Photos
Dee Vaughan
- Self - Wife of Gilbert Taylor
- (as Dee Taylor)
Joseph McGrath
- Self - Friend of Peter Sellers
- (as Joe McGrath)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe titles for this film were designed by Pablo Ferro, who created the distinctive titles of the original Dr. Strangelove.
- ConnectionsFeatures Lolita (1962)
Featured review
Really interesting documentary plenty of nuggets
A documentary that looks at the creation and filming of the film Dr Strangelove. This uses footage and interviews to build up the story behind the scenes the problems, the errors, the motivation behind what they did and the areas of improvisation.
This documentary has it's weaknesses but for me it did the one thing a `making of ..' film should do, and that is to surprise me with things I didn't know about the film and how it was put together. Things like the fact that Sellers improvised many of the really funny scenes, that the word Dallas was replaced in a Slim Picken's speech, a planned pie fight at the end, even how the credits were thought up. At nearly every stage of this I was captivated at how much I didn't know!
The documentary only lasts 45 minutes but there's so much information that it feels longer. The two main failures of the documentary are sadly biggies! The first is that the narrator is terrible he's just cheesy and sounds a bit wooden with a slice of fake sincerity. The second problem is that many of those telling the stories are not those directly involved. Now in many cases the producers etc are still all alive, but there's too many friends, daughters and sons who pass it all on second hand. This doesn't take away from the fact that it's a very enlightening documentary.
Overall this is a really good watch. It'll make you want to watch the film again and appreciate the creative processes that went into making such a great piece of art.
This documentary has it's weaknesses but for me it did the one thing a `making of ..' film should do, and that is to surprise me with things I didn't know about the film and how it was put together. Things like the fact that Sellers improvised many of the really funny scenes, that the word Dallas was replaced in a Slim Picken's speech, a planned pie fight at the end, even how the credits were thought up. At nearly every stage of this I was captivated at how much I didn't know!
The documentary only lasts 45 minutes but there's so much information that it feels longer. The two main failures of the documentary are sadly biggies! The first is that the narrator is terrible he's just cheesy and sounds a bit wooden with a slice of fake sincerity. The second problem is that many of those telling the stories are not those directly involved. Now in many cases the producers etc are still all alive, but there's too many friends, daughters and sons who pass it all on second hand. This doesn't take away from the fact that it's a very enlightening documentary.
Overall this is a really good watch. It'll make you want to watch the film again and appreciate the creative processes that went into making such a great piece of art.
helpful•61
- bob the moo
- Jul 3, 2002
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Inside: 'Dr. Strangelove'
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime46 minutes
- Color
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