The Imitation Game (HD CLIP) | Keeping It a Secret

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  • čas přidán 11. 08. 2016
  • Alan and his team must now face the hardest challenge of breaking enigma yet: keeping it a secret. This proves to be especially difficult for young Peter.
    This clip was taken from the Oscar-nominated 2014 film "The Imitation Game," starring Benedict Cumberbatch, Keira Knightley, Matthew Goode, Mark Strong, and Charles Dance.
    If you liked this clip, and want to see more clips featuring Benedict, please be sure to like, share, and subscribe! I upload as often as I can and am hoping to get more videos up soon! =)
    Thanks and have a great day!
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    MORE MOVIES FEATURING BENEDICT:
    Star Trek Into Darkness | • Star Trek Into Darkness
    Parade's End | • Parade's End
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Komentáře • 512

  • @tier3gaming452
    @tier3gaming452 Před 5 lety +773

    "All warfare is based on deception"
    Sun Tzu

    • @souswodaem1
      @souswodaem1 Před 4 lety +16

      Friendly fire will not be tolerated.

    • @leonard_9500
      @leonard_9500 Před 4 lety +6

      And he knows a little bit more about fighting than you do, pal. Because he invented it! And then he perfected it.
      And then he beat the living crap out of every single one of them.

    • @OrdinaryLatvian
      @OrdinaryLatvian Před 4 lety +1

      @@leonard_9500 o7

    • @ziadnafiz3022
      @ziadnafiz3022 Před 3 lety +1

      @@souswodaem1 Press F

    • @patthonsirilim5739
      @patthonsirilim5739 Před 3 lety +1

      @@souswodaem1 friendly fire have always been tolerated if its for the betterment of the war

  • @ZacharyLoeser
    @ZacharyLoeser Před 4 lety +1518

    My favorite part of this scene is watching Hugh as he silently realizes what Alan means - he gets there only a few seconds after Joan but it hits him harder. You can see the weight of it suddenly envelope him, and he just turns away sadly to lean on the closest desk.

    • @kcking
      @kcking Před 2 lety +14

      wait until you find out how hard it hits Peter

    • @markusmuller6173
      @markusmuller6173 Před rokem +2

      look and listen - then think carefully !

  • @alichehab5804
    @alichehab5804 Před 2 lety +1390

    He saved more than 14 million lives, shorted the war by two years and still his live couldn’t be saved. So heartbreaking

    • @happybear3706
      @happybear3706 Před rokem

      Too bad this movie is bullshit for being historically inaccurate.

    • @reneprovosty7032
      @reneprovosty7032 Před rokem +8

      guy got arrested for a crime and got consequences.

    • @paulkimble454
      @paulkimble454 Před rokem +181

      @@reneprovosty7032 Alan Turing's only crime was being a gay man at a time when the world didn't understand that no person can choose their whether they're homosexual, straight or bisexual, it is in their genetics from birth. He was issued a posthumous pardon by Queen Elizabeth II in 2013 along with the British prime minister at the time giving an official public apology for what happened to Mr. Turing. He should NEVER have been convicted of the supposed "crime" because of the fact that he was a human being. Please do not make assumptions without knowing the actual facts of the incidents in question.

    • @Scytheslinger
      @Scytheslinger Před rokem +1

      @@reneprovosty7032 What a shitty fucking perspective you have there

    • @reneprovosty7032
      @reneprovosty7032 Před rokem +3

      @@Scytheslinger you just don't understand wat I am talking about sir.

  • @kevinboudreaux7860
    @kevinboudreaux7860 Před rokem +437

    This scene shows Alan Turing as a true genius. He not only creates a remarkable invention, but he also has the sense to know how to utilize it most effectively.

    • @Youbularbells
      @Youbularbells Před rokem +31

      This scene is pure fiction though. Turing played no part in how the intelligence was utilised, and it was used very extensively. The Allies just covered their tracks very well by concocting plausible alternative ways they would have gained the intelligence (e.g. by sending a spotter plane over the nazi U-boats to 'randomly' spot them before attacking).

    • @lawrencebrenton3365
      @lawrencebrenton3365 Před 27 dny +1

      One point that I would like to make about the above mentioned and its basic reality as it applies to us humans today..😢
      Take for example the idea that we are not alone in the universe?!
      If ordinary people believed that life existed on other planets and they were to be revealed to have visited here? Todays society would revolt because it would betray everything that we have come to believe. Once that's happened it's a culture shock from which we may never recover! Keeping that a secret would also be utmost paramount, just for our own survival! It's no different than the reality that they faced in that situation. Think about it?! Would you not feel unsettled knowing that something else was far superior to our abilities! People already feel that way towards those that they already see as elites!

    • @sandydennylives1392
      @sandydennylives1392 Před 22 dny

      @@lawrencebrenton3365 Hope there is, there's very little intelligence here; Our 'grate' leader is bored so goes to war, the male herd of lemmings follow him to hell.

    • @andmos1001
      @andmos1001 Před 11 dny +1

      @@Youbularbells Do you know why that is? Because someone had the bright idea to keep the code breaking a secret

  • @joewhitehead3
    @joewhitehead3 Před 6 lety +612

    Talk about a dilemma

    • @RandomThoughtsFromEll
      @RandomThoughtsFromEll Před 5 lety +14

      *enigma

    • @TheArklyte
      @TheArklyte Před 4 lety +5

      WWII was won on 25th August of 1940. Everything past that was slow decline of Axis into nonexistence without any hope for victory. And that was a year before these events.

    • @alalalala57
      @alalalala57 Před 4 lety +5

      @@TheArklyte No, actually. Nobody would ever argue that date ever.

    • @prospero4183
      @prospero4183 Před 3 lety +3

      Not really a dilemma. It just seems that way viewed through history.

    • @TheArklyte
      @TheArklyte Před 3 lety +6

      @@prospero4183 it always is. We look at that era with bias of afterknowledge. Look up how many people call german/french/british/russian/american/japanese/italian/etc. commanders and politicians dumb or something along those lines.

