Dr. Strangelove or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Paradox

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  • čas přidán 6. 01. 2018
  • In this video I'm talkin cool about Stanley Kubrick's way-back ultra paradox laden classic Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb. Love you Kubrick.
    PATREON: bit.ly/2GhaUMJ
    TWITTER: bit.ly/2FvQGBq
    DISCORD: bit.ly/2NFLQRA
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 3,2K

  • @BREADSWORD
    @BREADSWORD  Před 5 lety +118

    PATREON: bit.ly/2GhaUMJ
    TWITTER: bit.ly/2FvQGBq
    DISCORD: bit.ly/2NFLQRA

    • @reptilespantoso
      @reptilespantoso Před 5 lety +3

      Nice one. One thing; Dr. Strangelove was NOT fiction. It still is not. Including the conversations in the War Room. (Gentlemen, no fighting in the War Room!?)

    • @YoniIsrael
      @YoniIsrael Před 5 lety +4

      i thought the first sentence in this video was "hey"

    • @jacksquatt6082
      @jacksquatt6082 Před 5 lety +2

      I disagree with you about feeling joy when Strangelove stood and walked. Throughout the movie each of the characters represented an aspect of politics at the time: Ripper being McCarthyism, the President being pandering US politicians, and so forth.
      Dr Strangelove himself represented post-WWII fascism, and the fact that he is inside the US War room represents how the US took in ex-German scientists to help build or adapt German military technology to their own purposes. He represents that German fascism was severely crippled, but not yet dead. In those final moments, where he is talking about eugenics to the highest authority in the US government, the fact that he is able to stand and walk represents that German fascism has taken hold in the minds of the US leaders, that it is getting back onto its feet. I don't think that is something to feel joy over, but, since this video is about paradoxes, I suppose it is just as valid as any other emotion.

    • @kiwwiee
      @kiwwiee Před 4 lety +1

      intro song??

    • @coreycallahan4609
      @coreycallahan4609 Před 4 lety +1

      I totally enjoyed the break down of the movie. It was spot on and very informative. The only issue that I had was that the commentary continued to reference Nucular as opposed to nuclear. It was like listening to George Bush.

  • @alexandrasandu3947
    @alexandrasandu3947 Před 5 lety +2177

    "Gentlemen, you can't fight in here. This is the War Room!"

    • @alienbacon656
      @alienbacon656 Před 5 lety +28

      We can’t fight here! This is bat country!!!

    • @d3ada5tronaut
      @d3ada5tronaut Před 5 lety +16

      im dead that killed me

    • @ZrankFappaH
      @ZrankFappaH Před 4 lety +40

      Has to be one of the greatest lines from the movie! I laugh every time.

    • @danielcobbins9050
      @danielcobbins9050 Před 4 lety +24

      "This is outrageous, I've never heard of such conduct in the war room before!"

    • @weldonwin
      @weldonwin Před 4 lety +25

      "Mister President, we *CANNOT* allow a Mineshaft Gap!"

  • @LinusE
    @LinusE Před 5 lety +1618

    ''I dont wanna be known as the next Hitler''
    *hires nazi weapons scientist who accidentally lets out his inner nazi*
    This movie is so good on so many levels

    • @weldonwin
      @weldonwin Před 4 lety +85

      *"MEIN FURUR! I CAN WALK!!!"*

    • @leoui1085
      @leoui1085 Před 4 lety +39

      The best thing is, something like this happened in real.life. Wernher von Braun was a Nazi scientist, who build rockets for the SS in WW2. After the war he went to America, and build rockets with NASA.
      Don't know if Kubrick took inspiration, but I would not be surprised.

    • @Auchentoshan
      @Auchentoshan Před 4 lety +47

      @@leoui1085 technically, it was most likely under Operation Paperclip. Where former nazi scientists are initiated into development and production of such weapons. So yeah, he probably did take inspiration.

    • @leoui1085
      @leoui1085 Před 4 lety +3

      @@Auchentoshan I've never heard of Operation Paperclip, just breifly about Braun. Seems interesting, thank you.

    • @cv4809
      @cv4809 Před 4 lety +4

      @@leoui1085 they were German scientists, who were working for their country
      Would you call American scientists working during trump's presidency "republican" scientists?

  • @flaviochavez1747
    @flaviochavez1747 Před 5 lety +798

    “If you want peace, prepare for war.” ... We really do live in a paradox

    • @owenbunny4023
      @owenbunny4023 Před 3 lety +7

      We can only control our freedom of will after all

    • @paolopasini8200
      @paolopasini8200 Před 3 lety +19

      in latin it's even cooler:
      "Si vis pacem, para bellum"

    • @chrizzel28
      @chrizzel28 Před 2 lety +3

      The sad reality of deterrence is that only those willing to fight can live peacefully.

    • @kelechi_77
      @kelechi_77 Před rokem

      kill for peace

  • @thecircusb0y1
    @thecircusb0y1 Před 5 lety +731

    "Dear John" letters were girlfriends writing soldiers to break up with them. So the warhead was a "break up" symbol. Ending the relationship between the two parties.

    • @selecterjd9785
      @selecterjd9785 Před 4 lety +39

      The letters could also be from wives or fiancees...I think it represents the contradiction of the men going far away and for an extended time putting their lives at risk to protect their homeland, family and lovers in war, broadly, that are often betrayed by the thing they're fighting for.
      The narrator seemed to miss the term's reference and it would be nice to include his thoughts on it in the video. This is one of my favorite films and I am glad to see it get some of the attention it deserves...so funny and so deep.

    • @louisalvarez9907
      @louisalvarez9907 Před 4 lety +15

      And after you say, That's All she wrote.

    • @selecterjd9785
      @selecterjd9785 Před 4 lety +5

      @@louisalvarez9907 I was just reading that there is thought to be a connection between the term and the phrase. I never realized that.

    • @louisalvarez9907
      @louisalvarez9907 Před 4 lety +3

      @@selecterjd9785 I am History major and my professor mentioned this to me a few years ago. It's really interesting and sad at the same time.

    • @helenl3193
      @helenl3193 Před 4 lety +6

      As he says in the video, it symbolises the sacrifice made by the soldiers, and the loved ones they have left behind - be they women breaking up with them or sending letters of love and support, is less important to the broad theme than the idea of the forced separation and potential for that to be permanent - due to death, or because the distance is too hard, or because if he gets to go home he may no longer be the man he was and that relationship will be changed as well.

  • @jonwesick2844
    @jonwesick2844 Před 5 lety +908

    I always interpreted "We'll Meet Again" at the end of Strangelove as cynical sarcasm. The survivors of nuclear holocaust who dig out of the ruins will remain bitter enemies and repeat war and destruction over and over. There's no comfort here.

