Tags / Peter Sellers

"Peter Sellers"

2 BuzzVerdicts

Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb

4.5

1964 · Stanley Kubrick · 94 min · Political Satire / Black Comedy

Dr. Strangelove remains one of the sharpest satires ever put on screen. Stanley Kubrick took the most terrifying scenario imaginable and turned it into a comedy that somehow makes the danger feel more real, not less. Peter Sellers doing three distinct roles without a single weak link is a performance feat that still hasn't been matched. The humor won't connect for everyone, and younger audiences may need to meet the film's bone-dry tone on its own terms. But for those who click with it, this is 94 minutes of controlled absurdity that has only become more relevant with time.

Lolita

3.6

1962 · Stanley Kubrick · 153 min · Drama

Kubrick's Lolita is a fascinating compromise between a brilliant novel and a censorship regime that made faithful adaptation impossible. James Mason's Humbert is superb, Peter Sellers delivers one of the most unhinged comic performances of his career, and Kubrick finds ways to suggest what he can't show with characteristic intelligence. But the film's inability to depict the relationship at the story's center means it becomes something different from the novel: a dark comedy about obsession rather than a disturbing study of predation. That's not necessarily a failure, but it is a fundamental transformation that leaves the film feeling incomplete to anyone who knows what was left out.