Daniel Higginbottom
Telenovela masquerading as a feature film. Does no justice to the team at Bletchley park or to Turing himself, who is crippled with a retrospective aspergers diagnosis that renders him unrecognisably dysfunctional and (more tellingly) sexless. A team of 5,000 is reduced to a team of 5, computing machines appear fully formed from nowhere, and fundamental questions of direction and security are settled by farcical last minute squabbling. Cheapness reduces both Turing and the team around him.
පුද්ගලයින් 3කට මෙම සමාලෝචනය ප්රයෝජනවත් විය
Jeremy Tsuei
There's some poor CGI - included, I suppose, to add weight to the WWII aspect - that really detracts from the movie far more than it should. The puzzle here is, why have CG planes instead of more Cumberbatch?
Lara Trenchev
I did a project on the role enigma played in World War II and based some of my research off this movie. Although many of the facts are not true, for example Alan Turing didn't work on the machine alone, and the machine was not named Christopher, there are also a lot of true facts and background information about Turing. Overall, the movie is very well made. The movie shows the audience that there is a lot more to the two World Wars than just the soldiers on the battlefield.