• Sachin Chatte
    Sachin Chatte
    The Navhind Times

    8

    To put it plainly, The Imitation Game is one of the finest films seen on the big screen in recent times. Being a biopic, it works in the framework of a commercial enterprise but within that, it is as good as it gets. Norwegian director Morten Tyldum has got a terrific subject on hand but as we have seen before, there’s many a slip between the cup and the lip, no matter how good the raw material, it still has to translate into a good film on the big screen. But Tyldum has hardly put a foot wrong and The Imitation Game has the makings of a classic.

  • …one can’t help get the feeling that the film doesn’t seem to want to go into what Turing really was like deep, deep inside. It delves into plenty of facts, yes, but it could have been so much more powerful if Tyldum hadn’t chosen to make a simple story seem like it is a complex tale. The deepest, darkest layers of Alan Turing, it seems, are destined to be an enigma, much like the man himself. This film on his life, though, is a well-crafted, gripping film.

  • Turing’s story is indeed hard to imagine. Thanks to Cumberbatch’s committed performance, a lot more people will know it.

  • Shalini Langer
    Shalini Langer
    Indian Express

    8

    There were 159 million million million possibilities each code generated by Enigma entailed. In the normal course, it would take 20 million years to decipher. Turing’s team and his machine did that in two years, giving us what would become the modern computer, cutting the war short by an estimated two years, and saving approximately 14 million lives. But that’s not what this film is about, making it better than other films on the Enigma. It is about the one life it couldn’t.

  • Raja Sen
    Raja Sen
    Rediff

    5

    If you do end up watching The Imitation Game and rightfully applauding its performances, do so with gusto but do also look up the facts of Turing’s life.

    As for this critic who expected more from yet another obvious biopic-shaped piece of Oscar-bait, well, as that feeble Floyd album sang, High Hopes.

  • Rohit Khilnani
    Rohit Khilnani
    India Today

    8

    If you need one good reason to watch The Imitation Game then watch it for an award winning performance by Benedict Cumberbatch!

  • This movie has the same unmistakable stench of disappointment and the waft of simplistic tripe that his previous movie ‘The Fifth Estate’ had. The same can also be said about director Morten Tyldum who showed so much promise in the Norwegian film ‘Headhunters’ and sold out so easily to the comforts of Hollywood.

  • Gautaman Bhaskaran
    Gautaman Bhaskaran
    Hindustan Times

    8

    Cumberbatch is a marvel to watch. The contrasts in him – comical when he is confronted with ordinary tasks like ordering food, and obsessive when it comes to work – are portrayed with powerful sensitivity. His inability to face the real world, the world outside his workplace, is almost heartrending. And Knightley is superb, a perfect match for Cumberbatch, demolishing the era’s demeaning view of a woman’s ability.

  • The Imitation Game is blessed to have a supporting cast with actors like Mark Strong who are able to rally around the hybrid of Sherlock and Turing that Cumberbatch plays. The acting and editing lift this film out of mediocrity, but just barely.

  • …a good introductory film for those who are not aware of Alan Turing and it is worth a watch. Visually with gripping metaphors along with snapshots of WWII and a colour palette that’s apt, the film captures the era and the fine nuances of artists to perfection.

  • Jaanam Dewan
    Jaanam Dewan
    BookMyShow

    8

    Benedict Cumberbatch is all kinds of incredible as the witty, arrogant, sociopath and homosexual mathematician! You’re guaranteed to have an unbelievably great time while watching The Imitation Game. It’s beyond any shadow of a doubt that this film is going to bag multiple awards at the Oscars this year. Watch a beautiful and impeccable story unfold before your eyes!

  • Joan’s warmth and intellect both complements and is a counterfoil to Turing’s personality. While his sexuality did cause him problems in his native England, this is not a tale of tragedy but rather, one of triumph. And as Turing was told as a child: “Sometimes, it is the people whom no one imagines anything of who do the things that no one can imagine.” An affecting tale of an extraordinary human being.