First Time Watching | The Imitation Game (2014) | Reaction

Ойын-сауық

#firsttimewatching #moviereaction #imitationgame
American Reacts to The Imitation Game starring Benedict Cumberbatch as Alan Turing and Keira Knightley as Joan Clarke. First Time Watching the movie in its entirety, King Boomer is moved by this World War 2 British Drama about Alan Turing and other mathematicians and scientists in The United Kingdom who were tasked with cracking the German code that was deemed unbreakable (ENIGMA).
Rent The Imitation Game HERE: • The Imitation Game
Like, Share, Subscribe, and HOWDY!!!
Patreon!!! - GET EXCLUSIVE AND SUPPORT US ON PATREON FOR EXTRA AND EXCLUSIVE CONTENT - patreon.com/THEkingboomer
King and Queen Boomer's INSTAGRAM: / kingandqueenboomer
King Boomer's Gaming Streams and Content on TWITCH: / kingboomeryay
Homework Radio provides the relaxing music for the Twitch streams!
/ @homeworkradio
Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. No copyright infringement intended. ALL RIGHTS BELONG TO THEIR RESPECTIVE OWNERS.

Пікірлер: 270

  • @robertom6869
    @robertom686911 ай бұрын

    Alan Turing the father of modern computing is on the british £50 note. Incredible that the very machine you are using to react to a film about him can be traced back to his achievements.

  • @ncard00

    @ncard00

    8 ай бұрын

    Alan Turing as portrayed here is meant to have autism, basically meaning taking stuff as it’s said, lacking social skills, and finding his hobbies are more interesting than other people, very broadly speaking. And I love people who think differently, also having autism myself, “normal” people are so boring. And one of my favorite quotes is “nobody ever made a difference by being like everyone else”.

  • @amberfranklinmk93

    @amberfranklinmk93

    8 ай бұрын

    @@ncard00. I absolutely love Bletchley Park it’s my favourite place

  • @polarisukyc1204

    @polarisukyc1204

    21 күн бұрын

    I think the best part of Turing on the £50 note is the quote: “This Is Only a Foretaste of What Is To Come, and Only the Shadow of What Is Going To Be”

  • @nicksykes4575
    @nicksykes457511 ай бұрын

    Apparently Alan committed suicide by taking a bite out of a poisoned apple. (Snow white vibes anyone?) When Steve Jobs was asked if the Apple logo was a tribute to Turing, he said "no, but it damn well should of been."

  • @TheJrr71

    @TheJrr71

    11 ай бұрын

    I didn't know the Job's quote! I had heard that the logo was a tribute to Turing!

  • @staticcentrehalf7166

    @staticcentrehalf7166

    11 ай бұрын

    Far more likely he said ".... should have been."

  • @mancuniangamecat8288

    @mancuniangamecat8288

    11 ай бұрын

    He said he wished it was.

  • @robinGkem
    @robinGkem11 ай бұрын

    If you ever come to England, you can now visit the real Bletchley Park!! They've opened it to the public as a massive museum

  • @davenunn7259

    @davenunn7259

    11 ай бұрын

    Had the joy of an amazing tour of Bletchley Park with a great Scottish lady who worked there during the war

  • @ahmadsadeq4530

    @ahmadsadeq4530

    11 ай бұрын

    I want or we want the part 2 of The Imitation Game movie seriously

  • @shaneord7527
    @shaneord752711 ай бұрын

    Apparently there is a memo from Churchill that he wrote after a visit to BP, as there were requests for more funding. The memo simply read, 'Give them what they want.'

  • @mattmurdoch5575
    @mattmurdoch557511 ай бұрын

    Just to answer the bit about Churchill allowing a convoy to be attacked and people killed. This occurred in the bombing of the city of Coventry when Churchill new that the city was about to be bombed and he had to allow it to take place to prevent the Germans from knowing they have broken the enigma code. the cathedral of Coventry (its ruins) has been left standing as a memorial to the people who died during the bombing.

  • @kindabatooni9314
    @kindabatooni93147 ай бұрын

    Benedict Cumberbatch always delivers. This man can do anything when it comes to acting.

  • @jacquelinepearson2288
    @jacquelinepearson228811 ай бұрын

    Benedict Cumberbatch was nominated for an Oscar for his portrayal of Alan Turing in this film. However, he was up against Eddie Redmayne as Stephen Hawking in The Theory of Everything for the Best Actor category, and Eddie Redmayne won. Both actors attended the most prestigious schools in the UK. Cumberbatch went to Harrow. Redmayne went to Eton (and was in the same year as Prince William).

  • @ahmadsadeq4530

    @ahmadsadeq4530

    11 ай бұрын

    I want or we want the part 2 of The Imitation Game movie seriously. Greatt movies

  • @BabaGoesHollywood

    @BabaGoesHollywood

    7 ай бұрын

    For non-British what the hell is a prestigious school

  • @robanks3895

    @robanks3895

    9 күн бұрын

    @@BabaGoesHollywood Britain's top private schools

  • @davidsweeney4021
    @davidsweeney402111 ай бұрын

    He has finally got some respect as his portrait is on a £50 note in the UK. Also my where I work university named one of its buildings a few years ago, fittingly the Maths/Science centre.

