Answers
Vertical Hold is where the image goes up up up up and up.
I don't remember seeing it, no. If it's constant throughout the movie then definitely not.
This is the trailer of the classic Stanley Kubrick film, Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.
Answer these questions and i will love you
1. What was your favorite part?
2. Why would the embasitor take pictures of the war room if the world was going to end?
3. Name another movie the pilot was in that was also awesome?
4. After you watched this movie, did you now have a very large fear for the contamination of your presious bodily fluids?
1. When Dr. Strangelove made his appearance and could not control his aberrant arm
2. Perhaps it wasn;t truly going to end
3. Blazing Saddles
4. No, but I would like to know what brand of alcohol he drank
It was a satire on the state of the world in the year it was made.
The cold war had created a mindset that was beyond surrealistic. Stanley Kubrick captured the oddness that came from a military and political situation that had never existed before.
There is a lot of speculation on who Dr Strangelove is based on. The simple answer is that we don't know, but some historical fgures he's believed to be based on include:
Henry Kissinger;
Werner von Braun;
Edward Teller;
Herman Kahn.
Check out the source below for a more in-depth speculation.
On a side note, General "Buck" Turgidson was based on General Curtis LeMay.
I think that there was an historical figure called Dr. Strangelove. I just don't think he was played by the same guy that played the President.