray UHD PG.

  3. Apr 3, 2020 - Stanley Kubrick's satirical masterpiece is over half a century old but it's as relevant and hilarious as ever.But the humor of Dr. Strangelove: Or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and ...

  4. Dr. Strangelove (1964) -- (Movie Clip) Doomsday Machine President Muffley (Peter Sellers) asks Ambassador de Sadesky (Peter Bull) why the Soviets would build a "Doomsday Machine," leading to the first appearance of the title character (also Sellers), in the war room during the nuclear crisis, in Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove Or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb, 1964.

  5. Through a series of military and political accidents, a psychotic general - U.S. Air Force Commander Jack D. Ripper (Hayden) - triggers an ingenious, irrevocable scheme to attack Russia's strategic targets with nuclear bombs. The U.S. President (Sellers) and Dr. Strangelove (Sellers), a wheelchair-bound nuclear scientist who has bizarre ideas about man's future, work with the Soviet premier in ...

  6. In the days after it first opened in early 1964, Stanley Kubrick's "Dr. Strangelove" took on the enchanted aura of a film that had gotten away with something. Johnson was in the White House, the Republicans were grooming Goldwater, both sides took the Cold War with grim solemnity, and the world was learning to be comfortable with the term "nuclear deterrent," which meant that if you blow me up ...

  7. Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying about my Cinephile Credibility and Accept not Every Kubrick Film Will Blow Me Away or Strongly Resonate with Me Review by Branson Reese 1 If “You’ll have to answer to the Coca-Cola company” isn’t in your “The Magic of Cinema!” montage get the absolute fuck away from me