Yes, they are doing great. Actually, they already did a film together: It was Atonement, and if I remember it correctly it was just where Cumberbatch has been chosen to play Sherlock ;-)
Cielosta Well, disgusting in a convincing way as he IS a brilliant actor..... And I personally wouldn't have minded if these two would have had some private interactions.... But they seem to be very happy now with their chosen partners, family founding and all that. So all is well ;-)i
By far the best interview i’ve ever watched. I can feel the joy in the room and Benedict and Keira’s chemistry feels so natural. It’s a refreshing breathe of fresh air to watch one that doesn’t consist of fake laughs and actors merely sitting in their chairs awkwardly
So adorable. I watched The Imitation Game in a neighborhood theater in Louisville, Kentucky, having studied Alan Turing's life and work all my own life, since childhood. I have read Andrew Hodges' standard biography on Turing, upon which the movie was based, many times, and have visited Bletchley Park. I loved Derek Jacobi as Alan Turing in the BBC production of the stage play "Breaking the Code", so I was already prepared for a biopic that would surely take narrative license. What I saw was a packed theater of 300 people who were completely riveted by the filmmakers' attempt to tell them the story of Alan Turing. I could probably speak without notes for two hours on the inaccuracies of the movie as compared with the known facts of Alan (and Joan Clarke's) lives, but I am profoundly grateful that this film was made. Like "Breaking the Code" before it, may Alan's life continue to inspire new works of art and drama, to the end of time. If anyone reading this is not a computer geek, I just have to say that to those of us who love knowing about computers, and how they came to be, Alan Turing was the equivalent of Michelangelo, or Bertolt Brecht, or Ludwig Van Beethoven. Every computer that can ever be made is governed by principles he discovered, and, on top of that, he did so much more for humanity.
The “ACM A. M. Turing Award” (named after Alan Turing) is an annual prize given by the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) for contributions of lasting and major technical importance to computer science.
One of the most historically incredible movies. Alan Turing did not crack the Enigma code first. Because this code has long been cracked by Polish cryptologists. For the first time, the cryptograms encoded with Enigma were deciphered by Polish cryptologists in December 1932 at the Saski Palace in Warsaw, which housed the Cipher Bureau of the Second Department of the Polish Army General Staff. The work of Poles, mainly Marian Rejewski, Jerzy Różycki and Henryk Zygalski, allowed for further work on decoding the ciphers. Around October 1938, Rejewski developed another electromechanical device, called a crypto bomb, whose task was to automatically break the Enigma code. Despite modest funds, the team of Polish cryptologists continued to work on Enigma, perfecting mathematical methods of decryption and still deciphering German correspondence. Shortly thereafter, in Great Britain, in the decryption center in Bletchley Park under the direction of Alan Turing and based on Polish materials, work began on the decryption of Enigma using extensive and modified cryptology bombs.