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Maybe it's a mid-life thing for us boomers, but I'm finding that the
Cold War is one of those things for which I frequently have to remind myself that younger folks have no frame of reference. I'm surprised how much of my mental baseline was composed of USA/Soviet tensions. Nuclear weapons are still a threat, but the prospect of Soviet ICBMs raining from the sky has faded deeper from my awareness. Bomb shelter films are now almost humorous, and the "kiss your ass goodbye" drills are gone. Culturally, the Cold War was a rich field from which sprang some good spy novels from LaCarre, Clancy, & others. The better Bond movies had "red menace" overtones. I began realizing this in conversations with my Russian coworker. We share some intercultural humor, and I was recommending that he watch "Dr. Strangelove". From the west's perspective, it's excellent dark humor, but I wonder if he'll "get it". Without palpable Cold War tensions, I'm not sure it's as funny. For his part, he strongly suggested I read the "Life and Adventures of Soldier Chonkin" if I wanted a humorously accurate portrait of the Soviet system. Sounds interesting. /rambling Joe F. |
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rb608 wrote:
Maybe it's a mid-life thing for us boomers, but I'm finding that the Cold War is one of those things for which I frequently have to remind myself that younger folks have no frame of reference. I'm surprised how much of my mental baseline was composed of USA/Soviet tensions. Nuclear weapons are still a threat, but the prospect of Soviet ICBMs raining from the sky has faded deeper from my awareness. Bomb shelter films are now almost humorous, and the "kiss your ass goodbye" drills are gone. Culturally, the Cold War was a rich field from which sprang some good spy novels from LaCarre, Clancy, & others. The better Bond movies had "red menace" overtones. I began realizing this in conversations with my Russian coworker. We share some intercultural humor, and I was recommending that he watch "Dr. Strangelove". From the west's perspective, it's excellent dark humor, but I wonder if he'll "get it". Without palpable Cold War tensions, I'm not sure it's as funny. It is. :-) I just watched it again when it showed on the Turner movie channel. It was an experience that I can only describe as a true sense of deja vu. The plot and characters are inextricably linked to a particular time of my life, and rather than just halfway watching it while I did other things, I was totally fixated on it. Yes, it's heavy-handed and the characters are all over-the-top, but it's a masterpiece, IMHO. (And Sellers' performances are just as amazing now as they seemed then.) Silly asie: Did anyone else notice that in the last scene with Sellers playing Dr. Stangelove and doing his best to suppress his Nazi salute, that the guy playing the Russian ambassador is visibly struggling to hold back his laughter? I'd never noticed it before, but it's there. Chuck Vance |
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"rb608" wrote in
oups.com: Culturally, the Cold War was a rich field from which sprang some good spy novels from LaCarre, Clancy, & others. The better Bond movies had "red menace" overtones. It is interesting Clancy's last book takes Jack Ryan by to the 80s again for yet another cold war scenario. The bottle seems bottomless. I began realizing this in conversations with my Russian coworker. We share some intercultural humor, and I was recommending that he watch "Dr. Strangelove". From the west's perspective, it's excellent dark humor, but I wonder if he'll "get it". Without palpable Cold War tensions, I'm not sure it's as funny. I watched it for the first time only in the mid-90s and actually went and bought it. Impossible for me to juxtapose the Cuban Missile Crisis, which was close in the rear view mirror at Strangelove's release, against my 90s viewing, but nonetheless it is one damn funny movie. President: You're talking about mass murder, General, not war! General 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. |
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Conan The Librarian wrote in
: Silly asie: Did anyone else notice that in the last scene with Sellers playing Dr. Stangelove and doing his best to suppress his Nazi salute, that the guy playing the Russian ambassador is visibly struggling to hold back his laughter? I'd never noticed it before, but it's there. Yes, I have seen that. I also think George C. Scott's fall near the middle of the movie was accidental, but left in, judging by the stupid expression on his face when gets back up. |
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![]() "Skwala" wrote in message ... call me a hawkrista... http://friends.s5.net/mazzini/ovitki/default.html Well, that's why they'll never tell us the truth about Rosewell. Instead of them or us it's not liberals and conservatives and pro-war and anti-American and life and atheists.....divide and conquer..... john . . .in my day juvenile slaves grew up on the farm... |
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![]() "Conan The Librarian" wrote in message ... ...Silly asie: Did anyone else notice that in the last scene with Sellers playing Dr. Stangelove and doing his best to suppress his Nazi salute, that the guy playing the Russian ambassador is visibly struggling to hold back his laughter? I'd never noticed it before, but it's there. I believe the scene is a considered something of a classic by aficionados of the "****ups left in" genre. ![]() I, subtlety being my strong suit, first caught it on about my tenth or twelfth viewing. Yeah, I've seen it that many times.....and more. "Dr. Strangelove" is one of three movies (the others are "To Kill a Mockingbird" and "In the Heat of the Night") that I, a usually, and increasingly, early to bed kind of guy, will stay up into the wee hours to watch every time it comes around. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has long been remiss in not having an annual award for the best performance by an actor in a single scene. George C. Scott's description of a B-52 bombing run as the crazed Gen. Buck Turgidson would have been a shoo in. And Merkin Muffley is, hands down, THE BEST character name in the history of the arts! Wolfgang |
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