‘Based on a true
story’ says the opening card of the movie. By the time the movie ends you
wonder how such an important event in history was not public knowledge for
decades. We have seen dozens of WWII movies, and quite a lot on the launching
of the Second Front at Normandy
beach, which was a decisive moment in WWII. But, who decided the moment and
place of that attack? Have we ever thought of that beyond perhaps the generals
and commanders who decided the strategies of war? What if those were not the decisions
of the Generals, but that of Christopher? Who’s Christopher? Watch The
Imitation Game to find out.
Its 1939, the
Nazi’s are threatening civilization and the allies have no clue about their
movements. There is a way to know their movements before they actually happen.
But to do so they have to break a code, the code called ‘Enigma’. Espionage
thrillers usually have an undercover agent in enemy territory pilfering
information for his people back home, risking his limb and life. Here, the
spies are in the comfort of a radio factory, in cozy huts with sheets of
papers. They are the best cryptographers in all of England , and they have been chosen
because they solved crosswords faster than anyone else. How do they break
‘Enigma’? That journey and the bigger journey that Alan Turing takes through
this task is The Imitation Game.
This is as
different a WWII movie as you can think about. Yes, there are fleeting footages
of war that
remind us of the devastations of the period that the movie is set
in. But for most part, the movie is a drama set within a military camp where a
group of certified geniuses rack their brains. While all of them want to use
pen and paper and their gray matter to crack the problem, Alan Turing,
professor of mathematics at
If you need just
one reason to watch a movie, then here the reason is Benedict Cumberbatch. He
plays the irascible genius to perfection. He is not good at talking to people,
he never understands why people mean something and say something else and yet
expect you to know what they mean. He never wants to explain his ways to others
and believes that even if he tried they would never understand the importance
of what he was doing, not even his fellow geniuses. He can’t take orders, he
can’t work in a team. He’s just not normal! But as it is said many times in the
movie, almost always at the right time, ‘It is the people who no one imagines
much of, who do things that no one can imagine’. All those traits portrayed
with seasoned expertise, underplay and expression at the exactly right places.
This is a pitch perfect acting masterclass by Cumberbatch.
And his
brilliance has rubbed off on others too. Everyone around him transforms into
min-geniuses in their own ways. Keira Knightley comes in as a very important
character who makes Alan Turing likeable to his other teammates. Their romance
that seems to spring from the admiration of each other’s intellect and oddities
comes across as refreshing.
The script, and
the way it ahs been shot, beautifully shows the ways in which geniuses function
on a different plane. Their daily frustrations of knowing that there is someone
or something out there smarter than them, their processes of elimination and
calculation; and most importantly the final moment of truth when they hit upon
what they have been looking for all this while! It is not all said in a way
that a layman cannot understand. Especially, the simple piece of logic which
gives them the final breakthrough is very understandable.
A special word
of mention for the dialogues. They are witty, sharp and deep at different
points and you will enjoy them as they sprinkle humor along the way. The movie
begins in 1951 as cops enter the house of Alan Turing whose neighbors have
reported unusual sounds. The movie then flits between 1951 and the WWII, as the
police investigate into what or who made those unusual noises. One small detail
that could have been better here is a clear demarcation of the two periods. The
scenes shift so fast from one era to another that there are a few seconds
before one can actually pick up which it actually is. That apart, the few looks
at the boyhood of Alan Turing are revelations into the growth of his genius and
some of his predilections.
In the end, it
is a bit sad to know how late in history this man has been acknowledged.
Nevertheless, The Imitation Game is the beginning of a very late tribute that
the world owes to Alan Turing.
Brilliantly
executed portrayal of brilliance that changed the world!
4/5
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