    • @ViolosD2I
      @ViolosD2I Před 4 lety +56

      ^ This.
      It does give comfort, but in laughter as it is the crowning satirical moment. Using that song which is meant to make people feel better to state how humans are damned to not learn from their mistakes, even after just literally destroying the world. With the Doctor being the only one who thrives in this madness.
      Also as others have stated, the "Dear John" line is the start of a breakup letter... while "Hi there!" was a popular greeting uttered by gay men at the time.
      I personally don't think those are connected to any song lyrics - although they might be, on top of that.
      All in all I think this is an interesting analysis, though it is trying too hard / spinning things too far at times. What a paradox! ;)

    • @helenl3193
      @helenl3193 Před 4 lety +23

      Yes, which is highlighted by them using a song from a previous war. Round and round we go again! :(

    • @Coolguy98765432q457
      @Coolguy98765432q457 Před 4 lety +21

      In other words, war, war never changes.

    • @mr.pavone9719
      @mr.pavone9719 Před 3 lety +18

      I always felt it was used ironically since humankind would almost certainly be wiped out. There would be nobody left to meet.

    • @xw591
      @xw591 Před 3 lety +1

      Same here

  • @Ponderro
    @Ponderro Před 2 lety +67

    I took the scene of Strangelove walking as completely the opposite of what you describe. It's the symbolic rebirth of fascism on the ashes of the world. He was getting increasingly energized and giddy talking about his eugenics project while physically gripping his hand to keep himself from throwing it in a Nazi salute and slipping into calling an American officer "Mein Führer", finally having his true message heard and listened to very intently for the first time in years. As a culmination of that, as the bombs are falling, he can walk again, rejuvenated by the end of the world as we know it.
    You aren't supposed to take any "joy" from that scene. It's there for a dark, sardonic, final laugh.

    • @nickwestbrook5647
      @nickwestbrook5647 Před 8 měsíci +3

      This is correct

    • @byronbuck1762
      @byronbuck1762 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Interesting. Always felt the uncontrollable arm was a metaphor for the ultimate uncontrollability of nuclear weapons

    • @drlupe4232
      @drlupe4232 Před měsícem

      Yes. I have no idea where he got any joy from in Strangelove standing up lol

  • @lolshark99b49
    @lolshark99b49 Před 4 lety +176

    "Dr. Strangelove is the best Kubrick film." You're damn right!!!

    • @lorensims4846
      @lorensims4846 Před 3 lety +7

      I've always been such a huge fan of 2001: A Space Odyssey ever since it first came out, yet I can find absolutely no reason to argue with this assertion.

    • @moxxie9707
      @moxxie9707 Před 2 lety +1

      I think you mean quebrick

    • @geordiejones5618
      @geordiejones5618 Před rokem +1

      This and Barry Lyndon stand out for me

  • @OlOleander
    @OlOleander Před 4 lety +119

    Point of note: while it's entirely possible that the "Dear John" and "Johnny" connection you describe at about 24:00 ish was intentional, a "Dear John" has a very specific meaning in the military: a break-up letter from a significant other back home to a member abroad, often paired with the stereotypical "Jody" who has replaced them in their relationship.

    • @09VMM
      @09VMM Před rokem +2

      Yeah I agree. I enjoyed his analysis but think he was off on this one point. I always took "Hi There" and "Dear Johnny" as a breakup of the status quo of the world. The modern world happened quickly after WW2 then quickly ended with the most catastrophic of break ups.

  • @yourunclejoe9500
    @yourunclejoe9500 Před 5 lety +194

    This is the most "video essay" video essay I've ever seen.

    • @plugshirt1762
      @plugshirt1762 Před 6 dny

      I don't know if that's a compliment or an insult lmao

  • @flooblet
    @flooblet Před 6 lety +1012

    quality>quantity, great fucking job

  • @Cannibal713
    @Cannibal713 Před 5 lety +133

    "You can't fight in here! This is the war-room!". Dr Strangelove is one of my favorite movies and my fav of Kubrik. Its amazing he got this film made right in the height of the cold war. It is so much like and completely opposite another movie made at this time; Fail Safe. Great review and analysis of this classic.

    • @williamwoodall3538
      @williamwoodall3538 Před 2 lety +4

      @Cannibal 713 That's a good onservation, and speaking of paradoxes it is worth mentioning that both films used the same novel, Red Alert, for their source material. Fail Safe mostly differs from Dr. Strangelove in its so-serious, humorless approach to the subject matter. However, they are not opposite in every way. Despite its relatively promilitary, do what has to be done pacing for most of the movie, in its bitter, near-nihilistic conclusion Fail Safe reveals itself to be subtly anti-MAD. (Mutually Assured Destruction)

    • @geordiejones5618
      @geordiejones5618 Před rokem +1

      It must have sucked being the creators of Fail Safe after watching this just knowing they nailed everything they wanted to say in a timeless comedy.

  • @FLJuJitsu
    @FLJuJitsu Před 4 lety +100

    Dr. Strangelove is an utterly brilliant film on every level.

  • @F22onblockland
    @F22onblockland Před 6 lety +443

    I didn't cry at the end.
    Definitely didn't cry at the end.
    Certainly didn't cry at the end.
    I cried at the end. That was beautiful.

    • @nicholasmitchell6025
      @nicholasmitchell6025 Před 6 lety +22

      SSH-40 Yeah, this is the only CZcams video in more than five years to make me cry. It reminded me of the 3 hour tearjerker I had with Devilman Crybaby beginning with the butterfly rap and continuing almost interrupted through scenes of absolute shock and horror at the human condition, interspersed with scenes of blind hope and optimism, and in a way, I feel like it ties into this video with its dualistic yet pessimistic view of our future.
      Seriously, go check it out.

    • @hugoperegrina6571
      @hugoperegrina6571 Před 6 lety +7

      Feelings... I forgot I had those

    • @commanderv4114
      @commanderv4114 Před 6 lety +3

      you're not alone in this

    • @willkriegforkartoffeln4878
      @willkriegforkartoffeln4878 Před 6 lety +3

      I kinda just felt an empty want to shoot myself. The world is absurd, humanity is absurd, there is no meaning. Why continue in the meaningless day to day just to see what comes of it. I got a feeling of complete empty loneliness. I wish I could feel what you all did.

    • @hyperionic1044
      @hyperionic1044 Před 5 lety +4

      I laughed... I laughed a lot and then drunk a lot that night, then i went to sleep the whole of the rest of the day.
      I honestly love this film.

  • @somedude5749
    @somedude5749 Před 6 lety +174

    The "When Johnny Comes Marching Home" and "Johnny I Hardly Knew Ye" connection was MIND-BLOWING. Both songs have the same exact structure, have a similar subject, and both feature characters with the EXACT SAME NAME, with the biggest difference between them being that one is about Johnny coming home a celebrated war hero, and the other being about him dying in a pointless war effort among many. That detail is astounding, the coincidence is almost uncanny, and it perfectly represents the entire movie.
    This was perfect. It did the entire movie justice, and explained everything about humanity in a beautiful way. Thank you. This kind of work is just what everyone needs.

    • @mapache7317
      @mapache7317 Před 6 lety +5

      I would think the latter was to satirize the former.

