模仿游戏 The Imitation Game (2014)【完整台词】
模仿游戏 The Imitation Game (2014) 全部台词 (当前第1页,一共 1 页)
MAN (voice-over):
Are you paying attention?
Good.
If you're not listening carefully,
you will miss things,
important things.
I will not pause.
I will not repeat myself,
and you will not interrupt me.
You think that because you are sitting where you are
and I am sitting where I am
that you are in control of what is about to happen.
You're mistaken.
I am in control.
Because I know things that you
do not know.
Manchester Police Department, please hold.
CONSTABLE (through radio): Windows broken.
Home's been ransacked.
Send a detective down, will you?
MAN (voice-over): What I will need from you now
is a commitment.
You will listen closely, and you will not
judge me until I am finished.
If you cannot commit to this,
then please leave the room.
MAN 2: Come in.
But if you choose to stay,
remember you chose to be here.
What happens
from this moment forwards is not my responsibility.
It's yours.
Pay attention.
DETECTIVE: What's all this, then?
SERGEANT: Turing, Alan.
Professor at King's.
Seems there's been a burglary.
Oh? What of?
Well, that's just it. Nothing missing, really.
What's he doing in Manchester?
Something with machines.
The project at the NPL.
I checked, but he won't say what it's on.
Professor Turing?
Detective Nock, Manchester Police.
Sergeant Staehl here tells me you had a burglary last night.
Professor Turing?
Take a step back,
and don't breath heavily.
-Breathe? -Undiluted cyanide.
It-it wouldn't take
more than a thimbleful to kill you.
Ah.
Disappointing.
Pardon?
I-I had hoped for a bit more.
Sergeant Staehl, is it just me, or do you get the sense
that we're being insulted?
Last night, you had a break-in.
Your neighbor, Mr. Springborn, called to report the noise.
He said there was quite a ruckus.
Only you say nothing was taken.
It's odd. So how about you tell us
what happened, and we'll find the chap who did this.
Gentlemen,
I-I don't believe
that you could find the chap that did this
if, uh, he walked up to you and spat in your face.
Uh, what I could us right now
is not a bobby, but a really good cleaning lady.
So unless one of you has a-an apron
in your car, I suggest
you file your reports and leave me alone.
As you say, Professor Turing.
Best of luck with your cyanide.
STAEHL (voice-over): I'll give you a quid
if you can name me a more insufferable sod.
Seemed a bit forced, though, didn't it?
Don't know what you mean.
Well, if you didn't want a pair of bobbies
digging around in your personal affairs,
that'd have been a stellar way to make sure they don't.
Tell me you don't think this is suspicious.
I don't think this is suspicious.
A mysterious professor who won't admit
he's had something stolen from his house?
I think Alan Turing's
hiding something.
War declared!
800,000 children evacuated!
German bombs on their way!
Get your papers here!
Fresh off the press!
War declared!
800,000 children evacuated!
German bombs expected soon!
NEVILLE CHAMBERLAIN: This morning,
the British Ambassador in Berlin
handed the German government
a final note stating that
unless we heard from them,
by 11:00,
a state of war
would exist between us.
I have to tell you now
that no such undertaking has been received.
And that, consequently,
this country is at war
with Germany.
KING GEORGE VI: For the second time
in the lives of most of us,
we are...
at war.
...to find
a peaceful way out...
Papers, please.
What are you doing here?
Oh, uh, the lady told me to wait.
In my office?
She tell you to help yourself to tea
while you were here?
Uh, no, she didn't.
She obviously didn't tell you
what a joke was, then, either, I gather.
Was she supposed to?
Who are you?
Alan Turing.
Ah, Turing.
The mathematician.
Correct.
-However could I have guessed? -Well, you didn't.
You just read it on that piece of paper.
King's College, Cambridge.
Now, it says here you were a bit of a prodigy
in the maths department.
I-I'm not sure I can evaluate that, Mr....
-How old are you, Mr. Turing? -Uh, 27.
And how old were you when you became a Fellow at Cambridge?
-24. -And how old were you
when you published this paper that has a title
I can barely understand?
-Uh, 23. -And you don't think
that qualifies you as a certified prodigy?
Well, Newton discovered binomial theorem aged 22.
Einstein wrote four papers that changed the world
by the age of 26.
As far as I can tell,
I've...
I've barely made par.
My God, you're serious.
Would you prefer I made a joke?
Oh, I don't think you know what those are.
Hardly seems fair that that's a requirement
for employment here, Mr....
Commander Denniston, Royal Navy.
All right, Mr. Turing, I'll bite.
Why do you wish to work for His Majesty's government?
Oh, I don't, really.
Are you a bleeding pacifist?
I'm... agnostic about violence.
Well, you do realize
that 600 miles away from London
there's this nasty little chap called Hitler
who wants to engulf Europe in tyranny?
Politics isn't really my area of expertise.
Really?
Well, I believe you've just set the record
for the shortest job interview
in British military history.
Oh, uh...
Mother says I can be off-putting sometimes on account
of being one of the best mathematicians in the world.
In the world?
Oh, yes.
Do you know how many people I've rejected for this program?
-No. -Well, that's right,
because we're a top-secret program.
But I'll tell you, just because we're friends,
that only last week,
I rejected one of our great nation's top linguists.
Knows German better than Bertolt Brecht.
I don't speak German.
What?
I don't...
speak German.
Well, how the hell were you supposed to decrypt
German communications if you don't...
I don't know, speak German?
Well, I'm really quite excellent at crossword puzzles.
-Margaret! -The German codes are a puzzle.
A game, just like any other game.
-Margaret, where are you? -I'm really very good at games.
Uh, puzzles.
And this is the most difficult puzzle in the world.
Margaret!
For the love of God.
This is a joke, obviously.
I'm afraid I don't know what those are,
Commander Denniston.
Have a pleasant trip back to Cambridge, Professor.
Enigma.
You called for me?
That's what you're doing here.
The top-secret program at Bletchley.
You're trying to break the German Enigma machine.
What makes you think that?
It's the greatest encryption device in history,
and the Germans use it for all major communications.
If the Allies broke Enigma,
well,...
this would turn into a very short war, indeed.
Of course that's what you're working on.
But you also haven't got anywhere with it.
If you had, you wouldn't be hiring cryptographers
out of university.
Y-You need me a lot more than I need you.
I-I like solving problems,
Commander.
And Enigma is the most difficult problem in the world.
No, Enigma isn't difficult; it's impossible.
The Americans, the Russians, the French,
the Germans, everyone thinks Enigma
is unbreakable.
Good.
Let me try, and we'll know for sure,
won't we?
DENNISTON: Welcome to Enigma.
The details of every surprise attack,
every secret convoy
and every U-boat in the bloody Atlantic
go into that thing.
And out comes gibberish.
It's beautiful.
DENNISTON: It's the crooked hand of death itself.
Our Wrens intercept thousands of radio messages a day,
and to the lovely young ladies
of the Women's Royal Navy, they're nonsense.
It's only when you feed them back into Enigma
that they make any sense.
But we have an Enigma machine.
Yes, Polish Intelligence
smuggled it out of Berlin.
So what's the problem?
Just put the intercepted messages
back into the Enigma and you'll...
Look, it's not that simple, is it?
Just having an Enigma machine
doesn't help you to decode the messages.
DENNISTON: Very good, Mr. Turing.
To decode a message, you need to know the machine's settings.
Now, the Germans switch settings
every day promptly at midnight.
We usually intercept
our first message around 6:00 a.m.,
which gives you exactly
18 hours every day to crack the code
before it changes, and you start again.
Five rotors.
Ten plugboard cables.
-That's... -One million... -A thousand million...
No, no, it's, uh, I've got it.
-It's million, million. -It's in the millions, obviously.
It's over 150 million million million possible settings.
Very good.
159.
If you want to be exact about it. 1-5-9
with 18 zeroes behind it.
Possibilities.
Every single day.
DENNISTON: Gentlemen, meet Hugh Alexander.
I personally selected him
-to run this unit. -Didn't you...
Mr. Alexander won Britain's national chess championship.
Twice.
DENNISTON: You're not the only one
who's good at games around here, Turing.
Are-are we to work together, then?
I prefer to have my own office.
You're a team, and you will work as one.
I-I-I don't have time to explain myself as I go along,
and I'm afraid these men
-would only slow me down. -(chuckles) -If you can't
play together, then I'm afraid we can't let you play at all.
This is Stewart Menzies, MI6.
There are only five divisions of military intelligence.
There is no MI6.
Exactly.
That's the spirit.
Mr. Turing, do you know how many British servicemen
have died because of Enigma?
Uh, no, I don't.
Three...
while we've been having
this conversation.
Oh, look, there's another.
I rather hope he didn't have a family.
This war Commander Denniston's been going on about,
we're not winning it.
Break the code,
at least we have a chance.
Shall we leave the children alone
with their new toy?
Hm.
All right, gentlemen...
-let's play.
TURING (voice-over): The game was quite a simple one.
Every single German message, every surprise attack,
every bombing run,
every imminent U-boat assault...
They were all floating through the air.
Radio signals that...
well, any schoolboy with an AM kit
could intercept.
The trick was that they were encrypted.
There were 159 million million million possible
Enigma settings.
All we had to do was try each one.
But if we had ten men checking one setting a minute
for 24 hours every day and seven days every week,
how many days do you think it would take to, uh,
to check
each of the settings?
Well, it's not days, it's years.
Good morning.
It's 20 million years.
-To stop a coming attack, -Thank you.
we would have to check 20 million years' worth
of settings
in 20 minutes.
I'm famished.
Lunch?
ALEXANDER: Good Lord. What is it
about women with little hats?
The boys, we're going to get some lunch.
Alan?
Yes?
I said we're going to get some lunch.
Alan?
Yes?
-Can you hear me? -Yes.
I said we're off to get some lu...
This is starting to get a little bit repetitive.
-What is? -I had asked
if you wanted to come to lunch with us.
Um, no, you didn't.
You said you were going to get some lunch.
Have I offended you in some way?
Why would you think that?
Would you like to come to lunch with us?
-What time's lunchtime? -Christ, Alan,
it's a bleeding sandwich.
-What is? -Lunch.
Oh, I don't like sandwiches.
Never mind.
You know,
to pull off this irascible genius routine,
one actually has to be a genius, Alan.
And yet we're the ones
making progress here, aren't we?
Oh, you are?
Yes, we are.
We have decrypted a number of German messages
by analyzing the frequency of letter distribution.
Oh, even a broken clock is right twice a day.
That-That's not progress; that's just blind luck.
I'm designing a machine
that will allow us to break every message
every day instantly.
Who's hungry?
Let's go.
I'm hungry.
What?
TURING: Peter asked who was hungry.
Can I have some soup, please?
...another break in the circuit there.
What do you mean, "classified"?
No, I'm aware of the literal meaning of the word classified.
What I'm asking is why would a maths professor
have his military records classified?
Yeah, well, I will come down.
WPC: Sorry, can I get you to hold for a minute, please?
Pardon me, I'd like to see some documents, if I may.
Service records of a Mr. Turing.
Alan.
Foreign Office sent me.
This is unacceptable.
If you wish to discuss the complaint,
I suggest you make a proper appointment.
Alexan...
Complaint?
No, no, Hugh Alexander
has denied my requisition for parts
and-and equipment that I need to build the machine I've designed.
Your fellow code-breakers are refusing to work with you,
and they filed a formal complaint.
It's is inspired by an old Polish code machine.
Only this one
is infinitely more advanced.
If you don't respond to the complaint,
I shall have to take it up with the Home Office.
Put those files by my desk.
Fine, my response is they're all idiots.
Fire them and use the savings to fund my machine.
I only need about 100,000 pounds.
100,000...
Why are you building a machine?
It's highly technical. You wouldn't understand.
I suggest you make the effort to try.
Enigma is...
an extremely well-designed machine.
Our problem is that we're only using men to try to beat it.
No, what if only a machine
can defeat another machine?
Well, that's not very technical.
Hugh Alexander is in charge
of your unit; he said no, and that is that.
I simply don't have time for this.
Have you ever won a war, Turing?
I have.
Do you know how it's done?
Order, discipline,
chain of command.
You're not at university any longer.
You are a very small cog in a very large system.
And you will do as your commanding officer instructs.
Yes.
Who-who is your commanding officer?
Winston Churchill,
Number 10 Downing Street,
London, SW1.
You have a problem with my decision,
you can take it up with him.
TURING (voice-over): Mr. Menzies!
Mr. Menzies!
A-A-Are you going to London?
Possibly.
Would you deliver a letter for me?
ALEXANDER (voice-over): Look, I'm sorry,
but are you joking?
Churchill's put Alan in charge?
-This is a terrible idea. -No, no, no, no, no.
So I can give these men orders now?
I hate to say it, but yes.
Excellent. Keith and Charles, you're both fired.
-Excuse me? -What?
You're mediocre linguists,
and positively poor code-breakers.
Alan, you can't just fire Keith and Charles.
Well, he just said I could.
No, I did no such thing.
But Churchill did.
Go to hell.
Well,
this is inhuman.
Even for you.
Popular at school, were you?
TURING (voice-over): The problem began, of course,
with the carrots.
Carrots are orange.
And peas
are green.
They mustn't touch.
I got it.
TURING (voice-over): Do you know why people
like violence?
It is because it feels...
good.
Humans find violence
deeply satisfying.
But remove the-the satisfaction,
and the act becomes...
-(panting) -hollow.
STUDENT: Turing?
