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Secret Cinema gets Political presenting Stanley Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove


21 March 2016

(Photo left courtesy of Hanson Leatherby)

Secret Cinema can finally lift the curtain on their latest immersive production. Stanley Kubrick’s 1964 cinematic masterpiece and political comedy: Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb starring Peter Sellers, was resurrected, and with it a call to engage in a new social movement.

Secret Cinema’s Tell No One production, the first since their hugely successful Secret Cinema presents Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back in 2015, was a homage and a return to its underground roots where the film is not revealed to the audience until the night.

“We are pacified…by full stomachs, TV and comfortable homes, but we have become ‘walking dead.’ We’ve given up as individuals. We deny the threat and subconsciously experience our anxieties elsewhere.” Stanley Kubrick

 

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(Photos above courtesy of Camilla Greenwell and Hanson Leatherby)

Drawing inspiration from Kubrick himself, and current world affairs, the production confronted modern social anxieties and blurred the lines between real and fictional worlds. The journey beginning for the audience when they were assigned their unique persona at the D.O.C.S. website (Department of Cultural Surveillance) password: accessdocs. Whether they were Military Division or Diplomat, all ticket holders were encouraged to get involved in the new world, with even a fictional newspaper encouraging participants to become citizen journalists.

Reporting to duty on the night at the fictional Burpelson Air Base, created at an abandoned factory warehouse complex in South London, the film was brought to life with over 35 actors posing as D.O.C.S. personnel, military and non-military, a live jazz band, and a life-size replica of the iconic War Room, created by set design legend Ken Adam, who sadly passed away in the course of the last month. This was built to a grand scale, and incorporated six stadium-sized screens from where the audience could watch world events unfold.

 

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(Photos above courtesy of Camilla Greenwell and Hanson Leatherby)

Active engagement was encouraged, and in an attempt to bridge the gap between the citizen and political class, audience members were invited to stand up to world leaders within the show. The Tell No One production gave its ticket holders the opportunity to deliberate on the threat of nuclear warfare, an issue that whilst laying buried, is still a real threat today.

Founder of Secret Cinema, Fabien Riggall said ‘Secret Cinema is committed to creating powerful experiences in which audiences become activists in stories that matter during these uncertain times. We are incredibly honoured to have staged Stanley Kubrick’s wonderful Dr Strangelove.’

Dr. Strangelove Film Page

Secret Cinema Tell No One featuring Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb ran from 17th February until 20th March.

Secret Cinema returns on 26th March with Secret Cinema X and from 14th April with Secret Cinema Presents 28 Days Later.

The event was in support of War Child UK.

Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb is distributed by Sony Pictures

More information about Secret Cinema can be found online, and on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

 


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(Photo above courtesy of Camilla Greenwell)

ABOUT SECRET CINEMA
Creating large-scale cultural experiences in abandoned spaces, Secret Cinema fuses film, music, theatre and installations. Audiences explore ultra-immersive worlds where fiction and reality blur.

In 2007, Secret Cinema pioneered the form ‘Live Cinema’ by introducing site-specific, immersive cultural experiences. Breaking films – and recently music albums – into their constituent parts and marrying narratives with play-along action, Secret Cinema is a unique participatory social experience. Fuelled by a desire to fill the void left by an over-saturated technological world, it invites audiences to lose themselves in serendipitous, imaginary environments that challenge the way we perceive culture and social interaction. To date, over 400,000 people attended Secret Cinema’s events.

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