The Abonormal Love in The Imitation Game

I have no any clue that who Alan Turing is until I see the movie today. It is all about the love that matters, no matter in the pursuit of the discourse of homosexual or heterosexual affairs. The love in a person with his deeper soul who believes his love, Christopher, would always accompany him through creating a machine by Turing's own hand, designating his true belief in connection with Christopher in his rest of life. Perhaps it still remains in the discourse of two people in love for such traditional assumption. Instead of falling a discourse of love, perhaps The Imitation Game points out the happiness of being abnormal in love through Turing's case. Such seemingly abnormal love at the time of 1950s portrays more than we have expected. It occurred to me in one of the episodes The Grantchester. The role of clergyman in The Grantchester is responsible for dealing all sorts of trivial and big matters but still realizes nothing for the homosexuals. Sometimes it is the feeling that others can no longer feel the same way as themselves. It is Turing's belief, his suffering from violence that brings him to recognize this world treating him, and the choice he made turning out to be the last straw in keeping his secret immensely and thoroughly.

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