2015年4月1日 星期三

W4--'The Imitation Game': Movie review

'The Imitation Game': Movie review

NEW YORK  DAILY NEWS / Monday, November 24, 2014, 3:12 PM

Story of the English math genius, played by Benedict Cumberbatch, who helped win World War II is solidly done but might have been better with a less conventional approach.

There’s an algorithm for making an Oscar-ready prestige picture — and “The Imitation Game” follows it obsessively. With a committed Benedict Cumberbatch in the lead and awards-savvy producer Harvey Weinstein steering the campaign, this polished, poignant biopic may well earn the success it clearly seeks.
Ultimately, though, director Morten Tyldum’s conventional approach doesn’t do full justice to his tragically unconventional hero.
As played by Cumberbatch, English mathematician Alan Turing is a man fated by the timing of his birth. Ferociously brilliant, possibly autistic and definitely gay, Turing is charged with saving the war-ravaged country that considers him an abomination.
The film starts in 1952 but it quickly flashes back to 1938, when Turing was called in to crack the German Enigma code. With the code being changed daily, it has been impossible to gain any traction.
Turing immediately antagonizes his new colleagues (overseen by a charismatic Matthew Goode), who are equally put off by his arrogance, intense intelligence and idea for a proto-computer he thinks could solve their problem. Only Joan Clarke (an underused Keira Knightley) respects his outsider perspective. With her help, he finally persuades the establishment to look beyond established methods.
Cumberbatch specializes in emotionally detached geniuses, and there’s no doubting his skill and his innate empathy for Turing. But there’s a meticulous self-awareness to this portrayal that has been absent from his previous performances. When we watch him as Sherlock Holmes, we simply see the great detective. Here, we see Benedict Cumberbatch working very hard to play Alan Turing.
Similarly, Tyldum and screenwriter Graham Moore seem to be using the Oscar-approved method of “The King’s Speech”: stately, straightforward filmmaking.
But Turing’s story was impossibly messy. The heartbreaking betrayals and ironies of his existence — the man who saved Britain only to be betrayed by her — deserve more than well-meant platitudes.
Fortunately, Tyldum and Cumberbatch demonstrate enough compassion and sincerity to give us a respectable imitation of an extraordinary life.
http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/imitation-game-movie-review-article-1.2022089
Structure of the Lead
   WHO-the English math genius, played by Benedict Cumberbatch
   WHEN-World War II
   WHAT-Story of the English math genius
   WHERE- not give
   HOW- helped win World War II
Keywords
   1.algorithm  算法
   2. prestige 聲望
   3. obsessively痴迷地
   4.  savvy精明的
   5.  conventional常規的
   6. brilliant卓越的
   7.  traction牽引
   8. abomination  厭惡
   9.  messy麻煩的
 10.platitudes 老生常談

1 則留言:

  1. Without him, we wouldn't have computer to use.
    However, people critic him just because he was homosexual.
    I think we should think that we can live a convenience life because of his invention.

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