  • @ProfessorBernardFuck

    @ProfessorBernardFuck

    11 ай бұрын

    Sadly ironic they put him on a bank note that isn't accepted in a lot of places!

  • @neeway1620
    @neeway162011 ай бұрын

    An interesting Charles dance fact... His Father Walter was born in 1874 and had him at age 72. Chalres had a daughter in 2012 aged 66. Her grandfather was born 138 years before her.

  • @rde4017
    @rde401711 ай бұрын

    A wonderful film about a genuine international treasure and a very British kind of superhero.

  • @patrickkeefe1919
    @patrickkeefe191911 ай бұрын

    Nice one KB, my mum had her 99th birthday this week, which included her giving a talk on her minor part in the war effort, having joined the Air Force in 1942 (where she learned to drive). She mainly worked with photo reconnaissance squadrons whose interpretation was concentrated at RAF Medmenham - a key counterpart to the signals intelligence at Bletchley Park (which interests her too). A further element of the backroom activities was then deception - you might be interested in the film Operation Mincemeat... which was a particularly filmable one, unlike the massive subterfuge for D--Day - Operation Fortitude. By the time of D-Day, Bletchley Park was deciphering German signals faster than the intended recipients, but still having to decide what they could act on with a plausible explanation that didn't involve having broken the code. On the flip side, when a German U Boat sank HMS Barham (see youtube for the clip released after the war), they knew the Captain didn't know he had sunk it, so didn't make it public for ages (leading to the last conviction under the Witchcraft Act 1735 for Helen Duncan - if that doesn't pique someone's interest for a Google...). All the above relates to Europe and the film to the Enigma code, but I'm sure you are aware that it was the US breaking some Japanese Code that enabled the battle of Midway and often covered in films on the subject.

  • @redf7209

    @redf7209

    Ай бұрын

    I found the 1956 film 'The man who never was' to be a better version of the story than ;Operation Mincemeat'. The former was flawed a bit as some facts were still shrouded in secrecy and the second seemed to drift into personalities/relationships with god knows how much fantasy built in.

  • @jeffscoble1
    @jeffscoble111 ай бұрын

    it was all kept top secret for so long, thats why it took the Queen until the 2000s to pardon him

  • @williambranch4283

    @williambranch4283

    11 ай бұрын

    The Russians were using captured German equipment into the 1970s ... That is why.

  • @lee8821c

    @lee8821c

    Ай бұрын

    Actually it was originally rejected by the government because they tried to say that within that time it was still illegal and he knew it was so they wasn’t going to pardon him. The only reason this got overturned was because millions of people went mad and a petition was made once again and it pressured the government to actually pardon him which is why they ended up asking the queen to pardon him in 2013 if it wasn’t for all those people signing the petition and basically pressuring them I reckon it would have never happened. Honestly he was a hero and he could have done so much more for our country if the world wasn’t so ignorant back then.

  • @catdavies89
    @catdavies8911 ай бұрын

    After Life is a must. Its absolutely thought provoking, hilarious and my god you will cry. Definitely one to watch with Queen Boomer however she will cry lol. Seen it three times ❤❤

  • @dannjp75

    @dannjp75

    11 ай бұрын

    The last episode crushed me!😢

  • @paulbromley6687
    @paulbromley668711 ай бұрын

    It wasn’t just London my dad (aged Eleven )and his younger brother sat under a table during the Sheffield blitz 12 Dec 1940 their mother was not there she was across town and came back the next day. They were made of sterner stuff back then. He never mentioned it, his brother my uncle told us about it a few years before his own death.

  • @tommyxbones5126
    @tommyxbones512611 ай бұрын

    There are some really good gentle English comedies like the detectorists (series) or Mrs Coldicots cabbage war (film) or maybe you'd like gone fishing with Bob Mortimer & Paul Whitehouse -just being themselves in a program that shows Paul trying to teach Bob how to fish for different fish in a variety of rivers & lakes all around Britain.

  • @cryptosammy

    @cryptosammy

    11 ай бұрын

    I love the detectorists did you watch the Xmas special

  • @tommyxbones5126

    @tommyxbones5126

    11 ай бұрын

    @@cryptosammy yep, I saw the Christmas special & the feature length special this last Christmas just gone as well. This program has always struck a thumbs up from me & I never want it to end.

  • @MD-1982
    @MD-198211 ай бұрын

    A good film, shame how things went for Turing 😔

  • @lewisdowd
    @lewisdowd11 ай бұрын

    Darkest hour is a good film about what Churchill did during ww2 - Churchill and Alan Turing were the biggest influences from britain in terms of winning the war. Gary Oldman also won best actor for his performance as Churchill

  • @andrewgray5945

    @andrewgray5945

    11 ай бұрын

    Would definitely recommend this film for a reaction and one of the best, if not THE best portrayal of Sir Winston Churchill I have ever seen.

