the most underrated movie. I absolutely loved it, and the way it was made. the settings, the scenes, the lines, the acting, the history, it was all so mesmerizing.
I love this movie too. Turing was a true genius, decades ahead of time and its very sad that he ended his life the way he did. He kicked off an industry worth billions of $ just 50 years later, less than a lifetime, an invention that has effected every human being on the planet, in some way or another. RIP Alan the world salutes you.
The way he did ? The way the society blame he to be just himself. He won a war to let free a society that doesnt let free her own citizens. That' not his fault to be who he was.
The conscious decision made by the costume designers to give Joan (Joanne?) an outfit that 'doesn't match' - a hat that is not aligned, color-wise, with her dress etc, is absolute brilliance imho. I am so impressed by the thought that goes into these productions behind the scenes
I have the deepest respect for Alan Turing. I believe he was destined to create that machine: foreordained. He wrote the most elegant algorithms, some of which are still in use today. A brilliant, brilliant man.
I am aware of his papers what we call "turing machines" and "universal turing machines" as a means to demonstrate which algorithms are "computable". I am less aware though of any algorithms he developed that are currently in use. Could you please share the ones that you may know about?
@3:40. Bletchely Park invited them to film inside the building, but the only scene which was filmed in current Bletchely Park was "Beer Hut" scene! LOL! When I saw the movie I assumed that it depicted a real-life pub OUTSIDE Bletchely Park, and was never intended to replicate a BP interior, let alone the it might actually be one! I wish I'd known! This was very moving. Some of the scenes brought tears to my eyes again.
I enjoy watching this film multiple times. Even though I am well into my sixties, I am embarrassed to admit that until this film was released I never heard of Alan Turing or knew anything about the heroic work that he and his colleagues did to defeat the Nazis. I was also sad to learn about how he was treated after the war and that he died so young. Apparently it was suicide but even that is the subject of some controversy now.
The US Cryptological Museum, at Fort Meade, had two of them sitting out, available to play with. Bucket List Item checked off. Low-budget-looking museum but surprisingly good.
There’s a lot more to the Enigma story than Turing and Bletchley Park. Much of what happened at Bletchley was building upon what the Poles had accomplished before the Germans invaded. The Poles managed to break early versions of Enigma.
If the British hadn't been so concerned about keeping things secret post-war and allowed men like Turing and others to build the machines they wanted to build (and given them the resources needed to do so), its entirely possible that the UK could have had a company up there with IBM as a major player in the computer market instead of letting the Yanks take the lead and dominate the computer market.
It is the Longhery Code that predicts lottey wins for every draw. The Swiss billionaire, Andrew Wyess, employs the code at strategic intervals, and under assumed names and distant locations.
I was interested in your post. I googled " Longhery Code" and came up with nothing remotely resembling how you described it. Can you point me in the right direction ?
Wonderful film, beautifully acted. Unfortunately, it is my understanding that the film has many inaccuracies and exaggerations in order to make it "more cinematic".
Très beau film. Dommage qu'il ne soit pas en lien avec les faits réels. Le premier décodage de Enigma est l'oeuvre de Marian Rejewski. Et l'oubli patent des travaux de ce dernier jette un voile d'ombre sur le film
Turing did not build the machine it was a GPO Research Engineer TOMMY FLOWERS who received little recognition for his contribution to Cryptanalysis. The government granted him a £1,000 payment which did not cover Flowers' personal investment in the equipment, and he shared much of the money amongst the staff who had helped him build and test Colossus. Ironically, Flowers latter applied for a loan from the Bank of England to build another machine like Colossus but was denied the loan because the bank did not believe that such a machine could work!
They were working together in a team. For Tommy Flower's luck he was not homosexual and chemical castrated in the end... The whole point is that Alan Turing was legaly driven into suicide in spite of what his work on the Enigma-encodingteam had done.
The Imitation Game portrays to many falsities about Alan Turing and about Bletchley Park. For instance the machine developed to decipher the Enigma machine wasn't invented by Turing it was first developed in Poland and the one developed at Bletchley was an updated version of this. It wasn't called Christopher it was called Bombe after the Polish machine that was called Bomba. Bombe was already being developed before Turing arrived at Bletchley. Though Turing did play a major part in helping to decipher the enigma code. The falsities in the film are endless.
