I like how the description is 'Keira Knightley joins Benedict Cumberbatch and Mark Strong's mission to crack the Nazis' secret code.' Not 'Joan Clarke joins Turing and Menzies', but the actual actors, like they've gone back in time to kick Nazi butt.
Breaking the code was top top secret. Many lives were sacrificed as a result. Alan was treated appallingly because of his personal life and that is unforgivable by the British government of the day apologies decades later are meaningless to Alan and his surviving family and friends and relatives. Germany built a war machine for close to seven years before they declared war. Sir Winston Churchill told parliament back in 1933 that Germany was gearing for war he was ignored.
Saw this movie in theaters on a random whim without knowing anything about it. Ended up being a really great movie. If you haven't seen it i'd recommend it.
The Enigma code was broken primarily by a team of Polish mathematicians and cryptographers, including Marian Rejewski, Jerzy Różycki, and Henryk Zygalski, who made significant early contributions to cracking the code. Their work was later continued and expanded upon by British cryptanalysts at Bletchley Park, with key figures including Alan Turing, Gordon Welchman, and Dilly Knox. Alan Turing, in particular, is well-known for his development of the Bombe machine, which was instrumental in decrypting Enigma-encrypted messages.
Elizabeth Swan first met Stephen Strange during a crossword puzzle class. Stephen Strange and Elizabeth Swan were engaged and married, but they broke up and Elizabeth fell in love with Will Turner and Doctor Strange became the sorcerer of Supreme of illusions
Later later Dr. Strange would be awoken from hibernation by a war-mongering admiral, but he crushes the admiral's skull with his bare hands and flies a spaceship into a city.
In 1944 Telegraph crossword compiler Leonard Dawe a 54 year old teacher had 5 answers in a crossword which were code names for the planned invasion of France. He was visited by MI5 but it turned out to be just a coincidence.
Only an English girl could capture the enormity of the situation the allies were in and the staggering importance of knowing what the Germans were doing with one word well spoken and with emphasis…oh.
No mention of Tommy Flowers AT ALL in this film. Without him Turing's ideas would have stayed vapourware and the decrypts unread. Fast, loose and crap with the truth best describes this film
Tell , Benedict Cumberbatch , who selain Andy Lau , can Tell According Name Apollo it Logic , Some Area in planet Jupiter can have until 8 Mountain but cause my First Life (a Human or it amen ) only 27 Area in planet Jupiter each Area only until have 8 Mountain in planet Jupiter
I don't get how x word puzzle is related to code breaking. Isn't it just answering trivia? I would have thought find the words in a bunch of letter puzzle would be more useful since it involves pattern recognition.
Crossword puzzle is not just about guessing the right words to the questions, it is also about finding the right words from the letters that you already have written into the grid. Which can make your work easier but also harder. Also, some crowword puzzles are obviously harder than others, and they very likely used those hard ones in order to sift out those who would be most likely to have the basic skills of a code breaker. They mention the crossword puzzle as a preselection test for candidates in the movie Enigma also - only there Hester (Kate Winslet's character) beat three men in her competition but ended up being a file clerk - not only because she was a woman but also because she was from the wrong social background.
Also when you are breaking codes knowing what sort of words get used is very useful, though admittedly you’d have to learn here what German words get used most.
You Think breaking the Enigma is a Puzzle? The Enigma or Modern Day Cyphers are 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000. Gazillion, Trillion, Trillion, Trillion.
Pattern recognition and all that technical stuff… Meh… You have to be empathetic to break codes. Or someone. Anything, really. There’s much less randomness than it is believed, even in quantum cryptography.
@@claudiamanta1943 You're French. If You Understood "English " - You'd Know What "Poly Alphabetic Substitution Cipher" Means. The Alphabetic Substitution (Replacement), Changes One Each Key Press. Each Time You Press The Key: The Mappings e.g. A->D, B->K e.c.t. They Change: A->G, B->F. e.c.t.
I like how the description is 'Keira Knightley joins Benedict Cumberbatch and Mark Strong's mission to crack the Nazis' secret code.' Not 'Joan Clarke joins Turing and Menzies', but the actual actors, like they've gone back in time to kick Nazi butt.
Clearly you don't understand how important actors are, or what their unparalleled contributions to history have been...
@@philsurtees clearly you don't understand the point he is trying to make
@@Stellaudemba clearly you don't understand sarcasm
Clearly you don't understand how youtube seo works..
this is just *chefs kiss* of a thread
Such a shame how things ended for Turing. He left a tremendous scientific legacy.
