Movie |
Submarine | Lover (female)
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6.4/10
IMDbBest British Actress | 2002 | Kate
2001 | Michael
Expos | 2003
Best British Film | 2002
Best Actress | 2001 | Kate
Best Director | 2001 | Michael
Best Technical Achievement | 2001 | John
Best Drama Soundtrack | 2001 | John
Box Office Collection 15,705,007 USD
Mick Jagger owned an original four-rotor Enigma encoding machine which he loaned to the film for historical accuracy in constructing props.
Kate Winslet was pregnant with her daughter during the filming of this movie, so the schedule was arranged around that, and at the end of the movie when her character is pregnant, she didn't need a prosthetic.
When Hester Wallace decodes the long list of Polish names the camera zooms in on the name "Zygalski". Henryk Zygalski was a Polish mathematician who helped to break Enigma.
When he's tapping on the desk with a pencil, Tom is spelling out "Claire" in Morse code.
One of the motivations behind making this movie was the indignation of many British World War 2 veterans (and civilians) over the movie U-571 (2000), in which the capture of the Enigma was shown to be done by American navy officers (despite the fact that the makers of that movie had indicated their movie to be a work of fiction and no accurate portrayal of the events leading to the capture of the Enigma).
"Mermagen: D'you know, without your glasses, you don't look half bad. Hester Wallace: Do you know, without my glasses, nor do you?"
"Tom Jericho: I like numbers, because with numbers, truth and beauty are the same thing."