Come on.
Don't be such a kike about it.
STUDENT 2: Leave him to bloody rot.
TURING (voice-over): I didn't learn this on my own,
of course.
I had help.
Christopher helped.
Alan, are you all right?
It's not my fault.
The carrots got in with the peas and...
I'm sorry.
I won't let them do it again.
They're getting worse.
They only beat me up because I'm smarter than they are.
No, they beat you up because you're different.
Mother says I'm just an odd duck.
And she's right.
But you know, Alan,
sometimes it's the very people who no one imagines anything of
who do the things no one can imagine.
So, what do we do now?
We're short on staff.
TURING: Well, we, uh, we get
more staff then.
And how do you propose to do that?
Um, Alan Turing
to see Stewart Menzies.
Very good, sir.
MENZIES (voice-over): So who are they?
Oh, all sorts, really.
Teacher, an engineer,
a handful of students.
And you think they're qualified for Bletchley
'cause they're good at crossword puzzles?
Well, they say they're good, and now we shall find out,
won't we?
(voice-over): In order to aid your efforts,
there is, to the right of you, a green scratch card book.
You are to make notes in that.
Gentlemen, you have six minutes
in which to complete the puzzle, at which point,
I will...
Pardon, ma'am, this room's restricted.
Oh, apologies for my tardiness.
The-the bus caught a flat tire.
Uh, may I continue, please?
-Thank you. -You're not allowed in here, ma'am.
Oh, but I'm only a few minutes late.
The secretaries are to head upstairs.
This room's for the candidates.
May I get on with this now, please?
I-I am a candidate.
-For what position? -(groans)
The letter didn't say precisely.
Yeah, so secretaries are to head upstairs.
It did say that it was top secret.
What is going on?
I-I solved
a-a crossword puzzle in the newspaper,
and I-I got this letter saying
that I was a candidate for some sort of mysterious job.
My name's Joan Clarke.
Miss, did you really solve this puzzle yourself?
What makes you think I couldn't solve the puzzle myself?
-I-I'm really very good at... -Ma'am,
-I'll have to ask you to... -Miss Clarke,
I-I find tardiness
under any circumstance, um, unacceptable.
Take a seat so that we may continue.
(softly): Thank you.
TURING: Now, um,
as I was saying, you-you have six minutes
to, uh, complete the task in front of you.
Uh, gentlemen and lady,
begin.
Six minutes.
Is that even possible?
No, it takes me eight.
This isn't about crossword puzzles.
It's about how one, uh,
approaches solving an impossible problem.
Do you tackle the whole thing at once or divide it
into small...
You've finished?
Yes.
Five minutes and 34 seconds.
You said to do it in under six.
MENZIES (voice-over): Congratulations.
My warmest welcome to His Majesty's service.
If you speak a word of what I'm about to show you,
you will be executed for high treason.
You will lie to your friends,
your family and everyone you meet
about what it is you really do.
And what is it that we're really doing?
We're going to break an unbreakable Nazi code
and win the war.
Oh.
What's that you're reading?
It's about cryptography.
Like secret messages?
Not secret.
That's the brilliant part.
Messages that anyone can see, but no one knows what they mean
unless you have the key.
How's that different from talking?
-Talking? -When people talk to each other,
they never say what they mean.
They say something else,
and you're expected to just know what they mean.
Only I never do.
So, how's that different?
Alan, I have a funny feeling
you're going to be very good at this.
Good night, Alan.
Good night.
WOMAN: Hold on, Marion, I'm coming!
Coming round the lesser settings and then route back through...
-(thumps loudly) -Back to those ones...
Uh, careful, will you?
Um, it-it's not a toy.
ALEXANDER: Funny.
Looks like a toy.
Bloody great 100,000-pound one.
Your new minion's arrived.
Jack Good. We met...
Well, where's Miss Clarke?
Lovely, isn't he?
TURING: It's not just a-a usual humdrum production mill factory.
I mean, well, as-as I was saying,
it's a very important, uh, radio factory.
I-It's not, actually. Uh, well, um,
on the spectrum of, uh... radio factories,
this-this one is-is particularly...
Why are you not at Bletchley?
Thank you... so much for your visit, Mr. Turing.
-Was your trip pleasant? -Gather your things and let's go.
I'm sorry, but I'm unable to accept your offer.
We feel that such a position
would hardly be appropriate.
You earned a double first in mathematics.
But sadly wasn't granted the opportunity to become a Fellow.
You belong at Bletchley.
JOAN: I'm sorry, but for someone in my position
to live... to...
to work in a radio factory so far from home,
with all your men, um...
it-it would be...
indecorous.
What in the world does that even mean?
We have a group of, uh, young ladies
who tend to all of our
clerical tasks: assistants, translators.
Uh, they live, um, together in town.
W-W-Would that be a more, uh, suitable environment?
Hm. So-so I would be working amongst these women?
Yes.
Wonderful ladies. Uh, they even organize social events
at St. Martin's Church down the road.
Uh, really, the whole thing is-is quite, uh...
uh, um...
decorous.
Now, you won't have proper security clearance,
of course, so, uh, we'll have to improvise things a bit.
Why are you helping me?
Because there is only one thing that matters
in this entire world right now-- do you understand?--
and that is breaking Enigma.
But-but, Mr. Turing...
why are you helping me?
Oh. Um...
sometimes it's the very people who no one imagines anything of
who do the things that no one can imagine.
Sir.
-What's this? -Alan Turing's classified military file.
-It's bloody empty. -Exactly.
-It's an empty manila envelope. -Yeah.
Well, you've cracked the case wide open, then, haven't you?
Alan Turing's war records aren't just classified,
they're nonexistent.
That means someone's got rid of them.
Erased them. Burned them.
And that same person broke into his house and stole nothing?
Guy Burgess and Donald Maclean.
What, the spies from the papers?
The Soviet spies.
But first they were professors, weren't they?
Radicalized at Cambridge,
then they joined the Communist Party,
then Foreign Office, then leaked information
to Stalin during the war-- now,
can you think of anyone else we know who was at Cambridge,
then took up something murky and top secret when war broke out?
You think this Alan Turing might be a Soviet agent?
I think...
something very serious is happening
right here under our noses.
(sighs) Wouldn't you like to find out what it is?
Welcome, ladies.
If you'd like to follow me.
TURING (voice-over): Some people thought we were at war
with the Germans-- incorrect.
We were at war with the clock.
Britain was literally starving to death.
The Americans sent over
100,000 tons of food every week, and, uh, every week
the Germans would send our desperately needed bread
to the bottom of the ocean.
Our daily failure was announced at the chimes of midnight.
And the sound would haunt our unwelcome dreams.
Tick...
tock...
tick.
Damn it!
-What just happened? -CAIRNCROSS: Midnight--
all the work we've done today is useless.
Oh, but don't worry, we've a few hours
before tomorrow's messages start flooding in...
and we start all over again.
From scratch.
ALEXANDER: I'm so sick of this.
Four hours rewiring his plugboard matrix.
Three hours yesterday
on his rotor positions!
-Don't go over there. -Look, John, no.
If this job wasn't already impossible before,
-it bloody well is now. -Hugh, don't.
Damn you and your useless machine.
(sighs) My machine is how we are going to win.
Really?
This machine? Hmm?
Are you talking about this bloody machine?!
-Hugh! Hugh! Hugh, don't! -Hugh! Hugh! Stop!
ALEXANDER: You arrogant bastard.
You could help us.
You could make this go faster, but you won't.
Get off.
He's right, Alan.
There are...
actual soldiers out there trying to win an actual war.
My brother
protects food convoys in the Navy.
My cousins fly RAF patrols.
All my friends, they're all making a difference,
while we just... while away our days
producing nothing.
Because of you.
(panting): My machine...
will work.
Come on, Peter.
Okay.
-(Turing grunting) -Uh, will you...
-(panting, laughs) -Could you make
a bit more noise? I'm not quite sure
-my landlady woke up. -Oh, sorry.
Oh, uh, look.
I think that's the best I can do.
No male visitors after dark.
So...
what did you bring me?
There you go.
Here.
Some men try flowers, you know.
These are actual decrypted Enigma messages
direct from Nazi
High Command.
"0600 hours.
"Weather today is clear.
"Rain in the evening.
Heil Hitler."
Well, clearly, that vital piece of information
is going to win us the war.
It's the relationship between the encrypted
a-and decrypted messages that interests me.
Can we find a clue here that we can build into Christopher?
Who's Christopher?
Oh, he's, uh, he's my machine.
You named him?
Is that a bad name?
No.
No, never mind.
Are you trying to build your universal machine?
I read your paper
-at university. -Is it already being taught?
(laughs): No. No. No, I was precocious.
So...
you-you theorized a machine that
could solve any problem.
It didn't just do one thing, it did everything.
It wasn't just programmable, it was reprogrammable.
Mm.
Is that your idea behind Christopher?
Well, human brains can compute large sums very quickly--
even Hugh can do that-- but I want Christopher to be smarter.
To make a calculation and then, uh...
to determine what to do next.
Like a person does.
Think of it.
Electrical brain.
A digital computer.
Digital computer.
Hmm.
-(clattering) -What's going on?
What's happening?
No. No, no. No, no, no! Don't touch that!
-Stay back. -That's my desk.
DENNISTON: Thank goodness.
I'd hate to think we were searching
-the wrong one. -What are you doing? What's going on?
There is a spy
in Bletchley Park.
The Navy thinks that one of us
is a Soviet double agent, Alan.
Uh... why?
Our boys intercepted this on its way to Moscow.
Look familiar?
It's a Beale cipher.
Encrypted with a phrase from a book or a poem or...
You don't seriously think I did this, do you?
Double agents are such bastards.
Isolated loners.
No attachments to friends or family.
Arrogant.
Know anybody like that?
I...
Hm, I know you don't like me,
but that does not make me
a Soviet spy.
POLICEMAN: Nothing out of the ordinary, sir.
Really.
Mm, all right.
The Home Office may be protecting you now,
but sooner or later
you will make a mistake.
And I needn't bother firing you.
They will hang you for treason.
Hello.
I heard about what happened.
It's all the girls in Hut 3 can talk about.
I have an idea of what might cheer you up.
-♪ ♪ -(indistinct chatter)
JOAN: So because no letter
can be encoded as itself, there's already a handful
of settings that can be rejected at the outset.
Is that your team?
-Y-Yes. -Shall we say hello?
-No. -Hello.
I-I told you not t-to do that.
-Alan. -Uh, Hugh, h-hello.
-Didn't know you drank. -He doesn't, really.
He just sort of sips at the foam.
Well, I'll let you into a little secret, Miss...?
Clarke.
-Miss Clarke. -Please.
Foam's my favorite part, too.
Is it really?
Come and join us for a drink?
We'll be there in a moment.
Miss Clarke.
♪ ♪
Well, he likes you.
-Yes. -You...
g-got him to like you.
Yes.
Why?
Because I'm a woman in a man's job,
and I don't have the luxury of being an ass.
Alan...
it doesn't matter how smart you are,
Enigma is always smarter.
If you really
want to solve your puzzle,
then you're going to need all the help
you can get, and they are not going
to help you if they do not like you.
-What are those? -Apples.
-No. -Oh, they really are.
Um, I... well, Miss Clarke, Joan actually, um...
said that it would be... (clears throat)
nice if I was to, uh, bring you all something.
So here we are. I...
Thank you.
I like apples.
My best to Miss Clarke.
Uh, there are two people in a wood,
and, um, they run into a bear.
The first person gets down on his knees to pray.
The second person starts lacing up his boots.
The first person asks the second person,
"My dear friend, what are you doing?
You-you-you can't outrun a bear."
Uh, to which the second person responds,
"I don't have to.
I only have to outrun you."
I'll be w-with Christopher, if anyone needs me.
MAN (voice-over): If we assume that the square root of two
is a rational number, then we can say
that the square root of two
is A over B...
where A and B
are whole numbers and B is not zero.
Mr. Turing, passing notes, are we?
No, sir.
Only Turing would pass notes written in gibberish.
(quiet laughter)
-(bell ringing) -All right, gentlemen,
do not forget your algebra over the break.
Have a pleasant holiday, and we'll resume
your irrationals when you return.
Mm.
But Euler's Theorem gives you that immediately.
Um...
Here. Look at this.
If you run the wires across the plugboard matrix diagonally,
it will eliminate rotor positions 500 times faster.
That's, uh...
actually not an entirely terrible idea.
I think that was Alan for "thank you."
Uh, th-that's my sandwich.
You don't like sandwiches.
You nervous?
What happens now?
It-it should work out the day's Enigma settings.
How long?
CROWD (voice-over): Sieg Heil! Sieg Heil!
NEWSMAN: The German Army has fanned out across Europe,
from Poland to Serbia, Lithuania to Denmark,
Norway to France.
The Nazi flag now flies from more than two dozen
national capitals.
Their campaign mounts in fury
as a free Europe crumbles.
MAN (voice-over): Oh, it's still going.
-Good morning, sir. -Morning, Margaret.
Gears keep spinning on and on.
Rotors on and on.
It's endless.
With no result in sight?
-No. -(door closes)
(groans) Ow.
Turing.
Turing,
-open the bloody door. -Uh, no.
No.
Open the door or we'll break it down.
I can't let you in! I-I... I cannot let you interfere.
Go on, then.
Turn that thing off.
No. Don't, please. Please.
Please! Please!
No!
N-No. No!
Don't!
Well, then, it seems that your great big
expensive machine doesn't work.