  • @augustgreig9420
    @augustgreig9420 Před 3 lety +34

    Although I think 2001 is his best film, I do have Dr. Strangelove as his second best. I think the parallel he draws in a movie which on the surface is about the Cold War, the folly of man, and how absurd thes men are who play these games with every life on this planet. When you juxtapose that with all of the sexual energy in the film and then extrapolate that to all of these power games they play are really just a different kind of expression of their sexual energy.
    That's why the final scene is so important. After discussing the mineshafts and how there woul be 10 women for every man, and the women would be chosen for their beauty so they could breed most prodigiously, Strangelove realizes that as a paraplegic, he may not get to go, or at least not get to enjoy it. But then what seems to be out of force of will alone, he stands and proclaims, "Mein Fürher, I can walk!", a proclamation that his penis works. And then we see all the mushroom clouds, which have become synonymous with sex. Great film, so many layers.

  • @Mrs.Munchiana
    @Mrs.Munchiana Před 5 lety +104

    The fact that you have Bobby
    Caldwell's "What I'd do For Love" playing softly in the beginning gives you major respect points from me.

    • @comandantethorn9929
      @comandantethorn9929 Před 4 lety +2

      Same, do you know the exact version BTW?? I've been looking for it but i haven't found it

  • @nicobruin8618
    @nicobruin8618 Před 6 lety +118

    "Gentlemen u can't fight here this is the war room!"
    Still cracks me up every time.

  • @Inkerflargin
    @Inkerflargin Před 6 lety +169

    I think Dr. Strangelove is so ecstatic at the end of the film because is witnessing the final and total defeat of his enemies at their own hands. In a way, the Nazis won at the end of the movie, because Dr. Strangelove ends up converting the last remnants of power in the world that the best path forward is his mineshaft eugenics plan.

    • @wittsdream
      @wittsdream Před 5 lety +10

      That is indeed a very good reading of the film, one of many Rosetta Stones to be found throughout SK's oeuvre, including Dr. S. When the male sexual drive is halted in its tracks, or men are humiliated in some way, the end result is a Freudian reading of sexual frustration/repression, whose end result is a violent or caustic: The Shining, Full Metal Jacket, Lolita. When sexual release is allowed to happen, men become exalted/liberated at the prospect of ejaculating their pent up "energy," in films like Dr. Strangelove, Clockwork Orange, Barry Lyndon (loss of limb, as a sexual metaphor). Eyes Wide Shut is Kubrick's ultimate socio-psycho sexual deconstruction on this. 2001 is very much a cautionary tale of a future reality (a counterpoint sequel to Dr. Strangelove in some ways) in which humans become so sterilized/neutered by technology that sexual drives cease to exist, and instead, AI becomes the predominating impetus to forging ahead the species into the cosmos. Quite a different future to the "10 females to one female" male fantasy of underground breeding emblematic of Dr. Strangelove. Kubrick's work remains way ahead of its time, and always invites deeper introspection, peeling off more onion layers with each subsequent viewing to get to the core.

    • @ILoveDawko
      @ILoveDawko Před 4 lety +2

      Didn't Sellers ad lib the walking? Obviously K chose to keep it in, so that doesn't discount what's being said. I guess perhaps it shows that films have several geniuses that contribute to what they are trying to say in their owns ways

  • @adrianpaulalfafara5005
    @adrianpaulalfafara5005 Před 4 lety +31

    One of the most comedic scenes I could remember was when the (sorry, forgot the names) British Officer was insistent on calling the top brass thru a pay phone by using the coins from smashing the coin box from a Coca Cola Machine, the sergeant didn't want to be responsible for that...yup even in war, Capitalism is king.

    • @ViolosD2I
      @ViolosD2I Před 4 lety +3

      Him getting coke in the face shortly after is the only obvious comedy scene in the film.
      And indeed, it feels out of place.

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 Před 4 lety +6

      He was a Colonel not a Sergeant .... His name was Bat Guano .... Get It? .... Bat Shit as in Bat Shit Crazy!

    • @TheGravyTrainConductor
      @TheGravyTrainConductor Před 2 lety +1

      “If this doesn’t work, you’re going to have to answer to the Coca-Cola Company!”

  • @CatacombD
    @CatacombD Před 5 lety +869

    "Hi. The first sentence of this video is a lie."
    There is no paradox, only an incorrect assertion, since the first sentence of your video was, "Hi."

    • @dru7277
      @dru7277 Před 5 lety +14

      If I ask someone to explain how the Earth , and universe began without a creator is it possible to explain?
      If I ask someone to explain a computer - it's beginning and inner workings BUT without a creator. Just natural laws and observation, theory, experiment. Is it possible to explain?
      If so to either question does Faith? and the underline theme of phylosphy take root? Is there a duel system of everything? Science included? Astronomy? Astrology?

    • @lancasterchurch4747
      @lancasterchurch4747 Před 5 lety +28

      Hi Is a word. not a sentence.

    • @CatacombD
      @CatacombD Před 5 lety +98

      @@lancasterchurch4747 "Hi," is a word that can be a complete sentence on it's own, which is why, in the example from the video, it is followed by a period instead of a comma.

    • @nachtegaelw5389
      @nachtegaelw5389 Před 5 lety +3

      Grim Reaper well, in this case you could call it a phrase?

    • @jacob-zz6my
      @jacob-zz6my Před 5 lety +19

      Steve Zirngible “Hi, the first sentence of this video is a lie.” note apostrophe

  • @andyfeyfall5571
    @andyfeyfall5571 Před 6 lety +321

    This video was amazing, and you should be proud. Every point was well thought out and every example had an explanation. You drew eyes and thoughts to things most people wouldn’t notice, and added depth where it may not have been evident before hand. The opening was extremely clever, and I’ll be honest with you, I actually teared up a little at the end.
    TLDR: This video was amazing, you’re amazing, and you have no idea how glad I am that I found your channel

    • @BREADSWORD
      @BREADSWORD  Před 6 lety +15

      THANK YOU SO MUCH YOU ARE SO NICE AAAAAAAA

    • @MillionthUsername
      @MillionthUsername Před 6 lety +1

      I teared up at the mention of "xenophobia" near the end, but it was tears of laughter.

  • @hem9483
    @hem9483 Před 6 lety +1531

    Your content is fantastic and incredibly entertaining to watch.
    Never a boring moment. Thank you for making these.

    • @BREADSWORD
      @BREADSWORD  Před 6 lety +34

      I LOVE YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS NICE COMMENT THANK YOU I'M FRAMING IT ON MY WALL

    • @hem9483
      @hem9483 Před 6 lety +2

      :)

    • @inlikeflynn7238
      @inlikeflynn7238 Před 6 lety +1

      your an armless legless chickenless egg you'll have to be left with a bowl to beg johnny I hardly knew ye with your guns and drums and guns and drums haroo haroo with your guns and drums and guns and drums haroo haroo
      with your guns and drums and guns and drums the enemy nearly slew ya oh darlin deer ye look sae queer johnny I hardly knew ye

    • @inlikeflynn7238
      @inlikeflynn7238 Před 6 lety +1

      oops you're and dear instead of deer

    • @inco9943
      @inco9943 Před 6 lety

      Please do something on Barry Lyndon! I love that film too and could see a Romantic interpretation and am interested to see a detailed analysis like this for it

  • @ACTlVISION
    @ACTlVISION Před 3 lety +17

    "...that sword never left, if anything it just got bigger but the grip tightened"
    ok I am stoned but this is profound af

    • @petergant1379
      @petergant1379 Před 2 lety +1

      I'll give you that, on BOTH your points! Not necessarily a bad thing, either of them!