  • @sus_beatz8559
    @sus_beatz855911 ай бұрын

    Really impressed with your history knowledge. Learnt some things, even about my own bloody country that I didn't know before watching this video. great reaction.

  • @j9lorna
    @j9lorna11 ай бұрын

    Kids were taken out of the cities and were passed on to folk living in the country pretty much randomly. Often the kids were housed on farms and it was the first time kids had been away from their families.

  • @watchreadplayretro
    @watchreadplayretro11 ай бұрын

    Brilliant reaction, thank you King! Laughs are great, but I'm equally fascinated by your reactions on history-based things too! Touching to hear why you wear the DTs and yes we owe so much to the older generations especially those that went to wars!

  • @casperselka671
    @casperselka67111 ай бұрын

    Unbelievable film my favourite film of all time. one of the only films I have watched multiple times

  • @missdoglover1644
    @missdoglover164411 ай бұрын

    I vote for Ricky Gervais’s “After Life” next, it’s absolutely hilarious 👍🏻

  • @davidz3879

    @davidz3879

    11 ай бұрын

    More than The Office & The Ricky Gervais Show?

  • @TheJrr71

    @TheJrr71

    11 ай бұрын

    @@davidz3879 Loved The Office, but I think Extras was better, maybe because I've seen The Office too many times, but After Life is very good.

  • @missdoglover1644

    @missdoglover1644

    11 ай бұрын

    @@davidz3879 The After Life out takes are so funny! Should be bottled as a cure for depression 😂

  • @seancrowe3353

    @seancrowe3353

    11 ай бұрын

    The after life is too sad to be a comedy. Derek is more light hearted

  • @danielpeterg

    @danielpeterg

    11 ай бұрын

    Also ‘the invention of lying’

  • @MrSapperb3
    @MrSapperb311 ай бұрын

    Please rewatch this with both of you guys! This is one of my favourite films of all time

  • @nicholasbeech932
    @nicholasbeech93211 ай бұрын

    Really enjoyed your reaction & your understanding of how we faced up to the Nazis basically alone for 2 years.

  • @Bowleskov
    @Bowleskov11 ай бұрын

    Alan Turing and Jean Laidlaw are definitely 2 of the biggest heroes on the Homefront of WWII, I would recommend looking into Jean Laidlaw of the Royal Navy's Western Approaches Tactical Unit because she was the one who helped design the Tactics and Training to solve the U-boat problem. Also I have seen it mentioned in other comments but A trip to Bletchley Park is highly recommended just to be able to walk around the huts, to see the machines is really an experience not to be missed if you are in the London area.

  • @guyblack
    @guyblack11 ай бұрын

    This is the second war film with Benedict and Keira Knightly. The film being the equally brilliant Atonement.

  • @radarlockeify
    @radarlockeifyАй бұрын

    My dad was evacuated during the war, he was sent Wales and learnt to be a blacksmith. Then when he was conscripted he drove trucks around europe and was stationed near Belsen. He hardly ever talked about that bit.

  • @alisonrodger3360
    @alisonrodger336011 ай бұрын

    'Went The Day Well?' is an interesting little film, released in 1942 so made during the war, about possible invasion. It has it's unexpected moments.

  • @kumasenlac5504

    @kumasenlac5504

    Ай бұрын

    Written by Graham Greene, it was later 'borrowed' as "The Eagle Has Landed".

  • @stevejones8413
    @stevejones8413Ай бұрын

    Great reaction, king , keep it going

  • @sathvamp1
    @sathvamp111 ай бұрын

    THANK YOU for doing a reaction to this movie... for some reason it's one of the RAREST movies to find a reaction to. It is one of MY favorites though.

  • @dcsportsmark4996
    @dcsportsmark49965 ай бұрын

    Not many The Imitation Game reactions out there. Thanks for doing it. Underrated movie for sure.

  • @matwetton
    @matwetton11 ай бұрын

    this is a great film but it does have some very significant ommissions and inaccuracies. the largest of which is the ommission of the contribution of the Polish in the development of the breaking of Enigma. and the basic way that the Bombe worked. it was not made and then refined by identifying key information. rather using key "unchanging" info to break codes is codebreaking 101. the bombe was used to make this faster.

  • @marflitts
    @marflitts11 ай бұрын

    I was visiting friends in London a few years back and on return at Kings Cross station to catch my train back oop north was 2 steam trains and loads of extras milling about. I asked one of the crew what was going on and they said they was doing some filming for a movie coming out the next year called The Imitation Game. Iv'e watched it a fair few times since.

  • @dannjp75
    @dannjp7511 ай бұрын

    Films like this mean more to me, I live in the Channel Islands, the only part Britain that were occupied by the Germans during the war…

  • @LettucePlate
    @LettucePlate9 күн бұрын

    Part of why it took until 2013 to pardon Alan Turing because the whole story of what he and his team did during the war wasn't public knowledge until then. Once the information about breaking enigma was released he was pardoned.