It does.
Wonderful.
So you've broken Enigma, then?
It was just...
s-still working.
This is my associate from the Home Office.
You see, a hundred thousand pounds
is rather a lot of money,
and he's here to see what you have to show for it.
You... will never understand
the importance of what I-I am creating here!
Have you decrypted any German messages?
A single one?
Can you point to anything at all that you've achieved?
Hmm. Your funding is up,
and our patience is expired.
It's with such great pleasure
that I am finally able to say this.
Alan Turing, you're fired.
Please escort Mr. Turing from the premises.
ALEXANDER: No.
DENNISTON: I beg your pardon?
If you fire Alan...
well, then you'll have to fire me, too.
What on earth are you saying?
ALEXANDER: Trust me when I tell you there is no one
who would rather say this less than I do, but...
he's right.
Alan is right.
His machine can work, and it's probably
the best chance that we've got.
God, it's beyond belief.
CAIRNCROSS: If you fire them...
you'll have to fire me, too.
PETER: And me.
ALEXANDER: We're the best cryptographic minds in Britain.
Are you going to fire us all?
Commander, at least give us some more time.
Six months, and if the machine doesn't produce
any results that we need, then we'll go back
to doing things the old way-- how about that?
One month.
And then, so help me God,
you're all gone.
Oh, leave him.
Thank you.
You're welcome.
Oh, and, Alan, your machine...
...it better bloody work.
TURING: Hugh.
I swear...
I'm not a spy.
Oh, for God's sake, of course you're not a bloody spy.
What?
Denniston gave me the Beale cipher,
and guess what?
I cracked it.
"Ask, and it shall be given to you;
seek and ye shall find." Matthew 7:7.
That was the key.
Far too simple for the likes of you.
Pity Denniston disagrees.
-(knocking) -Come in.
Sir, I think I've got Turing.
I tailed him
to a pub last night, where he met a bloke.
They exchanged an envelope.
So I follow this other fella,
pick him up, give him a good shake.
He's a poofter. He confessed.
What?
The man admitted it. Arnold Murray.
Hangs around that pub; men pay him for a go.
Turing's one of the men that paid.
Only Mr. Murray here
then has the bright idea
of robbing Turing's house after, with a friend.
That's what Turing's hiding.
Well, he's a poof, not a spy.
-No. -What's the matter?
We can charge a university professor
-with indecency. -No, this is...
it's bloody rubbish.
Turing's up to something important...
He's committed a crime
and he's broken the law.
And with a bloke. Jesus Christ,
-it's bloody disgusting. -This isn't
the investigation I was conducting.
Bring him in.
Wait.
L-Let me interrogate him.
Please. Give me half an hour alone,
and then I swear, I'll spend the next month
running errands on as many rubbish cases as you like.
Fine. Now, will someone get me a warrant
for the arrest of Alan Turing.
Alan?
Christopher's simply not moving fast enough.
-We should talk. -And even with the diagonal board,
he's still not eliminating settings as quickly
-as we need him to in order... -I'm leaving.
But you've just walked in.
No.
No. Bletchley.
What?
It's my parents.
I'm 25, I'm unmarried, I'm living alone,
and they want me home.
(chuckles) That's ridiculous.
That's my parents.
You... you can't leave-- I-I won't let you.
"I'll miss you." That's what a normal person
-might say in this situation. -I-I don't care what is normal.
What am I supposed
to do, Alan?
I-I will not...
give up my parents. (laughs)
You... you have an opportunity here
to make some actual use of your life.
And end up like you? No, thanks.
-(Alan panting) -I'm sorry you're lonely.
But Enigma will not save you.
Can you decipher that, you fragile narcissist?
Or would you like me to go and fetch
your precious Christopher to help?
I'm sorry.
Mm...
I want you... I want you to stay because I-I like you.
I like... talking to you.
I like talking to you, too, Alan.
And what if you weren't alone?
What if you had a husband?
Do you have one in mind?
I do.
Hugh?
Hugh's terribly attractive, I'll give you that,
but I don't really think he's the marrying kind.
(chuckles) No, I-I wasn't thinking of Hugh.
Or Peter.
Peter's so quiet.
Oh, my God.
But this makes sense.
Did you just propose to me?
Well, it is the logical thing to do.
This is ridiculous.
This is your parents.
I-I can't... believe that this is happening.
Mm. Joan...
Is your middle name Caroline or Catherine?
-Elizabeth. -Um, Joan Elizabeth...
Clarke, um...
...will you marry me?
WOMAN: It's beautiful.
Well, I know it isn't ordinary, but...
whoever loved ordinary?
-ALEXANDER: She had it in both hands... -(laughing)
and she looked up at me with her doe eyes and said,
"Am I supposed to put that in my mouth?"
And I said, "Yes. You know, the French way."
So she pops it in,
clamps her lips around it,
and starts humming the bloody Marseillaise.
Come have a dance.
ALEXANDER: No, no, no, you can dance
with your fiance anytime you like.
Right now, this moment...
-(claps hands) -my turn.
♪ ♪
♪ ♪
What's the matter?
Wh-What if...
Wh-What if I don't fancy being...
with Joan i-in that way?
Because you're a homosexual?
I suspected.
Well, should-should I tell her
that I've had...
affairs with men?
You know, in my...
admittedly limited experience,
women... tend to be a bit touchy
about accidentally marrying homosexuals.
Perhaps not spreading this information about might be
in your best interest.
TURING: I care for her,
I truly do. I...
I-I... I just don't know
if I can, um... pretend.
You can't tell anyone, Alan.
It's illegal.
And Denniston is looking for any excuse he can
to put you away.
I know.
This has to stay a secret.
JOAN: Come on, it's your turn.
Ah. Okay.
Cup of tea?
No, thank you.
Mr. Turing, can I tell you a secret?
I'm quite good with those.
I'm here to help you.
Oh, clearly.
Can machines think?
Oh, so you've read some of my published works?
What makes you say that?
Well, because I'm sitting in a police station,
accused of entreating a young man to touch my penis
and you just asked me if machines can think.
Well, can they?
Could machines ever think as human beings do?
Most people say not.
You're not most people.
Well, the problem is you're... asking a stupid question.
I am?
Of course machines...
can't think as people do.
A machine is different... from a person.
Hence, they think differently.
The interesting question is, just because something, uh,
thinks differently from you,
does that mean it's not thinking?
Well, we allow for humans to have such divergences
from one another.
You like strawberries, I hate ice-skating,
you... cry at sad films,
I... am allergic to pollen.
What is the point of-of different tastes,
different... preferences
if not to say that our brains work differently,
that we think differently?
And if we can say that about one another,
then why can't we say the same thing for brains...
built of copper and wire, steel?
And that's...
this big paper you wrote?
What's it called?
(exhales) "The Imitation Game."
Right, that's...
that's what it's about?
Would you like to play?
Play?
It's a game.
A test of sorts.
For determining whether something is a...
a machine or a human being.
How do I play?
Well, there's a judge and a subject, and...
the judge asks questions,
and, depending on the subject's answers,
determines who he is talking with...
what he is talking with, and, um...
All you have to do is ask me a question.
What did you do during the war?
I worked in a radio factory.
What did you really do during the war?
(laughs softly)
Are you paying attention?
Damn it!
CAIRNCROSS: We're soon out of time. A month.
PETER: So that's it, then, is it?
Oh, the trouble is, it doesn't matter how much we improve it.
The machine's never gonna be able to process
159 million million million possibilities in time.
It's just bloody hopeless.
It's searching. It's just...
It... doesn't know what it's searching for.
If we knew what the messages were going to say...
If we knew what the messages were going to say,
we wouldn't have to decrypt them at all.
Who's Alan's friend?
Hugh. He's a bit of a cad, actually.
So my type, then?
-Well, I'll introduce you. -No.
He'll come over.
-Are you sure? -Yes.
I smiled at him 15 minutes ago
and haven't looked back since.
Who's that with Joan?
Hmm?
TURING: Uh, Helen. Works with her.
She's really pretty.
She wants me to come over.
What? H-How on earth can you know that?
She smiled at me a while back
and she hasn't looked again since.
And got him.
Now, why is this, that when I was single
I found it very boring, but now that I'm engaged,
I just find it dreadfully fun.
Bingo. She's in.
Alan, introduce us.
What? Wh-Why me?
Because there's nothing like a friend's engagement
to make a woman want to do something she'll later regret
with the fiance's better looking chum.
Let's go.
Half a crown says Alan bollixes this up entirely.
-No bet. -(chuckles)
-Alan Turing has a theory. -JOAN: He has many.
He believes that the regulations
against men and women working side by side are sound
because such proximity will necessarily lead to romance.
What? No, I don't. I...
However...
I disagree.
-You do? -Yeah.
I think that if I were working beside a woman all day long,
I could appreciate her abilities and intellect
without taking her to bed.
I'm sorry, have we met?
I don't recall. But let's assume we haven't.
Helen Stewart. Hugh Alexander.
So who do you agree with,
-Alan or myself? -Well, Alan, of course.
I-I'm very flattered, really, but I-I don't think...
-ALEXANDER: Rubbish. -HELEN: Well, I work beside a man
every day, and I can't help
but have developed a bit of a crush on him.
Well, who is this man? So I can kick his arse.
Well, there's no need to worry-- it's been chaste.
We've never even met. He's a German.
-Now I really want to kill him. -(laughs)
How-how do you mean you work alongside a German?
Well, each of us intercepts messages
from a specific German radio tower.
So we have a counterpart on the other side
who's tip-tapping out the messages.
Everyone types a touch differently,
so you get to know the rhythm of your counterpart.
It's strangely intimate.
I feel as if I know him so well.
It's a pity he has a girlfriend,
but that's why I disagree with you, Mr. Alexander.
Because I'm in love with a coworker of sorts,
and we've never even met.
Well, allow me to buy you another pint,
and I'll tell you why you're wrong.
Let's.
Excellent.
Thanks.
ALEXANDER: Um, pints. Have you got any sloe gin?
In case you were wondering, that's what flirting looks like.
TURING (loudly): Helen...
Really, no cigarettes?
Alan...
Yes, Alan?
Wh-Why do you think
-your German counterpart has a girlfriend? -It's just
-a stupid joke; don't worry. -No, no, no, no. Tell me.
Well, each of his messages
begins with the same five letters:
C-I-L-L-Y.
So I suspect that Cilly must be the name
-of his amore. -But that's impossible.
The Germans are instructed to use five random letters
at the start of every message.
HELEN: Well, this bloke doesn't.
Love will make a man do strange things, I suppose.
In this case, love just lost Germany the whole bloody war.
Oh!
Go, Peter.
Sorry.
JOAN: Alan! Alan!
-GUARDS: Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa! Hey, hey, hey! -Alan!
-I just want... -(guards shouting)
Hugh Alexander. John Cairncross.
Peter bloody Hilton.
Alan? What-wha...?
(panting): What...
what if... what if Christopher
doesn't have to search through all of the settings?
What if he only has to search through
ones that produce words we already know will be
-in the message? -Repeated words; predictable words.
Exactly.
JOAN: Look, look, like this one.
"0600 hours. Weather today is clear.
Rain in the evening. Heil Hitler."
Well, that's it.
Exactly.
They send a weather report every day at 6:00 a.m.
So that's-that's three words we know will be
in every 6:00 a.m. message-- "weather," obviously,
-a-and... -Heil bloody Hitler.
Heil bloody Hitler. (laughs)
(pants) Here's the 6:00 message from this morning.
TURING: Hugh, the, uh,
the right-hand letter wheel, set them to...
I know, I know. "Weather" and "Hitler."
Peter, John, run voltages through those letters,
-through the back scramblers. -PETER: So we'll use the loops?
TURING: Yes. Joan, what was the last 6:00 a.m. message?
-L... -L...
H...
-TURING: H... -W...
TURING: W...
-JOAN: A... -A...
-Q. -Q.
Done.
Come on. Come on, Christopher.
Oh, my God.
Wh-What happened?
-Did it work? -Alan?
ALEXANDER: Alan! Alan!
I need a new message.
The latest intercept.
(softly): Thank you.
O... T...
-JOAN: Ready? -Yes.
-M... -M...
-Y... -Y...
-M... S... -M... S...
-A... I... -A... I...
-C... -C...
-T... -T...
-R... -R...
-I... -I...
-S... O... -S... O...
-A... -A...
-Y... R... I... -Y... R...
-TURING: I. -(Joan panting)
"KMS Jaguar is auf punkt...
"is directed to 53 degrees 24 minutes north
and auf punkt one... degree west."
TURING & ALEXANDER (quietly): Heil Hitler.
Turns out that's the only German you need to know
to, uh, break Enigma.
Yes!
Oh!
-JOAN: M... -TURING: M...
-A... -A...
-Y... -Y...
-I... -I...
-T... -T...
-R... -R...
-O... -O... T...
-T... A... -A...
-H... -H...
-Q... -Q...
-TURING: U... -U...
-R. -R.
ALEXANDER: My God, you did it.
You just defeated Nazism with a crossword puzzle.
There are five people in the world who know
the position of every ship in the Atlantic.
They're all
-in this room. -Oh, good God.
Oh, I don't think even He has the power
-that we do right now. -JOAN: No.
there's going to be an attack
on a British passenger convoy.
Right there.
God, you're right. All those U-boats are only
-20, 30 minutes away. -JOAN: Civilians.
Hundreds of them. We can save their lives.
ALEXANDER: I'll phone Denniston's office so that
-he can alert the Admiralty. -Do you think
there's enough time to save them?