  • @cDisC-lz4fv
    @cDisC-lz4fv Před 6 lety +2220

    he could have just told him "If u do, the Nazis will know". then he would have avoided being punched in the face. just saying

    • @vonb2792
      @vonb2792 Před 5 lety +243

      Dont think so... He needed the guy to get his anger out. He punched him because he knew, he knew that he could save the boat but it was the wrong thing to do.... He knew Alan was right. Alan mentions it... you punched me, with anger, cause you knew, Anger is not out of your body, you can think logically now.

    • @shirokuro2559
      @shirokuro2559 Před 5 lety +219

      It's plausible since he's suppose to be autistic, and explaining yourself clearly to others don't come natural too him, and their urgency isn't his urgency. He has cold logic and emotion's don't play a part in his decision making. This is just very typical for any one with any form of autism. :)

    • @madeyeatreides4055
      @madeyeatreides4055 Před 5 lety +3

      Ragna R this

    • @Ken.-
      @Ken.- Před 5 lety +35

      In real life every one of them would have know this long before they cracked it. Only in movies is there a single genius and every one else is a blithering idiot.

    • @Ken.-
      @Ken.- Před 5 lety +7

      Yeah, but elephants can't swim upstream.

  • @christopherharmon2433
    @christopherharmon2433 Před rokem +160

    "In wartime, truth is so precious that she should always be attended by a bodyguard of lies." - Winston S. Churchill

    • @joefriedman9843
      @joefriedman9843 Před 6 měsíci

      Wow great quote

    • @nachc6459
      @nachc6459 Před 5 měsíci

      Wow, amazing leader he was

    • @Cdntrvler54
      @Cdntrvler54 Před měsícem +1

      Bodyguard of Lies: Written by Anthony Cave Brown.. A great book..

  • @PhilipIsTheNeym
    @PhilipIsTheNeym Před rokem +77

    "There are 500 civilians in that convoy-"
    Alan: In the grand calculus of the multiverse, their sacrifice means much more than their deaths.

    • @florinivan6907
      @florinivan6907 Před rokem +1

      Unless that convoy was transporting refugees there were no civilians in that convoy. Merchant navy men were armed and equippped to defend their ships.

    • @hobbso8508
      @hobbso8508 Před rokem

      @@florinivan6907 They can be as armed as you like, they aren't going to shoot a submarine.

    • @florinivan6907
      @florinivan6907 Před rokem

      @@hobbso8508 Makes no difference the moment you pick up a rifle on the battlefield you lose your civilian status.

    • @hobbso8508
      @hobbso8508 Před rokem

      @@florinivan6907 No, they were civilian volunteers.

    • @florinivan6907
      @florinivan6907 Před rokem

      @@hobbso8508 Their deaths are included in the official military casualty list. And even if they weren't the moment you're armed you're a combatant I don't care what your 'official' designation is. Bullets are bullets. I'm a pragmatist legal niceties are for lawyers to sort out not soldiers. For me what matters is your contribution to the war effort not how you call yourself.

  • @willbackhouse287
    @willbackhouse287 Před 5 lety +941

    who else is watching on a turing machine?

  • @Phil_Taz
    @Phil_Taz Před 5 lety +486

    I love a good script... this movie gave me goosebumps every ten minutes.

  • @stanleyshady9465
    @stanleyshady9465 Před 3 lety +420

    Benedict did an amazzzing job. Seeing him portray Kahn from Star Trek, Dr Strange, and Alan Turing, he's got so much range

    • @sushantgoswami9149
      @sushantgoswami9149 Před 2 lety +17

      And Sherlock

    • @CVerse
      @CVerse Před 2 lety +8

      @@sushantgoswami9149 and Smaug

    • @PawelK198604
      @PawelK198604 Před rokem +3

      @@sushantgoswami9149 Scherlock is cool it was my favourite in Netflix cheers from Poland 🙂

    • @onilink134
      @onilink134 Před rokem +1

      And Dormammu

    • @thunberbolttwo3953
      @thunberbolttwo3953 Před rokem +1

      Benedicts prtrayl of Khan sucked big time. Ricardo Montbahn will always be Khan.

  • @padmeskywalker6048
    @padmeskywalker6048 Před 4 lety +112

    Alan Turing deserved better life🥺

  • @leo070798
    @leo070798 Před rokem +76

    This scene shows how each character is more clever then the other. Turing (the genius) knows they can't save the comboy, once he starts explaining, Joan (who beated Turing test in a shorter time than he could) realises in his first sentence. Then Hugh as he begins to explain it, followed by John and then Peter as Turing continues.

  • @Stillreal312
    @Stillreal312 Před 2 lety +436

    This is a perfect example of what it means to sacrifice your life for your country. In order to keep the machine a secret he had to sacrifice his brothers as well as his own life in order to win the war. Doesn’t sound so cool and romantic when you see it actually happen does it?

    • @Zombiewithabowtie
      @Zombiewithabowtie Před 2 lety +14

      "My friend, you would not tell with such high zest,
      To children desperate for some ardent glory
      The old lie: Dulce Et Decorum Est Pro Patria Mori." - Wilfred Owen.

    • @WT.....
      @WT..... Před rokem

      In times of desperate war & fighting, sometimes, the needs/survival of the many far outweighed the needs of a few. Must be a mentally heartwrenching decision to be forced to remain a bystander to the loss of lives that you alone could've saved, but had to sacrifice.

    • @BlackDiamond2718
      @BlackDiamond2718 Před rokem +1

      Reminds me of Robb with the 2,000 men he sent to die to beat Jamie Lannister.

    • @tobytaylor2154
      @tobytaylor2154 Před rokem +2

      But it didn't happen

    • @thunberbolttwo3953
      @thunberbolttwo3953 Před rokem

      Churchill had to do the same thing with Coventry.

  • @meekmeads
    @meekmeads Před 5 lety +360

    Another trick by Doctor Strange to defeat Thanos.

