Not every comedy is a mindless series of fart and boob jokes. That type of fare unquestionably has its place in the pantheon of filmmaking genres, but a comedy can certainly also provide a deep, hard-thinking, sobering look at our world. To know that to be true beyond a shadow of a doubt, one only need look at the Stanley Kubrick classic, Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb. Which, not so coincidentally has just made its way onto Blu-ray in a "45th Anniversary Special Edition."
The film, originally released in 1964, stars Peter Sellers (in three different roles), George C. Scott, Sterling Hayden, and Slim Pickens (as well as a young James Earl Jones in a supporting role). Strangelove follows an attempt on the part of General Jack D. Ripper (Hayden) to eliminate the Soviet Union with a massive pre-emptive nuclear strike and the aftermath of that attempt. Never has the apocalypse and the end of all mankind been quite so funny.
As the film progresses, President Merkin Muffley (Sellers) learns what Ripper has done and invites the Soviet Ambassador into the War Room to try to make amends, much to the chagrin of Joint Chief of Staff Buck Turgidson (Scott). Muffley is only somewhat successful – the ambassador certainly feels for Muffley, which leads him to informing the folks in the War Room about a "Doomsday Machine" the Soviets have invited. The machine is meant to prevent any nuclear strikes as one a strike occurs the machine will make the entire planet radioactive for almost 100 years – clearly an effective deterrent, that is, it would be if the Soviets had bothered to tell anyone they built it.
Strangelove, made at the height of the Cold War, takes a lot of reality and facts and twists them just slightly, turning everything just enough where one knows that this hasn't happened, but where one is sure that it could (despite what the crawl before the movie states). Everything progresses in an exceedingly logical, if ludicrous, if fashion, and watching the film today the audience can't help but wonder what everyone in the world was possibly thinking 50 years ago.

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