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One of Stanley Kubrick's most highly regarded and influential films, Dr. Strangelove, or: How I learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964) is the definitive film about the nuclear age. In this close analysis of the story, themes and style of Dr. Strangelove, Kubrick expert Peter Kramer lays out the film's complicated production history and analyses the key aspects of its development. Highlighting the film's close relationship with real-world nuclear strategy and politics, Kramer foregrounds several crucial themes within the film such as the relevance of Dr. Strangelove's Nazi past; the parallels between the Cold War and World War II; the combination of comedy and suspense; and the futile hope for transcendence of the nuclear threat. Exposing how we still live in the shadow of the bomb, Kramer shows that Dr. Strangelove is as relevant today as when first released.