  • @kaspedkk
    @kaspedkk Před rokem +65

    Fun fact. The enigma machine that he uses in this clip is an actual enigma that bletchley park posessed during the war. Its still in blectcley park : )

  • @stoobeedoo
    @stoobeedoo Před 3 lety +179

    Fictional films are fiction at their heart - they are about telling a story. Historical films like these are based on real historical events which are molded INTO a story, in this case a story about Turing and his life. There were about 10,000 people involved in the wider Bletchley Park program, and hunderds of ciphers. Of course you can't fit all that into a few hours, so they turn this into a story involving characters we can empathise with. All of these decisions on keeping the decoding secret was made by those at the higher levels and remained 'Ultra' secret, people were sworn to secrecy even well after the war ended, and the information wasn't revealed unitl well into the mid to late 70's. But to convey that to the auidence, the simplified it into this exchange.

    • @yottagram
      @yottagram Před rokem +10

      the only problem with this sort of movies is that people start to take it for reality, at least those who don't get in deeper on it. Thereby simplifying reality and historical facts and context as it was a movie. In the long run people don' t get their facts straight anymore, and, as you see everywhere these days, start to think history, science and current world affairs are as simple as a romantic plot of some hollywood entertainment.

    • @alalalala57
      @alalalala57 Před rokem

      @@yottagram Its not like it matters to them anyway, so what?

    • @Mysteriousmachine1
      @Mysteriousmachine1 Před 9 měsíci

      It could be debated that, while this was a great scene, it was limited by an understanding of filming at the current time.
      I’m not saying I have such an understanding (I don’t), but if cinema were to continue to develop, perhaps there would be enough breakthroughs and revolutions on filming technique and philosophy to capture the debates and 10,000 people within the decision making process in such a way a laymen audience could understand (laymen simply meaning average person, not an insult, more of a neutral term… ironically I’m oversimplifying laymen here)
      The categorised limitations of the now could very well be opportunities for the next-in-line.

    • @captainpoppleton
      @captainpoppleton Před 19 dny

      @@yottagram getting the simple version is better than getting no version at all.

    • @captainpoppleton
      @captainpoppleton Před 19 dny

      @@yottagram getting the simple version is better than getting no version at all.

  • @PumaTwoU
    @PumaTwoU Před rokem +41

    Historian here: 1) NO, they did not have the authority to decide how to use the information in a case like this. The military authority above them made those decisions. They passed the information upward. 2) The premise however in this scene, ( even if over dramatized for the movie ) was that any action making use of the information they gleaned had to take into consideration the protection of their breaking of Enigma. In fact the Germans had suspicions anyway, and soon created the 4th wheel Enigma machine, which once again stumped decoding. 3) Military operations involving capturing of code books and documents had to continue during the war in order to continue to adapt and decode messages. It was genius to figure out a pattern to be able to find a key to decoding messages ( daily weather reports were in fact a pivotal element ) but the creation of the 'bombes' - the machines used to figure out code keys- were the true genius inventions. Modern computing was a result of these early electro mechanical systems.

    • @justiniath
      @justiniath Před 15 dny

      Im not sure why they chose to change the first point you made. It is just as dramatic to have them relay the info and have everyone excited and tense and then have Turing say something along the lines of 'in his case, it doesnt matter. They can't change course, they have to protect the information etc' and then have him defend that decision whilst everyone else feels sick. Sacrifices none of the tension, keeps it more true to reality. It's a good movie but not sure why they don't work within the parameters of the true story, especially in places where it can work as well or even better.

    • @TeslaPixel
      @TeslaPixel Před 14 dny

      @@justiniath The stakes are greater if they are the ones that are deciding what to do, so I'd argue a little of the tension is lost. It's harder to imagine Hugh (I think his name is) punching Alan for example when they don't have direct control.
      Personally, I'd have much preferred as you've written it and think the punch is silly anyway.

    • @PrograError
      @PrograError Před 13 dny

      @@justiniath it just doesn't makes Hollywood if it's not simplified as a concept. Also, there's no show in having them telling someone else _("show, don't tell" technique)_
      there's a reason why novels adapted for the screen always say “based on”; sometimes what works for written, doesn't work for the screen.

    • @justiniath
      @justiniath Před 12 dny

      @@PrograError I understand the concept and I get why they did it but I think it is lazy. I think the punch is forced and there are plenty of ways to show and not tell here. Plus, this is already a scene with a lot of tell and not show. Also, the idea that they were cogs in the machine and that in the moment that they feel like they can save lives that decision was taken away from them is so much more impactful. I get what you're saying though.

    • @PrograError
      @PrograError Před 12 dny

      @@justiniath IMO this scene is very much show, don't tell tho... it shows likely different reactions of the Admiralty when they got told they have cracked the code (even if they are behind the walls of compartmentalisation)

  • @fed1up
    @fed1up Před 5 lety +494

    Those decisions were actually made at a much higher level

    • @a.m.s6611
      @a.m.s6611 Před 4 lety +63

      Yeah cause in reality would code breakers really make a call like that? Their job is to crack the codes it would be their superiors job to decide what to do with it, to withhold potentially life saving information would not be their call to make,in fact, wouldn't that be treason?

    • @nickh8200
      @nickh8200 Před 4 lety +69

      That is a call above the Admiralty, however. It's a National-level asset so they were right not to tell the Admiralty first. The correct decision is to tell the Prime Minister/War Cabinet that
      1) Enigma has been broken
      2) the implications/extent of it
      3) give recommendations based on their analysis of the situation
      This would all take longer than the ~30 minutes until the convoy was attacked

    • @arunavasarkar3600
      @arunavasarkar3600 Před 4 lety +5

      @@a.m.s6611 other code breakers are not turing who invented computers and decided world war.. comparing dirt with diamonds/

    • @TimoSt3v
      @TimoSt3v Před 4 lety +7

      @fed1up quite possible. but im sure the people tasked with cracking enigma where more than smart enough to know that if they don't use their ability to read german communications and anticipate their moves with caution and farsightedness they would sacrifice their most powerfull advantage in this war. so i think when they presented their strides to their superiors they will have emphazised on the caution with which their decoding ability had to be implemented into a longterm strategie to gain the upperhand in the longrun. and i guess it's just easier to show that dilema in the way showed in this scene. but.. yes i too think that a decision like that most likely would have been made on a higher level.

    • @Haaris.Qureshi
      @Haaris.Qureshi Před 4 lety +6

      They simplify it here but that's kind of the intent - coz they start sharing the results with the spymaster who then decides what action to take.

