Enigma (2001 film)

All you want to know about Enigma (2001 film)

Enigma
Directed by Michael Apted
Produced by Mick Jagger
Lorne Michaels
Written by Tom Stoppard
(based on the novel by Robert Harris)
Starring Dougray Scott
Kate Winslet
Saffron Burrows
Jeremy Northam
Music by John Barry
Cinematography Seamus McGarvey
Editing by Rick Shaine
Distributed by Miramax Films
Release date(s) January 22, 2001
Running time 119 min.
Language English

Enigma is a 2001 film set in World War II. It stars Dougray Scott and Kate Winslet and is based on the novel Enigma by Robert Harris.

Contents

Plot

The story takes place in March 1943 with the Second World War at its height and is loosely based on actual events. The cryptanalysts at Bletchley Park, England, have a problem: the Nazi U-boats have increased the security of key-changing of their Enigma machine ciphers, leading to a blackout in the flow of naval vital signals intelligence. This could spell disaster in the critical Battle of the Atlantic, on whose outcome Britain's survival depends. The British cryptanalysts have cracked the "shark" cipher before, and they need to do it again in order to keep track of U-boat locations and steer shipping convoys out of their way.

The plot follows the fictional character of the brilliant but maverick working class mathematician Tom Jericho (played by Dougray Scott). He is returned to Bletchley Park from Cambridge to assist with the crisis after a period of recuperation bought on by overwork earlier in the war combined with an unhappy love affair with Claire Romilly (Saffron Burrows), which led to his having a nervous breakdown. Jericho immediately tries to see Claire again and finds she has mysteriously disappeared. He enlists the help of Claire's blue stocking housemate Hester Wallace (Kate Winslet) to follow the trail of clues and learn what has happened to her. Mr. Jericho and Miss Wallace, as they coldly call each other, repeatedly break the rules of the Bletchley Park establishment and the law as their hunt gets more intense. Jericho is closely watched by MI5 agent Wigram (Jeremy Northam), who plays cat and mouse with him throughout the film. Jericho is tolerated at the Park, despite his transgressions, because of the brilliant plan he invents for uncovering the new key. The plan may unfortunately mean sacrificing at least one Allied convoy to the U-boats.

The film follows events as signals intelligence see a convoy spotted and then hunted down by the U-boats, but this gives enough information for the new key to be analysed using electro mechanical Bombe devices.

Tom and Hester at the same time in their unofficial research uncover a British government plot to bury the intelligence information of the Katyn massacre for fear it might weaken American willingness to remain in the war on the same side as Stalin.

This in turn leads to their suspicion that a Polish cryptanalyst, Jozef 'Puck' Pukowski (Nikolaj Coster Waldau) at the park may have been so incensed by his own learning of the massacre that he is prepared to betray Bletchley's secrets to the Nazis in order to take revenge on Stalin.[1]

Main cast

Criticism

The scaled-down model of a World War II U-boat used in the film. The model was donated to the Bletchley Park museum.

The film - and by association the book - have attracted criticism for their portrayal of the Polish role in Enigma decryption[citation needed]. Critics argue that in the film the fictitious traitor turns out to be Polish whilst only slight mention is made of the contributions of pre-war Polish Cipher Bureau cryptologists to Allied Enigma decryption efforts and that historically the only known traitor active at Bletchley Park was British spy John Cairncross who passed crucial secrets to the Soviet Union.[2]

The film has also been criticised for substituting the character of Jericho for Alan Turing. Jericho, who is clearly a stand-in for Turing, drops references to the Entscheidungsproblem and Turing machines, but is heterosexual and provides the love interest to the film (Turing was homosexual). [3].


Miscellaneous facts

  • During the film' premiere in Edinburgh, Dougray Scott stayed for only fifteen minutes of the film – he went to a nearby pub to watch a Scottish Premier League football match between Rangers and his favourite team, Hibernian. Co-producer Mick Jagger stayed away altogether.[4]
  • When Tom Jericho is tapping on the desk with a pencil in the film, he is spelling out "Claire" in Morse code.
  • When Hester Wallace decodes the long list of Polish names the camera zooms in on the name "Zygalski". Henryk Zygalski was a Polish mathematician who helped to break Enigma designing the "perforated sheets" also known as "Zygalski sheets".
  • The mansion in the film is not the real Bletchley Park mansion – it was shot, instead, at Chicheley Hall.[5]
  • Co-producer Mick Jagger of The Rolling Stones makes a cameo appearance as a RAF officer at a dance. He also lent the film's design department a four-rotor Enigma encoding machine he owned – to ensure the historical accuracy of one of the props.
  • The festivities around the London premiere of the film are shown in the 2001 documentary Being Mick.

See also

References

  1. ^ Plot summary from IMDB.Retrieved on 2007-08-09.
  2. ^ The Cambridge spy ring - BBC News, 13 September 1999.Retrieved on 2007-08-09.
  3. ^ Enigma film review
  4. ^ Jagger No-show At Enigma Premiere, IMDB, 20 August 2001.Retrieved on 2007-08-09.
  5. ^ Sleeve notes from DVD.

External links


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