The Imitation Game (DVD REVIEW)
The
Imitation Game
DVD Review by Kam Williams
Best Adapted Screenplay Oscar-Winner Arrives on DVD
At the outset of World War II, the
Nazis gained the early advantage with the help of its Enigma, the encrypting
machine which enabled the German military to communicate without having to
worry about any messages being intercepted. In response, Winston Churchill
deputized eccentric, math genius Alan Turing (Benedict Cumberbatch) to handpick
a team comprised of fellow savants whose appointed mission would be to crack
the Enigma’s inscrutable codes.
Operating on the campus of a cypher
school located in Buckinghamshire’s Bletchley
Park, Turing’s
exceptional eggheads proceeded to embark upon a surreptitious race against time
every bit as important as the fighting simultaneously unfolding on the
battlefield. And when they finally did manage to decipher German
communications, it remained important that they keep that fact a secret.
You see, the info unearthed afforded
the Allies on the front lines a competitive advantage which would immediately
be lost if the Nazis ever caught wind of the fact that their supposedly
inscrutable commands were actually being intercepted. For, they would
undoubtedly have simply altered their encrypting in an instant.
The British government credited
Turing’s team with saving millions of lives while shortening the conflict in
the European theater by a couple years. That important achievement is the
subject of The Imitation Game, a bittersweet biopic directed by Norwegian
Morten Tyldum (Headhunters).
Winner of the Academy Award in the Best
Adapted Screenplay category, the film is based on “Alan Turing: The Enigma,”
Andrew Hodges’ belated tribute to the unsung hero. Unfortunately, despite the
pivotal role he had played, Turing was never really recognized as a national
hero because of his homosexuality.
Instead, after the war, he had to
suffer the indignity of being persecuted, arrested, convicted, and ultimately
chemically castrated for being gay. That led the brilliant visionary to commit
suicide while on the brink of inventing the computer. Though that tragedy can
never be undone, at least we live in more enlightened times, when an icon of
Turing’s order might finally be afforded his due.
Excellent (4 stars)
Rated
PG-13 for sexual references, mature themes and smoking
Running
time: 113 minutes
Distributor:
Anchor Bay / The Weinstein Company
Blu-ray
Extras: Making The Imitation Game; Alan Turing: Man & Enigma; and Heroes of
Bletchley.
To
see a trailer for The Imitation Game, visit:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S5CjKEFb-sM
To
order The Imitation Game on Blu-ray, visit:
No comments:
Post a Comment