  • @MadKingOfMadaya
    @MadKingOfMadaya Před 4 lety +61

    1:25 "That there's some good in this world Mr Frodo and that it's worth fighting for"
    *_Seriously this dude looks way too much like Sam_*

  • @folkengames
    @folkengames Před 7 dny +1

    My grandfather was a cryptographer in WW2. He translated and decrypted Japanese radio transmissions. Alan Turing was his hero for his entire life and he spoke about him daily until he passed at 94 a few years ago. He often told the story of how we killed Yamamoto and continued flying pointless patrols through the area and did not share the fact that we'd killed him publicly so the Japanese would not know we'd broken their code. We made them think we got lucky. He often said "The world owes Alan Turing everything, but firstly it owes him an apology."

  • @jacobgarrity9055
    @jacobgarrity9055 Před 3 lety +30

    Captain America will be proud of Doctor Strange who cracked the code to win the Second World War for us

  • @antisomething4248
    @antisomething4248 Před 3 lety +83

    The real reasons it was kept secret is nothing short of incredible

  • @tooshortnickname
    @tooshortnickname Před 3 lety +24

    Imagine to have greatest acomplishment in your life. The best anyone of your generation could think of. And you can tell none. Unhuman.

  • @ralcst-1977
    @ralcst-1977 Před rokem +30

    This WAS the best part of the movie!! Very well acted by everyone in the room!! Alan was a brilliant man,....a genius!!! B. C. did an excellent job of acting and portraying Alan!! Still one of the best movies out there!!!😉😉🤩🤩👍👍

  • @KevX1127
    @KevX1127 Před 9 měsíci +11

    I like how Alan accounted for this because in his mind he knew they'd crack enigma

  • @keithklassen5320
    @keithklassen5320 Před rokem +11

    This scene works dramatically, but this conversation would have been had and settled by other people, before work even started on cracking Enigma.

  • @rinaldianwar15
    @rinaldianwar15 Před 6 lety +59

    Including the strategy for beating thanos

  • @Mark_nobody3
    @Mark_nobody3 Před 7 lety +38

    To sum this up
    " Sins of the fathers that had to make tough decisions, self righteous vs ideal logic "

  • @seancollins7447
    @seancollins7447 Před 7 lety +111

    It is like Coventry from Sherlock episode four

    • @marula09
      @marula09 Před 5 lety +3

      I was just thinking about it

    • @joejohnson8789
      @joejohnson8789 Před 4 lety +3

      That's what they based this off, although that story is actually a myth, we didn't let Coventry be bombed to save enigma because we didn't know Coventry was the target, since those pesky Germans never referred to locations by name

    • @chavitanwar2126
      @chavitanwar2126 Před 3 lety +1

      It is Coventry from Sherlock. That is what he was referring to

    • @seancollins7447
      @seancollins7447 Před 3 lety +1

      It is just amazing that Turing himself thought of it first and he is also played by Benedict Cumberbatch.

    • @jimmy2k4o
      @jimmy2k4o Před 2 lety +2

      Watching this for the first time when Alan shouts no and grabs the phone I immediately (being a huge Sherlock fan) thought of the Coventry conundrum.
      Because of that episode as soon as he said “No” I knew exactly what the horrible situation was.
      There’s another reference loop in Sherlock 2x2
      Sherlock’s famous quote “when you eliminated the impossible whatever remains however improbable must be the truth”
      And Watson replies “ok Spock”
      And in star trek 2009 Spock says that exact quote…..

  • @dodgem259
    @dodgem259 Před 4 lety +57

    This part in the movie certainly makes one wonder how many allies lives in WW2 were sacrificed to prevent the Germans from knowing the engima code had been broken.

    • @SophiaAphrodite
      @SophiaAphrodite Před 2 lety +4

      It was cracked in July of 1941. Germany surrendered in May of 1945. A total of 75 million people died in WW2. 58% of which were allied civilians. That would be about 43 million civilians. take that and divide by the number of year for the war (rounding to 6). So potentially about 30 million allied civilians died from July 1941 to May 1945. I think we can safely argue that 10 million lives were sacrificed to protect this secret.

    • @williamzame3708
      @williamzame3708 Před 2 lety +18

      @@SophiaAphrodite No. 1) Half of the civilian deaths were in Russia. Those lives would not have been saved in any case. 2) If it had been known that the Allies had broken the Enigma code, a lot of other lives would have been lost and the war would almost surely have gone on longer.

    • @brmbkl
      @brmbkl Před rokem +1

      @@SophiaAphrodite "A total of 75 million people died in WW2. 58% of which were allied civilians. That would be about 43 million civilians. "
      it's impossible to know how many lives would be lost without enigma.

    • @haroldbenton979
      @haroldbenton979 Před rokem +1

      The lives lost by keeping the cracking of that code and machine a secret was way less than we could have lost if the Germans had figured out we had broken it. Just look at what happened in the Battle for the Atlantic when the German Navy went to the 4 Rotor system. Instead of being able to miss the wolfpacks as we had been reading their mail almost as fast as they got it we had about 4 months of shipping losses about as great as during the so called Happy Time for the Germans.

    • @haroldbenton979
      @haroldbenton979 Před rokem

      @@williamzame3708 even though most of the civilian lives lost were in Russia we still saved lives there by being able to avoid the German navy's attempts to stop the polar convoys that went into Murmansk and Archangel. By being able to keep those 2 northern ports open and supplies going into them we shortened the supply line with the Russian army fighting around Leingrad and Moscow then on the push back west into Germany itself. We still supplied 10 percent of all materials used by the Russian government in WW2 in combat power not including the food and medical supplies. We sent over millions of tons of food.

  • @Shane_Stoic
    @Shane_Stoic Před 3 lety +88

    I cant imagine this decision being made anymore, people cant bear to sacrifice for the greater good these days and it brings me both relief and worry

    • @joewhitehead3
      @joewhitehead3 Před 3 lety +8

      People can surprise you

    • @KingKing-cz6xh
      @KingKing-cz6xh Před 2 lety +3

      Really what makes you say that? Horrible shit is happening around the world as we speak

    • @SophiaAphrodite
      @SophiaAphrodite Před 2 lety +4

      Maybe we should stop putting ourselves in positions to have to make these decisions in the first place.