  • @FredGarnett
    @FredGarnett3 ай бұрын

    Great reaction! You might want to watch From Russia With Love after this as Ian Fleming worked for MI6 during the war and wrote the James Bond novels to fictionalise stories he knew about the intelligence service! He too could not say anything about the war for 50 years. The whole plot of this second James Bond movie (and Sean Connery's personal favourite) revolves around a coding machine like Enigma. From Russia With Love (1963) also has the first use of a mobile phone in movies (see if you can spot it) ;)

  • @FSMusicLTD
    @FSMusicLTD11 ай бұрын

    A friend of mine back in college was an extra in the film he went to the same school Alan Turing went to

  • @benkaveney5499
    @benkaveney549911 ай бұрын

    The blitz was awful but the british Spirit never caved, everyone just carried on like normal the next day, hitler wanted us to be his ally and he feared fhe british resolve, he knew wed never give up and that scared him, although we was on our knees and he battered our supply lines the spitfire conquered. Apparently we was like a few weeks away from defeat too, but thats never spoken about, still, we won and britain will never surrender no matter what.

  • @AlphaGamer1981

    @AlphaGamer1981

    11 ай бұрын

    The one thing the history books never told you about the blitz, was it wasn't all holding hands and singing war songs in the underground tunnels, there was a lot of thievery, prostitution, fist fighting to the death over ration stubs and a lot of backstabbing. Keep calm and carry on.

  • @brettshirley
    @brettshirley11 ай бұрын

    I went to Sherborne School from 2010 - 2015. They filmed the scenes of Turing's young life at the school itself and the children that play extras in those scenes are all my classmates. I was offered the chance to be in it too but ended up refusing because I didn't want to get a haircut... 😅

  • @bobbyshaftowenttosea5410
    @bobbyshaftowenttosea541011 ай бұрын

    Yesterday's Cheese Rolling" clips have appeared!! " Thrills and spills as Cheese Rolling 2023 leads to MULTIPLE" seems the best (7 mins) The crowds becoming funnier year by year and the Womens Winner finished unconscious!

  • @KingBoomer

    @KingBoomer

    11 ай бұрын

    Thanks Bobby I’ll check it out!

  • @KingBoomer

    @KingBoomer

    11 ай бұрын

    Bobby I did a reaction to that video but it was blocked. So I’ll try a different one soon and see if I can get it up for you.

  • @charlesfrancis6894
    @charlesfrancis689411 ай бұрын

    Logically one would have to ration the use of the daily information from the German forces and i imagine one would have to attempt to look at the possible unseen consequences of a German victory and a German defeat on every occasion then inform the relevant service of the German plan of attack ,when the calculations are made that would allow interception that would not look like information received through enigma but other forms of intelligence.

  • @rcormie
    @rcormieАй бұрын

    Thank you for doing this one. Such a great story and an excellent film. Sad but true. Always brings me to tears every time i watch it. So sad Alan Turing was treated the way he was. I only wish he lived to see what he had created and even in Tim e met up with Prof Stephen Hawking. Imagine those to mind getting together.

  • @mason123133
    @mason12313311 ай бұрын

    Please please watch a British TV series called ‘Faulty Towers’ it’s such a humour-ridden series, John Cleese plays an amazing role in it!

  • @davidz3879

    @davidz3879

    11 ай бұрын

    Fawlty Towers is brilliant. A new series of it is being made.

  • @mason123133

    @mason123133

    11 ай бұрын

    @@davidz3879 oh man that’s news to me! Gonna have to look into it and get excited whilst at work tonight 😂

  • @lewistremonti7827

    @lewistremonti7827

    11 ай бұрын

    Don’t mention the war!

  • @watchreadplayretro

    @watchreadplayretro

    11 ай бұрын

    Fawlty. And yes, although YT seem to be extra fussy over such shows and reactions, sadly

  • @seancrowe3353

    @seancrowe3353

    11 ай бұрын

    I can't imagine how woke the remake will be

  • @Zombie.793
    @Zombie.79311 ай бұрын

    Mark Strong along with Keifer Sutherland and many other great actors are in another fantastic movie about WW2 this time about POW'S of the Japanese it's called "To End All Wars" (2001) it's one of those movies that really got to me, it should've won Oscars

  • @mancuniangamecat8288
    @mancuniangamecat828811 ай бұрын

    If you want to see Mark strong in a completely different role you should watch brothers grimsby.

  • @woods457

    @woods457

    11 ай бұрын

    Watch it with Queen Boomer...............

  • @sirjohnmara
    @sirjohnmara11 ай бұрын

    25:20 GREAT Recommendation to KB. Whoever you are! Horray, Horray, Horray!

  • @nerdytom6881
    @nerdytom688112 күн бұрын

    38:20 The brother on a convoy scene is fictional and added for dramatic effect to personalise the consequences and add drama. Convoy positions were highly secret, and which ship was in each convoy would not be plotted at Bletchley.

  • @garymarshall4447
    @garymarshall444711 ай бұрын

    There is an excellent four part Channel 4 documentary called Station X which details the work that went on at Bletchley Park in breaking the Enigma code, including interviews with people that were there, well worth a look.