@yt45204 Ah crap have an upvote you silly bastard!
Breaking the code was top top secret.
Many lives were sacrificed as a result.
Alan was treated appallingly because of his personal life and that is unforgivable by the British government of the day apologies decades later are meaningless to Alan and his surviving family and friends and relatives.
Germany built a war machine for close to seven years before they declared war.
Sir Winston Churchill told parliament back in 1933 that Germany was gearing for war he was ignored.
@yt45204 It's ok it's said he was NP-hard when seeing certain men
Saw this movie in theaters on a random whim without knowing anything about it. Ended up being a really great movie. If you haven't seen it i'd recommend it.
I loved it too. I never knew Alan Turing was a homosexual.
Same here I got dragged by accident and it ended up being really good, I'm glad it happened.
Bryant Thats what she said!
I cried when it ended.
I didn't know Anne Frank used UA-cam.
"Oh." One of the most understated reactions in movie history.
That seems like a slight exaggeration.
But so typically British. at least of that era. Sadly not anymore.
Why do people feel the need to speak in superlatives? It's a funny understated reaction, but one of the "most in movie history?" Come on.
@@romilrh For the same reason they consider Keira's character's reaction unusual. They're American.
@@romilrh This is the most underrated comment ever written
Keira never aged since Pride And Prejudice .. A beauty queen
Aegon Targeryan hasn’t aged since Pirates of the Caribbean
IKEA knightley
She looked older when she was young though - like she was only 18 in Love Actually, I'm convinced she was born at 25 and stayed that way
NOT
She’s the Pirate King that’s why
After all the amazing work Keira did, Im glad this finally gave her another Oscar nomination!
yeah, glad they revealed Keira's work in cracking enigma
My mother did this during WW2 for the US Navy. She was given essentially the same warning. We didn’t learn of her work until the mid 1990s.
Her response is known as...an understatement.
actually it's a quintessentially English understatement.
"Oh." kills me everytime. 🤣🤣🤣
Sherlock and Lord Blackwood
Nelson Tsang dr strange and elizabeth bennet
Elizabeth Swan and Khan Noonien Singh
While working with Veidt (Ozymandias)
Doctor Strange and Elizabeth Swan
Such a great movie!
A terrific film.
Keira Knightley did a great job in this movie.
This movie is 10/10
Such a great movie.
Loved this movie.
She's just been recruited by the Men Who Crack. For the rest of them, one final test - an eye exam....
Excellent movie.
Polish mathematicians- Rejewski,Zygalski, Różycki broker the Enigma cipher.
Not the later version that these where working on though. Please don’t underestimate the work of Bletchley park.
Lol, " I got This ! "
C'mon, Benedict - don't be such a Sherlock again :D :D
"Oh!"
Very English response.
oh...
You can see that a brit is really impressed when "ouh" is being uttered.
"oh"
lol at the end, the most british "Oh" ever.
The Enigma code was broken primarily by a team of Polish mathematicians and cryptographers, including Marian Rejewski, Jerzy Różycki, and Henryk Zygalski, who made significant early contributions to cracking the code. Their work was later continued and expanded upon by British cryptanalysts at Bletchley Park, with key figures including Alan Turing, Gordon Welchman, and Dilly Knox. Alan Turing, in particular, is well-known for his development of the Bombe machine, which was instrumental in decrypting Enigma-encrypted messages.
"oh"
beautiful
Knightley is speechless. After POTC a major achievement.
Respect…
“Crossword Winner”
Elizabeth Swan first met Stephen Strange during a crossword puzzle class. Stephen Strange and Elizabeth Swan were engaged and married, but they broke up and Elizabeth fell in love with Will Turner and Doctor Strange became the sorcerer of Supreme of illusions
Doctor Strange later went on to be a crossdressing model named All who would dominate the fashion industry to the shame of models Derek and Hansel.
Later later Dr. Strange would be awoken from hibernation by a war-mongering admiral, but he crushes the admiral's skull with his bare hands and flies a spaceship into a city.
In 1944 Telegraph crossword compiler Leonard Dawe a 54 year old teacher had 5 answers in a crossword which were code names for the planned invasion of France. He was visited by MI5 but it turned out to be just a coincidence.
2015: nah
2020: yeeaahhhh
Keira Knightly STILL doesn't need any makeup....JEEZUS!
She's wearing makeup. It's more subtle in order to be time/place appropriate. Foundation, eyeshadow, blush.
..... and win the war
Only an English girl could capture the enormity of the situation the allies were in and the staggering importance of knowing what the Germans were doing with one word well spoken and with emphasis…oh.
oh....that one gets me....