    • @Mankey1234
      @Mankey1234 Před 2 lety +4

      What are you on about? We lifted lockdowns knowing full well people will die as a result to help the economy. LMAO

    • @kythrathesuntamer9715
      @kythrathesuntamer9715 Před 2 lety

      like ok a lot of people are awful and that makes me sad but you know if I thought the only people in the world were the bad ones Id probably give up on life...
      like what's really the point at all if there's no one of any real character or morally upstanding to even hang out with? truthfully a lot of humans are fucked up and cold but it's not everyone.

  • @MontyQueues
    @MontyQueues Před 6 lety +37

    lovely scene

  • @stanleyshady9465
    @stanleyshady9465 Před 3 lety +10

    It sucks soo much about his brother.. but in the strategic side of this warfare, this was the right call :(

  • @billmorgan7602
    @billmorgan7602 Před 7 lety +16

    good history.

  • @PeterJavi
    @PeterJavi Před 3 lety +182

    This might be the most unbelievable part of the movie. Even before the code would have been officially cracked, someone, somewhere at the top would have long thought of plans or procedures to make it seem credible to the Germans that their plans were foiled. Turing and team would have never had the right, or the desire to make strategic calls.

    • @marta9127
      @marta9127 Před 2 lety +59

      Still it says something about the moral responsibility. The scene is over simplifying things, but yet it shows us how overwhelming this knowledge and inability to use it must have been. They were all people after all... This says something about the terrible dillema someone somewhere had to face. Whether it was the team or some high level officials, still the weight of the information was the weight of human lives. This is the worst thing a person can ever experience... Responsibility and the knowledge that you could have saved innocent people but you didn't do anything because of the wider picture of events. Awful... War is awful...

    • @PawelK198604
      @PawelK198604 Před 2 lety +9

      @@marta9127 A little bit like Triage on ER

    • @hashtagrex
      @hashtagrex Před 2 lety +10

      well yes, thats why after this scene they went to someone who specialised in secrecy, who did have proper plans set out for this and was already doing it. but the military at Bletchley was not privy to those kinds of plans. The military at Bletchley was tasked with an impossible task and hoped to decode bits and pieces that would help them win fights and battles. It's not just that they didnt have plans, they didnt think it was possible to even need them. Turing and his team were the only ones with the right to make those kinds of strategic calls, they were the ones who broke the code after all

    • @BetterWithBob
      @BetterWithBob Před 2 lety

      Yep. This whole part is complete bullshit, to put it lightly. Peter Hilton didn't even have any such brother, and wasn't working at Bletchley Park until after the machine was built. The Allies had plenty of ways to act on information leaks, and fool the Germans into how it leaked. For example, they used their double agent network to convince the Germans they were tracking U-boats by detecting the submarine's anti-aircraft radar systems. Enigma was the one place they never suspected they had information leaks. The military had been working with this kind of thing as far back as World War I. And Commander Alistair Denniston was not some obstructive bad guy looking to fire Alan any chance he got - he supported the team and viewed Alan as one of the best. The military and government officials would decide what to do with this information, not low ranking cryptographers (a little thing called the chain of command).

    • @toddkes5890
      @toddkes5890 Před rokem +16

      They should have had a scene before this where the group is running past the security checkpoint (but verifying their identities so the guards don't tackle or shoot them), then going into this room and doing this scene. However, when they pick up the phone, they slowly realize that there is no dial tone (or other 'connected' signal).
      Then at a critical moment you hear a voice at the back of the room, and it is Commodore Dennison saying "I don't know whether to hate you or admire you Professor Turing, because you made the right call by insulting my intelligence." Dennison then leans outside the door and says to someone standing outside, "leftenant, if anyone leaves this building before I do, shoot them." (cue the sound of running footsteps surrounding the building, to give the impression that the building is surrounded)
      Dennison then explains that very little happens on his base without his knowledge, and having the main team of codebreakers suddenly running onto the base caused the officer on duty to call him, and he was able to get to the base in time. He was standing outside the door, listening to the group, and decided to intervene at the right moment. He explains that his job is to win the war, not just one battle, and as a result he would not have passed on their warning. Their job is to gather intelligence, to crack Enigma, but their job is NOT to act on the information they receive.
      Dennison then knocks on the door to leave, tells the lieutenant to stand down the ready platoon, and to reconnect the phone line.
      (Basically, I didn't like how Commodore Dennison was portrayed in the movie. This would remind people that Commodore Dennison was placed in charge of a top secret strategic location because he could be trusted to make long-term decisions while keeping the civilians under control.)

  • @sherlockholmes8528
    @sherlockholmes8528 Před 3 lety +23

    He broke the code, and he keep the secret plan from Watson, Moriarty, Kirk, Spock, Tony and Thanos too... Benedict playing 4D chess with everybody.

    • @kenudice9841
      @kenudice9841 Před 2 lety

      Technically, he was playing 5D Chess as Dr. Strange, when he needed to defeat Thanos; He had to look at alternate realities to find the one scenario where the Avengers could win.

    • @leonpaelinck
      @leonpaelinck Před rokem +1

      Holy shit Mycroft mentioned this in Sherlock and it's the same actor. MIND BLOWN

  • @Vurawn410
    @Vurawn410 Před rokem +2

    Best scene in the film.

  • @Taylor_Wolfe115
    @Taylor_Wolfe115 Před 3 lety +29

    You may feel he made the wrong decision but in the end it was the right one

    • @obscurereference6298
      @obscurereference6298 Před rokem +2

      if you feel he made the wrong decision then this movie isnt for you.

  • @Lamzilla24
    @Lamzilla24 Před 12 dny

    For the greater good... It takes a good person to make that decision, and a great person to feel remorse for doing so. For all his contributions and sacrifices, society couldn't just accepted him for who he is. What a shame...

  • @anthonykristoffersonalonzo658
    @anthonykristoffersonalonzo658 Před 10 měsíci +4

    This is the part when you know Alan Turing is a real genius.