There should be, if we can get...
Commander Denniston's office,
please. It's urgent.
No.
What the hell are you doing?
You-you can't call Denniston.
You-you can't tell him about the attack.
-What are you talking about? -CAIRNCROSS: We can have
air support over that convoy in ten minutes.
Let the U-boats...
-sink the convoy. -Look, it's been
a big day-- maybe you're...
-We don't have time... -No!
JOAN: Oh! Hugh! Hugh! That's enough!
-That's enough! -CAIRNCROSS: Stop, Hugh!
John, the attack is in minutes.
Yes, no, I'm fine, I'm fine.
I'm fine.
You know why people like violence, Hugh?
It's because it feels good.
TURING: Sometimes we can't do what feels good.
We have to do what is logical.
What's logical?
Hardest time to lie to somebody
is when they're expecting to be lied to.
Oh, God.
What?
If someone's waiting for a lie,
you can't just, uh, give them one.
Damn it, Alan's right.
What?
TURING: What would the Germans think if we destroy
their U-boats?
Nothing. They'll be dead.
No.
No, you can't be right.
TURING: So our convoy
suddenly veers off course...
a squadron of our air bombers
miraculously descends on the coordinates of the U-boats--
what will the Germans think?
The Germans will know
that we have broken Enigma.
JOAN: They'll stop all radio communications by midday,
and they'll have changed the design of Enigma
-by the weekend. -ALEXANDER: Yes.
Two years' work.
Everything that we've done here
will all be for nothing.
CAIRNCROSS: There are 500 civilians in that convoy.
Women...
children.
We're about to let them die.
TURING: Our job i-is
not to save one passenger convoy, it is to win
-the war. -Our job was to crack Enigma.
We've done that.
Now for the hard part.
-Keeping it a secret. -PETER: Carlisle.
What?
The convoy you're about to... it's, uh...
The HMS Carlisle is one of the ships.
We can't act on every piece of intelligence.
So fine, we won't.
Just this one.
Peter, what's the matter with you?
My-my brother's...
well, he's on the Carlisle.
A gunnery ensign.
(sighs) I'm...
I'm so sorry.
Who the hell do you think you are?
This... this is my brother.
He's my big brother, all right, and you have
a few minutes to call off his murder.
We can't.
CAIRNCROSS: He's right.
Alan.
Joan.
Hugh.
John.
(crying): Please, I...
The-the Germans, they won't get suspicious
just because we stop one attack.
No one will know. (pants)
I'm asking you...
as your friend.
Please.
I'm so sorry.
You're not God, Alan-- you don't get to decide
who lives and who dies.
Yes, we do.
Why?
Because no one else can.
-♪ ♪ -(alarm blaring)
♪ ♪
♪ ♪
Why are you telling me this?
We need your help to keep this a secret from...
Admiralty, Army, RAF.
Uh, no one can know we broke Enigma.
Not even Denniston.
Who's in the process of having you fired.
You can take care of that.
While we develop a system to help you determine
how much intelligence
to act on-- which a-attacks to stop,
which to let through.
Statistical analysis.
The minimal number of actions
it would take for us to win the war...
but the maximum number we can take
before the Germans get suspicious.
And you're going to trust all this to statistics?
-To maths? -Correct.
And then MI6 can come up with the lies
that we tell everybody else.
You'll need a believable alternative source for all
-the pieces of information you use. -A false story
so that we can explain how we got our information
that has nothing to do with Enigma.
And then you can leak those stories to the, uh, the Germans.
And then to our own military.
Maintain a conspiracy of lies
at the highest levels of government.
Sounds right up my alley.
Alan, I so rarely have cause to say this,
but you are exactly the man I always hoped you would be.
TURING (voice-over): They code-named it "Ultra."
It became the largest store of military intelligence
in, uh... the history of the world.
(whirring, rhythmic clacking)
(whirring, rhythmic clacking stop)
It was like having a tap on Himmler's intercom.
I-E-O...
(voice-over): Secrecy became the primary concern,
and for some reason, they... they trusted me.
Peter... do you have the, uh,
the-the 630 decryp...
TURING (voice-over): ...it's a Beale cipher
encrypted with a phrase from a book or...
ALEXANDER (voice-over): "Ask, and it will be given to you;
seek and you will find." Matthew 7:7.
That was the key.
Peter will come around eventually.
Jack.
Could you give Alan and me a moment, please?
The Soviets and us,
we're on the same side.
What I'm doing will help Britain.
I-I have to tell Denniston.
No, you don't.
Because if you tell him my secret...
I'll tell him yours.
Do you know what they do to homosexuals?
You'll never be able to work again,
never be able to teach.
Your precious machine...
I doubt you'll ever see him again.
(phone line ringing)
TURING: Hello. Can I... can I, um,
speak to Stewart Menzies, please? It's urgent.
FEMALE OPERATOR: One moment, please.
Hello. Menzies.
TURING (voice-over): Some advice about keeping secrets.
It's a lot easier if you don't know them in the first place.
Were they steaming my letters, tapping my telephone?
Trailing my nervous walks?
You know, I...
I never did find out.
Joan?
Joan?
What's...
Uh...
where's Joan?
Military prison.
What have you done?
Decoded Enigma intercepts. I found a pile of them
-in the bedside table. -No, no. I-I gave those to her
over a year ago when I was trying to figure out
-a link between... -I'm sure you did.
Denniston's been looking for a Soviet spy.
He's been looking inside Hut 8.
I know who the spy is.
It's not Joan. It's...
it's Cairncross.
I-I found the Beale cipher,
the Bible.
God, I wish you'd been a spy.
You'd be so much better at this than he is.
You knew it was him?
Of course I bloody knew.
I knew before he came to Bletchley.
Why do you think I had him placed here?
But we have an Enigma machine.
DENNISTON: Yeah, Polish Intelligence...
TURING (voice-over): You-you placed
a... a Soviet agent at Bletchley Park?
It's really quite useful to be able
to leak whatever we want to Stalin.
MENZIES (voice-over): Churchill's too damn paranoid.
He won't share a shred of intelligence
with the Soviets.
Not even information that will help them against the Germans.
(sighs): There's...
so much secrecy.
Cairncross has no idea we know, of course.
He's really not the brightest bulb.
Which is why I need your help.
I want to know what to leak to John,
what to feed to the Soviets,
as well as the British.
(softly): I... I'm not a spy.
I'm... I'm just a mathematician.
I know a lot of spies, Alan.
You've got more secrets than the best of them.
You... you have to promise me that you will release Joan.
Yes, Joan's at the market.
She's gonna be back in an hour. I lied.
I better hold on to these.
If anybody finds out about them,
prison will be the least of her worries.
Oh, Alan...
we're gonna have such a wonderful war together.
TURING (voice-over): I need you to leave Bletchley.
-What? -It's Menzies. I don't trust him.
-TURING: It's not safe here. -Do you think it's any safer
-anywhere else? -You need to get away.
You need to get very far away from me.
Alan, what's happened?
We can't be engaged anymore.
You... your parents need to take you back
and find you a husband elsewhere.
What's wrong with you?
I have something, uh, uh, to tell you.
I'm...
I'm a homosexual.
All right.
No, no. M-Men, Joan...
uh, not women.
-So what? -Well,
I-I just told you.
So what?
I had my suspicions; I always did.
But we're not like other people.
We love each other in our own way,
and we can have the life together that we want.
You-you... you won't be the perfect husband.
(exhales) Well, I can promise you,
I have no intention of being the perfect wife.
I'll not be... fixing your lamb all day
while you come home from the office.
I'll work.
You'll work.
And we'll have each other's company.
We'll have each other's minds.
(exhales) That sounds like a better marriage than most.
Because I care for you.
And you care for me.
And we understand one another more than...
more than anyone else ever has.
I don't.
-What? -Care for you.
I never did.
I-I just needed you to break Enigma.
I've done that now, so... so you can go.
I'm not going anywhere.
I've spent entirely too much of my life
worried about what you think of me,
or what my parents think of me,
or the boys in Hut 8 or the girls in Hut 3.
And do you know what? I'm done.
This is the most important work I will ever do,
and no one is going to stop me.
Least of all, you.
You know what, they were right.
Peter, Hugh, John.
You really are a monster.
The war dragged on for two more...
solitary years...
and every day we performed
our blood-soaked calculus.
Every day we decided who lived and who died.
Every day we...
helped the Allies to victories, and nobody knew.
-(gunfire) -Stalingrad.
The Ardenne.
The invasion of Normandy.
All victories that would not have been possible
without the intelligence that we supplied.
And people...
talk about the war as this epic battle between, um...
civilizations...
freedom versus tyranny,
democracy versus Nazism,
armies of millions
bleeding into the ground,
fleets of ships weighing down the oceans,
planes dropping bombs from the sky
until they obliterated the sun itself...
The war wasn't like that for us.
For us, it was just...
...half a dozen crossword enthusiasts
in a tiny village in the South of England.
WINSTON CHURCHILL: This is...
your victory.
-(crowd cheering) -Victory...
of the cause of freedom
in every land.
PRESIDENT TRUMAN: This is a solemn but glorious hour.
I wish that Franklin D. Roosevelt
had lived to see this day.
TURING: Was I God?
No. Because...
God didn't win the war.
We did.
ALEXANDER: So, what happens now?
Is it... back to university for us, I suppose?
Yes, pretty much.
But you've one thing left to do
before your service to your government
-in concluded. -What's that?
Burn everything.
-Burn? Why? -You were told when you started
this was a top-secret program-- did you think we were joking?
-But the war is over. -TURING: This war is.
But there'll be others.
And we know how to break a code
that everybody else believes is unbreakable.
MENZIES: Precisely.
Tear it down. Light it up.
Sweep away the ashes.
None of you have ever met before.
None of you have ever even heard
the word Enigma.
Have a safe trip home.
MENZIES: Behave. With a bit of luck, you'll never have
to see me or one another again for the rest of your lives.
That's unbelievable.
(sighs): Now, Detective,
you get to judge.
So, tell me...
what am I?
Mm, am I...
a machine?
Am I a person?
Am I a war hero?
Am I a criminal?
I can't judge you.
Well, then...
...you're no help to me at all.
-(knocking) -HEADMASTER (voice-over): Come in.
You wanted to see me, sir?
Turing. Sit down.
Something the matter?
You and Christopher Morcom are quite close.
I wouldn't say that.
Well, your mathematics teacher
says the two of you are positively inseparable.
We're the best students in the class.
He caught you passing notes the other day.
Cryptography, to pass the time. The class is too simple.
You and your friend solve maths problems during maths class
because the maths class is too dull?
He's not my friend.
Well, I'm told he's your only friend.
Who said that?
Something's come up concerning Morcom.
Why am I here?
Christopher is dead.
I don't understand.
His mother sent word this morning.
The family were on holiday, you see.
I don't understand.
Well, he had bovine tuberculosis,
as I'm sure he told you.
So this won't come as a shock, but...
still, all the same,
I'm sorry.
You're mistaken.
Did he not tell you?
Well, he's been sick for a long time.
He knew this was coming soon.
But he had a stiff upper lip about it.
Good lad.
-Are you all right, Turing? -Yes. Of course.
Like I said, I didn't know him very well.
Ah. I see.
Very well.
May I leave, Headmaster?
Congratulations, sir.
Sorry.
I would have come.
I would have testified.
And what would you have said, that I, uh...
I wasn't a homosexual.
Alan... this is serious.
They could send you to jail.
Damn it.
Your hands. You're twitching.
No-no, I'm not.
-Alan. -Uh...
It's the medication.
The medication?
Uh, well, the judge gave me, um, a choice--
uh, ei-either two years in prison
or... ho-hormonal therapy.
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
Yes, yes, that's right.
Chemical castration.
Um, to, uh, to cure me of my, um...
(chuckles): homosexual predilections.
Well, of course I chose that.
I mean, I... couldn't...
work in prison, and, uh...
All right.
Now, I-I'm going to speak to your doctors.
-I'm going to speak to your lawyers. -I'm-I'm fine.
-Please let me help you. -No, I, uh, don't need your help,
thank you.
Alan, you do not have to do this alone.
I'm not alone.
Never have been.
Christopher's become so smart.
If-if I don't continue my treatment,
then they'll, um...
...they'll take him away from me.
You...
(crying): You-you can't let them do that. You can't.
You... you can't let them leave me alone.
(sobbing): I don't... I don't want to be alone.
-I don't want to be alone. -All ri... all right, all right.
All right.
It's all right. Come and sit down.
It's all right.
Come and sit down.
-(Turing panting) -It's all right.
Oh, well, that's a...
(laughs) that's a much nicer ring
-than the one I-I made you. -(Joan laughs softly)
Yes. His name's Jock.
He's an Army man,
if you can believe it.
-We work together. -(Turing laughs)
Why don't we do a crossword puzzle.
It'll only take us five minutes.
Or, in your case, six.
There.
Uh...
Uh...
Uh, p... perhaps later.
Yes, of course.
You-you got what you wanted, didn't you?
Work, a husband.
Normal life.
No one normal could have done that.
Do you know, this morning...
(sighs) I was on a train
that went through a city that wouldn't exist
if it wasn't for you.
I bought a ticket from a man
who would likely be dead if it wasn't for you.
I read up
on my work...
a whole field of scientific inquiry
that only exists because of you.
Now, if you wish you could have been normal...
I can promise you I do not.
The world is an infinitely better place
precisely because you weren't.
Do you...
do you really think that?
