The Imitation Game (2014) is an intelligently crafted biography about the creation of computer science and the complexity that immediately arises from such a sophisticated technology. From the very beginning of the movie, you are forced to think about the tradeoffs between national security, surveillance and transparency. This includes wartime justifications for breaches of natural rights and thinking about what decisions you would make when lives are at stake. The movie makes you think about saving the few you love or the many for the greater good of the world. The movie also explores the humanity of machines. Turing talks about the imitation game where you ask a series of questions to identify if who you are talking to is machine or human. This means he believes that machines can never be humans but are still intelligent in a different way, because machines are different than humans. At the end of the movie, you see him working on his machine and he makes a comment about how "Christopher" is getting more intelligent. Ironically machines have gotten so smart that they pass the Turing test. Not only does the movie focus on key concepts and debates about ethical use of information and technology while exploring the government power and privacy realities, but the movie even explores future topics of human machine relationships. Just a month ago a 14-year-old boy killed himself because his AI girlfriend broke up with him. Intelligent machines are more of a reality than ever before, and this film explores these relationships in an interesting way using Turing's friend's death and Interrogation at the end of the movie to showcase the differences in humans and machines but also human attachment sentimental object and how humans derive worth from unintelligent beings.Â