  • @olliejobson6371
    @olliejobson6371 Před 2 měsíci +3

    The scary thing about the enigma is that, even with modern computer knowledge, it’s still not an easy machine to crack. The deep understanding that was needed for them to reverse engineer a solution to the enigma is astounding. It’s a shame what happened to Mr Turing

    • @douglasharbert3340
      @douglasharbert3340 Před dnem

      A modern supercomputer would crack Enigma in seconds. Our current supercomputers perform one quadrillion operations per second.

  • @dontgetmadgetwise4271
    @dontgetmadgetwise4271 Před 4 lety +5

    Talk about a condensation of historical events! But, this is entertainment after all.

    • @alalalala57
      @alalalala57 Před 4 lety

      Its theater. You want facts, you read a book. Doesn't take away from the point of this movie.

  • @davidlloyd3116
    @davidlloyd3116 Před rokem +2

    The fact that us Brits put a homosexual genius on the highest denomination banknote is testament to our acknowledgment of this man’s profound impact on computer science. Darwin too. USA put In God We Trust on their currency, not people who’ve influenced our understanding of the sciences and our universe, and continue to use an outdated imperial measurement system. I’ll get hammered for saying this. As a scientist, I recognise genius. We reward those that change things for the better. My late wife had an IQ of 186. She was a genius. I married her for her brain. A remarkable mind. We need to encourage talent, educate our children, teach them to love and learn.

  • @steffidas4785
    @steffidas4785 Před 5 měsíci

    I liked this movie and all the actors😎

  • @basilmcdonnell9807
    @basilmcdonnell9807 Před rokem +5

    When I was in school many years ago, two of my classmates (twins) mother was slightly known in the neighbourhood for having worked at Bletchly Park during WW2. Many years later I learned that she was one of the core group of codebreakers. I only wish that my 15-year-old self had had the nerve and the foresight to actually interview her about it. But... who of us at 15 would have known?

    • @dougjonnaebel5704
      @dougjonnaebel5704 Před rokem

      I always encouraged my students to go talk to those in the know. I ended up with a treasure trove of stories from people who worked in Camp X, the AVRO Arrow program, a Devil's Brigade member, a survivor of a German torpedo attack, a member of the Righteous, a Holocaust survivor, a York Uni volunteer in the Mississippi Summer Project, an internment camp survivor (Japanese Canadian) and so many others. I get it. I wish I'd had the courage to talk to the people in my neighbourhood growing up. So many stories. so much history.

  • @wanderlust2727
    @wanderlust2727 Před rokem

    amazing

  • @michahcc
    @michahcc Před 11 dny

    1:02
    Mark Bellison : [calling Anna] Hi, this is Mark.
    Anna McDoogles : Oh, hi Mark. Didn't you get my Email?

  • @daydreamer0798
    @daydreamer0798 Před 4 lety +3

    A Cumberbatch of Cumbercookies

  • @VirtualLearningAcademyofStClai

    I don't know how to message you privately... but I have a question for you about movie clip licensing.

  • @tomace4898
    @tomace4898 Před 8 dny

    "We've done that. Now for the hard part..."

  • @mmsizzlak3726
    @mmsizzlak3726 Před 3 lety +4

    USE THE TIME STONE, Dr Strange!!! Use it!!

  • @xfire7
    @xfire7 Před 3 lety

    Man was a hero .

  • @marshacreary2442
    @marshacreary2442 Před 5 lety +18

    I wonder how long they kept that (their deaths)a secret

  • @MalachiSealy-sy8nl
    @MalachiSealy-sy8nl Před 7 lety +9

    That is cold man

    • @gustavoreno1442
      @gustavoreno1442 Před 7 lety +4

      FYI: In reality, Hilton had no such brother, and decisions about when and whether to use data from Ultra intelligence were made at much higher administrative levels.
      Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Imitation_Game#Historical_events

    • @AkshayAradhya
      @AkshayAradhya Před 5 lety +3

      That is war man

  • @NVRAMboi
    @NVRAMboi Před rokem +2

    We all know this (wonderful) "problem" ran all the way up the chain of command to Churchill. Even he and his advisors had to be extremely careful in their reaction(s) not to let on because of ULTRA information. That kind of situation certainly has the potential to tear an individual in two...weighing lives, ethics, secrecy and the overarching good of sometimes doing...nothing.

  • @starpawsy
    @starpawsy Před 9 měsíci

    "Our job is to win the war". And what a tough job it can be.

  • @StarHunter28
    @StarHunter28 Před 3 lety +14

    "crazy how the good guys have won every war"

    • @TheAkashicTraveller
      @TheAkashicTraveller Před 3 lety +4

      I mean in WWII one side was mostly a group of people fighting for survival and the other was Nazis and groups allied with them. And Imperial Japan. It also just happens to be the most recent major war. Look at pretty much any other war in history and things are very much not so clear.

    • @asahel980
      @asahel980 Před 2 lety +1

      the idea of good vs bad is childish thinking, in world affairs, its evil vs evil and you have to side with the lesser evil

    • @edgarmorales8944
      @edgarmorales8944 Před 2 lety +2

      Not WW2. That was mass genocide by people who thought they were racial superior to those they were slaughtering vs people trying to stop them.

    • @freshprince69
      @freshprince69 Před 2 lety

      @@asahel980 I wouldn't say it's "evil vs evil" either, but rather nations committing atrocities because they believe it's the right thing to do, even if they're right, breaking some ethics is inevitable. Good and Evil are relative at that point.

  • @joyhaswell751
    @joyhaswell751 Před 7 lety +21

    1:02 😫

  • @spudhead169
    @spudhead169 Před 3 lety

    Okay, the previews of other videos at the end in the boxes. You can't click them. What's the game?

  • @willnewton3051
    @willnewton3051 Před 4 lety

    3 blokes squabbling in a shed!

  • @Davevegasful
    @Davevegasful Před 4 lety +3

    A real life Mr. Spock.

  • @SanBear7
    @SanBear7 Před rokem +1

    This is why he did what he did in The Watchmen.