  • @elleon677
    @elleon677 Před 3 lety +7

    One of my favorite scenes in Dr. Strangelove involves Jack Ripper. He grabs his golf bag and we all expect him to go play golf while his OWN ARMY IS FIGHTING ITSELF. But, in the end, he pulls out a machine gun from the bag and starts shooting at his own army. It is an underrated moment of comedic brilliance.

  • @AlcuBerry
    @AlcuBerry Před 6 lety +69

    “Who the f is BREADSWORD? Oh yeah, the Treasure Planet guy 😍”

    • @Yohoat
      @Yohoat Před 6 lety +6

      Miguel Alcubierre lol I did the same thing

  • @grimjhaixus
    @grimjhaixus Před 6 lety +26

    I took “Dear John” to be a reference to the Dear John Letter, which I knew as break-up letter soldiers would get while in the field from girlfriends they had back home.

    • @vaylonkenadell
      @vaylonkenadell Před 6 lety

      Yes, same. Rather strange that he didn't mention that.

  • @Vivi_Sterling
    @Vivi_Sterling Před 3 lety +18

    Wow, just wow. I have never seen anyone pick apart this movie in such a simplistic, referenced and analytic meticulousness. This is a professional grade of analysis and is remarkably well made. When I am tutoring some people next fall for collage level writing analysis, I am definitely haveing theme watch this

    • @normsaunders4980
      @normsaunders4980 Před 2 měsíci

      3 yrs later, how did that go over in your class? Did your students pick up the idea? Are you still using this in your course?

  • @UnholyBasil
    @UnholyBasil Před 3 lety +21

    I want you to know that this video gives me comfort in my darkest hours, paradoxically so given it was released during one of yours. I'm really grateful you've decided to continue doing what you do, because you inspire me to do the same. Keep talkin' cool about cool stuff, I look forward to hearing more of it.

  • @Johnjwalt
    @Johnjwalt Před 6 lety +237

    At the end, Strangelove got his eugenics program approved. His sudden ability to stand up meant that Nazism was literally on its feet again.

    • @MrTurbowhitey
      @MrTurbowhitey Před 6 lety +22

      your over thinking things. That was just Peter Sellers acting like Peter Sellers. A good portion of his acting was ad libed.

    • @AudieHolland
      @AudieHolland Před 6 lety +19

      No, john1054 is correct. Remember that it is the director who decides what stays in the film in the cutting room. It wasn't Christian Hayden's fault or the little kid's fault. It was Lucas who chose to turn his movies into freaking disasters. And it is Kubrick in this film who lets the Nazis win after all. MEIN FUHRER I CAN VALK

    • @fangsabre
      @fangsabre Před 6 lety +15

      Or you could say that him suddenly standing up is a representation of a Nazi erection, much like the involuntary salute

    • @_NobodySpecial_
      @_NobodySpecial_ Před 5 lety +2

      Lesser evil than the communist at least

    • @petersayatshkin7454
      @petersayatshkin7454 Před 5 lety +2

      yeah, that was also my intuition, and I‘m deeply confused about author’s reaction to it. “warm feeling and hopefulness”?? seriously??? A very real hope I felt was that the missile won’t be dropped after all... it was possible and came down to anecdotal bad luck. I don’t get it, I don’t feel it... feel free to correct me.

  • @kyriesanchez4122
    @kyriesanchez4122 Před 5 lety +238

    This is real ASMR for me. I get “tingles” from the music that has that filter that makes it sound muffled with passionate analysis of how a piece of media portrays certain philosophical ideas. This is truly relaxing. Thank you.

    • @caseyspaos448
      @caseyspaos448 Před 3 lety +1

      Except every other sentence starts with the narrator's irritating "euhhhhh...."

    • @gifdar
      @gifdar Před 3 lety +4

      Bobby Caldwell will always give me that tingly feeling

    • @kyriesanchez4122
      @kyriesanchez4122 Před 3 lety

      @Dr. Phil Good wtf indeed

    • @johnpaulcross424
      @johnpaulcross424 Před 3 lety

      I use these videos to fall asleep far too much to disagree with you

    • @esteboi3858
      @esteboi3858 Před 6 měsíci

      @@caseyspaos448no kidding

  • @wills242
    @wills242 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Normally I hate background music in videos but the way you used it with only the low end and stuff was great. Set a nice tone.

  • @davecrupel2817
    @davecrupel2817 Před 5 lety +40

    The first sentence of this video cant be wrong or right. You said "Hi."
    There. Paradox eliminated.
    *Sits back and smokes pipe.*

  • @StarlasAiko
    @StarlasAiko Před 5 lety +147

    Am I the only one who feels like the lamp in the war room above the table looks like the cloud halo of a nuclear mushroom?

  • @nothingorother302
    @nothingorother302 Před 5 lety +168

    Arguably, I think the last moments were less optimism on Cubric's part, and more a final bit of dark irony. The only positive character in all of the movie is strangelove, who took joy in the increasing madness of the situation. His perspective is the closest to the audience, the spectator that can laugh at at the insanity, and in the final moments, when we hear those pretty tunes and see the world being destroyed, it's funny because, like reality, like ourselves, like Strangelove, it's kind of insane, and you might as well stop worrying, relax, and enjoy the show.

    • @amiller9628
      @amiller9628 Před 4 lety +5

      That’s my plan 😈

    • @gfarrell80
      @gfarrell80 Před 3 lety +9

      "the only positive character in all of the movie is strangelove"??
      What?
      President Muffley and Mandrake are both positive humanistic characters. They come aware of a horrible threat to humanity, and rather like other characters in the film that either seek to exploit the potential death of millions (Turgidson) in order to launch a greater attack, or the bomber crew who simply carry out their insane orders unquestioningly - Mandrake and Muffley work their hardest to save lives. Not just of their own tribe, but all human lives.
      Strangelove is just a horrible technocrat scientist.
      The fact that Mandrake and Muffley ultimately FAIL in my opinion makes the movie a much stronger warning AGAINST tribalism and nuclear war. If they had succeeded in averting doomsday, the audience would feel much less need for individual action, as the message would be 'eh, don't worry, I'm sure the technocrats at the top can restrain the military and avert disaster if it comes down to it'.

