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Member's Forum The Best (and Worst) films about Engineers?
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The Best (and Worst) films about Engineers?

jlucas
jlucas over 9 years ago

Given that engineers are responsible for many of the most exciting innovations in human history, it's little wonder that they're often featured in Hollywood movies. Whether it's as the obligatory 'brains' in an action/adventure ensemble or as the subject of an Oscar-baiting biopic, engineers are a common sight on celluloid.

 

The latest addition to the canon of films explicitly focused on engineering is 'Hidden Figures', a forthcoming biopic of the pioneering physicist, space scientist, and mathematician Katherine Johnson who, along with her colleagues Dorothy Vaughan and Mary Jackson, made a crucial but often overlooked contribution to the American 'Space Race' of the 1960s.

 

The problem with putting engineering on film is that while it can be an exciting job, it isn't always a particularly glamorous one. This means that Hollywood productions often have to take major creative liberties in order to make engineering stories interesting and accessible to the casual viewer - occasionally simplifying or wildly distorting the scientific work that goes behind it.

 

For this week's discussion, we'd like to hear about some of your favourite - and least favourite - films about or heavily featuring engineers. Which films do you believe do the best job of accurately portraying the profession? And which ones got it painfully wrong?

 

To kick things off, here are five of the most celebrated films that feature engineering in some form.

 

A Beautiful Mind (2001)

 

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Russell Crowe was nominated for an Oscar for his portrayal of mathematician and Nobel Laureate John Nash in this 2001 biopic from director Ron Howard. The film was widely praised, although drew some criticism for making major divergences from the facts of Nash's life, and watering down the discussions of Nash's pioneering work.

 

Apollo 13 (1995)

 

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One of the most iconic and oft-quoted movies of all time, Apollo 13 manages the tricky balancing act of depicting the heroism of the real-life engineers who safely brought the crew of the ill-fated Apollo 13 mission back to earth, without sacrificing the technical accuracy behind the story .

 

October Sky (1999)

 

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An early breakthrough role for actor Jake Gyllenhaal, October Sky is based on the bestselling autobiographical novel of the same name by former NASA engineer Homer Hickam. Although only a modest success on release, it has been praised for its inspiring story and positive depiction of a bright young science student.

 

Contact (1997)

 

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Based on the 1985 novel by Carl Sagan, Contact presents a more thoughtful and philosophical approach to the science fiction genre, starring Jodie Foster as a SETI scientist who discovers a signal that appears to be a message from an extraterrestrial being.

 

The Imitation Game (2014)

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Although criticised in some quarters for the questionable accuracy of its story, this blockbuster based on the life and work of Alan Turing - who decrypted German intelligence codes for the British government during World War II - was a major critical and commercial success, with star Benedict Cumberbatch particularly praised for his depiction of the tormented cryptanalyst, who tragically took his own life in 1954 after undergoing chemical castration as a result of his homosexuality.

 

Have we missed your favourite film about engineers? What about the ones that get it spectacularly wrong? Let us know your picks for the best and worst engineering movies in the comments section below.

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Top Replies

  • cstanton
    cstanton over 9 years ago +2
    C'mon, no Big Hero 6? it's basically a film about a workshop/hackerspace/robots. Keeping with the Engineering super hero theme, what about Iron Man? I, too, would like to build an exosuit in a cave from…
  • phoenixcomm
    phoenixcomm over 9 years ago in reply to bwelsby +2
    yeper.. I have a copy and can send it if you wish... BTW corny yes, stupid or worst no way. I have about 90 films of this genre, which I call Classic SyFi, then about another 90 films of SyFi which really…
  • phoenixcomm
    phoenixcomm over 9 years ago in reply to shabaz +2
    What can you say I watch a lot of TV. So here is my SciFi list and i have three toppers: Prometheus, and Deja Vu. Deja Vu is on my Terrorism list also, and the Martin. 10 Cloverfield Lane (2016).mkv 2012…
Parents
  • mcb1
    0 mcb1 over 8 years ago

    had a really nice talk with the guides at Bletchly park about "The Imitation Game"
    While they weren't happy about some aspects, they confused that if they made it, it would have been 16 hours long and bored everyone.

     

    It did result in more visitors and they have the movie props in the house.

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  • D_Hersey
    0 D_Hersey over 8 years ago in reply to mcb1

    I think Turing's explorations in morphology are almost enough for a feature film, themselves.

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  • uscdadnyc
    0 uscdadnyc over 8 years ago in reply to D_Hersey

    To DH: Although I have the DVD "The Imitation Game", I haven't time yet to watch it. What is the connection between AT & "morphology" = the branch of biology that deals with the form of living organisms, and with relationships between their structures(?) Aside from the possible conflict between AT's sexuality & the English Norms of the 1930's 40's? Did AT in the movie possibly collect Insects, small creatures and study them WRT their appendages/organs (sex organs included)? Spoiler Alerts are OK by me. Again could You and fellow comment(ers) reveal your physical (country) location? B/C for example. In the U.S. , there is Same-Sex Marriage, SSM is legal in the UK (except Northern Ireland) Like I say "Context is Everything". Being a Scientist/Engineer/Technician/Hobbyist, don't you want to lay the ground work (basis) for your findings/research/experimentation? Like in an US Patent Application, there is a "Specification" Section where the Basis of the Purposed Invention is presented. Similarly knowing country of residence, will add to the background/beliefs/theories behind a Comment(er) Posting. Get w/ the program! People. Although, admittedly I am the only person who has voiced that knowing Country of residence would be helpful.