  • @paulwinstone7339
    @paulwinstone733911 ай бұрын

    If you enjoyed this you should watch Tinker Taylor Soldier Spy. Every British actor worth mentioning in it. One of the best British films In decades

  • @CallumIsRaving
    @CallumIsRaving9 ай бұрын

    I was an air cadet at Bletchley Park for 5 years or so during my teenage years in the 2000’s - It’s mad how even today with a film like the Imitation Game, how few people in the UK, let alone in the world, know of the work of Alan Turing and the codebreakers of Bletchley Park! They literally shortened the war by YEARS and saved millions of lives on both sides of the war in the process, but did so in complete secrecy - Secrecy that was kept until at least 1975, with most information only coming out in the last 40 years or so. Many of those who worked there during wartime took their role and efforts to the grave with them. It was so cool to be an air cadet there and using the entirety of Bletchley Park (mostly preserved since it’s war days and now a great museum) as a place to do cadet exercises and training knowing the history and importance of the place!

  • @direnova6284
    @direnova628411 ай бұрын

    Gay legalisation was in 1967 in the UK. The US legalised it nationwide in 2003, though that was just the last state to do it.

  • @johnnyuk3365
    @johnnyuk336511 ай бұрын

    As others have said there are lots of inaccuracies in the movie, but it does give a flavour for the era and events. Alan Turning was treated appallingly by the “establishment “, and probably committed suicide. A lot of historians agree,as was said at the end of movie, that he probably shortened the war by 2 years and saved millions of lives. The only official recognition he has is that he on our £50 note (bill). As lovely as it is to see Kiera Knightley, there were other women involved. At its height Bletchley Park employed 8,000 women which was 75% of its workforce. A high percentage involved in decrypting messages and translating from German to English. The existence of Bletchley Park wasn’t declassified until the the 1970’s, but no one was told. It took years to leak out, then stories started appearing about dear elderly ladies talking to their grandchildren about how gran was a “spy” during the Second World War. “OK Grandma, is turning funny again, she thinks she’s James Bond”.

  • @pauldurkee4764

    @pauldurkee4764

    11 ай бұрын

    I think that many people get the impression that Turing was the prime mover in cracking the enigma problem. It was a collaboration of many extraordinary people, the Poles, Welchman and the often forgotten Tommy Flowers from the GPO. 👍

  • @johnnyuk3365

    @johnnyuk3365

    11 ай бұрын

    @@pauldurkee4764 I agree, in particular Tommy Flowers. He effectively with valves put the whole thoughts of Turnings thoughts together.

  • @dougiehowe802
    @dougiehowe80211 ай бұрын

    HI KB, Brian - If you and QB do make it to the UK, PLEASE, PLEASE, try to visit Bletchley Park, you will not be disappointed. There is so much to see and learn. I'm an HM Forces Veteran (RAF), and I visited the site with my wife and I was blown away with the work they achieved there. It made me feel even more proud to have served for my country in HM Forces (RAF) from 1983 - 1995.. And don't forget to visit THE TOWER OF LONDON and meet the Kings personal bodyguard, the Yeoman Warders (Beefeaters). Love your reactions to BRITISH stuff, KUTGW (Keep Up The Good Work) And I hope Little Boomer is doing and growing well.

  • @MorganMontyMcKeown

    @MorganMontyMcKeown

    11 ай бұрын

    Yep. It was a crime until 1967 in the UK..

  • @cockneygeezer3528
    @cockneygeezer352811 ай бұрын

    a great reaction to a great movie, thanks

  • @jasonjones3638
    @jasonjones3638Ай бұрын

    Many people don't know that Benedict Cumberbatch was ACTUALLY RELATED to Mr. Turing, albeit its distant cousins, it must have been part of how great he was in the movie.

  • @chindie88
    @chindie8811 ай бұрын

    A fantastic film that is more or less a fable of what actually happened. Turing was a brilliant man whose country committed a heinous crime against in return for his efforts to save it, but the film makes him into a one man army in many ways, when in reality Bletchley Park was absolutely filled with brilliant people working on the most difficult tasks of cryptography. Turing was probably the most brilliant mind of those people, but he wasn't the sole driving force of those efforts . Polish men and women had been deciphering Enigma messages throughout the war, and one of Turing's colleagues, Tommy Flowers, developed a much more complex machine to break a more complex cypher. As for what happened to Turing... Chemical castration is used to reduce sex drive and sexual urges. In Turing's case he was fitted with a device in his thigh which gave him oestrogen, which caused him to bloat and begin to develop breasts, and he remarked that he began to have heterosexual dreams which scared him. This type of 'treatment/punishment' is still used in the UK but with different chemicals, and usually only in cases with extremely bad sexually motivated criminals. Thankfully the shameful days were we subjected people to it for simply being gay are behind us. It's slightly ambiguous if he committed suicide, but the balance of the evidence suggests he did. He had so much cyanide in his system it's unlikely he accidentally inhaled it, and while it's reported his mentality was good prior to his death he had basically been ruined by his being prosecuted.