    • @okuno54
      @okuno54 Před 3 lety +13

      @@gfarrell80 I'm pretty sure nothing or other means that Strangelove is the only one who sees the situation in a positive light

    • @gfarrell80
      @gfarrell80 Před 3 lety +2

      @@okuno54 he said "The only positive character in all of the movie strangelove". That seems like a pretty broad and odd take to me, as I have written above.
      Turgidson also sees the wing attack situation in a positive light, or at least opportunistic for a potential positive result. He excitedly describes how the US could win with minimal casualties with a very positive upside take on the situation.

  • @arthurwinslow9144
    @arthurwinslow9144 Před 5 lety +21

    i watched this and it made me want to see the movie so i asked my mom about it and she said: 'i love strange love, hey did you know i used to be the presedant of the harvard film club?"
    and no i didn't know that, thank you for introducing me to my new favorite film.

  • @finwake
    @finwake Před 5 lety +10

    I laughed I cried I got the T-shirt. Your Insight is pure genius. Thank you thank you

  • @deanbrooks8542
    @deanbrooks8542 Před 6 lety +120

    Your closing thesis was outstanding! From your cadence, to your alliteration; wrapping it all together with another affirmation of the paradox was some of the finest and most satisfying conclusions to any video essay I've seen. I cannot wait for you to continue making more videos and hope you enjoy them as much as I.

  • @MrOwnerandPwner
    @MrOwnerandPwner Před 6 lety +41

    It was my interpretation that the contrasting moods at the end of the movie was to place us in the position of the characters in the war room. The last 10 minutes or so of the movie is spent discussing and planning the steps taken after the dust settles, and how they will rebuild society to be even better (through eugenics and 10:1 harems) and stronger than it was before.
    Humans are obsessed with the blank slate. If you've ever seen hollywood reboots, it's evident that most people think that the only way to fix a set of deep structural problems, real or imagined, is to destroy it and to build it again from the ground up, this time with hindsight over what went wrong before. The Americans latch onto this idea, talking about "the future of mankind". Strangelove mentions reaching their present GDP in only 20 years, and Turgidson even talks about resuming the Cold War in case the Russians manage to do the same.
    Like you said, the characters look at the situation as a net benefit for Humanity, despite the billions of deaths and the probable end of civilisation, and it's reflected in the final song, "we will meet again" which I think implies that the nuclear holocaust is nothing more than another hardship for Humanity to undergo. And as we watch the bombs fall, we see it directly through their lens, as a moment of optimism, after they have spent the entire movie subconsciously rationalising the destruction of mankind.
    After all, the movie is titled Dr Stangelove or: *How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.*

    • @dragoxl5
      @dragoxl5 Před 5 lety +3

      MrOwnerandPwner This makes a ton of sense

  • @BennyBigIron
    @BennyBigIron Před 3 lety +8

    Just watched this movie for my history class, gotta say you nailed everything right in the head. That plus you gave me a lot of much needed context for its significance. Thanks man! Awesome video!

  • @CynicallyYours
    @CynicallyYours Před 4 lety +9

    I watched the video 2 years ago but it wasn't till now that it hit me, we are going to be ok

  • @michaelroach3175
    @michaelroach3175 Před 6 lety +142

    You think you can just do that? Leave for 4 months and come back like nothing happened and expect me to watch your video?
    Well you can.

    • @xxtonyblastxx
      @xxtonyblastxx Před 6 lety +5

      Michael Roach It seems only the most talented deserve our patience.

  • @MrChocolateM4n
    @MrChocolateM4n Před 6 lety +206

    Dude, your video essays are freaking great. Keep it up my guy.

  • @sierraspenser4394
    @sierraspenser4394 Před 3 lety +2

    The final three minutes were enough to bring me to sincere tears, amazing. “Somehow, we’ll be ok.” Hit really hard for me.

  • @hughman6663
    @hughman6663 Před 4 lety +7

    I've always loved the media of film and watching your videos allows me to experience and think of it in a whole new way. Because of you, I plan on studying philosophy in college because you make it incredibly enjoyable. Thank you for everything you do to entertain thousands of people. You are appreciated.

  • @tSp289
    @tSp289 Před 6 lety +259

    Note: A Dear John letter is a breakup letter from the wife/gf of a serviceman informing him she has found someone else. Seeing that on the bomb made me snort beer the first time I saw it.
    Also the theme from 'Johnny' has three meanings: those two you mentioned, and it is also the tune to the nursery rhyme about Noah's Ark: " The animals marched in two by two, hurrah! hurrah!", so it is not only a pro-and anti-war song but also a song about global catastrophe. And if you want to read anything into the mating pairs of animals, then it's there for the reading.

    • @SpiderandMosquito
      @SpiderandMosquito Před 5 lety +8

      There's also the nursery rhyme the ants come marching on which is more of a children's educational tune than anything else

    • @symph2220
      @symph2220 Před 5 lety +4

      LetterBomb

    • @partehonn2311
      @partehonn2311 Před 5 lety

      Yeah, I was waiting for him to mention that as it fit with his theme.

    • @nachtegaelw5389
      @nachtegaelw5389 Před 5 lety +1

      Christian Schmude but they’re escaping the rain! It’s obviously not about counting but about climate change causing super storms! Jk jk!

    • @nachtegaelw5389
      @nachtegaelw5389 Před 5 lety +4

      Yes, that’s true, but so many famous tunes have been recycled into hymns or nursery rhymes (Greensleeves for a Christmas carol, the Arkansas Traveler for I’m taking home a baby bumblebee), that one could argue that the original lyrics still carry the strongest association with the tune.
      That might vary by person of course, but Johnny has such a martial feel to it imho. It’s in a minor key, the rhythm feels foreboding, and even both the children’s songs kept the extant martial parade “hurrah!”
      So for me, just hearing the tune with no lyrics evokes an army marching off to death and glory, more than it does ants. Or elephants.
      But that’s just me ofc, and we could easily argue this the other way (when most Americans hear the tune of their national anthem, I doubt they recall the lyrics of Anacreon in Heaven, or think of drinking songs generally).

  • @CptFishrPrice
    @CptFishrPrice Před 6 lety +63

    I don't fully grasp like half of the cinematographic and environmental themes you talk about but I still love the fuck out of your videos because you can see exactly how much effort and passion went into each and everyone. love your shit man!

  • @nellab4366
    @nellab4366 Před 4 lety +3

    Wow, total chills at the ending comments. You continually put out the most thought provoking video essays on film that I’ve seen!

  • @MemorableMedia
    @MemorableMedia Před 2 lety +3

    After binging a whole bunch of your videos I ADORE how strong your thesis statements are. They present such an incredibly strong core to your analysis that is all at once broad-strokes relatable and INCREDIBLY personal in its presentation. Your points are all so detailed and interesting. I walk away from every video with a MUCH greater appreciation for the subject that leaves me better prepared to enjoy it and anything like it. Can't wait to see more.

  • @papawhitebeard4648
    @papawhitebeard4648 Před 6 lety +246

    Need me a 10 to 1 mineshaft waifu ratio

    • @giascle
      @giascle Před 6 lety +30

      more than one waifu will ruin your laifu

    • @F_lippy
      @F_lippy Před 6 lety +4

      What's the ratio of trash waifus though?