I think...
that sometimes it is the people
who no one imagines anything of
who do the things
that no one can imagine.
Good.
If you're not listening carefully,
you will miss things,
important things.
I will not pause.
I will not repeat myself,
and you will not interrupt me.
You think that because you are sitting where you are
and I am sitting where I am
that you are in control of what is about to happen.
You're mistaken.
I am in control.
Because I know things that you
do not know.
Manchester Police Department, please hold.
CONSTABLE (through radio): Windows broken.
Home's been ransacked.
Send a detective down, will you?
MAN (voice-over): What I will need from you now
is a commitment.
You will listen closely, and you will not
judge me until I am finished.
If you cannot commit to this,
then please leave the room.
MAN 2: Come in.
But if you choose to stay,
remember you chose to be here.
What happens
from this moment forwards is not my responsibility.
It's yours.
Pay attention.
DETECTIVE: What's all this, then?
SERGEANT: Turing, Alan.
Professor at King's.
Seems there's been a burglary.
Oh? What of?
Well, that's just it. Nothing missing, really.
What's he doing in Manchester?
Something with machines.
The project at the NPL.
I checked, but he won't say what it's on.
Professor Turing?
Detective Nock, Manchester Police.
Sergeant Staehl here tells me you had a burglary last night.
Professor Turing?
Take a step back,
and don't breath heavily.
-Breathe? -Undiluted cyanide.
It-it wouldn't take
more than a thimbleful to kill you.
Ah.
Disappointing.
Pardon?
I-I had hoped for a bit more.
Sergeant Staehl, is it just me, or do you get the sense
that we're being insulted?
Last night, you had a break-in.
Your neighbor, Mr. Springborn, called to report the noise.
He said there was quite a ruckus.
Only you say nothing was taken.
It's odd. So how about you tell us
what happened, and we'll find the chap who did this.
Gentlemen,
I-I don't believe
that you could find the chap that did this
if, uh, he walked up to you and spat in your face.
Uh, what I could us right now
is not a bobby, but a really good cleaning lady.
So unless one of you has a-an apron
in your car, I suggest
you file your reports and leave me alone.
As you say, Professor Turing.
Best of luck with your cyanide.
STAEHL (voice-over): I'll give you a quid
if you can name me a more insufferable sod.
Seemed a bit forced, though, didn't it?
Don't know what you mean.
Well, if you didn't want a pair of bobbies
digging around in your personal affairs,
that'd have been a stellar way to make sure they don't.
Tell me you don't think this is suspicious.
I don't think this is suspicious.
A mysterious professor who won't admit
he's had something stolen from his house?
I think Alan Turing's
hiding something.
War declared!
800,000 children evacuated!
German bombs on their way!
Get your papers here!
Fresh off the press!
War declared!
800,000 children evacuated!
German bombs expected soon!
NEVILLE CHAMBERLAIN: This morning,
the British Ambassador in Berlin
handed the German government
a final note stating that
unless we heard from them,
by 11:00,
a state of war
would exist between us.
I have to tell you now
that no such undertaking has been received.
And that, consequently,
this country is at war
with Germany.
KING GEORGE VI: For the second time
in the lives of most of us,
we are...
at war.
...to find
a peaceful way out...
Papers, please.
What are you doing here?
Oh, uh, the lady told me to wait.
In my office?
She tell you to help yourself to tea
while you were here?
Uh, no, she didn't.
She obviously didn't tell you
what a joke was, then, either, I gather.
Was she supposed to?
Who are you?
Alan Turing.
Ah, Turing.
The mathematician.
Correct.
-However could I have guessed? -Well, you didn't.
You just read it on that piece of paper.
King's College, Cambridge.
Now, it says here you were a bit of a prodigy
in the maths department.
I-I'm not sure I can evaluate that, Mr....
-How old are you, Mr. Turing? -Uh, 27.
And how old were you when you became a Fellow at Cambridge?
-24. -And how old were you
when you published this paper that has a title
I can barely understand?
-Uh, 23. -And you don't think
that qualifies you as a certified prodigy?
Well, Newton discovered binomial theorem aged 22.
Einstein wrote four papers that changed the world
by the age of 26.
As far as I can tell,
I've...
I've barely made par.
My God, you're serious.
Would you prefer I made a joke?
Oh, I don't think you know what those are.
Hardly seems fair that that's a requirement
for employment here, Mr....
Commander Denniston, Royal Navy.
All right, Mr. Turing, I'll bite.
Why do you wish to work for His Majesty's government?
Oh, I don't, really.
Are you a bleeding pacifist?
I'm... agnostic about violence.
Well, you do realize
that 600 miles away from London
there's this nasty little chap called Hitler
who wants to engulf Europe in tyranny?
Politics isn't really my area of expertise.
Really?
Well, I believe you've just set the record
for the shortest job interview
in British military history.
Oh, uh...
Mother says I can be off-putting sometimes on account
of being one of the best mathematicians in the world.
In the world?
Oh, yes.
Do you know how many people I've rejected for this program?
-No. -Well, that's right,
because we're a top-secret program.
But I'll tell you, just because we're friends,
that only last week,
I rejected one of our great nation's top linguists.
Knows German better than Bertolt Brecht.
I don't speak German.
What?
I don't...
speak German.
Well, how the hell were you supposed to decrypt
German communications if you don't...
I don't know, speak German?
Well, I'm really quite excellent at crossword puzzles.
-Margaret! -The German codes are a puzzle.
A game, just like any other game.
-Margaret, where are you? -I'm really very good at games.
Uh, puzzles.
And this is the most difficult puzzle in the world.
Margaret!
For the love of God.
This is a joke, obviously.
I'm afraid I don't know what those are,
Commander Denniston.
Have a pleasant trip back to Cambridge, Professor.
Enigma.
You called for me?
That's what you're doing here.
The top-secret program at Bletchley.
You're trying to break the German Enigma machine.
What makes you think that?
It's the greatest encryption device in history,
and the Germans use it for all major communications.
If the Allies broke Enigma,
well,...
this would turn into a very short war, indeed.
Of course that's what you're working on.
But you also haven't got anywhere with it.
If you had, you wouldn't be hiring cryptographers
out of university.
Y-You need me a lot more than I need you.
I-I like solving problems,
Commander.
And Enigma is the most difficult problem in the world.
No, Enigma isn't difficult; it's impossible.
The Americans, the Russians, the French,
the Germans, everyone thinks Enigma
is unbreakable.
Good.
Let me try, and we'll know for sure,
won't we?
DENNISTON: Welcome to Enigma.
The details of every surprise attack,
every secret convoy
and every U-boat in the bloody Atlantic
go into that thing.
And out comes gibberish.
It's beautiful.
DENNISTON: It's the crooked hand of death itself.
Our Wrens intercept thousands of radio messages a day,
and to the lovely young ladies
of the Women's Royal Navy, they're nonsense.
It's only when you feed them back into Enigma
that they make any sense.
But we have an Enigma machine.
Yes, Polish Intelligence
smuggled it out of Berlin.
So what's the problem?
Just put the intercepted messages
back into the Enigma and you'll...
Look, it's not that simple, is it?
Just having an Enigma machine
doesn't help you to decode the messages.
DENNISTON: Very good, Mr. Turing.
To decode a message, you need to know the machine's settings.
Now, the Germans switch settings
every day promptly at midnight.
We usually intercept
our first message around 6:00 a.m.,
which gives you exactly
18 hours every day to crack the code
before it changes, and you start again.
Five rotors.
Ten plugboard cables.
-That's... -One million... -A thousand million...
No, no, it's, uh, I've got it.
-It's million, million. -It's in the millions, obviously.
It's over 150 million million million possible settings.
Very good.
159.
If you want to be exact about it. 1-5-9
with 18 zeroes behind it.
Possibilities.
Every single day.
DENNISTON: Gentlemen, meet Hugh Alexander.
I personally selected him
-to run this unit. -Didn't you...
Mr. Alexander won Britain's national chess championship.
Twice.
DENNISTON: You're not the only one
who's good at games around here, Turing.
Are-are we to work together, then?
I prefer to have my own office.
You're a team, and you will work as one.
I-I-I don't have time to explain myself as I go along,
and I'm afraid these men
-would only slow me down. -(chuckles) -If you can't
play together, then I'm afraid we can't let you play at all.
This is Stewart Menzies, MI6.
There are only five divisions of military intelligence.
There is no MI6.
Exactly.
That's the spirit.
Mr. Turing, do you know how many British servicemen
have died because of Enigma?
Uh, no, I don't.
Three...
while we've been having
this conversation.
Oh, look, there's another.
I rather hope he didn't have a family.
This war Commander Denniston's been going on about,
we're not winning it.
Break the code,
at least we have a chance.
Shall we leave the children alone
with their new toy?
Hm.
All right, gentlemen...
-let's play.
TURING (voice-over): The game was quite a simple one.
Every single German message, every surprise attack,
every bombing run,
every imminent U-boat assault...
They were all floating through the air.
Radio signals that...
well, any schoolboy with an AM kit
could intercept.
The trick was that they were encrypted.
There were 159 million million million possible
Enigma settings.
All we had to do was try each one.
But if we had ten men checking one setting a minute
for 24 hours every day and seven days every week,
how many days do you think it would take to, uh,
to check
each of the settings?
Well, it's not days, it's years.
Good morning.
It's 20 million years.
-To stop a coming attack, -Thank you.
we would have to check 20 million years' worth
of settings
in 20 minutes.
I'm famished.
Lunch?
ALEXANDER: Good Lord. What is it
about women with little hats?
The boys, we're going to get some lunch.
Alan?
Yes?
I said we're going to get some lunch.
Alan?
Yes?
-Can you hear me? -Yes.
I said we're off to get some lu...
This is starting to get a little bit repetitive.
-What is? -I had asked
if you wanted to come to lunch with us.
Um, no, you didn't.
You said you were going to get some lunch.
Have I offended you in some way?
Why would you think that?
Would you like to come to lunch with us?
-What time's lunchtime? -Christ, Alan,
it's a bleeding sandwich.
-What is? -Lunch.
Oh, I don't like sandwiches.
Never mind.
You know,
to pull off this irascible genius routine,
one actually has to be a genius, Alan.
And yet we're the ones
making progress here, aren't we?
Oh, you are?
Yes, we are.
We have decrypted a number of German messages
by analyzing the frequency of letter distribution.
Oh, even a broken clock is right twice a day.
That-That's not progress; that's just blind luck.
I'm designing a machine
that will allow us to break every message
every day instantly.
Who's hungry?
Let's go.
I'm hungry.
What?
TURING: Peter asked who was hungry.
Can I have some soup, please?
...another break in the circuit there.
What do you mean, "classified"?
No, I'm aware of the literal meaning of the word classified.
What I'm asking is why would a maths professor
have his military records classified?
Yeah, well, I will come down.
WPC: Sorry, can I get you to hold for a minute, please?
Pardon me, I'd like to see some documents, if I may.
Service records of a Mr. Turing.
Alan.
Foreign Office sent me.
This is unacceptable.
If you wish to discuss the complaint,
I suggest you make a proper appointment.
Alexan...
Complaint?
No, no, Hugh Alexander
has denied my requisition for parts
and-and equipment that I need to build the machine I've designed.
Your fellow code-breakers are refusing to work with you,
and they filed a formal complaint.
It's is inspired by an old Polish code machine.
Only this one
is infinitely more advanced.
If you don't respond to the complaint,
I shall have to take it up with the Home Office.
Put those files by my desk.
Fine, my response is they're all idiots.
Fire them and use the savings to fund my machine.
I only need about 100,000 pounds.
100,000...
Why are you building a machine?
It's highly technical. You wouldn't understand.
I suggest you make the effort to try.
Enigma is...
an extremely well-designed machine.
Our problem is that we're only using men to try to beat it.
No, what if only a machine
can defeat another machine?
Well, that's not very technical.
Hugh Alexander is in charge
of your unit; he said no, and that is that.
I simply don't have time for this.
Have you ever won a war, Turing?
I have.
Do you know how it's done?
Order, discipline,
chain of command.
You're not at university any longer.
You are a very small cog in a very large system.
And you will do as your commanding officer instructs.
Yes.
Who-who is your commanding officer?
Winston Churchill,
Number 10 Downing Street,
London, SW1.
You have a problem with my decision,
you can take it up with him.
TURING (voice-over): Mr. Menzies!
Mr. Menzies!
A-A-Are you going to London?
Possibly.
Would you deliver a letter for me?
ALEXANDER (voice-over): Look, I'm sorry,
but are you joking?
Churchill's put Alan in charge?
-This is a terrible idea. -No, no, no, no, no.
So I can give these men orders now?
I hate to say it, but yes.
Excellent. Keith and Charles, you're both fired.
-Excuse me? -What?
You're mediocre linguists,
and positively poor code-breakers.
Alan, you can't just fire Keith and Charles.
Well, he just said I could.
No, I did no such thing.
But Churchill did.
Go to hell.
Well,
this is inhuman.
Even for you.
Popular at school, were you?
TURING (voice-over): The problem began, of course,
with the carrots.
Carrots are orange.
And peas
are green.
They mustn't touch.
I got it.
TURING (voice-over): Do you know why people
like violence?
It is because it feels...
good.
Humans find violence
deeply satisfying.
But remove the-the satisfaction,
and the act becomes...
-(panting) -hollow.
STUDENT: Turing?
Come on.
Don't be such a kike about it.
STUDENT 2: Leave him to bloody rot.
