Why do the movies love chess?
By Finlo Rohrer
BBC News Magazine

The late Ingmar Bergman’s film the Seventh Seal helped cement his reputation as a cerebral director, and might explain why chess is such an enduring theme for film makers.

In the Seventh Seal a Swedish knight returns from the crusades to find his home country ravaged by tragedy and is soon locked in a game of chess with death.

Without giving much away, it’s a fairly intense game.

Bergman’s arthouse favourite is perhaps the most notorious example of chess on celluloid, but there are hundreds and hundreds of others. From the brainiest to the schlockiest, one of the movie world’s favourite devices is chess.

And among the chess-playing fraternity there’s a whole subculture of “chess in the movies” discussion, with a number of dedicated websites, and Bob Basalla’s book Chess in the Movies, providing exhaustive lists stretching up to 2,000 titles.

Perhaps the second best known chess scene is in the Thomas Crown Affair, where Steve McQueen and Faye Dunaway enjoy a romantically-charged game.

Satyajit Ray’s the Chess Players is another arthouse classic, while 2000’s Luzhin Defence had a grandmaster as its central character.

But for many chess aficionados, the best example of the game has to be in the second James Bond film, From Russia With Love, where the Spectre agent Kronsteen ruthlessly beats the Canadian master McAdams.

Plotting moves

This fictional struggle was based on a real and much-discussed game between Boris Spassky and David Bronstein – who inspired the name Kronsteen despite being the loser in the real-life game – in Leningrad in 1960.

Grandmaster, writer and chess entrepreneur Raymond Keene says it is easily his favourite chess scene.

“It leaves off two of the pawns on the queen-side but the way they stage it in the movie is really magnificent, the giant chessboards and the ‘Venice’ set. When I try and arrange a chess tournament I’m aiming for that. The position itself is very well chosen.”

CHESS MOVIES
The Chess Players
Blade Runner
Seventh Seal
From Russia With Love
Casablanca
Chess Fever
Thomas Crown Affair

And the chess scene perfectly sets up the character of the evil Kronsteen. He is a chess master so he is someone who plots every move in great detail and thinks a long way ahead.

“Kronsteen works for Spectre. He’s an evil genius of vast cunning but he is defeated by Bond’s British bravura, attacking each problem as it comes.

“I feel flattered that we chess grandmasters are regarded as geniuses,” Keene adds

And the use in From Russia With Love certainly gives us a clue as to the nature of Hollywood’s relationship with chess.

Here is the full story.

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