  • @Bill0102
    @Bill0102 Před 5 měsíci

    Marvelous exposition! It's on par with a seminal book I read in this field. "Game Theory and the Pursuit of Algorithmic Fairness" by Various Authors

  • @alecchavez9430
    @alecchavez9430 Před 10 měsíci

    Sometimes the price for saving millions of lives requires the sacrifices of a few

  • @liewjunyuen9265
    @liewjunyuen9265 Před 8 měsíci

    In the grand calculus of the war, their sacrifice means more than their lives.

  • @jakeleon381
    @jakeleon381 Před rokem +1

    I can only imagine the heartache of making those kinds of deicisions. Knowing what the Germans were planning and letting them happen to that you can stop the big ones

  • @morganbrown392
    @morganbrown392 Před rokem +1

    It’s crazy as the guy who plays Ozymandias got to play two intelligent characters that had to sacrifice lives to save a bunch more.

  • @jimmy2k4o
    @jimmy2k4o Před 2 lety

    The trolley problem x 1000000000

  • @pgum123gonowplayread4
    @pgum123gonowplayread4 Před 4 lety +5

    Seriously, all up the ship, tell them to attack some random place in the ocean and tada.

    • @TheJemShuffle
      @TheJemShuffle Před 2 lety +2

      If you're seriously suggesting they should've done that then you're just as idiotic as the people who had Alan Turing sentenced for being a homosexual

  • @stanleyshady9465
    @stanleyshady9465 Před 3 lety +3

    "If God's on our side, who's on theirs?"

  • @biscuitspark6137
    @biscuitspark6137 Před rokem

    What song?

  • @1235368
    @1235368 Před 5 měsíci

    I sometimes think AI will be like Turing 😂

  • @DZatheus
    @DZatheus Před 10 měsíci

    Wait, did stuff like this really happen? I'm not talking about Turing's team making big decisions, but about not using intel to prevent raising suspicions? Did it happen?

  • @reynabelladonna3587
    @reynabelladonna3587 Před 3 lety

    The Coventry Conundrum.

  • @SamA-gh3kq
    @SamA-gh3kq Před 3 lety +5

    This is a great movie overall you really should watch it if you haven’t

  • @timpyrules
    @timpyrules Před 4 lety +3

    While I like the scene making suck decision is beyond the scope of what they did at Bletchley Park, Turing didnt decide on which information was acted the admiralty and war offices did. SO yes this discussion would have taken place it just wouldnt have taken place at Bletchley Park between these people

  • @tylerraleigh5092
    @tylerraleigh5092 Před 2 lety +2

    I expected Ozymandias to keep a cooler head.

  • @grassCrow
    @grassCrow Před 2 lety +2

    i don’t think saving one should would lead to the conclusion that enigma was cracked

    • @my_quiet_riot
      @my_quiet_riot Před rokem +1

      It still would raise suspicion. And they really couldn't afford that.

  • @jamesfunk7614
    @jamesfunk7614 Před rokem +1

    For dramatic effect, the movie departs from history in some scenes. In reality, the code breakers would not have made this decision. Intercepted messages would have been passed up their chain of command. The people at the top would have made the decisions about how to handle that information.
    I don't know whether the Allies decided to let Axis submarines attack a convoy or not. But, in reality, such decisions were made. In one case, a message was decrypted to reveal the Germans were planning an attack on factory in England. To protect the secret that Enigma code had been broken, nothing was done to stop or resist the attack, or to protect the workers.

  • @imofage3947
    @imofage3947 Před 8 dny

    This is an unfortunate reality of information warfare. Once you've broken your enemy's cyphers, you must realize that it is a limited time advantage. Preserving that advantage for as long as possible is best done by allowing your enemy to win smaller victories so you can win the big ones when it really matters. And I don't need to spell out the cost of an enemy victory.

  • @dole-brentbayalas854
    @dole-brentbayalas854 Před 4 lety

    Ozmandias!

  • @decibellone696
    @decibellone696 Před 3 měsíci +1

    This - for that is intrested is the meaning of, TOP SECRET.

  • @ethanrossignol4718
    @ethanrossignol4718 Před 3 lety +4

    So they found a way to cheat in battle ship nice

  • @warhawk9566
    @warhawk9566 Před 4 dny

    Frankly, with a 20 minute window, even if they got the word out help wouldnt arrive in time. I know they said planes are 10 minutes away but this is 1940s tech, communication wasnt that quick, it would have to go through multiple stations before ever reaching the pilots.
    And thats assuming anyone believed that they cracked enigma since at this point in the movie they hadnt reported it yet

  • @cuhlainnslane1564
    @cuhlainnslane1564 Před rokem +1

    Its a good representation of the kind of moral struggle they would have had to go through but people of that time, especially the english, did not act typically act like that in a professional setting. It reeks of modern drama. Like in apollo 13 when the module blows the fuel. The actual astronauts didnt shout and snap at each other like in the movie, they in fact to our modern eyes acted bizarrely calmly.

  • @vincentmarotta9800
    @vincentmarotta9800 Před rokem +1

    So if they kept it a secret, how did they use it to win the war? Did they organize a full on singular assault or something?
    Did this breakthrough lead to D-Day?

    • @DomWeasel
      @DomWeasel Před rokem +2

      In this case, the Germans know the convoy's there and they know its course and are planning an attack which is due to occur within the hour. If the convoy suddenly changes course right before the attack, it looks suspicious. Too suspicious.
      However, Bletchley Park knew the movements of the Wolfpacks and they knew their reports of sighting Allied convoys. Convoys that hadn't been located could be steered away from the Wolfpacks. They could also arrange for spotter planes to locate U-boats they already knew about so that the Germans would think the plane did the discovering; not that their position was already known. Vital convoys could be protected while less important groups would be left to make contact with the enemy; sacrificial lambs as it were. Although the toll escorts took on U-boats meant that the Germans never had an overwhelming victory.
      On land, if you knew an attack was coming you couldn't have the troops making sudden extensive defensive preparations. But you could prepare a response to be waiting behind the lines, ready to counterattack. This would then look like an intelligence failure on the Germans part; failing to locate the enemy's reserves.
      In the case of Operation Citadel; everyone knew the Germans were planning to attack the Kursk salient. The Soviets knew the attack coming. The Germans knew the Soviets knew and were making huge preparations for it. It was an obvious target.
      What the Germans didn't know was that between British and Soviet intelligence, the USSR knew more about the Wehrmacht forces preparing for the attack than the German generals did. They knew which armies would take part, which divisions constituted those armies, how many tanks and guns they possessed; everything. This allowed the Soviets to tailor their defences to the coming attack. Conversely, as the Germans lacked this kind of extensive intelligence; they had no idea the Soviets had amassed a reserve force of over a million men, ready to counterattack if it looked like the Germans were going to break through the Kursk defences.

