
Chris H. answered 05/26/22
Japanese and Political Science Tutor: Knowledgable and Patient
It sounds like the question is asking what the fictional, titular character Dr. Strangelove has in common with the real world Robert Oppenheimer. If that is the case, there are some facile similarities between the two: they were both scientists; they both worked on a sort of commission for the United States Government (although in the film it is clear that Dr. Strangelove still harbors allegiance towards the Nazis); and both were placed in positions of advising the U.S. President regarding the use and, in Oppenheimer's case, overseeing the day-to-day development of nuclear weapons.
There is much more to be said of the differences between the two, though. Dr. Strangelove is depicted as a comically and clearly evil former (current, as revealed by the end of the film) Nazi who ruthlessly advocates for the wanton use of atomic weapons for personal gain, whereas Oppenheimer was Jewish and spent much of his later life advocating for denuclearization and reckoning with conflicting feelings over his role in helping develop the atomic bomb.