This scene was so british, love it
Kiera Knightly hasn’t aged since Star Wars
That's Natalie Portman.
@@anoopjs she was in Star wars too
@@anoopjsKeira Knightly's character in Star Wars was Padme's double/bodyguard, Sabé
Elizabeth Swan?
❤
Did she act in games of thrones
this is the scene when i realized that smart girls are waaaay more attractive lol
yes, specially when they have Kiera Knightly's faces, uh?
They gave him the exact data required to behave like that around her. Will he be forced to lie about the things used to slow her down?
"Oh!" Only a Brit could say it that way! 😊
0:45 Bri ish "Oh"
Should I watch this?
Lol
Yes
Still yes
Oh yes
No, it should watch you Mr. Norris, sir.
My kind of woman, Smart as well as beautiful.
And real.
No mention of Tommy Flowers AT ALL in this film. Without him Turing's ideas would have stayed vapourware and the decrypts unread. Fast, loose and crap with the truth best describes this film
this is my youngest daughter...
It just makes me sick of how after he breaks the code he is treated like an mad animal/ The British government at the time were disgusting sadists
Such an insult to a real Joan Clarke.
Tell , Benedict Cumberbatch , who selain Andy Lau , can Tell According Name Apollo it Logic , Some Area in planet Jupiter can have until
8 Mountain but cause
my First Life (a Human or it amen ) only 27 Area in planet Jupiter each Area only until have 8 Mountain in planet Jupiter
o h
The best code breakers are crossword solvers?... 🤔🤪
yes
The clues were anagrams and the like.
In real life, Bletchley Park recruited mathematicians, linguists, and yes, puzzle solvers.
THIS SCENE NEVER HAPPENED ACCORDING TO WIKIPEDIA!!!!
Wikipedia is not a reliable source
@@magicgluestoneny2487 Wikipedia isn't a source, it lists the sources.
It isn't a documentary, you know that don't you?
Don't watch 'Inglorious basterds' then.
@@magicgluestoneny2487 Name your sources for your claims? 🙃
Wow first viewer ever yay
The movie bears absolutely ZERO representation of the actual events.... but ok
It was dumbed down for the audience. The real events were a lot more complex.
Well d’oh.
@@nicolad8822 please just go away. Your comment is absolutely worthless
@@howardcroft3748this is a movie..not a documentary
second view
I don't get how x word puzzle is related to code breaking. Isn't it just answering trivia?
I would have thought find the words in a bunch of letter puzzle would be more useful since it involves pattern recognition.
It was probably a cryptic crossword, where you have to 'find' the clues.
Crossword puzzle is not just about guessing the right words to the questions, it is also about finding the right words from the letters that you already have written into the grid. Which can make your work easier but also harder. Also, some crowword puzzles are obviously harder than others, and they very likely used those hard ones in order to sift out those who would be most likely to have the basic skills of a code breaker.
They mention the crossword puzzle as a preselection test for candidates in the movie Enigma also - only there Hester (Kate Winslet's character) beat three men in her competition but ended up being a file clerk - not only because she was a woman but also because she was from the wrong social background.
Yes you are correct 💯
Also when you are breaking codes knowing what sort of words get used is very useful, though admittedly you’d have to learn here what German words get used most.
It's really about pattern recognition maybe. Frankly, they needed any kind of help they could get to crack enigma.
UNDERWHELMING MOVIE!
YOU SEEM THE OPPOSITE OF UNDERWHELMED?!?!
You Think breaking the Enigma is a Puzzle?
The Enigma or Modern Day Cyphers are 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000.
Gazillion, Trillion, Trillion, Trillion.
Tunny (later identified as the Lorenz SZ-40/42) the super Enigma was cracked by hand without ever seeing the machine. So yes, for some it's a puzzle.
The Above Ground UK is Heated by Mid Atlantic drift Current. Unlike Continental Poland. Germany is Colder than Above Ground UK. Poland, even Colder.
Pattern recognition and all that technical stuff… Meh… You have to be empathetic to break codes. Or someone. Anything, really.
There’s much less randomness than it is believed, even in quantum cryptography.
@@claudiamanta1943 You're French. If You Understood "English
" - You'd Know What "Poly Alphabetic Substitution Cipher" Means.
The Alphabetic Substitution (Replacement), Changes One Each Key Press.
Each Time You Press The Key: The Mappings e.g. A->D, B->K e.c.t. They Change: A->G, B->F. e.c.t.
Not a bad movie over all