    USCDADNYC (NY NY)

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  • D_Hersey
    0 D_Hersey over 8 years ago in reply to uscdadnyc

    image

    Turing taught us how leopards and other furry animals get their spots, how butterflies get their colorations,  and that dactylism arises from a continuous function.

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  • D_Hersey
    0 D_Hersey over 8 years ago in reply to uscdadnyc

    http://www.dna.caltech.edu/courses/cs191/paperscs191/turing.pdf

     

    http://icetcs.ru.is/SlidesTuringTalkBjarni.pdf

     

    Alan Turing's Breakthrough Biological Model Confirmed: Who Knew he was a Biologist? | Mysterious Universe

     

    Evidence found for Turing’s morphology theory | Penny Warren Recruitment

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  • uscdadnyc
    0 uscdadnyc over 8 years ago in reply to D_Hersey

    To DH: Great Posts. BTW the Flag is of what country? Could I have cut & paste the flag onto a Database/Search-Engine which would Identify the country? AAR back to AT. I guess w/ his varied interests, you would consider him a "Polymath" (Pun Intended) I guess the state of Peer-Review back in AT's time was not as it is now. Now, Better/More-Timely. They say : "You are never a Prophet in your own time". Sad. One of the references you cited said: "...In his only paper on biology, he put forward a theory of morphogenesis, explaining how identical copies of a single cell differentiate into an organism with separate structures...". Shades of (biological) STEM cells. (NOT = STEM [Science Technology Engineering Math]) Great. At least he had some validation of his non-math theories. Unlike Nobel Prize Winners like Shockley, Watson, Pauling. But remember the saying : "Where there is Smoke. There is Fire".

    USCDADNYC (NY NY USA)

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  • D_Hersey
    0 D_Hersey over 8 years ago in reply to uscdadnyc

    I was being a stinker with the flag.  It isn't a national flag.  That is the standard of the City of Chicago, Urbo en hortis.

     

    Chicago pop.: 2.7 x 10^6

    Chicagoland pop:  9.73 x 10^6

     

    We think of ourselves as the capitol of the Midwest and the jewel of Lake Michigan-Huron.  Economically we are nucleated by CBOT , CBOE and foreign and domestic large corporations.  We are largely surrounded by areas of industrial agriculture, so we do not feel terribly connected to the rest of the state, where many St Louis Cardinal fans reside. 

     

    Chicago’s Flag Is a Much Bigger Deal Than Any Other City’s Flag | Chicago magazine | The 312 August 2013

     

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_of_Chicago

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  • uscdadnyc
    0 uscdadnyc over 8 years ago in reply to D_Hersey

    Chicago. Poet Carl Sandburg called(?) Chicago, the City of Broad Shoulders. Was last in Chicago when the the (American) Football Bears won their Last Super Bowl (1985?). Too Bad we don't have direct Voice OR .mp3 play-back b/c in the US it is "Talk Like a Pirate Day". Har Har Matey!

    USCDADNYC (NY NY USA)

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  • uscdadnyc
    0 uscdadnyc over 8 years ago in reply to D_Hersey

    Chicago. Poet Carl Sandburg called(?) Chicago, the City of Broad Shoulders. Was last in Chicago when the the (American) Football Bears won their Last Super Bowl (1985?). Too Bad we don't have direct Voice OR .mp3 play-back b/c in the US it is "Talk Like a Pirate Day". Har Har Matey!

    USCDADNYC (NY NY USA)

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Children
  • D_Hersey
    0 D_Hersey over 8 years ago in reply to uscdadnyc

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_Royko said that the unofficial motto is:  "Where's mine?"

     

    "We don't want nobody nobody sent."  is a contender.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abner_J._Mikva

    https://www.amazon.com/We-Dont-Want-Nobody-Sent/dp/0253179157

     

    After the SF 49ers decrapitated the Bears in an NFC playoff, a SanFran columnist referred to Chicago as "The city of broad shoulders -- and wide butts."  Royko inveighed that a guy from SF should know better than to switch to that topic.

     

    Chicago was always a cluster of neighborhoods, like Vancouver that way.  Once she was a major producer of car parts.  There was more money in making things like transmissions here than there was in final assembly in Detroit.  The area where Indiana, Ohio and Michigan meet was crucial to the development of the car-parts industry,  In the electronics world, Thoradson transformer started here, an early electronic-parts company.  Motorola made field radios here during the war, IIRC they were pioneers of FM in this application.  Pre-war, it was a home for oscilloscope manufacturers.  In the engineering world, Enrico Fermi constructed his graphite pile at Stagg field.

     

    Culturally, Chicago was the home of Chess records, home of Willie Dixon.  Also home to Curtis Mayfield, and Jimmy McPartland.

     

    Industrially, currently, we do a lot of CNC machining and injection molding.

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