Chess in movies

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hondoham

Hello... everybody

Chess Topic:  Chess played in movies/TV

Alternate Fun Topic: movies/TV being stupid

 

Chess-game: 

"Phenomenon" with Jon Travolta

The main character (Travolta)  seeing some sort of lights in the sky that stimulate some sort of brain tumor that makes him a genius.  The event happens in the middle of a chess game at a bar when he steps outside for some reason.  After he returns from the event, he has a stroke of  "Tongue outgenius Tongue out" and finds a Mate-In-One sitting their on the board when he comes back to the game.

 

Being-stupid:

"Point Blank" with Patrick Swayze/Keanu Reeves

Remember that part when the airplane maintains a low altitude to stay off the radar, and then Keanu and Patrick have a 90 second to 120 second free-fall action/dialog scene before the parachute is pulled.

 


jag72

Independence Day:

Opening in NYC, Jeff Goldblum playing chess in the park. 


wlapre
chess in movies? chess games in movies are usually there as a prop. Most of them have fake one move mates. Notice how the boards are usually set up wrong? black square in the right hand corner?
billwall

Check out my list of chess in the movies at

http://www.geocities.com/siliconvalley/lab/7378/movies.htm

 

Over 1,700 movies with a chess scene it it. 


topspin
to wlapre:  it's funny that you mention that the board is frequently set up incorrectly - I notice the same thing, and it seems that more times than not there is a black square in the lower right hand corner, rather than the mandatory white square.
Fandango

Interesting idea..... chess in films.... interesting ideas

 


Fandango
billwall wrote:

Check out my list of chess in the movies at

http://www.geocities.com/siliconvalley/lab/7378/movies.htm

 

Over 1,700 movies with a chess scene it it. 


 from the wiki

Stalag 17 begins "about a week before Christmas" in 1944 in a prisoner-of-war camp located somewhere along the Danube River. The story of a Nazi spy in Barracks Four is narrated by Clarence Harvey "Cookie" Cook (Gil Stratton).Prisoners Manfredi and Johnson try to escape through a tunnel the inmates have dug under the barbed wire. They are immediately shot when they emerge from the other end. The prisoners believe there is a spy in their midst since the Germans obviously knew about the tunnel, but the barracks security officer, Price (Peter Graves), fails to uncover his identity.Sefton (William Holden) is the main suspect; he barters openly with the German guards for eggs, silk stockings, blankets and other luxuries. He also organizes mouse races and various other profitable enterprises. The other prisoners are suspicious of his fraternization with the enemy, as well as envious of his success. Sefton himself is rather cynical, cold, and impersonal; he bets on whether Manfredi and Johnson will actually escape, then trades the cigarettes he wins to the Germans for an egg the next morning.The lives of the prisoners are depicted, although in a somewhat sanitized way. They receive mail, eat terrible food, wash in the latrine sinks, and collectively do their best to keep sane and defy the camp's cruel and ruthless commandant, Oberst von Scherbach (Otto Preminger). They use a clandestine radio (shared by all the barracks) to pick up the BBC and the war news. (The antenna is their volleyball net.) Their German guard, Sergeant Schulz (Sig Ruman), confiscates the radio, another success for the "stoolie", whoever he is.Sefton bribes the guards to let him spend a night in the women's barracks in the Russian section of the camp. The other prisoners spot him through Sefton's own telescope and conclude that this is his reward for informing the Germans about the radio. When he returns, he is accused of being a spy. At that moment, von Scherbach pays a visit to the barracks to apprehend new prisoner Lieutenant James Dunbar (Don Taylor), whom the Germans correctly suspect of blowing up a German ammunition train while he was being transported to the camp. The men are now convinced that Sefton is the spy and viciously beat him, after which he is ostracized. His considerable property is taken and redistributed to the rest of the prisoners. Sefton decides to investigate and uncover the identity of the spy.On Christmas Day, the men find out that SS men are coming to take Dunbar to Berlin, to be interrogated for his act of sabotage. The entire camp creates a distraction and Dunbar is freed and hidden. The guards search the camp thoroughly, but cannot find him. Later, the men of Barracks Four, excluding Sefton and Joey (who suffers from shellshock), plan to draw a name from a hat to see who will try to get Dunbar out of the camp, but Price volunteers first. At this point, Sefton reveals that the spy is Price (Sefton had stayed behind in the barracks during a fake "air raid" and eavesdropped on Price speaking with Schulz). Sefton shows how messages were passed between Price and Schulz, and then asks him, "When was Pearl Harbor?" Price knows the date of course, but Sefton traps him by quickly asking what time he heard the news. Without thinking, Price betrays himself by answering 6 p.m. — the correct time of the attack in Germany. After that, Sefton reaches into Price's jacket pocket and extracts the "mailbox" used to exchange messages with the Germans, a hollowed-out chess piece.With his fellow POWs convinced of Price's guilt, Sefton decides to take Dunbar out of the camp himself, partially because he likes the odds and the reward he can expect from Dunbar's rich family. The men give Sefton enough time to get Dunbar out of his hiding place, the water tower above one of the camp latrines, then to distract the guards in the gun towers, they throw Price out into the yard with tin cans tied to his legs. The ruse works: Price is killed in a hail of bullets (to the great annoyance of von Scherbach and Schulz) while Dunbar and Sefton cut through the barbed wire and make their escape.

 


JediMaster
How about a movie about chess.  "Searching for Bobby Fischer."  Josh is a young chess player.  He plays in tournaments.  He is also coached by a master.  His coach counsels him against playing blitz games in the park, because it will affect his tournament games and his game.
spartakiss4life
hondoham wrote:

 actually it was mate in 3 i was curious about the queen sacrifice so i paused the game at the first move which was john bringing his queen towards duvalls king area which was overrun by johns 2 knights   and duvall responded by moving his knight to a good square. and john checked him as if he didn't see the rook protecting that mating square so duvall takes the queen with his rook that blocked the only escape square for his king and john made the surprising knight move that mated duvall. In my opinionit was a well thought out game similar to some of the romantic mates ive seen on cg.com