Wednesday 19 November 2014

Movie Review - The Imitation Game: A no frills biopic, but this tragic and unjust story deserved to be told


The story of Alan Turing is one that is now rightly accepted as an injustice and personal tragedy: a mathematics genius who helped win World War 2 by developing a computer to break the Nazi's 'Enigma Code', in the post-war years Turing was found guilty of Homosexual acts - illegal at the time - and ordered to be chemically castrated.  Only a year following this he committed suicide.  In recent years his contribution to winning World War Two, and that the other members of a team of immensely clever people, have come to light and appreciation of their achievements is widely acknowledged.  At the same time, now that we live in a more tolerant society, Turing's personal tragedy has been acknowledged - in 2013 he was granted a posthumous pardon.  If Turing's story is one underpinned by injustice and tragedy it seems strange that biopic 'The Imitation Game' doesn't seem to evoke this to a greater extent.  It is a solid, if formulaic, film of its type, with a decent cast of quality British actors, it tells the story of Turing and the team at Bletchley efficiently enough.

The period detail is what you'd expect, but what separates this from most WW2-era dramas is the way Bletchley is portrayed as almost being a world away from it; apart from the presence of armed soldiers and the uniform of the WRENs working there, Bletchley is almost an idyll compared to the rest of the country.  There are reminders of the War going on beyond them - shots of burning and sinking ships, the bombed rubble of London in the blitz - but the film rightly doesn't dwell on these images.  For Turing and the team working to crack Enigma, their war is against time - to break the code before it is reset at midnight each day, knowing that each day that passes means more lives lost.  By using the typical war imagery sparingly the film succeeds in never letting the audience lose sight of this.

Turing (Benedict Cumberbatch) and the team working at Bletchley to break Enigma - a war against time to break the code before it reset each day...
For a film about what was ostensibly a maths problem, there is little dwelling upon the technical minutiae of Turing and his team's endeavours - probably just as well, as those of us (i.e. me) who aren't particularly good at maths could have been lost.  The emphasis is on personal and relationship struggles, and in this manner it is pretty much a biopic by numbers: there's a couple of montages, there's the bit where Turing's superiors don't understand what he's doing so try to shut his project down, there's the bits where his team don't like him at first and gradually accept and work with him...  Where the film breaks out of this a little is at the moment where Enigma is finally cracked, and the team realises they can't let anyone know they have - because if the Nazis realise, they will simply switch to another code, and the war will carry on as it has been.  This creates a moment of moral  anguish for the team, leading to further involvement in the skulduggery of MI6.

The cast do what we expect of them - Matthew Goode is a handsome, caddish type who is at first at odds with Turing before accepting his way of working; Keira Knightley is a typical plummy, middle-class, well-educated young woman; Mark Strong is an MI6 'spook' who casually and amicably uses lies, half-truths and threats to achieve his ends.  These are all the sort of roles we've seen these actors in before, and whilst they're solid in them, they don't exactly set the world on fire.  But these are supporting roles, and Benedict Cumberbatch is the headliner as Turing himself.  He's been drawing a lot of plaudits for his performance - it's not the most eye-catching I've seen this year, but it is effective and has some affecting moments.  If you've seen any of his work on 'Sherlock' you'll have seen that Cumberbatch can do un-sociable genius who is on the autistic spectrum (most likely) with ease; as well as that I found some of the nervous ticks and stammers he gives Turing a little bit forced, they didn't always feel totally natural.  Where his performance really takes off is in his portrayal of Turing during and after being investigated and prosecuted in the post-war years; he conveys a broken man to quite heart-breaking effect.  It's this point which also redeems the film's use of flashbacks to Turning's formative years at boarding school - while these are well handled (mostly in part to a sensitive performance from Alex Lawther as the young Turing), they don't always mesh with rest of the narrative - until the end of the film.

It's possible to see parallels with his work in 'Sherlock' and this, but it's probably why Cumberbatch was the best choice for this particular portrayal of Alan Turing...
This film does what it needs to mostly effectively, but not really anything more.  Ultimately it succeeds in conveying the tragedy of Turing's story through the best points of Cumberbatch's performance; other than that it doesn't break new ground for the biopic or drama genre.  Yet this is a story which needed to be told, especially in today's context where, sadly, anti-Gay stances are gaining increasing support in different parts of the world.  It is in no small way ironic that many of the anti-Gay movement in Russia most likely owe their entire existence to Turing - if he hadn't have broken the Nazi code, and enabled information to be sent to our Soviet Allies during the war, then it is entirely probably millions more Russians would have perished at the Nazi offensive.

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