    • @shira_yone
      @shira_yone Před 6 lety +2

      Pip IV depends on your laifu span I guess. If it's short the ratio would leans to either 10 or 1, if it's long then it'll be somewhere in the middle due to your high rates of exposure to both trash and naisu waifus.
      I'm just spouting nonsense here, don't read too much into this...

    • @papawhitebeard4648
      @papawhitebeard4648 Před 6 lety +4

      Pip IV One man's trash is another's treasure

    • @franklinvonfrankenstein1137
      @franklinvonfrankenstein1137 Před 5 lety

      How to you make 10 of yourself I'm interested

  • @michael_17213
    @michael_17213 Před 6 lety +21

    I just spent almost as much time watching a deep dive into the message of a movie from someone else as I would actually watching the movie and arriving at my own interpretation of the message, but it was truly fantastic.
    How paradoxically magnificent.

  • @CuriousPersonUSA
    @CuriousPersonUSA Před rokem +2

    That was a beautiful tribute to a great movie. It is amazing how much the world has changed since and yet we remain oblivious to the paradoxes you describe. The line "Paradoxes within paradoxes within paradoxes" reminded me of Frank Herberts Dune "Plans within plans within plans".

  • @samantha.redacted
    @samantha.redacted Před 3 lety +7

    I'd argue that the "Dear John" on the warhead is not in reference to the song, because both of them have John in the name, but of Dear John letters. They were letters sent to a soldier by a woman to break up with him, usually after finding a new man, this still works with your analysis though!

  • @Crazelord91
    @Crazelord91 Před 6 lety +252

    Holy shit you're back! Liked this video and haven't even watched it yet...
    Update: I have watched the video and have no regrets

  • @GBart
    @GBart Před 5 lety +28

    "Dear John" is a euphemism for a break-up letter. More generally, it's a phrase meant to precede bad news

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 Před 4 lety +2

      Yes .... As in by dropping this Bomb .... The US is "Breaking Up" with the USSR

  • @MyLateralThawts
    @MyLateralThawts Před 4 lety +2

    Something I just noticed while watching this. Ripper doesn’t blink when he explains his motivation to Mandrake. I doubt Kubrick knew about the propensity of liars to blink frequently when telling an untruth, but it works brilliantly for Ripper, convinced of his own fiction he created for himself. It shows him to be utterly mad. Genius!

  • @ChrisLeRose
    @ChrisLeRose Před 5 lety +4

    I love the part about the contrast in camera lenses and shooting styles between the ground combat and B-52 scenes and the rest of the movie. Great insight!

  • @wm2429
    @wm2429 Před 6 lety +88

    This is great. Like, seriously great. You deserve waaaaay more subscribers.

  • @DirkDerick
    @DirkDerick Před 6 lety +215

    OK so I know nobody is going to read this but you're using the term "paradox" quite a bit looser then I think is appropriate, not all contradictions are necessarily paradoxes, a paradoxical contradiction has to arise from entirely sound logic and some of these contradictions are merely juxtapositions designed to make a point, not a paradox

    • @Khepriem
      @Khepriem Před 6 lety +25

      People have brought this point up quite a few times actually, he even responded to a few of them. To sum it up though, a paradox is a seemingly absurd or self-contradictory statement or proposition that when investigated or explained may prove to be well founded or true. In this definition, which he also gives in the video if I'm not mistaken, he's completely right to use the term paradox as he does. Paradoxes don't all have to be logical tongue twisters for your brain, those are just the most well known.

    • @seanseanston
      @seanseanston Před 5 lety +9

      Yeah, but the fact a song called "Ironic" may not actually contain any irony... is pretty ironic you have to admit.

    • @SwarthySkinnedOne
      @SwarthySkinnedOne Před 5 lety

      Alex Auto
      Ok. Now give about three examples to make sense of what you said. Make three statements exemplifying what a paradox is.

    • @racercowan
      @racercowan Před 5 lety +8

      Though the words "absurd" and "self-contradictory" are both in that description, only one of them is the really important one. If a statement of set of statements contradicts itself, it's a paradox. If a statement is absurd, it's only really referred to as a paradox if it seems at a quick glance it should contradict itself. "The yellow mars-elephants eat hamburgers" isn't a paradox, even if it is absurd, but "Red staplers aren't red" is a paradox even if it isn't absurd.
      Here, he seems to use paradox to just mean "things that don't make obvious sense". I mean, how in the world is MAD a paradox? Or "comedy movie shot in dramatic style"?

    • @katim2644
      @katim2644 Před 5 lety

      I read your post, and my first reaction as I watch this is I need to look up paradox in the dictionary, because it doesn't seem to mean, as this creator suggests, what I think it means.

  • @markiemax5450
    @markiemax5450 Před 5 lety +3

    I just found this video and It has have me thinking so much that rewatching it made me cry with that last sentence. We will be okay. Your editing is amazing and there’s just so much I love about your videos. I’m sad to see that you don’t post more and that I might have missed the train for your channel. My family and I love your videos, we watch them on the tv and hope we see you upload

  • @fizzydog9249
    @fizzydog9249 Před 2 lety

    I can't believe I'm JUST NOW finding your channel, your videos are incredible and I love the way you talk about these topics! You put your points in such a clear, clever and entertaining way. You analyze things in a very compelling way. It's like having a really interesting conversation. It also helps that your voice is super relaxing to listen to!

  • @zoidsfan12
    @zoidsfan12 Před 5 lety +9

    Strangelove is one of my favorites. Kubrick was a master of film it speaks so firmly to me. I never entered the armed forces due to both struggling with moral implications but also because I knew of my own wrath. A paradox is the best word for it as we constantly shoot ourselves in the foot as a society. I always had a fascination yet damnation of war. I went through a time where I even yearned to just fight for the sake of it, to get out rage. Yet despite loving a lot of extremely violent media (except for my sophomore years being up my own ass and yearning for a darwinian slaughterfest due to perceived weakness I felt had rooted in society), I preach peace and cooperation. I draw art that often veers horror themed but then fill my writings have themes of "progression is slowed by squabbling amongst ourselves". Inherently we know that fighting is not solving the problem but because everyone isn't coming into agreement no-one can put down their guns. I believe that defense is a necessity. I think we won't overcome this issue as long as we are playing with large numbers, too many variables have to go right so the probability is low which prevents most from even considering it.

  • @mia-ec7lh
    @mia-ec7lh Před 6 lety +26

    I fucking love your videos and will watch anything you talk about. Your voice is nice. Your topics are interesting. The music is great. Keep it up dude

  • @danmchardy6424
    @danmchardy6424 Před 3 měsíci

    That was an incredible synopsis and exploration of the nature of humanity as a paradox. If I made this video, I would be a very proud man. Top class sir!