  • @ahmadsadeq4530
    @ahmadsadeq453011 ай бұрын

    I want or we want the part 2 of The Imitation Game movie seriously. Great movies ever

  • @dh-c1717
    @dh-c171711 ай бұрын

    Kudos for reference to antikythera machine. I believe it has been worked out now.

  • @HankD13
    @HankD1311 ай бұрын

    Breaking Enigma was of immense importance to winning the war. But this movie does it no real justice. It was a massive operation with countless teams and huge numbers of people. The Polish brought the first machines and started the breaking. Naval operations taking U-Boats, "pinch" raid to steal code books - all so important to Ultra. Breaking, losing and breaking again. This is drama, for the sake of drama and makes it look so much simpler than it was. Still, a good movie and covers the tragedy of Alan Turing.

  • @scottbrack9738
    @scottbrack97382 ай бұрын

    When Alan Turing made that decision about what information was fed to officials so that the Germans were not alerted, he was just 30 years old. Imagine having to bear the responsibility of making those decisions at that age.

  • @neeway1620
    @neeway162011 ай бұрын

    If you like Benedict playing this sort of character you'll love Sherlock! (BBC Tv series)

  • @tazzatamania
    @tazzatamania11 ай бұрын

    This is an amazing but also very sad movie to watch. He's such, or was, an unsung hero. I personally hadnt heard of him until i watched this. Watch Bronson next if you haven't seen it already. Tom Hardy is brilliant in it. Really funny in places.

  • @rickardroach9075
    @rickardroach907511 ай бұрын

    5:15 As an Australian I’d like to point out the Brits weren’t alone. Also, we didn’t wait until the war hit our doorstep to join like you Yanks. 😉

  • @scotthub3256
    @scotthub325611 ай бұрын

    If you haven't seen it you must watch Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy next, Benedict and Mark Strong are in that

  • @robertgraves8843
    @robertgraves884311 ай бұрын

    If what I hear is true, the Turing test is likely to be featuring rather prominently in our lives before very long.

  • @wolfen210959

    @wolfen210959

    11 ай бұрын

    Probably, but only in relation to the AI testing us to see if we are truly human, while it has us down on our knees.

  • @soozb15
    @soozb1511 ай бұрын

    Keira Knightly also impressive in The Duchess, with Ralph Feinnes.

  • @James-rc6qq
    @James-rc6qq11 ай бұрын

    brilliant film this

  • @Louis16261
    @Louis1626111 ай бұрын

    Amazing film. If you ever make it over to the UK you should visit Bletchley Park, it is a great experience.

  • @truebluehube
    @truebluehube11 ай бұрын

    And now he is on the back of the £50 note, British Hero

  • @RaceDayReplay
    @RaceDayReplay11 ай бұрын

    As a Churchill fan 'Darkest Hour' should be high on your list to react to

  • @KingBoomer

    @KingBoomer

    11 ай бұрын

    I saw that first day in the theatre. Gary Oldman rules.

  • @jakebrookes
    @jakebrookes11 ай бұрын

    Bro the beginning really jarred me 😂

  • @cryptosammy
    @cryptosammy11 ай бұрын

    Try Roald dahls tales of the unexpected Each episode is a different story

  • @wardjunior1450
    @wardjunior145011 ай бұрын

    I bloody love this film.

  • @paulfinucane6123
    @paulfinucane612311 ай бұрын

    I haven't watched that film for a while but shit that is heartbreaking and incredible in equal measure, the fact that the country which Turing had a massive role in saving from the N@zis had his life ended by the grateful government is nothing less than barbaric...

  • @Lucylava
    @Lucylava11 ай бұрын

    Being a homosexual in the uk was illegal until 1967, and then only for men aged 21 and above. From the 1500s until 1828 sodomy was a capital offence! Terrible how Turing was treated, especially considering how much he did for the world. Posthumously he's been much more recognised. RIP Alan

  • @phillipf1194

    @phillipf1194

    11 ай бұрын

    It was England and Wales which legalised it in 1967. Scotland and Northern Ireland were 1981 and 1982 respectively. For the whole of the UK equal age of consent was as recent as 2001 which is quite shocking.

  • @sathvamp1
    @sathvamp111 ай бұрын

    33:40 - 34:40 THAT part gives me MAD CHILLS every time!

  • @dawson508
    @dawson50811 ай бұрын

    Understatement of the year "Alan Turing was a very bright man". Yes....... yes he was.

