The Imitation Game By Alan Turing

542 Words2 Pages

The Imitation Game

The Second World War is raging, and Britain is fighting a hard fight against Hitler's military expansion in Europe. British intelligence has everything to gain from interpreting the Nazis' coded radio signals, as they contain very important information about German military strategies and the movements of the German war machine.

Interpretations of the radio signals seem impossible, but British authorities are hoping that the mathematician and encryption expert Alan Turing and his team of codebreakers will be able to reveal German secrets.

Alan Turing has a very complex personality, which complicates cooperation with colleagues and clients. Turing, however, is all honored to solve the code mystery, therefore turning the warfare that has long been in Hitler's favor. …show more content…

The United Kingdom, separated from Europe's mainland, is fighting a battle against the clock, and a lack of food supplies and huge material losses are in the process to break the country, where military action is not sufficient to beat Hitler's Nazi country, it is necessary to master technology that can reveal the contents of German radio signals.

Must break Enigma:
We are introduced to the math professor Alan Turing (Benedict Cumberbatch), who gets a secret mission during World War II. He is going to break the Nazi code maker Enigma, which will tip the war over the Allies favor. Turing and a group of cryptographers, including Joan Clarke (Keira Knightley), begin, but face several challenges, including from their own rows.

The movie has a smart and efficient structure, something as boring as code breaking is explained in an easy and understandable manner.
It never feels too technical or complicated. We get to know exactly what we need to know, while the focus is on the personality and their struggle on both the inner and outer

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