This week, Steve Coogan will emulate his hero Peter Sellers in the new West End adaptation of Stanley Kubrick’s celebrated Cold War farce Dr Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the ...
Stanley Kubrick’s 1964 political satire film “Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb,” is being adapted as a stage production for London’s West End by “Veep” creator ...
Sylvia Roussis is a New York based film enthusiast and aspiring filmmaker. She attended AcTvF high school in Long Island City and continued her film education at The New School's Eugene Lang College.
“Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb” debuted in theaters 60 years ago this January. Stanley Kubrick’s totemic examination of the intersection between Cold War ...
The U.K.’s National Theatre Live has unveiled the first trailer for its cinematic presentation of “Dr. Strangelove,” the stage adaptation of Stanley Kubrick’s cold war satire, ahead of its worldwide ...
A new book charts the remarkable career of Stanley Kubrick, America's most beloved filmmakers. Stanley Kubrick was just an average Jewish kid, born in Manhattan in 1928 and raised in The Bronx. He ...
During the late 1950s and early 1960s, concern over nuclear annihilation peaked with mass membership organisations like the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) leading thousands on protest marches.
Although Stanley Kubrick wrote one Dr. Strangeloverole with John Wayne in mind, that did not stop the famous star from turning the part down. John Wayne’s Westerns remain his most famous movies, and ...
Stanley Kubrick’s ruthless satire of Cold War tensions stands the test of time as an indictment of the madness at the center ...
If you’re looking for validation of the line from songwriters Peter Allen and Carole Bayer Sager that “everything old is new again,” you need not go further than a movie that premiered in New York ...
He read comic books and pulp novels, played chess, and rooted for the Yankees. He also watched every movie he could, often skipping school to go to 25-cent matinees. But as authors Robert P. Kolker ...