Where was the funny again?


I just watched Dr Strangerlove for the 3rd time. It often bothers me when I don't like movies that are highly regarded, but this must be one of the most overrated comedies, if not THE most overrated.

There were a few bits to chuckle at: phone conversations, the survival kit, etc. They're not hilarious jokes, just "huh, that's funny" type of thing you think to yourself, and maybe smile.

How is this one of the best comedies of all time? Please, someone, give me actual moments from the movie that you thought were hilarious, and why.

All I can see on these boards from people defending this movie are vague responses: "this is satire, you don't understand, this is dark humor about politics and war." Okay then; if you find this movie so hilarious, it must be easy for you to give me at least three scenes and explain why they're are GENIUS. I have yet to see someone come up with this...

I don't hate the movie, I like it and I'd give it a solid 7/10. I thought Kubrick did an awesome job, and Sellers and C. Scott as well as a few other actors were amazing to watch. However, none of that was 'haha funny' and given the premise and plot, the comedy is the only thing this movie had going for it. I just don't see any funny in it; mostly just entertaining.

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I think it's when the film came out that the jokes made sense.

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The jokes still make perfect sense. But younger audiences might not know enough about the Cold War or history in general to understand them.

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I'm 18 and I died laughing at this film.

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Younger audience may not be aware of the amount of sexual double entendre and metaphors that are just about everywhere.

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The jokes still make sense. Look at the pissing contest between Trump and China. Or Trump and Russia. We were almost close to a nuclear war because of the MEN in power.

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I'm not going to pass judgement on anyone for admitting they don't get it. This film is not for everyone. There are people like me who love it and there are others who hate it. The difference is when they get all indignant and insist it's a stupid film, which it's not. To be totally fair, you didn't say that.

Some people like slapstick and some hate it. Some like stand up routines, others - like me - don't. Some like satire and others prefer something more directly accessible. It's not absolute and there's no reason to pass judgement on anyone for having a different view.

The background to Dr Strangelove is that it's satire. Satire is not for everyone. The best satire is so close to the truth that it's difficult to tell when it's serious and the it isn't. In the case of this movie, it sails so close to the wind that the truth becomes funny. There's also a very strong streak of black humour in there. This was at probably the most dangerous period of the Cold War - just after the Cuban Missile Crisis. So many of the things in the movie are accurate portrayals of nuclear protocols. I don't know if the CRM-114 was a real device - I heard it was - but the Motto "Peace is Our Profession" was real. The black humour is the shooting and killing going on underneath it, all in one shot. The fact that politicians behave like children or get drunk at inopportune moments or that soldiers and scientists try to run the government... The whole insanity is that it was real. And by the way, George C. Scott, who parodies Gen. Curtis Le May (the man who developed the motto "Peace is Our Profession for Strategic Air Command), was brilliant. Peter Sellers plays three characters and is excellent in all of them. The president's name is Merkin Muffley, which should raise a few laughs... but nothing is absolute and binding here.

Some get all hot under the collar and insist it's disrespectful. This actually makes me like it even more.

But some prefer a greater delineation between the two and something that's less subtle. It depends on what your personal preferences are. No one is required to like this or any other movie. To me, it's the second greatest movie ever made but I don't expect others to feel the same way.

The old Latin saying goes "De gustibus non est disputandum" - Of taste there is no dispute or "there's no accounting for taste".

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The movie doesn't need to be defended.

I don't have time today to list three scenes that make "Strangelove" "genius," but I can start with the entire conversation between Ripper and Mandrake, when Ripper is explaining that he started a nuclear holocaust because of a commie plot to fluoridate water. In essence, he attributes his impotence to a commie plot and wipes out the world because he can't get a boner.

Wait, here's another: The B-52s are equipped with radios that are deliberately designed not to receive incoming messages that might recall them.

Or the Soviets built a doomsday device to deter an attack, then didn't bother to tell anyone, which negates its ability to deter an attack.

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well there are parts such as "gentlemen, you can't fight in here, this is the war room" that people find hilarious

it wasn't for me





so many movies, so little time

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Mandrake, in the name of Her Majesty and the Continental Congress, come here and feed me this belt, boy.

They call me the Mayor, 'Cause I spend all my days here

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It depends though, some comedy doesn't make you outright laugh but you can appreciate the subtelty and the cleverness of it more than some crude joke that you may find funnier... You know what I mean?

This comedy didn't make me laugh the most, nowhere near. But I think it's the best comedy film I've seen.

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It depends though, some comedy doesn't make you outright laugh but you can appreciate the subtelty and the cleverness of it more than some crude joke that you may find funnier... You know what I mean?


This. That's not to say I'm in love with this film or anything (it may be overrated but only slightly) but it's certainly a comedy and parts of it are priceless. Anything involving general Ripper must be my favourite.

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Why would you watch it three times if you think it's so overrated? Just admit it's not for you and move on.

"Worthington, we're being attacked by giant bats!"

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General "Buck" Turgidson: Mr. President, I'm not saying we wouldn't get our hair mussed. But I do say no more than ten to twenty million killed, tops. Uh, depending on the breaks.

Col "King" Kong: Well, boys, I uh reckon that this is it. Nucleer combat toe-to-toe with the Rooskies!

President Merkin Muffley: Well, Dimitri....I'll tell you...General Ripper went a little funny in the head. Just a little....funny.

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Younger crowd here I suppose but I saw this movie with several full-house college revivals back in the 70's (about a decade after its 1964 release) and I'm here to tell you that the audiences screamed with laughter start to finish...even as the story maintains suspenseful tension all the way through, too (Can the British military man wrest the stop code from General Ripper? Will Kong be convinced to turn his plane back in time?)

And it was George C. Scott, not Peter Sellers, not Slim Pickens who got the biggest laughs...

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