  • @drewyyy101
    @drewyyy101 Před 6 měsíci

    I come back to this video quite a bit. The intro alone is probably my favorite video intro of all time, and the use of Bobby Caldwell's 'What you won't do for love' is amazing. Then the rest of the video matches that awesome energy. Great stuff

  • @danielcannavo8899
    @danielcannavo8899 Před 6 lety +71

    Your content is like an oasis in the middle of the desolate land of CZcams

    • @JKPancake
      @JKPancake Před 6 lety +2

      Dig into the world of video essays, there is a lot of gold in these hills

    • @MrCactuar13
      @MrCactuar13 Před 6 lety

      I've been hooked on video essays for the past 3 or so years. They're probably the only youtube content I look forward to anymore, aside from high-level fighting game footage

  • @RenamedUser
    @RenamedUser Před 6 lety +21

    HE'S BACK

  • @catholiccontriversy
    @catholiccontriversy Před 5 lety +2

    I love how you make some rather out there theses and then spend half an hour proving it to us, and succeeding.

  • @Panzerfan93
    @Panzerfan93 Před 5 lety +7

    16:20 I want to add, that the combat scenes in this movie are superbly made with a lot of influence from actual combat footage

  • @tiny_shovel6570
    @tiny_shovel6570 Před 6 lety +33

    You make incredible content

  • @senabea
    @senabea Před 6 lety +4

    I started out intrigued by the topic, halfway though I legitimately started to get freaked out and lose hope in humanity, and at the end I felt comforted and genuinely fortunate to be a part of this paradox.
    Truly a fantastic video, I have no idea how you haven't even hit 100k yet

  • @paulaharrisbaca4851
    @paulaharrisbaca4851 Před 3 lety +3

    Another thing about Strangelove is its look. It's as unique in its way as "Barry Lyndon" and "The Shining" or "A Clockwork Orange".

  • @samuelbaker4004
    @samuelbaker4004 Před 4 lety +1

    I don't know if you'll ever read this, but you honestly made me cry a bit after watching this. its beautiful poetry about one of my favorite movies, and you just hit it all the harder. subscribed, i hope you keep doing what your doing because your doing something special.

  • @crowspheet
    @crowspheet Před 6 lety +13

    Socrates must not have wanted to cross that bridge anytime soon if he answered like that

    • @kekero540
      @kekero540 Před 6 lety

      Only if he said he knows no truth.

  • @bluest1524
    @bluest1524 Před 5 lety +7

    Exceptional insights, thank you. I didn't feel Ripper was driven by impotence however, you may have missed the point on that. When questioned about his water obsession by Mandrake he explained he 'denied women his essence' because he feared that empty feeling he'd had after ejaculating. It wasn't that he couldn't get hard; it was that he'd refused to orgasm for years, and this buildup of tension had driven him mad.

    • @Redwhiteblue-gr5em
      @Redwhiteblue-gr5em Před 3 měsíci

      You are exactly right. Most everyone misses that. Jack has no problem getting hard, he just gets an empty depressed feeling after he cums. And he blames the Commies corrupting fluoridation of water to create this depressed feeling.

  • @UnholyBasil
    @UnholyBasil Před 4 lety +1

    This video is the most important one this year. Hands down. Thank you for being such a massive inspiration to me.

  • @RealLukeWilson
    @RealLukeWilson Před 4 lety +7

    My dad was a teenager when this came out, and he didn’t think it was a comedy. He found it too terrifying that it verged on ill taste.

    • @thorn262
      @thorn262 Před 4 lety +2

      Along these lines, Daniel Ellsberg saw this in 1964 with a friend. Upon exiting the theater, Ellsberg...who was intimately involved with nuclear realities as he dealt with, in short, the Mega-Deaths binders via the Rand Corporation...said, 'This is not a fiction feature film, it's a documentary!'

  • @howaboutsomecorn8592
    @howaboutsomecorn8592 Před 5 lety +3

    The last 5 minutes of this video always make me cry without fail. It's just genuinely too powerful and cements how good breadsword is at this whole thing.

  • @arthurcarvalho6591
    @arthurcarvalho6591 Před 6 lety +26

    I think Kubrick used that music at the end implying irony... I didn't know the background to it, to be an optimistic return-of-war song, but by the tone of the rest of the movie, I guess he went dark all the way and selected this specific tune in order to use it as a tool to his fine irony - or paradox
    Great video tho! loved the intro and the analysis on film particularities w/ exterior expemples, in reality or other movies..

    • @jthadcast
      @jthadcast Před 6 lety +4

      i agree. that song is irony and has nothing to do with hope, it is the final stage of grief ... acceptance. "we'll meet again" is the hallmark of that generation's loss of innocence, by '62 it was an absurd cliche.

    • @reeddressler9042
      @reeddressler9042 Před 6 lety

      Yeah I think it's definitely irony especially since Dr. Strangelove jumping up he also says "Mein Fuhrer I can walk" which uh...is less about being happy for him and more that he an actual nazi, his ideology that of destruction has gained power through the the US war. This could possibly be a point against the US because we did actually pardon nazis to help us with our military goals.

    • @tSp289
      @tSp289 Před 6 lety

      There's more to the song as well: it's both a 'chin-up' optimistic song, but I read a slight possibility that the 'some sunny day' might actually be the afterlife.
      "Will you please say hello, to the folks that I know; tell them I won't be long. They'll be happy to know that as you saw me go I was singing this song."

  • @n119511m
    @n119511m Před 5 lety +2

    first youtuber to make me watch a 37 minute long video and completly enjoy it, subscribed :D

  • @constantine5
    @constantine5 Před 4 lety +3

    Just noticed the War Room’s lighting shape and it’s resemblance to a nuclear cloud. So much symbolism and thought put into every shot of his movies. Nothing is accidental.

    • @thorn262
      @thorn262 Před 4 lety

      Well, sorta, kinda. Kubrick was masterful in making it appear in his films that nothing was accidental. However, 'DS' had its first test screening, November 22, 1963. It was re-released January 29, 1964. Certain cuts or loops were made due to the assassination of JFK: the phrase from Major 'King' Kong, 'Shoot! A fella could have a pretty good weekend in Vegas with all that stuff,’ had been, ‘...a pretty good weekend in Dallas...’ There’s no such thing as ‘perfect’ or nothing accidental in filmmaking (as for the lighting in the War Room, you align with my thoughts, but it is nevertheless, and always, an interpretation).

  • @terribleauthority
    @terribleauthority Před 6 lety +91

    NUCULAR

    • @mac2phin
      @mac2phin Před 5 lety +2

      John Smith Nuclear. Unclear.

    • @dahawk8574
      @dahawk8574 Před 5 lety +3

      Right up there with Q-Brick.
      (Cube Rick)
      Perhaps done intentionally, to avoid sounding too intellectual?

    • @katim2644
      @katim2644 Před 5 lety

      Ok George.

    • @EggBastion
      @EggBastion Před 5 lety +2

      Uncular?

    • @mcnultyfp
      @mcnultyfp Před 5 lety +1

      Two syllables better than three

  • @briancollins1296
    @briancollins1296 Před 5 lety +18

    Barry Lyndon deserves a video someday. Easily Kubrick's most underrated.

