[math-fun] "The Imitation Game" -- review
Yesterday, I was dragged, kicking & screaming, to The Imitation Game by my wife. It was extremely painful to watch this movie, and I've been having a hard to trying to figure out why. Perhaps the best analogy would be a movie about Mozart by someone who was born deaf. No matter what anyone told this deaf movie-maker about Mozart's music, it would always be completely foreign hearsay, and could never convey Mozart's musical genius to someone who does know & love Mozart's work. ("Amadeus", of course, is the complete opposite, as it was made by people who really, really enjoyed & understood Mozart's music.) Turing's life was totally tied up in his head, and he must have spent an hour or two running every day as his form of mental yoga (his marathon running times were world-class, and you can't keep that level of fitness without running at least one or two hours per day). Although the movie shows him running, the movie completely misunderstands the point of his running -- it is time alone when he can contemplate & work out some of his theories. "Aspies" like Turing find too much external stimulation painful and distracting, so Turing's marathon runs were a welcome respite against this unwanted external stimulation. "I have such a stressful job that the only way I can get it out of my mind is by running hard; its the only way I can get some release." Perhaps a key point that The Imitation Game wanted to make, but really screwed up, was the fact that mathematicians like Turing were so highly motivated by the challenge of the puzzle, that they wouldn't have worked any faster (or any slower) on solving the Enigma problem knowing that many, many lives were at stake. It isn't because Turing didn't care about people's lives; it's just that whether he cared or not wouldn't make any difference in how he attacked the problem. "Caring" in this context simply became another distraction to be ignored. The Cairncross character is as completely gratuitous as it is unhistorical; there is no evidence that Cairncross ever even met Turing, much less worked with him. It is sad that The Imitation Game has to stoop to such low depths to find intrigue; Turing never made any secret about his homosexuality, and as a result, any attempt to blackmail him by threatening to out him would not have worked. Turing's actual real life is far more interesting than the stereotyped "Big Bang Theory"/"Bones" Yet Another Aspie Geek (YAAG) in popular media-type character. Unfortunately, The Imitation Game never gets beyond these stereotypes. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asperger_syndrome_in_popular_culture Some interesting things about Turing that I hadn't realized: * Turing did a dissertation on the Central Limit Theorem * Turing himself invented Turing computability with "oracles" * Turing worked on encrypted speech technology * Turing rode his bicycle 60 miles to the Sherborne School when he was 13 * Turing _rowed_ instead of running while at Cambridge * Turing's best marathon time would have placed him perhaps 15th in the 1948 Olympics * Turing invented LU matrix decomposition (!!) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Turing http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/Extras/Turing_running.html
Henry Baker wrote: Perhaps the best analogy would be a movie about Mozart by someone who was
born deaf. No matter what anyone told this deaf movie-maker about Mozart's music, it would always be completely foreign hearsay, and could never convey Mozart's musical genius to someone who does know & love Mozart's work. ("Amadeus", of course, is the complete opposite, as it was made by people who really, really enjoyed & understood Mozart's music.)
I actually remember having the opposite impression at one point in the movie, where Mozart's genius is supposedly demonstrated by the way he improves a piece of Salieri's. The way he did this was by morphing one of Salieri's melodies into one of his own more recognizable themes (I forget which) --- as if musical genius were a matter of inventing catchy tunes. If such an interaction had really taken place between Mozart and Salieri, I'm guessing Mozart would have left Salieri's musical idea mostly intact and made subtle modifications to enhance it. But then most movie-goers would have been deprived of the impression that they were hearing the difference between a Salieri and a Mozart. Jim Propp
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Henry Baker -
James Propp