Except that it is Turing who made decryption possible on an industrial scale, thus allowing us to follow Nazi plans and activities on a real-time basis.
The script is unnecessarily inaccurate on so many technical and historical points. Their 'hut' was under-populated; Bletchley Park was a bit more crowded. Not enough extras in background. Other than those nitpicks, nice movie.
the most underrated movie. I absolutely loved it, and the way it was made. the settings, the scenes, the lines, the acting, the history, it was all so mesmerizing.
There's no such thing as an underrated movie in the free market of the box office.
I love this movie too. Turing was a true genius, decades ahead of time and its very sad that he ended his life the way he did. He kicked off an industry worth billions of $ just 50 years later, less than a lifetime, an invention that has effected every human being on the planet, in some way or another. RIP Alan the world salutes you.
The way he did ? The way the society blame he to be just himself. He won a war to let free a society that doesnt let free her own citizens. That' not his fault to be who he was.
Pity it wasn't filmed at bletchley, I love 6 miles away and my grandfather was stationed there
This is such a beautiful film
It really is
The conscious decision made by the costume designers to give Joan (Joanne?) an outfit that 'doesn't match' - a hat that is not aligned, color-wise, with her dress etc, is absolute brilliance imho. I am so impressed by the thought that goes into these productions behind the scenes
RIP Alan Turing (June 23, 1912 - June 7, 1954), aged 41
You will be remembered as a legend.
I have the deepest respect for Alan Turing. I believe he was destined to create that machine: foreordained.
He wrote the most elegant algorithms, some of which are still in use today. A brilliant, brilliant man.
I am aware of his papers what we call "turing machines" and "universal turing machines" as a means to demonstrate which algorithms are "computable". I am less aware though of any algorithms he developed that are currently in use. Could you please share the ones that you may know about?
He was not. Destiny is an absurd concept.
@@Adaephonable Well there you are then. You've cracked everything. Time for a quick one down the pub?
7500+ views & no comments ?
Well, I would like to say thank you for uploading.
Great film, great addition.
Great acting, well told, brilliantly done. Excellent job done by all.
Superb
From the real story to the real acting
It brings hope for the humanity
Thank You Alan
Thank You acting team
@3:40. Bletchely Park invited them to film inside the building, but the only scene which was filmed in current Bletchely Park was "Beer Hut" scene! LOL! When I saw the movie I assumed that it depicted a real-life pub OUTSIDE Bletchely Park, and was never intended to replicate a BP interior, let alone the it might actually be one! I wish I'd known!
This was very moving. Some of the scenes brought tears to my eyes again.
I enjoy watching this film multiple times. Even though I am well into my sixties, I am embarrassed to admit that until this film was released I never heard of Alan Turing or knew anything about the heroic work that he and his colleagues did to defeat the Nazis. I was also sad to learn about how he was treated after the war and that he died so young. Apparently it was suicide but even that is the subject of some controversy now.
Incredible film about an incredible man.
My outlook on homosexuality was further improved after watching this movie considering I owe my profession to the father of computer science.
*modern computer science
I don’t like historic movies or war movies or movies based on true events and yet this is my favorite movie ever
Thank you for uploading it! I love this movie, so it's very interesting about the making of this.
This was a really great movie! Bravo!
Turing Machine. Today, we call them computers.
Such an amazing movie. Dance was terrifying. Tywin Lannister, all over again.
Went to Paris to actually see an Enigma machine in the flesh. Rotor position LOL. Great movie, Alan Turing great hero 🇬🇧.
I've been to Bletchley Park and seen theirs. Paris for me meant standing at Marie and Pierre Curie's tomb, which I did on the same trip.
The US Cryptological Museum, at Fort Meade, had two of them sitting out, available to play with. Bucket List Item checked off. Low-budget-looking museum but surprisingly good.
It was a brilliant movie with a moving story that captured what happened in real life
alan turing is my idol since i've seen this movie for the first time. 🙏 the story and sountrack are 10/10.
What a great period movie. An absolute gem!
Thank you for this download...The team at Bletchley were superb...ALAN TURING WAS A GIANT AMONGST GIANTS!!!!!!
One of the Best Movie Ever in My Life🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
What a cast!
My other half is a Alan Turing, they are far beyond intellectual. They function in another world, it's very sexy. 😊
Turing is my choice to have as a dinner guest if I could bring him back, just to have a chat and say Sorry.
Wonderful movie.
