|  | Squid:  |  | The British WWII intelligence and codebreaking 
                  efforts housed at Bletchley Park outside of London is the setting 
                  for a disappearance/murder mystery. The Nazi military were using 
                  sophisticated machines, code-named Enigma, to send messages 
                  to troops in the field and especially to ships and U-boats at 
                  sea. In Bletchley Park were assembled some of the finest mathematical 
                  geniuses of the day devoted to breaking the Enigma code. When 
                  the code was broken, the Allies had a huge advantage over the 
                  Nazis, especially considering that the Nazis still considered 
                  the code unbroken. Okay, some plot. Set against the above background, Dougray 
                  Scott plays Tom Jericho, a talented mathematician called to 
                  Bletchley Park. He helped break Shark, an Enigma refinement. 
                  He falls for Claire (played by Saffron Burrows), an attractive 
                  classifier and interceptor of Nazi messages, who also works 
                  at Bletchley Park. Tom goes off the deep end when Claire dumps 
                  him, and is sent back to Cambridge to recuperate. As the movie 
                  opens, he is being called back to Bletchley Park because the 
                  Nazis have changed the Shark code. However, Tom’s recall is 
                  done over the objections of some of the supervisors. When Tom 
                  arrives, he finds that Claire has gone missing. He enlists the 
                  help of Hester (Kate Winslet), Claire’s roommate and fellow 
                  classifier/interceptor, and the two begin to do some amateur 
                  sleuthing to find Claire. Meanwhile, a secret service investigator 
                  begins asking Tom uncomfortable questions about the possibility 
                  of Tom being an enemy agent, or possibly knowing one. It really winds up being a movie that respects the ability 
                  of the audience to follow a plot and gives them good acting 
                  performances to watch while it does so. It’s not your typical 
                  war movie with huge gasoline explosions, heroic speeches, and 
                  hopeless romances. It’s good war/spy/intrigue, and not a little 
                  bit of mathematics and extreme cleverness thrown in for good 
                  measure. Here’s an analogy. Equations : Squid's taste in movies 
                  :: Guitar distortion : PostLibyan's taste in music. You can 
                  never really have enough, but even a little bit can really improve 
                  the overall effect. This movie is in pretty limited release, considering that here 
                  in Atlanta we’re just getting it and (as indicated above) it’s 
                  a 2001 release. I don’t think it would lose much on the small 
                  screen, but if you are lucky enough to know someone with a good-sized 
                  television, or better yet someone who lives in an apartment 
                  complex with a clubhouse that has a big projection television 
                  set and theater-style seats, I’d recommend seeing it there. |  |