The highs and lows of Alan Turing's life, tracking his extraordinary accomplishments, his government persecution through to his tragic death in 1954. In the last 18 months of his short life,... Read allThe highs and lows of Alan Turing's life, tracking his extraordinary accomplishments, his government persecution through to his tragic death in 1954. In the last 18 months of his short life, Turing visited a psychiatrist, Dr. Franz Greenbaum, who tried to help him. Each therapy s... Read allThe highs and lows of Alan Turing's life, tracking his extraordinary accomplishments, his government persecution through to his tragic death in 1954. In the last 18 months of his short life, Turing visited a psychiatrist, Dr. Franz Greenbaum, who tried to help him. Each therapy session in this drama documentary is based on real events. The conversations between Turing... Read all
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- Self - Narrator
- (voice)
- Self - Christopher Morcom's Nephew
- (as Christopher Morcom QC)
- Self - University of Warwick
- (as Professor Ian Stewart)
- Self - Author, 'Engines of Logic'
- (as Professor Martin Davis)
- Self - Queen Mary, University of London
- (as Dr Matt Parker)
- Self - Google
- (as Dr Alma Whitten)
- Self - University of Cambridge
- (as Professor Simon Schaffer)
- Self - London South Bank University
- (as Professor Jeffrey Weeks)
- Self - University of Sheffield
- (as Dr Allan Pacey)
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Featured reviews
The documentary continues along the same lines, superficially describing who Alan Turing was and what his contributions were without "connecting the dots" between his observational skills and his intellectual skills. It shows, at best, a Wikipedia-level knowledge of who he was. Even the title "Codebreaker" is misleading. Turing's contributions at Bletchley Park are barely dealt with and not in any way informatively dealt with. One could make the case, I suppose, that the title is a play on words, referring Turing's breaking of the gentleman's code of conduct, but that's not stated in the film.
I felt like this was pretty much of a loss of an hour or so of my time.
It states right in the documentary that what made Turing a genius was the fact that, although others had broken the Enigma code, no one had ever broken the German navy code. Turing built a machine to do that.
Turing aLao invented the idea of the computer years before its time, even talking about taking a computer to the park, like a i-phone. The documentary also shows some of his early inventions.
The documentary's conceit is that Turing (played here by Ed Stoppard) is talking with a psychiatrist (Henry Goodman), as he goes over his life. There are interviews with the woman to whom he proposed, Joan, with the psychiatrist's daughters, Turing's nephew, and others.
I think we learn more about Turing than just that he was gay. That he was gay is important because after serving his government and, according to Churchill, shortening the war by two years, he was chemically castrated. Pretty shabby treatment.
The estrogen had an effect on his brain as well. And we know what happened in the end. A sad statement about the way heroes are treated.
I think this is a good companion piece to "The Imitation Game," and I recommend it.
Only a handful of reviews on this one, despite the popularity of others? I was intrigued. Ed Stoppard's credits on IMDb fail even to mention it. Was it really that insignificant, or a bad film?
Not at all. It is a fine piece of work, combining fact and fiction in an artful and satisfying way...an excellent accompaniment to The Imitation Game for anyone who found, as I did, the more recent Cumberbatch portrayal mysterious and vague. Codebreaker for all its faults in not going far enough into the science of computing does indeed reflect the real man and those who were integral participants in his life and tragedy. It pulls no punches. Although the role of the psychoanalyst is a throwaway gimmick, I cannot fault the Stoppard performance. It informs cold documentation very well indeed.
Nine out of ten marks without any hesitation.
The main reason I tried to watch this film was to learn about Turing's professional accomplishments. Instead, I had to endure for more than 70% of the running time the victimization of Turing.
The guy was a homosexual, and because of it, it seems, it has reached sainthood...
The more interesting questions were never answered: Why was he a genius? How did he decode the enigma machine? Why is he so important for computers and computer sciences?
Did learn anything from it? No, I was only reminded many, many times that Turing was gay...
Some may say "well someone else would have done it" - but would they? And if so would it have been 10 or 20 years later? If so - skip back to the 1960's now and thats arguably what the world would be like.
This genius invented the modern world that others have now built on. Good to see incredibly talented people coming out to attribute his work to him.
Did you know
- Quotes
Alan Turing: I think if you find a person like that; And I don't think everybody does find one; In fact I think it's terribly rare; Then all you thought before; All your plans for yourself; You realize they were just filling a gap; They were just something for you to do while you were waiting for this person. And everything you want to be is something for him not yourself. There is a drawback, however; Finding such a person makes everybody else appear so ordinary. And if anything happens to him, you've got nothing left but to return to the ordinary world; And a kind of isolation that never existed before.
- ConnectionsFeatures Blade Runner (1982)
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- Britain's Greatest Codebreaker
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- Runtime1 hour 2 minutes
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- 1.78 : 1