Saffron Burrows Movie:

Enigma Special Edition



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Saffron Burrows Movie:
Enigma Special Edition



Movie
Enigma (Special Edition)
Enigma (Special Edition)
List Price: $24.95Label: Sony Pictures

Salesrank: 76558

Released: September 16, 2003
Our Price: $17.92
Used Price: $14.96
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • Anamorphic
  • Closed-captioned
  • Color
  • Dolby
  • DVD
  • Special Edition
  • Subtitled
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • Dougray Scott
  • Kate Winslet
  • Saffron Burrows
  • Jeremy Northam
  • Nikolaj Coster-Waldau
  • Editorial Review:
    In this twisty thriller about Britain's secret code breakers during World War II, Tom Jericho (Dougray Scott, best known as the villain of Mission Impossible 2) devised the means to break the Nazi Enigma code, but a relationship gone awry sent the erratic genius into a breakdown. Now the Nazis have switched their codes, just as huge convoys of ships with crucial supplies are crossing the Atlantic--and squads of U-boats are hunting for them. With the help of his former lover's roommate (the ever-adorable Kate Winslet) and under the watchful eye of a suspicious intelligence officer (Jeremy Northam), Jericho struggles to figure out if there's a spy among the code breakers as they fight to crack the new Nazi ciphers. The plot gets extremely tricky but the excellent cast keeps you engaged. Written by the extremely tricky playwright-screenwriter Tom Stoppard (who cowrote Shakespeare in Love and Brazil). --Bret Fetzer

    Enigma (Special Edition) Reviews:
    ENIGMA - not Special Edition! 4 Star Review
    2009-11-01 - I ordered the Special Edition. The vendor sent me the regular edition. I retuned it and the vendor gave me a full refund.

    Unique Spy Story Set in Bletchley Park 5 Star Review
    2009-08-17 - "Enigma" as a spy story is as the title of my post states, truly unique. This is because the story's protagonist, Tom Jericho (played by Dougray Scott) is not a World War II version of James Bond engaging in gunfights with the Gestapo and downing vodka martinis and bedding starlets in his down time. No, Jericho is a cryptanalyst, a codebreaker, and I don't think such an individual has ever been the hero of a suspenseful tale such as this. And the spy story is set at Bletchley Park, the epicenter of the British codebreaking effort during World War II. Moreover, Jericho is played as a brilliant but shy and fragile man who fell so head over heels in love with the mysterious Claire (played by Saffron Burrows) that he had a nervous breakdown when she abruptly dumped him.



    Although the spy story is fictional, the plot (based on the novel "Enigma" is deeply rooted in the actual history of the effort to break into the Germans' codes. Before Jericho had his collapse, the British were able to read the Germans' U-Boat code, but shortly after he was packed off to Oxbridge to recuperate, the Germans abruptly changed their codes...almost as if someone had warned them that they were being broken.

    It's Jericho's official task to help break "Shark," the U-Boat code, before Allied convoys sail into harm's way. But Jericho has another personal mission, to find out what happened to Claire, who has mysteriously disappeared...leaving behind clues that she was involved with whoever might have warned the Germans that their codes were being broken.

    To use a British expression, the story is "ripping good stuff." As someone who has read the novel as well, the movie does an excellent job bringing the story to life. Scott possibly is a little too good looking to play the anxious, obsessive academic that is Tom Jericho, but that's a minor quibble. Kate Winslet does a very fine job as Hester Wallace, Claire's roommate. As one of her fans, I only wish she had more screen time. This being said, I was pleased that the filmmakers upgraded her relationship to Jericho in the novel from being just a helpmate to being an eventual love interest herself (and they made clever use of the fact that Kate Winslet was pregnant during the film and was beginning to show...concealing it until the end of story where we are left with the clear impression that Tom and Hester had gotten married and were expecting their first child by the time the story ended.

    Enigma

    So to sum up: "Enigma" is a great movie. The cast and story is excellent and the production values are superb (they even filmed it on the grounds of Bletchley). But it does require the viewer to think a bit.

    Enigma 4 Star Review
    2009-08-14 - Based on a true story, apparently, the plot is a bit twisted, but the acting is great. An exciting WWII yarn that could have been shorter, but then that's true of many films. It's a film I want to see again, in any case, partly to help figure out all the plot elements that weren't clear.

    Enigma 5 Star Review
    2009-04-04 - This film is a valuable addition to anyone building a library of excellent acting, writing, and directing. Its historical setting, interesting characters, and believable conclusion results in a film worth seeing over and over again. It was good to know how many people found "Enigma" to be a great contribution to film archives.

    2 stars out of 4 2 Star Review
    2008-12-18 - The Bottom Line:

    A rather tepid thriller that wastes a quietly interesting performance by Kate Winslet, Enigma follows a bored Dougray Scott through a pedestrian series of events--look elsewhere.










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