  • @Geojr815
    @Geojr815 Před rokem +3

    That’s really not their call lol

    • @vivianchetty7477
      @vivianchetty7477 Před rokem

      Yeah. Your right. It’s the big wigs call.

    • @DomWeasel
      @DomWeasel Před rokem +1

      The film makers excuse it by saying they didn't want to introduce a bunch of military characters to explain the problem. This film presents it as a revelation but intelligence services have struggled with this problem for centuries.
      In the modern era, the British Army grappled with the problem in the First World War, trying to balance using what they knew without tipping off the Germans that they had spies in their ranks. They were well aware of the difficulty of using Enigma intercepts come the Second World War.

  • @kreb7
    @kreb7 Před 3 lety

    I think that scene try to emulate the Coventry

  • @noisypr6048
    @noisypr6048 Před 3 lety +1

    The tricky part they dont show that one of the scientist's brother was on the convoy

  • @jonabank
    @jonabank Před 5 lety +86

    I don't like this scene. It makes everyone except Allan seem like an idiot, which is certainly not the case.

    • @vonb2792
      @vonb2792 Před 5 lety +36

      You need emotions and drama and to give the answers to the viewers so they can feel and understand too. Alot of people would have been like: WTF! Emotions or Not

    • @Phil_Taz
      @Phil_Taz Před 5 lety +19

      the guy transcribing would have known after 5 letters that it worked, but he looks at the final message as though he was transcribing in his sleep and just woke up. That is a necessary part of the scene, you need to allow a little theatre.

    • @a.m.s6611
      @a.m.s6611 Před 4 lety +5

      I actually think it paints the others in a good light as it shows their thought was not winning the war it was the value of 500 plus civilian lives that could be saved

    • @alalalala57
      @alalalala57 Před 4 lety +1

      Why would they be idiots?

    • @ethanramos4441
      @ethanramos4441 Před 3 lety

      Jonabank mate their right I mean what can they do if the Germans found out that they broken the Engima code, they would have change the Code and would 2 years would be all for nothing

  • @melreslor2114
    @melreslor2114 Před rokem

    To avoid suspicion after Enigma was broke, the Allies can only take action on 5% or so of the messages intercepted. Does anyone know of publications, articles that explain this tactic of reacting to only some of the messages so that the opponent (Germans in this case) doesn't realize they need to abandon (Enigma).

  • @bennettsnyder315
    @bennettsnyder315 Před 11 měsíci

    I have a hard time believing this decision was being made by a bunch of mathematicians.

  • @markusmuller6173
    @markusmuller6173 Před rokem +1

    look and listen - then think carefully !

  • @raginggamer7207
    @raginggamer7207 Před 3 měsíci

    These situations are always hard. But if you just imagine they didn't break Enigma at that moment, that convoy was going to be destroyed anyway. So Alan was right, even if it was a difficult decision.

  • @aarniometsuri
    @aarniometsuri Před 4 měsíci

    7 years later and i feel like i have to come back to this scene to think on just how much i absolutely despise it. Having a very interesting premise and important historical moment and yet, this scene is 3 minutes of standard coverage of characters saying lines like they are arguing over what food they want to order. Blocking is literally just medium shots and characters standing next to each other, the map that would visually actually show the weight of the decicion being made is forgotten by the camera in under a minute. There lighting is somewhat moody but doesnt change during the scene and everyone is ultimately just lit the same. I cannot believe how boring this scene is when the dilemma they face is so interesting. Theres no interesting back and forth in the dialogue, the most interesting thing being Turing speculating why "people like violence"; which seems rather off topic. I think the people making this realized how boring it was and so they decided to add a punch to the scene to make it feel like something was happening.
    Im not sure why i think on this scene and this movie so much specifically, but to me it represents a very hollywoody way of failing to do historical drama. Ultimately its going to be a bunch of people talking in rooms, so the film making has to make up for that in some way, but here it feels they just didnt even try to stage it in an interesting way. Sometimes dropping the soundtrack can create a specific atmosphere, like it did in that pivotal scene in Oppenheimer, but here the defeaning silence makes things worse, because theres nothing else going on.

  • @zackhunter8364
    @zackhunter8364 Před rokem

    Win the war but loose the battle

  • @Knuckles2761
    @Knuckles2761 Před rokem

    Virgin enigma enthusiasts vs Chad enigma enjoyer.

  • @aylanelson1012
    @aylanelson1012 Před 5 měsíci

    "We made designs completely backwards
    Nobody knows if were even close to where we need to go
    To find out how it all works with so many artists
    And nobody wants
    Nobody wants to sit behind the wheel
    Behind the wheel"
    #LanguageLies
    Why are scientist always portrayed as being socially inept, is it because it's difficult to except some people can be charismatic, endearing, athletic and intelligent?
    - Is it difficult for the Military and Hollywood's to picture a charismatic endearing scientist, they are so creative in everything else except that regard?

  • @PJOZeus
    @PJOZeus Před 9 měsíci

    With one correction - this single passenger ship wouldn't make a difference - it would be suspicious but not indicative
    They talk about an algorithm about what to utilise and what to discard later on - This one ship would not sway that scale
    It might be hell. It might be important. But they could've saved that one ship.
    If it was any old ship then that is fair enough, why take the risk. But having one of the 5 personally related to it? After all his work in cracking it? If it was Turing's brother could he really say he wouldn't save him? They won't catch on from just that one. It can't be every one. But it could've been that one.
    Can't save everyone, but that isn't everyone.