TURING (voice-over): I didn't learn this on my own,
of course.
I had help.
Christopher helped.
Alan, are you all right?
It's not my fault.
The carrots got in with the peas and...
I'm sorry.
I won't let them do it again.
They're getting worse.
They only beat me up because I'm smarter than they are.
No, they beat you up because you're different.
Mother says I'm just an odd duck.
And she's right.
But you know, Alan,
sometimes it's the very people who no one imagines anything of
who do the things no one can imagine.
So, what do we do now?
We're short on staff.
TURING: Well, we, uh, we get
more staff then.
And how do you propose to do that?
Um, Alan Turing
to see Stewart Menzies.
Very good, sir.
MENZIES (voice-over): So who are they?
Oh, all sorts, really.
Teacher, an engineer,
a handful of students.
And you think they're qualified for Bletchley
'cause they're good at crossword puzzles?
Well, they say they're good, and now we shall find out,
won't we?
(voice-over): In order to aid your efforts,
there is, to the right of you, a green scratch card book.
You are to make notes in that.
Gentlemen, you have six minutes
in which to complete the puzzle, at which point,
I will...
Pardon, ma'am, this room's restricted.
Oh, apologies for my tardiness.
The-the bus caught a flat tire.
Uh, may I continue, please?
-Thank you. -You're not allowed in here, ma'am.
Oh, but I'm only a few minutes late.
The secretaries are to head upstairs.
This room's for the candidates.
May I get on with this now, please?
I-I am a candidate.
-For what position? -(groans)
The letter didn't say precisely.
Yeah, so secretaries are to head upstairs.
It did say that it was top secret.
What is going on?
I-I solved
a-a crossword puzzle in the newspaper,
and I-I got this letter saying
that I was a candidate for some sort of mysterious job.
My name's Joan Clarke.
Miss, did you really solve this puzzle yourself?
What makes you think I couldn't solve the puzzle myself?
-I-I'm really very good at... -Ma'am,
-I'll have to ask you to... -Miss Clarke,
I-I find tardiness
under any circumstance, um, unacceptable.
Take a seat so that we may continue.
(softly): Thank you.
TURING: Now, um,
as I was saying, you-you have six minutes
to, uh, complete the task in front of you.
Uh, gentlemen and lady,
begin.
Six minutes.
Is that even possible?
No, it takes me eight.
This isn't about crossword puzzles.
It's about how one, uh,
approaches solving an impossible problem.
Do you tackle the whole thing at once or divide it
into small...
You've finished?
Yes.
Five minutes and 34 seconds.
You said to do it in under six.
MENZIES (voice-over): Congratulations.
My warmest welcome to His Majesty's service.
If you speak a word of what I'm about to show you,
you will be executed for high treason.
You will lie to your friends,
your family and everyone you meet
about what it is you really do.
And what is it that we're really doing?
We're going to break an unbreakable Nazi code
and win the war.
Oh.
What's that you're reading?
It's about cryptography.
Like secret messages?
Not secret.
That's the brilliant part.
Messages that anyone can see, but no one knows what they mean
unless you have the key.
How's that different from talking?
-Talking? -When people talk to each other,
they never say what they mean.
They say something else,
and you're expected to just know what they mean.
Only I never do.
So, how's that different?
Alan, I have a funny feeling
you're going to be very good at this.
Good night, Alan.
Good night.
WOMAN: Hold on, Marion, I'm coming!
Coming round the lesser settings and then route back through...
-(thumps loudly) -Back to those ones...
Uh, careful, will you?
Um, it-it's not a toy.
ALEXANDER: Funny.
Looks like a toy.
Bloody great 100,000-pound one.
Your new minion's arrived.
Jack Good. We met...
Well, where's Miss Clarke?
Lovely, isn't he?
TURING: It's not just a-a usual humdrum production mill factory.
I mean, well, as-as I was saying,
it's a very important, uh, radio factory.
I-It's not, actually. Uh, well, um,
on the spectrum of, uh... radio factories,
this-this one is-is particularly...
Why are you not at Bletchley?
Thank you... so much for your visit, Mr. Turing.
-Was your trip pleasant? -Gather your things and let's go.
I'm sorry, but I'm unable to accept your offer.
We feel that such a position
would hardly be appropriate.
You earned a double first in mathematics.
But sadly wasn't granted the opportunity to become a Fellow.
You belong at Bletchley.
JOAN: I'm sorry, but for someone in my position
to live... to...
to work in a radio factory so far from home,
with all your men, um...
it-it would be...
indecorous.
What in the world does that even mean?
We have a group of, uh, young ladies
who tend to all of our
clerical tasks: assistants, translators.
Uh, they live, um, together in town.
W-W-Would that be a more, uh, suitable environment?
Hm. So-so I would be working amongst these women?
Yes.
Wonderful ladies. Uh, they even organize social events
at St. Martin's Church down the road.
Uh, really, the whole thing is-is quite, uh...
uh, um...
decorous.
Now, you won't have proper security clearance,
of course, so, uh, we'll have to improvise things a bit.
Why are you helping me?
Because there is only one thing that matters
in this entire world right now-- do you understand?--
and that is breaking Enigma.
But-but, Mr. Turing...
why are you helping me?
Oh. Um...
sometimes it's the very people who no one imagines anything of
who do the things that no one can imagine.
Sir.
-What's this? -Alan Turing's classified military file.
-It's bloody empty. -Exactly.
-It's an empty manila envelope. -Yeah.
Well, you've cracked the case wide open, then, haven't you?
Alan Turing's war records aren't just classified,
they're nonexistent.
That means someone's got rid of them.
Erased them. Burned them.
And that same person broke into his house and stole nothing?
Guy Burgess and Donald Maclean.
What, the spies from the papers?
The Soviet spies.
But first they were professors, weren't they?
Radicalized at Cambridge,
then they joined the Communist Party,
then Foreign Office, then leaked information
to Stalin during the war-- now,
can you think of anyone else we know who was at Cambridge,
then took up something murky and top secret when war broke out?
You think this Alan Turing might be a Soviet agent?
I think...
something very serious is happening
right here under our noses.
(sighs) Wouldn't you like to find out what it is?
Welcome, ladies.
If you'd like to follow me.
TURING (voice-over): Some people thought we were at war
with the Germans-- incorrect.
We were at war with the clock.
Britain was literally starving to death.
The Americans sent over
100,000 tons of food every week, and, uh, every week
the Germans would send our desperately needed bread
to the bottom of the ocean.
Our daily failure was announced at the chimes of midnight.
And the sound would haunt our unwelcome dreams.
Tick...
tock...
tick.
Damn it!
-What just happened? -CAIRNCROSS: Midnight--
all the work we've done today is useless.
Oh, but don't worry, we've a few hours
before tomorrow's messages start flooding in...
and we start all over again.
From scratch.
ALEXANDER: I'm so sick of this.
Four hours rewiring his plugboard matrix.
Three hours yesterday
on his rotor positions!
-Don't go over there. -Look, John, no.
If this job wasn't already impossible before,
-it bloody well is now. -Hugh, don't.
Damn you and your useless machine.
(sighs) My machine is how we are going to win.
Really?
This machine? Hmm?
Are you talking about this bloody machine?!
-Hugh! Hugh! Hugh, don't! -Hugh! Hugh! Stop!
ALEXANDER: You arrogant bastard.
You could help us.
You could make this go faster, but you won't.
Get off.
He's right, Alan.
There are...
actual soldiers out there trying to win an actual war.
My brother
protects food convoys in the Navy.
My cousins fly RAF patrols.
All my friends, they're all making a difference,
while we just... while away our days
producing nothing.
Because of you.
(panting): My machine...
will work.
Come on, Peter.
Okay.
-(Turing grunting) -Uh, will you...
-(panting, laughs) -Could you make
a bit more noise? I'm not quite sure
-my landlady woke up. -Oh, sorry.
Oh, uh, look.
I think that's the best I can do.
No male visitors after dark.
So...
what did you bring me?
There you go.
Here.
Some men try flowers, you know.
These are actual decrypted Enigma messages
direct from Nazi
High Command.
"0600 hours.
"Weather today is clear.
"Rain in the evening.
Heil Hitler."
Well, clearly, that vital piece of information
is going to win us the war.
It's the relationship between the encrypted
a-and decrypted messages that interests me.
Can we find a clue here that we can build into Christopher?
Who's Christopher?
Oh, he's, uh, he's my machine.
You named him?
Is that a bad name?
No.
No, never mind.
Are you trying to build your universal machine?
I read your paper
-at university. -Is it already being taught?
(laughs): No. No. No, I was precocious.
So...
you-you theorized a machine that
could solve any problem.
It didn't just do one thing, it did everything.
It wasn't just programmable, it was reprogrammable.
Mm.
Is that your idea behind Christopher?
Well, human brains can compute large sums very quickly--
even Hugh can do that-- but I want Christopher to be smarter.
To make a calculation and then, uh...
to determine what to do next.
Like a person does.
Think of it.
Electrical brain.
A digital computer.
Digital computer.
Hmm.
-(clattering) -What's going on?
What's happening?
No. No, no. No, no, no! Don't touch that!
-Stay back. -That's my desk.
DENNISTON: Thank goodness.
I'd hate to think we were searching
-the wrong one. -What are you doing? What's going on?
There is a spy
in Bletchley Park.
The Navy thinks that one of us
is a Soviet double agent, Alan.
Uh... why?
Our boys intercepted this on its way to Moscow.
Look familiar?
It's a Beale cipher.
Encrypted with a phrase from a book or a poem or...
You don't seriously think I did this, do you?
Double agents are such bastards.
Isolated loners.
No attachments to friends or family.
Arrogant.
Know anybody like that?
I...
Hm, I know you don't like me,
but that does not make me
a Soviet spy.
POLICEMAN: Nothing out of the ordinary, sir.
Really.
Mm, all right.
The Home Office may be protecting you now,
but sooner or later
you will make a mistake.
And I needn't bother firing you.
They will hang you for treason.
Hello.
I heard about what happened.
It's all the girls in Hut 3 can talk about.
I have an idea of what might cheer you up.
-♪ ♪ -(indistinct chatter)
JOAN: So because no letter
can be encoded as itself, there's already a handful
of settings that can be rejected at the outset.
Is that your team?
-Y-Yes. -Shall we say hello?
-No. -Hello.
I-I told you not t-to do that.
-Alan. -Uh, Hugh, h-hello.
-Didn't know you drank. -He doesn't, really.
He just sort of sips at the foam.
Well, I'll let you into a little secret, Miss...?
Clarke.
-Miss Clarke. -Please.
Foam's my favorite part, too.
Is it really?
Come and join us for a drink?
We'll be there in a moment.
Miss Clarke.
♪ ♪
Well, he likes you.
-Yes. -You...
g-got him to like you.
Yes.
Why?
Because I'm a woman in a man's job,
and I don't have the luxury of being an ass.
Alan...
it doesn't matter how smart you are,
Enigma is always smarter.
If you really
want to solve your puzzle,
then you're going to need all the help
you can get, and they are not going
to help you if they do not like you.
-What are those? -Apples.
-No. -Oh, they really are.
Um, I... well, Miss Clarke, Joan actually, um...
said that it would be... (clears throat)
nice if I was to, uh, bring you all something.
So here we are. I...
Thank you.
I like apples.
My best to Miss Clarke.
Uh, there are two people in a wood,
and, um, they run into a bear.
The first person gets down on his knees to pray.
The second person starts lacing up his boots.
The first person asks the second person,
"My dear friend, what are you doing?
You-you-you can't outrun a bear."
Uh, to which the second person responds,
"I don't have to.
I only have to outrun you."
I'll be w-with Christopher, if anyone needs me.
MAN (voice-over): If we assume that the square root of two
is a rational number, then we can say
that the square root of two
is A over B...
where A and B
are whole numbers and B is not zero.
Mr. Turing, passing notes, are we?
No, sir.
Only Turing would pass notes written in gibberish.
(quiet laughter)
-(bell ringing) -All right, gentlemen,
do not forget your algebra over the break.
Have a pleasant holiday, and we'll resume
your irrationals when you return.
Mm.
But Euler's Theorem gives you that immediately.
Um...
Here. Look at this.
If you run the wires across the plugboard matrix diagonally,
it will eliminate rotor positions 500 times faster.
That's, uh...
actually not an entirely terrible idea.
I think that was Alan for "thank you."
Uh, th-that's my sandwich.
You don't like sandwiches.
You nervous?
What happens now?
It-it should work out the day's Enigma settings.
How long?
CROWD (voice-over): Sieg Heil! Sieg Heil!
NEWSMAN: The German Army has fanned out across Europe,
from Poland to Serbia, Lithuania to Denmark,
Norway to France.
The Nazi flag now flies from more than two dozen
national capitals.
Their campaign mounts in fury
as a free Europe crumbles.
MAN (voice-over): Oh, it's still going.
-Good morning, sir. -Morning, Margaret.
Gears keep spinning on and on.
Rotors on and on.
It's endless.
With no result in sight?
-No. -(door closes)
(groans) Ow.
Turing.
Turing,
-open the bloody door. -Uh, no.
No.
Open the door or we'll break it down.
I can't let you in! I-I... I cannot let you interfere.
Go on, then.
Turn that thing off.
No. Don't, please. Please.
Please! Please!
No!
N-No. No!
Don't!
Well, then, it seems that your great big
expensive machine doesn't work.
It does.
Wonderful.
So you've broken Enigma, then?
It was just...
s-still working.
