Director: Stanley Kubrick
Cast: Peter Sellers, George C. Scott, Sterling Hayden, Keenan Wynn
Have I Seen it Before: Oh, sure.
Did I Like It: Your mileage on this film is going to largely depend on the era in which you watch it. As a diligent movie freak in my younger (and now older) years, I made a point of watching it. In the early 2000s, the threats of the last century had already seemed quaint, and so, too, did the movie itself.
But now?
With a world swinging wildly between the abjectly horrific and the sublimely absurd (or is it the other way around?), the jokes hit quite a bit harder. That might be a bit unfair, and risks drifting into that same nostalgic way of thinking that insists that the world was a simpler place when we were younger. It isn’t so much that I wasn’t able to get into the film in the year 2000, it’s probably more that the world isn’t crazy enough for a fifteen year old to really enjoy the potshot.
But Kubrick isn’t a comic filmmaker at his core. Judging the film just by the standard of how much it makes one laugh is only part of the equation. Normally immaculate in each of his films, Kubrick lets the film surrounding this funhouse mirror reflection of the world in 1964. The expansive war room brought to life by Ken Adam—you’ll see his aesthetic all over the early Bond films—contrasts with the cramped spaces of the B-52 bomber. Visually, it keeps one interested, but all stays of a piece with each other. Aurally, too, the War Room echoes cavernously with every shout while the bomber clicks and whirrs with every mechanized horror they implement. Kubrick never cedes control over his films, even when what is being displayed is pointedly chaotic.