  • @Phil_A_O_Fish
    @Phil_A_O_Fish11 ай бұрын

    @King Boomer, I've seen The Imitation Game on a number of occasions and it is a great film. Personally speaking I'm a gay man who was born in September 1953 and homosexuality wasn't legalised here in the U.K. until July 1967 therefore at that time I was 13 - what's even crazier was the fact that the law stipulated at that time that it was only permitted "....between two consenting adults in the privacy of their own home....". The age of consent for gay men from then on was 21 therefore anyone caught indulging in it with someone under that age meant that they could both be prosecuted irrespective of how old they were. It took until 1994 until the age of consent for gay men was reduced to 18 so that didn't happen for another 27 years until after the first law came into effect. It took a further 7 years for the age of consent to be reduced to 16 in line with heterosexuals in January 2001. This means that from the age of 17 when I had my first sexual experience with another man in the eyes of the law I was considered to be a criminal and so was he....even though both of us could've been under the age of 21. In January 2001 when the law was equalised I was aged 47 so that particular amendment to the law was neither use nor ornament to either myself or anyone else of my generation. Okay, back to the topic at hand, your reaction to this wasn't totally unexpected on my part when you kept on thinking that London was the only city that experienced the blitz and the rest of the U.K. was left untouched. Despite all of the carnage that happened throughout the whole of the U.K. including the devastation in Coventry as well as the industrial heartlands in the Midlands and the north of England I was born in Plymouth and that city is renowned for being the most bombed city in England throughout World War II. The reason for this is because of its strategic location - it's where a lot of the Royal Navy ships were docked at Devonport, not only did it have easy access to the English Channel but also to the Irish Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. In fact I remember going to visit my late Nan in 1967 and there was still a bomb site located next to her house which I found incredible even though the war had actually ended 22 years before and the land had never been redeveloped. On the subject of Alan Turing and the despicable way that he was treated in the early 1950's the blame for that lies entirely with Winston Churchill. As most of us know Churchill was all too willing to rely upon Alan's genius to break the Enigma codes and Alan was awarded an OBE by Clement Atlee's Labour Government in 1946 for his services during World War II. Winston Churchill then became U.K. Prime Minister in 1951 and served in that office until 1955 therefore it was under that second term of Churchill's that Alan was so despicably treated - Churchill could've done something about it and have Alan's sentence commuted but he did f*ck all and let Alan suffer unnecessarily; that's how much of a loathsome, opportunistic creature Churchill was. Suffice to say that Alan Turing has always been a hero not just amongst us homos but also amongst the vast majority of people throughout the U.K. and across Europe - many of whom wouldn't even be around today without his genius and the saving of so many lives by his dedication and efforts throughout World War II, would we? Think of it this way, if he cut the war short by at least two years and saved 14 million lives then if he and his team hadn't have cracked the Enigma codes when they did then those same 14 million people and their descendants wouldn't be around today, would they?

  • @robanks3895

    @robanks3895

    9 күн бұрын

    Very informative. My home city of Liverpool was also badly damaged, something to do with the battle of the Atlantic and u-boats. I'm sure I've read that the city because of the docklands actually suffered more bomb damage than Coventry. My grandfather was one of those victims he was killed by the Luftwaffe the very first night he volunteered as a fire watcher in the street where lived. And my own father served on the secret Atlantic convoys aged just 17 and luckily survived.

  • @paulwright9749
    @paulwright974911 ай бұрын

    Shout out to all the people who live here in Manchester! It’s a great place to live! 🇬🇧🇺🇸🇬🇧🇺🇸

  • @32446
    @324469 ай бұрын

    Some people argue that he didn’t commit suicide but was conveniently ‘dispatched’ as he knew too much.

  • @redf7209
    @redf7209Ай бұрын

    They also serve who only stand and wait..

  • @rasmusn.e.m1064
    @rasmusn.e.m106411 ай бұрын

    5:10 Shouting boy from Man Down? Is that you?

  • @casperselka671
    @casperselka671Ай бұрын

    10:00 Interestingly, MI6 or SIS was not officially acknowledged until 1994

  • @jsmithmultimediatech
    @jsmithmultimediatech10 ай бұрын

    The work that Alan Turing was doing is now part of GCHQ, rather was established after WW1 and back then was called GC&CS Gov't Code & Cypher School (the latter is a dept within GCHQ). Wasn't acknowledged they even existed until the early 1980s. National Cyber Security Centre is based there as well, in Cheltenham where GCHQ's HQ is, is where reports sent to Action Fraud, least some of them get sent after being assessed by Thames Valley Police (who they get sent to initially).

  • @jsmithmultimediatech

    @jsmithmultimediatech

    10 ай бұрын

    The National Cyber Security Centre has said that since the war in the Ukraine, for the UK's support of the Ukraine the national grid (our electricity supply network) gets bombarded with hacking attacks, more than likely originating from Russia. Is what they essentially defend against and what ultimately is in power over them is GCHQ, though they are doing a very long assessment over the more consumer based things, like using hosting providers (both servers and web hosting etc) and doing a massive survey over all platforms to try and attempt to prevent cyber attacks.

  • @Reevesy791
    @Reevesy79111 ай бұрын

    Great performance by Benedict Cumberbatch but the film is plagued with innaccuaracies.