This is my associate from the Home Office.
You see, a hundred thousand pounds
is rather a lot of money,
and he's here to see what you have to show for it.
You... will never understand
the importance of what I-I am creating here!
Have you decrypted any German messages?
A single one?
Can you point to anything at all that you've achieved?
Hmm. Your funding is up,
and our patience is expired.
It's with such great pleasure
that I am finally able to say this.
Alan Turing, you're fired.
Please escort Mr. Turing from the premises.
ALEXANDER: No.
DENNISTON: I beg your pardon?
If you fire Alan...
well, then you'll have to fire me, too.
What on earth are you saying?
ALEXANDER: Trust me when I tell you there is no one
who would rather say this less than I do, but...
he's right.
Alan is right.
His machine can work, and it's probably
the best chance that we've got.
God, it's beyond belief.
CAIRNCROSS: If you fire them...
you'll have to fire me, too.
PETER: And me.
ALEXANDER: We're the best cryptographic minds in Britain.
Are you going to fire us all?
Commander, at least give us some more time.
Six months, and if the machine doesn't produce
any results that we need, then we'll go back
to doing things the old way-- how about that?
One month.
And then, so help me God,
you're all gone.
Oh, leave him.
Thank you.
You're welcome.
Oh, and, Alan, your machine...
...it better bloody work.
TURING: Hugh.
I swear...
I'm not a spy.
Oh, for God's sake, of course you're not a bloody spy.
What?
Denniston gave me the Beale cipher,
and guess what?
I cracked it.
"Ask, and it shall be given to you;
seek and ye shall find." Matthew 7:7.
That was the key.
Far too simple for the likes of you.
Pity Denniston disagrees.
-(knocking) -Come in.
Sir, I think I've got Turing.
I tailed him
to a pub last night, where he met a bloke.
They exchanged an envelope.
So I follow this other fella,
pick him up, give him a good shake.
He's a poofter. He confessed.
What?
The man admitted it. Arnold Murray.
Hangs around that pub; men pay him for a go.
Turing's one of the men that paid.
Only Mr. Murray here
then has the bright idea
of robbing Turing's house after, with a friend.
That's what Turing's hiding.
Well, he's a poof, not a spy.
-No. -What's the matter?
We can charge a university professor
-with indecency. -No, this is...
it's bloody rubbish.
Turing's up to something important...
He's committed a crime
and he's broken the law.
And with a bloke. Jesus Christ,
-it's bloody disgusting. -This isn't
the investigation I was conducting.
Bring him in.
Wait.
L-Let me interrogate him.
Please. Give me half an hour alone,
and then I swear, I'll spend the next month
running errands on as many rubbish cases as you like.
Fine. Now, will someone get me a warrant
for the arrest of Alan Turing.
Alan?
Christopher's simply not moving fast enough.
-We should talk. -And even with the diagonal board,
he's still not eliminating settings as quickly
-as we need him to in order... -I'm leaving.
But you've just walked in.
No.
No. Bletchley.
What?
It's my parents.
I'm 25, I'm unmarried, I'm living alone,
and they want me home.
(chuckles) That's ridiculous.
That's my parents.
You... you can't leave-- I-I won't let you.
"I'll miss you." That's what a normal person
-might say in this situation. -I-I don't care what is normal.
What am I supposed
to do, Alan?
I-I will not...
give up my parents. (laughs)
You... you have an opportunity here
to make some actual use of your life.
And end up like you? No, thanks.
-(Alan panting) -I'm sorry you're lonely.
But Enigma will not save you.
Can you decipher that, you fragile narcissist?
Or would you like me to go and fetch
your precious Christopher to help?
I'm sorry.
Mm...
I want you... I want you to stay because I-I like you.
I like... talking to you.
I like talking to you, too, Alan.
And what if you weren't alone?
What if you had a husband?
Do you have one in mind?
I do.
Hugh?
Hugh's terribly attractive, I'll give you that,
but I don't really think he's the marrying kind.
(chuckles) No, I-I wasn't thinking of Hugh.
Or Peter.
Peter's so quiet.
Oh, my God.
But this makes sense.
Did you just propose to me?
Well, it is the logical thing to do.
This is ridiculous.
This is your parents.
I-I can't... believe that this is happening.
Mm. Joan...
Is your middle name Caroline or Catherine?
-Elizabeth. -Um, Joan Elizabeth...
Clarke, um...
...will you marry me?
WOMAN: It's beautiful.
Well, I know it isn't ordinary, but...
whoever loved ordinary?
-ALEXANDER: She had it in both hands... -(laughing)
and she looked up at me with her doe eyes and said,
"Am I supposed to put that in my mouth?"
And I said, "Yes. You know, the French way."
So she pops it in,
clamps her lips around it,
and starts humming the bloody Marseillaise.
Come have a dance.
ALEXANDER: No, no, no, you can dance
with your fiance anytime you like.
Right now, this moment...
-(claps hands) -my turn.
♪ ♪
♪ ♪
What's the matter?
Wh-What if...
Wh-What if I don't fancy being...
with Joan i-in that way?
Because you're a homosexual?
I suspected.
Well, should-should I tell her
that I've had...
affairs with men?
You know, in my...
admittedly limited experience,
women... tend to be a bit touchy
about accidentally marrying homosexuals.
Perhaps not spreading this information about might be
in your best interest.
TURING: I care for her,
I truly do. I...
I-I... I just don't know
if I can, um... pretend.
You can't tell anyone, Alan.
It's illegal.
And Denniston is looking for any excuse he can
to put you away.
I know.
This has to stay a secret.
JOAN: Come on, it's your turn.
Ah. Okay.
Cup of tea?
No, thank you.
Mr. Turing, can I tell you a secret?
I'm quite good with those.
I'm here to help you.
Oh, clearly.
Can machines think?
Oh, so you've read some of my published works?
What makes you say that?
Well, because I'm sitting in a police station,
accused of entreating a young man to touch my penis
and you just asked me if machines can think.
Well, can they?
Could machines ever think as human beings do?
Most people say not.
You're not most people.
Well, the problem is you're... asking a stupid question.
I am?
Of course machines...
can't think as people do.
A machine is different... from a person.
Hence, they think differently.
The interesting question is, just because something, uh,
thinks differently from you,
does that mean it's not thinking?
Well, we allow for humans to have such divergences
from one another.
You like strawberries, I hate ice-skating,
you... cry at sad films,
I... am allergic to pollen.
What is the point of-of different tastes,
different... preferences
if not to say that our brains work differently,
that we think differently?
And if we can say that about one another,
then why can't we say the same thing for brains...
built of copper and wire, steel?
And that's...
this big paper you wrote?
What's it called?
(exhales) "The Imitation Game."
Right, that's...
that's what it's about?
Would you like to play?
Play?
It's a game.
A test of sorts.
For determining whether something is a...
a machine or a human being.
How do I play?
Well, there's a judge and a subject, and...
the judge asks questions,
and, depending on the subject's answers,
determines who he is talking with...
what he is talking with, and, um...
All you have to do is ask me a question.
What did you do during the war?
I worked in a radio factory.
What did you really do during the war?
(laughs softly)
Are you paying attention?
Damn it!
CAIRNCROSS: We're soon out of time. A month.
PETER: So that's it, then, is it?
Oh, the trouble is, it doesn't matter how much we improve it.
The machine's never gonna be able to process
159 million million million possibilities in time.
It's just bloody hopeless.
It's searching. It's just...
It... doesn't know what it's searching for.
If we knew what the messages were going to say...
If we knew what the messages were going to say,
we wouldn't have to decrypt them at all.
Who's Alan's friend?
Hugh. He's a bit of a cad, actually.
So my type, then?
-Well, I'll introduce you. -No.
He'll come over.
-Are you sure? -Yes.
I smiled at him 15 minutes ago
and haven't looked back since.
Who's that with Joan?
Hmm?
TURING: Uh, Helen. Works with her.
She's really pretty.
She wants me to come over.
What? H-How on earth can you know that?
She smiled at me a while back
and she hasn't looked again since.
And got him.
Now, why is this, that when I was single
I found it very boring, but now that I'm engaged,
I just find it dreadfully fun.
Bingo. She's in.
Alan, introduce us.
What? Wh-Why me?
Because there's nothing like a friend's engagement
to make a woman want to do something she'll later regret
with the fiance's better looking chum.
Let's go.
Half a crown says Alan bollixes this up entirely.
-No bet. -(chuckles)
-Alan Turing has a theory. -JOAN: He has many.
He believes that the regulations
against men and women working side by side are sound
because such proximity will necessarily lead to romance.
What? No, I don't. I...
However...
I disagree.
-You do? -Yeah.
I think that if I were working beside a woman all day long,
I could appreciate her abilities and intellect
without taking her to bed.
I'm sorry, have we met?
I don't recall. But let's assume we haven't.
Helen Stewart. Hugh Alexander.
So who do you agree with,
-Alan or myself? -Well, Alan, of course.
I-I'm very flattered, really, but I-I don't think...
-ALEXANDER: Rubbish. -HELEN: Well, I work beside a man
every day, and I can't help
but have developed a bit of a crush on him.
Well, who is this man? So I can kick his arse.
Well, there's no need to worry-- it's been chaste.
We've never even met. He's a German.
-Now I really want to kill him. -(laughs)
How-how do you mean you work alongside a German?
Well, each of us intercepts messages
from a specific German radio tower.
So we have a counterpart on the other side
who's tip-tapping out the messages.
Everyone types a touch differently,
so you get to know the rhythm of your counterpart.
It's strangely intimate.
I feel as if I know him so well.
It's a pity he has a girlfriend,
but that's why I disagree with you, Mr. Alexander.
Because I'm in love with a coworker of sorts,
and we've never even met.
Well, allow me to buy you another pint,
and I'll tell you why you're wrong.
Let's.
Excellent.
Thanks.
ALEXANDER: Um, pints. Have you got any sloe gin?
In case you were wondering, that's what flirting looks like.
TURING (loudly): Helen...
Really, no cigarettes?
Alan...
Yes, Alan?
Wh-Why do you think
-your German counterpart has a girlfriend? -It's just
-a stupid joke; don't worry. -No, no, no, no. Tell me.
Well, each of his messages
begins with the same five letters:
C-I-L-L-Y.
So I suspect that Cilly must be the name
-of his amore. -But that's impossible.
The Germans are instructed to use five random letters
at the start of every message.
HELEN: Well, this bloke doesn't.
Love will make a man do strange things, I suppose.
In this case, love just lost Germany the whole bloody war.
Oh!
Go, Peter.
Sorry.
JOAN: Alan! Alan!
-GUARDS: Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa! Hey, hey, hey! -Alan!
-I just want... -(guards shouting)
Hugh Alexander. John Cairncross.
Peter bloody Hilton.
Alan? What-wha...?
(panting): What...
what if... what if Christopher
doesn't have to search through all of the settings?
What if he only has to search through
ones that produce words we already know will be
-in the message? -Repeated words; predictable words.
Exactly.
JOAN: Look, look, like this one.
"0600 hours. Weather today is clear.
Rain in the evening. Heil Hitler."
Well, that's it.
Exactly.
They send a weather report every day at 6:00 a.m.
So that's-that's three words we know will be
in every 6:00 a.m. message-- "weather," obviously,
-a-and... -Heil bloody Hitler.
Heil bloody Hitler. (laughs)
(pants) Here's the 6:00 message from this morning.
TURING: Hugh, the, uh,
the right-hand letter wheel, set them to...
I know, I know. "Weather" and "Hitler."
Peter, John, run voltages through those letters,
-through the back scramblers. -PETER: So we'll use the loops?
TURING: Yes. Joan, what was the last 6:00 a.m. message?
-L... -L...
H...
-TURING: H... -W...
TURING: W...
-JOAN: A... -A...
-Q. -Q.
Done.
Come on. Come on, Christopher.
Oh, my God.
Wh-What happened?
-Did it work? -Alan?
ALEXANDER: Alan! Alan!
I need a new message.
The latest intercept.
(softly): Thank you.
O... T...
-JOAN: Ready? -Yes.
-M... -M...
-Y... -Y...
-M... S... -M... S...
-A... I... -A... I...
-C... -C...
-T... -T...
-R... -R...
-I... -I...
-S... O... -S... O...
-A... -A...
-Y... R... I... -Y... R...
-TURING: I. -(Joan panting)
"KMS Jaguar is auf punkt...
"is directed to 53 degrees 24 minutes north
and auf punkt one... degree west."
TURING & ALEXANDER (quietly): Heil Hitler.
Turns out that's the only German you need to know
to, uh, break Enigma.
Yes!
Oh!
-JOAN: M... -TURING: M...
-A... -A...
-Y... -Y...
-I... -I...
-T... -T...
-R... -R...
-O... -O... T...
-T... A... -A...
-H... -H...
-Q... -Q...
-TURING: U... -U...
-R. -R.
ALEXANDER: My God, you did it.
You just defeated Nazism with a crossword puzzle.
There are five people in the world who know
the position of every ship in the Atlantic.
They're all
-in this room. -Oh, good God.
Oh, I don't think even He has the power
-that we do right now. -JOAN: No.
there's going to be an attack
on a British passenger convoy.
Right there.
God, you're right. All those U-boats are only
-20, 30 minutes away. -JOAN: Civilians.
Hundreds of them. We can save their lives.
ALEXANDER: I'll phone Denniston's office so that
-he can alert the Admiralty. -Do you think
there's enough time to save them?
There should be, if we can get...
Commander Denniston's office,
please. It's urgent.
