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bobby fischer aganst the world on HBO

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  • bobby fischer aganst the world on HBO

    anyone watch alst night? i couldnt sleep so i watched it. i enjoy chess, and therefore enjoyed the movie. the guy was an amazing chess player.


    There are many different roles chess has played in popular culture: source of excitement, metaphor for conflict, cause of (or at least form of expression for) madness (e.g., Nabokov's The Defense). Last night's HBO documentary, Bobby Fischer Against the World, involved all of those, and was both an empathetic biography and fascinating history of a Cold War showdown to boot.

    The film, directed by Liz Garbus, relied heavily on documentary footage and exclusive period photography to tell the story, from his early days as a prodigy to his final years of paranoia, of the chess master whose defeat of Boris Spassky in 1972 was cause for national celebration. It was transporting to see the match—which had both competitive drama and personal drama caused by the psychological gamesmanship of the eccentric Fischer—treated as not just a game but sport, right down to the coverage by ABC Wide World of Sports and spectators gathered to watch on TV. It was like a Muhammad Ali title match, but with two guys sitting at a board.

    Fischer, the film reveals, was an odd man to serve as the champion of America and capitalism in a Cold War showdown. His mother was a communist and antiwar activist, while later in life he was drawn to conspiracist thinking that led him, among other things, to declare that America's chickens had come home to roost on 9/11. (He was also attracted to anti-Semitic theories, though Fischer was himself Jewish.) But Garbus traces Fischer's outlandish behavior, both in and outside the games, to roots of instability early on: chess may not have driven him mad, but its irresistible complexity attracted a mind, never properly socialized, that found something attractive in its combination of rules and near-infinite possibilities.

    But while Fischer's life and its end were not happy ones, there's something enthralling and thrilling about how the film makes competitive chess play come alive. I've only ever been a casual chess player, and the recounting of Fischer's famous games by the gathered talking heads makes them come alive for the non-expert. They lay out the jarring mind games he played with Spassky, confounding the Russian's preparation by introducing openings Fischer had never used, and contrast Fischer's usual brawling style of play with perhaps his most famous game, game six of the Spassky match, in which he switched up unexpectedly to a subtle, classical style of play—a game of "placid beauty"—that Spassky to stand and applaud in defeat.

    "Did you see what Spassky did?" Fischer is recalled to have said afterward. "He's a sportsman." Fischer, Garbus' film showed, may not himself have always been a gentleman or gracious, but his play and his mind could be things of beauty.



    Read more: http://tunedin.blogs.time.com/2011/0...#ixzz1ObkWS0yJ


    yes i know. im a fucking nerd.

    god bless.
    It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men -Frederick Douglass

  • #2
    i'll give him one thing and that was he lived his life the way he wanted to regardless to his fame!

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    • #3
      Paul, you are the last person I would ever expect to be into that kind of stuff.
      Originally posted by Broncojohnny
      HOORAY ME and FUCK YOU!

      Comment


      • #4
        There's another one called "Searching for Bobby Fischer", it's a good movie, worth streaming on netflix.

        Comment


        • #5
          Tony, Paul has to like chess, that's all they let you play in the Pen!

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by That_Is_My_El_Camino View Post
            Paul, you are the last person I would ever expect to be into that kind of stuff.
            Originally posted by kanetrain View Post
            There's another one called "Searching for Bobby Fischer", it's a good movie, worth streaming on netflix.
            Originally posted by Silverback View Post
            Tony, Paul has to like chess, that's all they let you play in the Pen!

            so no one saw this? or i am the only one nerdy enough to care?

            god bless.
            It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men -Frederick Douglass

            Comment


            • #7
              I saw it on the program guide, but Macgruber was on again.
              Originally posted by Broncojohnny
              HOORAY ME and FUCK YOU!

              Comment


              • #8
                solid choice!!!

                god bless.
                It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men -Frederick Douglass

                Comment


                • #9
                  I watched it. Pretty informative/entertaining. I had no idea he said that crap about 9/11. Kinda sad to see someone with so much potential go to waste after only a few years of adult life.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    It smells like nerds in here....

                    So about the Hobbit..

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by hotrod66stang View Post
                      I watched it. Pretty informative/entertaining. I had no idea he said that crap about 9/11. Kinda sad to see someone with so much potential go to waste after only a few years of adult life.
                      yeah he didnt think W could snatch his ass up like he did since he was all the way in Japan!!!!

                      Originally posted by mstng86 View Post
                      It smells like nerds in here....

                      So about the Hobbit..
                      lolz!

                      god bless.
                      It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men -Frederick Douglass

                      Comment

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