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re: Breaking the Code/Imitation Game

Posted by: tmdonahue (tmdonahue@yahoo.com) 05:29 pm EST 01/21/15
In reply to: Breaking the Code/Imitation Game - bobby2 04:01 pm EST 01/21/15

I saw it but it was so long ago I'm not sure my memory is any good.

Jacobi's Turing as written was less offensive and vain than the movie's. Jacobi made a lot of the stuttering, as you might imagine if you've seen Jacobi in almost anything else. The play focused more on characters than the film's somewhat trumped-up idea of story: whether the bombe--the device called "Christopher" in the film (nonsense!)--work, the Bletchley folks' machinations as to release of information (more nonsense), the Soviet spy (sort of true, but not as told in the film), etc.

The overall structure was the same, starting with Turing's arrest for homosexuality, telling his past during the war, and then the quick climactic coda of Turing's after war life, the hormone treatments, and his death. The play relates the death to Turing having seen as a child the Disney film of "Snow White" which somehow motivated his suicide by eating an apple tainted with cyanide. (Can I be recalling this right? I found the play moving but now that I write about the "Snow White" trope, I'm a little appalled.)

I recall in general that the scenes(s) with Turing and his sex partner were rather touching and well-written. His relationship with his boss at Bletchley played by Michael Gough in the play, who was excellent, was charming--totally fictional I'm sure.

Many historians have complained on the 'web and in print about the film's inaccuracies. Having read Hodge's biography of Turing, I would say the film was "inspired" by it, not "based" on it. But "Breaking the Code," was perhaps less inaccurate because it had less detail in every way.

Sorry, this is not much help but it's the best I can do. There is a TV movie of "Breaking the Code," starring Jacobi. I've not seen it but if you're really interested, there you are. If you're good with torrents, the film seems to be on the internet. Of course, downloading it would be stealing.


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re: Breaking the Code/Imitation Game

Posted by: showtunetrivia 09:32 pm EST 01/21/15
In reply to: re: Breaking the Code/Imitation Game - tmdonahue 05:29 pm EST 01/21/15

Alan Turing wasn't a child when Disney's SNOW WHITE came out. He was 25.

I haven't seen either the play or the film, I confess.

Laura


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re: Breaking the Code/Imitation Game

Posted by: Thom915 (Thom915@aol.com) 11:24 pm EST 01/21/15
In reply to: re: Breaking the Code/Imitation Game - showtunetrivia 09:32 pm EST 01/21/15

Very true. Turing sees the film as an adult upon his arrival to work at Bletchey. He finds the ending in which Sleeping Beauty after eating the poisoned apple awakes in the arms of a handsome prince to be sentimental but nonetheless touching. Additionally the play does not paint Turing as being particularly promiscuous as another poster has suggested nor Ron as a sex worker but rather as a thief who uses his sex appeal to his advantage. It was a very different and more difficult time for homosexuals to live either monogamously or openly.


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re: Breaking the Code/Imitation Game

Posted by: lordofspeech 06:27 pm EST 01/21/15
In reply to: re: Breaking the Code/Imitation Game - tmdonahue 05:29 pm EST 01/21/15

Din't remember it well. Wasn't particularly moved, but it was fine. I think it's challenging, then as now, for a storyline to embrace a protag's "promiscuity" and frequenting of borderline sex-workers without judging the personality.


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