  • @maxr5799
    @maxr5799 Před 3 lety +2

    "McLovin is the crescendo" Damn, I wish I could've made that my Senior quote

  • @satanicchameleon1928
    @satanicchameleon1928 Před 4 lety +4

    Your videos legit give me chills. I really love the deep analysis you go into with each of your reviews and how it opens up ones mind to the many details we could have possibly missed regarding artistic choices and a realistic approach. It’s serene and refreshing. I’d love so much to see more videos like this, especially if older movies.
    If you don’t mind me asking, what’s your opinion on “Who’s Afraid Of Virginia Wolf” and “What Ever Happened To Baby Jane?” ?

  • @thomaskent887
    @thomaskent887 Před 5 lety +7

    Thank you and Kubrick for this profound entertainment.
    Paradox is the doorway to enlightenment and as confusing as it can be there is nearly always a more important truth underlying them.

  • @gbrading
    @gbrading Před 6 lety +24

    Really excellent analysis. Convinced me to subscribe. I disagree about the ending a bit (I think the ending is a funny last gag followed by the hopeful song, considering Strangelove bellows "MEIN FUHRER, I CAN WALK!" before the bombs drop). But Dr. Strangelove is certainly very current today when we consider how the threat of nuclear war seems much more real again. And definitely one of Kubrick's very best (2001 is my favourite).

  • @1995yuda
    @1995yuda Před 3 lety

    I love the essence of this channel so much. So happy I stumbled on one of your videos last night. Instant subscriber.

  • @ethansmith7263
    @ethansmith7263 Před 4 lety +1

    I really needed your ending monologue from this video today, thank you.

  • @therussbuss5314
    @therussbuss5314 Před 5 lety +24

    I know I'm 7 months late but please explain the entire cold war. You could do a video on agricultural practices and I would still be entranced.
    Also the cold war was my favorite subject in history.

  • @aaronlawrence666
    @aaronlawrence666 Před 5 lety +3

    I just watched Dr. Strangelove for the first time a couple of days ago and loved it. I decided to watch your video to get some insight just now and thoroughly enjoyed it. Very insightful and really well produced. You did a great job with this. Thanks very much.

  • @roberste
    @roberste Před 3 lety

    I just came across this video. Thanks for doing this. Dr. Strangelove is one of my all time favorite movies. I never heard an explanation like this for the film, and you hit it out of the park.

  • @steveclapper5424
    @steveclapper5424 Před 3 lety +4

    The time I read Catch 22 I thought it was the funniest book I had ever read. I tried to read it again and all I wanted to do was cry.

    • @jameswilson8433
      @jameswilson8433 Před 3 lety +1

      "He was so young!"
      “Well, he died. You don't get any older than that.”

  • @koshnu7475
    @koshnu7475 Před 6 lety +119

    seriously dude, please, for the love of god, post the tracklist of your videos in the description or whatever, they´re great , and you should spread your good taste, Do us a favor.

    • @jayvonwebb4864
      @jayvonwebb4864 Před 6 lety +1

      Romanov 1917 it makes the video much better

    • @trevorwilson9229
      @trevorwilson9229 Před 5 lety

      The opening song is What You Won’t Do For Love by Bobby Caldwell.

  • @QuikVidGuy
    @QuikVidGuy Před 6 lety +97

    the first sentence of the video is "hi"

    • @nixietubes
      @nixietubes Před 6 lety +18

      Hi is the first word, The first sentence is
      "Hi, The first sentence of this video, Is a lie."

    • @DaftSheep
      @DaftSheep Před 6 lety +8

      Tntmod54321 That's a lie.

    • @billstephens396
      @billstephens396 Před 6 lety +10

      Tntmod54321
      Actually, the first sentence of this video was "Hi." And that can be both a truth and a lie at the same time. "Hi." can and usualy is, a stand-alone sentence. There was a VEEERY long pause at the end of "Hi." indicating the end of a specific thought. Thus, that is a a stand-alone sentence. Just saying the truth... Problem solved... Who's up for Italian? (My "..." indicates extremely long pauses in thoughts. Nearly paragraph long ideas going on in these words...)

  • @handbananaistherapist642

    The shot of the refueling boom , suddenly and with a shudder, uncoupling makes me think of every time one of my kids burst into the bedroom during that "special" time!

  • @CraigPeace
    @CraigPeace Před 5 lety +3

    OMFG goosebumps from begining to end, seen Dr Strangelove on may occasions and never seen half of what youve shown me. guess im off to watch it again

  • @zekeii3483
    @zekeii3483 Před 6 lety +5

    Dude. Wow. fantastic job. Such attention and care, truly inspiring. A vigorous shout of defiance in the face of the monster favoring sheer speed of output, over the quality of each result. Love your channel and hope to continue seeing more.

  • @DallenMalna
    @DallenMalna Před 6 lety +59

    I'm pretty sure Dr.Strangelove walking at the end was supposed to symbolize the proverbial return to power of the horrors of the Nazis. Or at least the spirit of them. And the song at the end represents that that evil in humanity will never been gone and always return. I don't think it's optimistic at all...

    • @Roflmaolinde
      @Roflmaolinde Před 6 lety +28

      Dallen Malna It's cool how many things that can be read out of one tiny thing. I've always just assumed it was a easier joke on this doctor talking about ushering in a new übermench and realizing that he himself wouldn't be a part of it if he couldn't walk.

    • @DallenMalna
      @DallenMalna Před 6 lety +14

      GainedSalmon 3 it's possible some of us will but it's not true we all will. Disaster sometimes reveals that the most normal of people are monsters waiting to happen. But it also reveals that the most unlikely of people are heroes in the making. It's true if the world ended many of us would be willing to do terrible things to each other...but many of us wouldn't. We would do what is right even if it meant a painful death. That was true even in Nazi Germany. People fought back.

    • @th3b0yg
      @th3b0yg Před 6 lety +12

      Dallen Malna. I'm with you. This nutty assertion that "We'll Meet Again" is optimism, and not bitter sarcasm, really bugged me. And of course you're right about Strangelove walking. He's so invigorated by the destruction of the world he manages to stand erect once again. Yep. It's another bitter sex joke.

    • @mattbenz99
      @mattbenz99 Před 6 lety +5

      It is hilarious how differently people can take interpret that improvised part of the scene. Apparently Strangelove standing up was an accident and was just the actor getting excited. Kubrick however liked it so much that he added it to the film.

    • @mattbenz99
      @mattbenz99 Před 6 lety +4

      Romano Coombs
      Sellers was one of the few actors that Kubrick liked enough to let do improve. In fact Sellers improvised a ton in this movie. I mean the entire phone conversation between the US President and the Soviet Premier was improvised.

  • @haryman222
    @haryman222 Před 3 lety

    I'm still finding myself coming back to this video. Like way too much. This video is so damn good. All your videos are really good, but this one just really gets me on a philosophical level that I cannot get around