
Dougray Scott, Saffron Burrows
and Michael Apted |
If new World
War II code-breaking film Enigma is criticised for its
historical inaccuracies, no-one can say that the film-makers
did not try.
Tom Stoppard,
who wrote the |
| screenplay,
got so immersed in the history of Bletchley Park that he even
worked out how to crack the German Enigma code that was
deciphered there. |
Actor Dougray Scott, who plays the
mathematical genius who breaks the code, spent five months researching
the project and learned how to take an Enigma machine apart and put it
back together again, while all the main actors talked to surviving
Bletchley workers.
Director Michael Apted got tuition
from a Cambridge maths professor so he could understand how the code
machines worked, and actors were driven by Mick Jagger to Bletchley
Park - now a museum - last year.
The Rolling Stones frontman's film
company is behind the big screen story, adapted from Robert Harris's
novel.
Although the characters are
fictional, the setting is very real and work done there is said to
have shortened the war by two years.
Apted says he was at pains to get the
details of Bletchley Park and what went on there right - unlike some
Hollywood war films that have simplified or distorted the stories.
"Trying to get a
balance between the detective, thriller, human side of it, and the
cerebral side of it - that was the struggle of the script," he
says.
He had to "calm Stoppard down a bit"
when the screenplay writer wanted to include all his intricate
knowledge of how the code machines worked.
"When I read the first draft, it made my
eyes water," Apted says.
"I loved it, but I didn't understand a
word of it. It was terrifying."
There is a love story and a whodunit that
Apted wanted to combine with the wider plot of cracking the Nazi
codes.
"The whole idea... was to try to get a
balance between the technicalities of it and the humanity of it,"
he says.
|
It is rumoured that Dougray
Scott read Harris's novel 10 times - as well as meeting
original Bletchley workers, professors and borrowing
Jagger's Enigma machine so he could work out how to use it.
"I read it a lot
because it was a wonderful source of research for the
character," Scott says.
His character is a
brilliant but unstable Cambridge student who gets one girl
(the plain Hester, played by Kate Winslet) after losing
another (the glamorous Claire, played by Saffron Burrows).
|

Northam: "Spiffingly
over-the-top" as intelligence officer
|
"Sometimes novels are very
helpful that a film is based on, sometimes they're not."
Scott is a fast-rising star who
has been tipped as the next James Bond - and he has refused to rule
the possibility out.
Another of the film's strong, mainly young cast is Jeremy Northam,
who plays the over-the-top British intelligence officer Wigram, who
provides the film's funniest moments.
"The thing that always appealed to me about this script was
that it... pits the personal crisis against the global crisis and
connects the two," he says.
That makes it more relevant today than anyone involved in the film
had expected - and Northam says cinema-goers may now be able to relate
better to Enigma than they would have done.
Film-makers do not expect the film to hit any raw nerves after the
US terror attacks - and despite hitting UK screens on 28 September, it
does not open in America until February.
Ability
Kate Winslet was notable by her absence at the film's UK première
on Monday after dropping out following the break-up of her marriage.
But Apted praised her ability to play a character who "let the
glamour to be inside her rather than outside her".
"One of the problems with the film is that it is kind of
cerebral, it is kind of difficult to follow, and you need this kind of
emotional area of the film to keep it alive," he says.
"Kate and Dougray brought an enormous amount to that love
story."
© 2001 BBC News
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