First let’s have a look at the trailer
Hmmm the movie certainly looks good (sets, costumes etc) and the main actors are all well known (Cumberbatch, Knightley, Strong) but the problems start to add up…
Ehm, I don’t know what greatest
encryption device means but the military Enigma was not revolutionary in
any sense. It was simply a clever modification of the commercial version, sold
to companies and countries around the world. In fact the Brits had their own
Enigma version called Typex.
As for the second part the Germans use it
for all communications it’s also wrong. The Germans used hand ciphers for
low level messages, the Enigma at regiment/division level and also by naval
units and airbases and cipher teleprinters for communications between higher
commands. So the Enigma did not cover all
German communications.
2). At 0:25 ‘everyone
thinks Enigma is unbreakable’3). At 1:15 ‘I’m designing a machine that will allow us to break every message, every day, instantly’.
Bullshit. Sorry but there’s no other way to put it…I
understand that some parts of Enigma theory need to be ‘dumbed’ down so that
the general audience will enjoy the movie but come on! The bombe devices couldn’t break every message, every day and they
certainly couldn’t do it instantly. Running ‘cribs’ took time and under the
best conditions solutions could be achieved in several hours. Under the worst
it could take days, weeks or possibly never…
Even when the Enigma settings were retrieved it wasn’t
possible to read the message instantly. Someone had to type the message on the
specially modified Typex devices and write down the deciphered text. Without
good ‘cribs’ the bombes didn’t work. Simple as that.
3). At 1:20: ‘They had to create the world’s first
computer’
……….The bombes were not general purpose computing devices. Apparently
the producers of the film were thinking of the ‘Collosus’ but this
was a different device, built by different people, for the solution of a
different cipher machine, NOT the Enigma.
4). At 1:29: Fake rivalry between Turing and Denniston.
Historically inaccurate but I guess they had to insert some
kind of conflict in the story for the general audience.
5). At 1:50: ‘The Navy
thinks that one of us is a Soviet spy’.
Again historically inaccurate. There was a Soviet spy at
Bletchley Park, John
Cairncross but he was not a cryptanalyst and he didn’t work with Turing.
So in only 2 and a half minutes we’ve seen some serious
mistakes. On the other hand maybe I’m nitpicking here. So how does the actual movie hold up? We’ll
get to that in the next post.
Perhaps we should tolerate minor deviations from strict accuracy in a movie created for wider public entertainment?
ReplyDeleteRelative improvements could be:
‘It’s one of the greatest encryption devices in history and the Germans use it for all important communications’.
‘everyone we've consulted thinks Enigma is unbreakable’
‘I’m designing a machine that will allow us to break nearly every message, most days, almost instantly’.