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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…
  • uscdadnyc
    0 uscdadnyc over 8 years ago in reply to Former Member

    To MB. Thx for the info. We in NYC have DVD-checkouts at our local Public Library Systems, also. I just never really considered going there. Does TCM (Turner Classic Movies) ever air ES? BTW where in Ma. are you? My old SU (Syracuse University) Roommate lives in Needham, Ma. So, I am familiar w/ the greater Boston Area. BTW no need to be Formal w/ "Mr. Yee", but that designation is shorter than...

    USCDADNYC (NY NY USA)

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

    Ed, You know I live in Fort Worth, that is Texas. And the last time I heard about we were part of the Union. And about TLPD no idea.

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

    to CH.  I will remember (from now-on) that you are Dallas-Ft. Worth. For what it is Worth. (Pun Intended) BTW now that we had a more formal Intro, what is w/ the Moniker associated w/ Cristina Harrison? Is it an accurate portrayal?.And NO, I am not shaped like a (American) Football. Not yet at least.

    WRT your Moniker if it is intended to accurately depict your actual physical Likeness, I may be as Bold as to Say: "Beauty is Skin-Deep, but Ugliness is to the Bone".LOL. Aside from Not having a Photo of me, you can verify certain aspects of my identity at www.uspto.gov. Go to OED (Office of Enrollment and Discipline). Next year we can all blog on TLPD2017 (Talk Like a Pirate Day) via Keyboard, using Pirate Jargon.

    USCDADNYC (NY NY USA)

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  • Former Member
    0 Former Member over 8 years ago in reply to uscdadnyc
    Edward, don't know about TCM as I don't have cable (believe it or not!).

     

    I had a run-in with the cable company, and they threatened to shut me

    off; said I couldn't live without cable. Well, I could! I used to be an RF

    engineer in another life and have a pretty good antenna system; get

    pretty much all of New England over-the-air broadcasts.

    I use Verizon DSL for my home internet connection.

     

    I'm in Westminster in North Central Mass; teach Computer Science
    at Fitchburg State Univ. I'm originally an Empire Stater. Grew up in
    Groton (near Ithaca), then Potsdam, Canton, Rome, finally settled
    in Albany (am a SUNY Albany graduate). I (used to) know Syracuse

    and NYC pretty well (my previous spouse was from Brooklyn).

     

     

    Hope that answers your questions.

    Take care and be well.

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  • jack.chaney56
    0 jack.chaney56 over 8 years ago in reply to Former Member

    Kudos Michael. Living without cable is a laudable attainment.  I also do the broadcast TV and (used to be DSL).  You might want to check that DSL connection to see if they haven't changed you over to UVERSE, sort of automatically, sort of without notification, sort of what you wanted, kind of operation.  I know there was a big push to get DSL out of the process by AT&T, don't know if Verizon also did the same thing.

     

    Jack

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  • uscdadnyc
    0 uscdadnyc over 8 years ago in reply to jack.chaney56

    TO JC and MB. Thx for your Post. I fortunately have Verizon FIOS for Four & a Half Years now. I still have my old Verizon Supplied DSL Modem, does MB (or JC) want it (to save on any possible DSL Modem Rental Cost)?

    USCDADNYC (NY NY USA)

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

    my picture  (not Obi-One) is a BW shot of me by my pal Jim Turner. for real private stuff I use Slack. its neet I can have a private chat + software deposit.  cool stuff.

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  • phoenixcomm
    0 phoenixcomm over 8 years ago in reply to jack.chaney56

    Man I hate DSL I now have charter cable 30mb down..:)

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  • tsustudent2016
    0 tsustudent2016 over 8 years ago

    I actually agree with you list and would like to add a couple of others such as Real Steel, and Pacific Rim.

     

    Both of them may be science fictions but you can't help but imagine how close we are to creating such things despite how impracticable some may think they are. As long as there at least one person who wants to build it, it will come to life sooner or later.

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  • youbrandon
    0 youbrandon over 8 years ago

    Falling Down is the best movie about an engineer.

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