There’s a lot more to the Enigma story than Turing and Bletchley Park. Much of what happened at Bletchley was building upon what the Poles had accomplished before the Germans invaded. The Poles managed to break early versions of Enigma.
Sometimes it is the people no one can imagine anything of who do the things no one can imagine.”
IN MY TOP 5 MOVIES OF ALL TIME
13:07 - "Are you my Mummy ?"
I learned about Alan Turling at school
Still can't remember the main guys name, will remember his part in this movie though, absolutely great movie set beautifully
If the British hadn't been so concerned about keeping things secret post-war and allowed men like Turing and others to build the machines they wanted to build (and given them the resources needed to do so), its entirely possible that the UK could have had a company up there with IBM as a major player in the computer market instead of letting the Yanks take the lead and dominate the computer market.
Olá meu amigo boa tarde confirmando a minha inscrição neste canal abraço boa sorte para nós
I like the part where they make a complex machine without knowing how it works.
it's the best film
It is the Longhery Code that predicts lottey wins for every draw. The Swiss billionaire, Andrew Wyess, employs the code at strategic intervals, and under assumed names and distant locations.
I was interested in your post. I googled " Longhery Code" and came up with nothing remotely resembling how you described it. Can you point me in the right direction ?
He had a good team, I am surrounded by ignorance 😉
Alan turling is a interesting man
Good movie. A mess what UK has done to Alan. One of masters of the 20th century. There were other nations included in this big task.
This movie was amazing
Joan Pujol Garcia was an other incredible hero of the WW2
aka Garbo.
Wonderful film, beautifully acted. Unfortunately, it is my understanding that the film has many inaccuracies and exaggerations in order to make it "more cinematic".
Can you provide some examples? Tks
Très beau film. Dommage qu'il ne soit pas en lien avec les faits réels. Le premier décodage de Enigma est l'oeuvre de Marian Rejewski. Et l'oubli patent des travaux de ce dernier jette un voile d'ombre sur le film
Sauf que c'est Turing qui a permis le déchiffrement sur une échelle industrielle, permettant ainsi de suivre les activités nazies EN TEMPS RÉEL.
Good film
It is a shame there are so many proven inaccuracies in the film eg the spy. He was in a different hut to Turing.
great great movie
Крутой фильм
Turing did not build the machine it was a GPO Research Engineer TOMMY FLOWERS who received little recognition for his contribution to Cryptanalysis. The government granted him a £1,000 payment which did not cover Flowers' personal investment in the equipment, and he shared much of the money amongst the staff who had helped him build and test Colossus.
Ironically, Flowers latter applied for a loan from the Bank of England to build another machine like Colossus but was denied the loan because the bank did not believe that such a machine could work!
They were working together in a team. For Tommy Flower's luck he was not homosexual and chemical castrated in the end... The whole point is that Alan Turing was legaly driven into suicide in spite of what his work on the Enigma-encodingteam had done.
Flowers did the Colossus, the UK bombe was designed by Turing and improved by Welchman
Colossus was used for cryptanalysis of the Lorenz cipher. It was not used for the simpler Enigma cipher.
clearly someone didn't study history properly :)
Wrong LOL. Flowers did colossus NOT the Bomba.
The Imitation Game portrays to many falsities about Alan Turing and about Bletchley Park. For instance the machine developed to decipher the Enigma machine wasn't invented by Turing it was first developed in Poland and the one developed at Bletchley was an updated version of this. It wasn't called Christopher it was called Bombe after the Polish machine that was called Bomba. Bombe was already being developed before Turing arrived at Bletchley. Though Turing did play a major part in helping to decipher the enigma code. The falsities in the film are endless.
It’s a movie not a documentary
It's a movie you moron. If you want a documentary, go watch one.
if you want a documentary kid go cry about it, it's a movie i.e. HOLLYWOOD
While much of what you say is true, the liberties taken are "recursively enumerable", as Turing would say, and not endless.
Except that it is Turing who made decryption possible on an industrial scale, thus allowing us to follow Nazi plans and activities on a real-time basis.
The script is unnecessarily inaccurate on so many technical and historical points.
Their 'hut' was under-populated; Bletchley Park was a bit more crowded. Not enough extras in background.
Other than those nitpicks, nice movie.
OM2
is it 100% certain that he killed himself?
R
j
wow this turing fellow is nearly as clever as trump