  • @peterfhere9461
    @peterfhere946111 ай бұрын

    As other have said, Bletchley Park, which was so secret for so long, is now open to the public. They have a replica of "Christopher" that actually works and they have volunteers who go through how the Enigma was broken using it. Even more fascinating are the other more complex codes that were cracked. After the war, everything remained secret because no-one apart from the UK and the US knew Enigma had been cracked, and so when the Soviet Union started to use it during the cold war their messages could continue to be decrypted. This is why Bletchley Park remained "hidden" for so long.....Most people working there never spoke of their work. For example, someone we came into contact with had a grandfather who they, and their father, never knew even worked there - and he is mentioned in the records you can see in the museum there.

  • @joshuacauser
    @joshuacauser11 ай бұрын

    The Blitz is remembered by all Brits, London and many other Cities were levelled during 1940-41, many Air raid shelters still remain in peoples back gardens if you're house is old enough

  • @j9lorna
    @j9lorna11 ай бұрын

    There's a movie called The Parole Officer with Steve Coogan and Stannis and Cersei from GOT.

  • @alanbilton2547
    @alanbilton254711 ай бұрын

    Any idea when the next father ted reaction will be?

  • @XENONEOMORPH1979
    @XENONEOMORPH197911 ай бұрын

    the mechanism that was found within the sea bed is a simple device the reason why i say that is for every each cog has so many sizes in which to cut the the cog on its dimensions to calculate either the hour or the planets move around the sun from night time to day time and other planets evolving the teeth have to be perfectly cut on each cog to represent time and the planets movements and form day to night i do hope that helps they say there is only one which i do not doubt but i am sure he either had one himself as you make more than one . so may have been either distroyed or lost in time.

  • @toddkes5890

    @toddkes5890

    11 ай бұрын

    People have also made LEGO versions of the Antikythera mechanism, so we do know quite well how it works.

  • @XENONEOMORPH1979

    @XENONEOMORPH1979

    11 ай бұрын

    @@toddkes5890 true but the size of the cogs are self explanatory and how many teeth it has. but forget the lego version they would not be accurate lol.

  • @johndavidson5428
    @johndavidson542811 ай бұрын

    You should really look up how the American war effort with shipbuilding and how quickly they were churning out new cargo ships to send to the uk

  • @GamingCont
    @GamingCont11 ай бұрын

    13 hours that saved britain, please king ❤

  • @daitommasino911
    @daitommasino9112 ай бұрын

    honest question ... all ur questions before the 30 min mark were just the same or some u had to get chit chat? like MI6... i think i would have remember that part the first part i watched it if i watched the first 30 min of it....

  • @Steevee5k
    @Steevee5k6 күн бұрын

    If you ever wondered, if there were humans on the other side, as well, I highly recommend watching "Das Boot".

  • @JBLFC92
    @JBLFC9211 ай бұрын

    The main thing I remember about this film is historians noting that it’s not at all accurate and doesn’t do any justice to the hundreds of other people involved.

  • @williambranch4283

    @williambranch4283

    11 ай бұрын

    But that would be a miniseries dozens of episodes long ;-). Dad's Army is all British media could muster ;-))

  • @BipoIarbear

    @BipoIarbear

    11 ай бұрын

    Yes an no , it is about Turing really it's very accurate

  • @JBLFC92

    @JBLFC92

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@BipoIarbear I'm not sure about that even. By all accounts from the time, his character was completely different to how Benedict Cumberbatch played him - it seems strange to make a tribute to someone but completely change their personality. And obviously the spy part never happened.

  • @PuzzledlifeTV
    @PuzzledlifeTV11 ай бұрын

    The Turing Test is the same as the opening of Blade Runner by Phillip K dick - based on his book "Do androids dream of electric sheep" - cool title right?

  • @chipsdad5861
    @chipsdad5861Ай бұрын

    Great Movie

  • @beardedsloth7805
    @beardedsloth780511 ай бұрын

    Operation mincemeat was a good film , there's a comedy about stealing an enigma with Matt Leblanc called all the queen's men

  • @bertalach
    @bertalach11 ай бұрын

    But serious for you this! If your in a serious mood give This is England a go. Or Dead Mans Shoes. This is Englands a self contained film but there are 2 series as sequels so it might add too much to your plate as you already have too many shows to work with! Also Pheonix Nights a short and sweet series, Peter Kay’s in it and it’s insanely funny. For me bin off Benidorm and get on that. But what do I know, I’m just a Northern Muppet!

  • @scotthub3256

    @scotthub3256

    11 ай бұрын

    What a great film Dead Man's Shoes is.

  • @bertalach

    @bertalach

    11 ай бұрын

    @@scotthub3256 It’s a masterwork. Anything Meadows does is class. If your in the UK he’s doing a new series on BBC2 on Wednesday night at Nine! It’s a historical drama

  • @jamesharris7341
    @jamesharris734111 ай бұрын

    Hi boomer, great reaction. Homosexuality amongst men was a crime until the 60’s in the UK. Was called “buggery”. Whilst we were alone for the first two years, by alone it was us and the largest empire the world had ever seen (the term superpower was coined to describe us). The biggest genuine threat to cause us to lose would be of we’d capitulated and we came close in May of 1940 as there was a split in the War Cabinet. Churchill won the argument and we kept going.

Келесі