No.
What the hell are you doing?
You-you can't call Denniston.
You-you can't tell him about the attack.
-What are you talking about? -CAIRNCROSS: We can have
air support over that convoy in ten minutes.
Let the U-boats...
-sink the convoy. -Look, it's been
a big day-- maybe you're...
-We don't have time... -No!
JOAN: Oh! Hugh! Hugh! That's enough!
-That's enough! -CAIRNCROSS: Stop, Hugh!
John, the attack is in minutes.
Yes, no, I'm fine, I'm fine.
I'm fine.
You know why people like violence, Hugh?
It's because it feels good.
TURING: Sometimes we can't do what feels good.
We have to do what is logical.
What's logical?
Hardest time to lie to somebody
is when they're expecting to be lied to.
Oh, God.
What?
If someone's waiting for a lie,
you can't just, uh, give them one.
Damn it, Alan's right.
What?
TURING: What would the Germans think if we destroy
their U-boats?
Nothing. They'll be dead.
No.
No, you can't be right.
TURING: So our convoy
suddenly veers off course...
a squadron of our air bombers
miraculously descends on the coordinates of the U-boats--
what will the Germans think?
The Germans will know
that we have broken Enigma.
JOAN: They'll stop all radio communications by midday,
and they'll have changed the design of Enigma
-by the weekend. -ALEXANDER: Yes.
Two years' work.
Everything that we've done here
will all be for nothing.
CAIRNCROSS: There are 500 civilians in that convoy.
Women...
children.
We're about to let them die.
TURING: Our job i-is
not to save one passenger convoy, it is to win
-the war. -Our job was to crack Enigma.
We've done that.
Now for the hard part.
-Keeping it a secret. -PETER: Carlisle.
What?
The convoy you're about to... it's, uh...
The HMS Carlisle is one of the ships.
We can't act on every piece of intelligence.
So fine, we won't.
Just this one.
Peter, what's the matter with you?
My-my brother's...
well, he's on the Carlisle.
A gunnery ensign.
(sighs) I'm...
I'm so sorry.
Who the hell do you think you are?
This... this is my brother.
He's my big brother, all right, and you have
a few minutes to call off his murder.
We can't.
CAIRNCROSS: He's right.
Alan.
Joan.
Hugh.
John.
(crying): Please, I...
The-the Germans, they won't get suspicious
just because we stop one attack.
No one will know. (pants)
I'm asking you...
as your friend.
Please.
I'm so sorry.
You're not God, Alan-- you don't get to decide
who lives and who dies.
Yes, we do.
Why?
Because no one else can.
-♪ ♪ -(alarm blaring)
♪ ♪
♪ ♪
Why are you telling me this?
We need your help to keep this a secret from...
Admiralty, Army, RAF.
Uh, no one can know we broke Enigma.
Not even Denniston.
Who's in the process of having you fired.
You can take care of that.
While we develop a system to help you determine
how much intelligence
to act on-- which a-attacks to stop,
which to let through.
Statistical analysis.
The minimal number of actions
it would take for us to win the war...
but the maximum number we can take
before the Germans get suspicious.
And you're going to trust all this to statistics?
-To maths? -Correct.
And then MI6 can come up with the lies
that we tell everybody else.
You'll need a believable alternative source for all
-the pieces of information you use. -A false story
so that we can explain how we got our information
that has nothing to do with Enigma.
And then you can leak those stories to the, uh, the Germans.
And then to our own military.
Maintain a conspiracy of lies
at the highest levels of government.
Sounds right up my alley.
Alan, I so rarely have cause to say this,
but you are exactly the man I always hoped you would be.
TURING (voice-over): They code-named it "Ultra."
It became the largest store of military intelligence
in, uh... the history of the world.
(whirring, rhythmic clacking)
(whirring, rhythmic clacking stop)
It was like having a tap on Himmler's intercom.
I-E-O...
(voice-over): Secrecy became the primary concern,
and for some reason, they... they trusted me.
Peter... do you have the, uh,
the-the 630 decryp...
TURING (voice-over): ...it's a Beale cipher
encrypted with a phrase from a book or...
ALEXANDER (voice-over): "Ask, and it will be given to you;
seek and you will find." Matthew 7:7.
That was the key.
Peter will come around eventually.
Jack.
Could you give Alan and me a moment, please?
The Soviets and us,
we're on the same side.
What I'm doing will help Britain.
I-I have to tell Denniston.
No, you don't.
Because if you tell him my secret...
I'll tell him yours.
Do you know what they do to homosexuals?
You'll never be able to work again,
never be able to teach.
Your precious machine...
I doubt you'll ever see him again.
(phone line ringing)
TURING: Hello. Can I... can I, um,
speak to Stewart Menzies, please? It's urgent.
FEMALE OPERATOR: One moment, please.
Hello. Menzies.
TURING (voice-over): Some advice about keeping secrets.
It's a lot easier if you don't know them in the first place.
Were they steaming my letters, tapping my telephone?
Trailing my nervous walks?
You know, I...
I never did find out.
Joan?
Joan?
What's...
Uh...
where's Joan?
Military prison.
What have you done?
Decoded Enigma intercepts. I found a pile of them
-in the bedside table. -No, no. I-I gave those to her
over a year ago when I was trying to figure out
-a link between... -I'm sure you did.
Denniston's been looking for a Soviet spy.
He's been looking inside Hut 8.
I know who the spy is.
It's not Joan. It's...
it's Cairncross.
I-I found the Beale cipher,
the Bible.
God, I wish you'd been a spy.
You'd be so much better at this than he is.
You knew it was him?
Of course I bloody knew.
I knew before he came to Bletchley.
Why do you think I had him placed here?
But we have an Enigma machine.
DENNISTON: Yeah, Polish Intelligence...
TURING (voice-over): You-you placed
a... a Soviet agent at Bletchley Park?
It's really quite useful to be able
to leak whatever we want to Stalin.
MENZIES (voice-over): Churchill's too damn paranoid.
He won't share a shred of intelligence
with the Soviets.
Not even information that will help them against the Germans.
(sighs): There's...
so much secrecy.
Cairncross has no idea we know, of course.
He's really not the brightest bulb.
Which is why I need your help.
I want to know what to leak to John,
what to feed to the Soviets,
as well as the British.
(softly): I... I'm not a spy.
I'm... I'm just a mathematician.
I know a lot of spies, Alan.
You've got more secrets than the best of them.
You... you have to promise me that you will release Joan.
Yes, Joan's at the market.
She's gonna be back in an hour. I lied.
I better hold on to these.
If anybody finds out about them,
prison will be the least of her worries.
Oh, Alan...
we're gonna have such a wonderful war together.
TURING (voice-over): I need you to leave Bletchley.
-What? -It's Menzies. I don't trust him.
-TURING: It's not safe here. -Do you think it's any safer
-anywhere else? -You need to get away.
You need to get very far away from me.
Alan, what's happened?
We can't be engaged anymore.
You... your parents need to take you back
and find you a husband elsewhere.
What's wrong with you?
I have something, uh, uh, to tell you.
I'm...
I'm a homosexual.
All right.
No, no. M-Men, Joan...
uh, not women.
-So what? -Well,
I-I just told you.
So what?
I had my suspicions; I always did.
But we're not like other people.
We love each other in our own way,
and we can have the life together that we want.
You-you... you won't be the perfect husband.
(exhales) Well, I can promise you,
I have no intention of being the perfect wife.
I'll not be... fixing your lamb all day
while you come home from the office.
I'll work.
You'll work.
And we'll have each other's company.
We'll have each other's minds.
(exhales) That sounds like a better marriage than most.
Because I care for you.
And you care for me.
And we understand one another more than...
more than anyone else ever has.
I don't.
-What? -Care for you.
I never did.
I-I just needed you to break Enigma.
I've done that now, so... so you can go.
I'm not going anywhere.
I've spent entirely too much of my life
worried about what you think of me,
or what my parents think of me,
or the boys in Hut 8 or the girls in Hut 3.
And do you know what? I'm done.
This is the most important work I will ever do,
and no one is going to stop me.
Least of all, you.
You know what, they were right.
Peter, Hugh, John.
You really are a monster.
The war dragged on for two more...
solitary years...
and every day we performed
our blood-soaked calculus.
Every day we decided who lived and who died.
Every day we...
helped the Allies to victories, and nobody knew.
-(gunfire) -Stalingrad.
The Ardenne.
The invasion of Normandy.
All victories that would not have been possible
without the intelligence that we supplied.
And people...
talk about the war as this epic battle between, um...
civilizations...
freedom versus tyranny,
democracy versus Nazism,
armies of millions
bleeding into the ground,
fleets of ships weighing down the oceans,
planes dropping bombs from the sky
until they obliterated the sun itself...
The war wasn't like that for us.
For us, it was just...
...half a dozen crossword enthusiasts
in a tiny village in the South of England.
WINSTON CHURCHILL: This is...
your victory.
-(crowd cheering) -Victory...
of the cause of freedom
in every land.
PRESIDENT TRUMAN: This is a solemn but glorious hour.
I wish that Franklin D. Roosevelt
had lived to see this day.
TURING: Was I God?
No. Because...
God didn't win the war.
We did.
ALEXANDER: So, what happens now?
Is it... back to university for us, I suppose?
Yes, pretty much.
But you've one thing left to do
before your service to your government
-in concluded. -What's that?
Burn everything.
-Burn? Why? -You were told when you started
this was a top-secret program-- did you think we were joking?
-But the war is over. -TURING: This war is.
But there'll be others.
And we know how to break a code
that everybody else believes is unbreakable.
MENZIES: Precisely.
Tear it down. Light it up.
Sweep away the ashes.
None of you have ever met before.
None of you have ever even heard
the word Enigma.
Have a safe trip home.
MENZIES: Behave. With a bit of luck, you'll never have
to see me or one another again for the rest of your lives.
That's unbelievable.
(sighs): Now, Detective,
you get to judge.
So, tell me...
what am I?
Mm, am I...
a machine?
Am I a person?
Am I a war hero?
Am I a criminal?
I can't judge you.
Well, then...
...you're no help to me at all.
-(knocking) -HEADMASTER (voice-over): Come in.
You wanted to see me, sir?
Turing. Sit down.
Something the matter?
You and Christopher Morcom are quite close.
I wouldn't say that.
Well, your mathematics teacher
says the two of you are positively inseparable.
We're the best students in the class.
He caught you passing notes the other day.
Cryptography, to pass the time. The class is too simple.
You and your friend solve maths problems during maths class
because the maths class is too dull?
He's not my friend.
Well, I'm told he's your only friend.
Who said that?
Something's come up concerning Morcom.
Why am I here?
Christopher is dead.
I don't understand.
His mother sent word this morning.
The family were on holiday, you see.
I don't understand.
Well, he had bovine tuberculosis,
as I'm sure he told you.
So this won't come as a shock, but...
still, all the same,
I'm sorry.
You're mistaken.
Did he not tell you?
Well, he's been sick for a long time.
He knew this was coming soon.
But he had a stiff upper lip about it.
Good lad.
-Are you all right, Turing? -Yes. Of course.
Like I said, I didn't know him very well.
Ah. I see.
Very well.
May I leave, Headmaster?
Congratulations, sir.
Sorry.
I would have come.
I would have testified.
And what would you have said, that I, uh...
I wasn't a homosexual.
Alan... this is serious.
They could send you to jail.
Damn it.
Your hands. You're twitching.
No-no, I'm not.
-Alan. -Uh...
It's the medication.
The medication?
Uh, well, the judge gave me, um, a choice--
uh, ei-either two years in prison
or... ho-hormonal therapy.
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
Yes, yes, that's right.
Chemical castration.
Um, to, uh, to cure me of my, um...
(chuckles): homosexual predilections.
Well, of course I chose that.
I mean, I... couldn't...
work in prison, and, uh...
All right.
Now, I-I'm going to speak to your doctors.
-I'm going to speak to your lawyers. -I'm-I'm fine.
-Please let me help you. -No, I, uh, don't need your help,
thank you.
Alan, you do not have to do this alone.
I'm not alone.
Never have been.
Christopher's become so smart.
If-if I don't continue my treatment,
then they'll, um...
...they'll take him away from me.
You...
(crying): You-you can't let them do that. You can't.
You... you can't let them leave me alone.
(sobbing): I don't... I don't want to be alone.
-I don't want to be alone. -All ri... all right, all right.
All right.
It's all right. Come and sit down.
It's all right.
Come and sit down.
-(Turing panting) -It's all right.
Oh, well, that's a...
(laughs) that's a much nicer ring
-than the one I-I made you. -(Joan laughs softly)
Yes. His name's Jock.
He's an Army man,
if you can believe it.
-We work together. -(Turing laughs)
Why don't we do a crossword puzzle.
It'll only take us five minutes.
Or, in your case, six.
There.
Uh...
Uh...
Uh, p... perhaps later.
Yes, of course.
You-you got what you wanted, didn't you?
Work, a husband.
Normal life.
No one normal could have done that.
Do you know, this morning...
(sighs) I was on a train
that went through a city that wouldn't exist
if it wasn't for you.
I bought a ticket from a man
who would likely be dead if it wasn't for you.
I read up
on my work...
a whole field of scientific inquiry
that only exists because of you.
Now, if you wish you could have been normal...
I can promise you I do not.
The world is an infinitely better place
precisely because you weren't.
Do you...
do you really think that?
I think...
that sometimes it is the people
who no one imagines anything of
who do the things
that no one can imagine.
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