Cryptograms and Old Movies: Discover Movie Titles by Solving Cryptography Puzzles

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Cryptograms and Movies

 

I like old movies and cryptograms. Some time ago I got the idea: why not make a book that combines both old movies and cryptograms? The result is this book that contains a set of 50 old movies of which the director’s name, the year of presentation and, a photo of some of the protagonists are reported.

The movie title can be obtained by solving a cryptography puzzle that follows the photo.

A series of hints that can help solve the puzzle is at the bookend, together with the list of movie titles that you can watch if you were not successful in solving the cryptograms.

Cryptograms and Old Movies. 1

Copyright Notice. 4

Introduction. 5

Tips to solve the puzzles. 6

Search for common letters. 6

Search for short words. 6

Search for digraphs. 6

Search for repeated letters. 6

Puzzles: Director Names. 7

Chapter 1- D.W.Griffith (1912). 8

Chapter  2 – William Nigh (1914). 9

Chapter 3- Marston Lawrence (1914). 10

Chapter 4- Dell Anderson (1915). 11

Chapter 5-William Beaudine (1922). 12

Chapter 6-Leon De La Mothe (1925). 13

Chapter 7- Vm Bertrand (1925). 14

Chapter 8-Frank Capra (1931). 15

Chapter 9-Lloyd Bacon (1931). 16

Chapter 10-Michael Curtiz (1933). 17

Chapter 11-Gregory Lacava (1936). 18

Chapter 12-Roland D.Reed (1936). 19

Chapter 13-Leo Mcarey (1937). 20

Chapter 14-George Cukor (1938). 21

Chapter 15- Joe Kane (1938). 22

Chapter 16-Alfred Hitchcock (1938). 23

Chapter 17-John Cromwell (1939). 24

Chapter 18-Frank Capra (1939). 25

Chapter 19-Melville Cooper (1939). 26

Chapter 20-Tay Garnett (1939). 27

Chapter 21-Howard Hawks (1940). 28

Chapter 22-Joseph Lewis (1941). 29

Chapter 23-George Stevens (1941). 30

Chapter 24-Phil Rosen (1941). 31

Chapter 25-Elmer Clifton (1941). 32

Chapter 26-Lewis Seller (1941). 33

Chapter 27-Ernst Lubitsc (1941). 34

Chapter 28-Michel Curtiz (1942). 35

Chapter 29-William McGann (1942). 36

Chapter 30-George Stevens (1942). 37

Chapter 31-William Seiter (1943). 38

Chapter 32-Delmer Daves (1943). 39

Chapter 33-Frank Capra (1944). 40

Chapter 34-Frank Capra (1946). 41

Chapter 35-Alfred Santell (1946). 42

Chapter 36-Lewis Milestone (1946). 43

Chapter 37-Edgar G. Ulmer (1946). 44

Chapter 38-Joseph Mankiewicz (1947). 45

Chapter 39-Maxwell Shane (1947). 46

Chapter 40-Stuart Heisler (1949). 47

Chapter 41- Hammid Alexander (1950). 48

Chapter 42-Stanley Donen (1951). 49

Chapter 43-John Huston (1951). 50

Chapter 44-Abby Berlin (1952). 51

Chapter 45- Ida Lupino (1953). 52

Chapter 46- Irving Jacoby (1954). 53

Chapter 47-Alfred Hitchcock (1955). 54

Chapter 48-Sidney Lumet (1957). 55

Chapter 49-Antony Mann (1958). 56

Chapter 50-Stanley Donen (1963). 57

Hints. 58

Movie Titles. 61

By the same author  64

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Large Print Cryptograms: 400 Puzzles to exercise your Brain

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Read Time:1 Minute, 30 Second

Cryptograms

 

A cryptogram is a type of puzzle that consists of a short piece of encrypted text.

There are different types of cryptograms. The most popular is the letter-to-letter substitution. In this method, the text is encrypted by replacing each letter with a different letter to create a sentence that seems incomprehensible before it is solved.

A puzzle that would use this code would look like this:

WQBPM AGXK ZPPU

With these substitutions:

W=E, Q=N, B=J, P=O, M=Y, A=T, G=H, X=I ,K=S ,Z=B, P=O, U=K

It becomes:

ENJOY THIS BOOK

The ciphers used in cryptograms were not created for entertainment purposes, but for encryption of military or personal secrets.

The first use of the cryptogram for entertainment purposes occurred during the Middle Ages by monks who had spare time for intellectual games.

Around the thirteenth century, the English monk Roger Bacon wrote a book in which he listed seven cipher methods, and stated that “a man is crazy who writes a secret in any other way than one which will conceal it from the vulgar.”

In the 19th century, Edgar Allan Poe helped to popularize cryptograms with many newspaper and magazine articles. [en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryptogram]

This book contains a collection of 400 quotes encrypted with a simple substitution cipher. The quotes are from:

Writers

Philosophers

Scientists

Mathematicians

Poets

Politicians

Actresses

World Leaders

Authors

Musicians

Enjoy yourself while solving the puzzles, don’t feel bad if you can’t figure one out right away.

If you need some help, a hint for each puzzle can be found on a page at the end of each group. After the hints, the puzzle answers are reported.

Solving engaging puzzles like cryptograms exercises the brain, helping it to remain sharp.

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