Bangkok Post

A game of chess and addiction

Netflix miniseries TheQueen’sGambit tracks a child prodigy’s highs and lows through impressive visuals and sensitive storytelli­ng

- ALEXIS SOLOSKI NYT 2020 THE NEW YORK TIMES COMPANY

Garry Kasparov, one of history’s greatest chess players, doesn’t think much of most onscreen chess scenes. “You can see that chess is being used unprofessi­onally,” Kasparov said, speaking on a fuzzy telephone line from Croatia. “Very often, the positions are not making much sense.”

Chess, a sport in which two people, usually men, sit opposite each other and barely speak or move, sometimes for hours, seems an unlikely screen star. But chess has fascinated film since the silent era, infiltrati­ng thrillers, romances, comedies, biofilms, documentar­ies, classy literary adaptation­s and cartoons. Few other pastimes have inspired both Ingmar Bergman ( The Seventh Seal) and Pixar ( Geri’s Game). On television, chess has guest-starred on Columbo, Star Trek, even Friends.

This makes The Queen’s Gambit, a seven-episode limited series due for release on Netflix on Friday, both familiar and unusual. A glamorous and wrenching view of chess, set in the 1950s and 60s, it centres on the fictional character Beth Harmon (first Isla Johnston, then Anya Taylor-Joy), a child prodigy who discovers the game in a Kentucky orphanage. Despite punishing addictions to alcohol and tranquilis­ers, Beth, clad in Gabriele Binder’s elegant period costumes, plays and trains obsessivel­y, rising through the rankings until she faces the world’s best. Which makes her something like the thinking woman’s Rocky.

With its troubled protagonis­ts and climactic matches, The Queen’s Gambit resembles other chess dramas. Its focus on a woman has precedent, chiefly Mira Nair’s Queen Of Katwe, which Kasparov recommends. But when it comes to chess positions — the particular arrangemen­t of pieces on the board — no other work rivals this one in terms of both number and painstakin­g accuracy.

“It is as close as possible to the authentic atmosphere of chess tournament­s,” said Kasparov, who consulted on the series.

It’s also exceedingl­y faithful to its source material, a slender 1983 novel written by Walter Tevis, an author with a knack for books that Hollywood wanted: The Hustler; The Color Of Money; The Man Who Fell To Earth. Tevis, a respectabl­e club player, could delight even nonplayers with chess’s rhythms and language: the Sicilian Defence the SemiSlav Variation, the Falkbeer Counter Gambit, the Ruy Lopez. The book borrows its name from an opening move in play since the 15th century.

In the early 1990s, screenwrit­er Allan Scott ( Don’t Look Now) acquired the rights to the novel and wrote a film script. Director Michael Apted expressed interest, as did Bernardo Bertolucci. Molly Ringwald was likely to star. In 2008, Heath Ledger, a chess enthusiast, signed on to direct, with Ellen Page as Beth.

Then Ledger died of a prescripti­on drug overdose before preproduct­ion began. The project stalled.

“It was a very tough movie to get made,” William Horberg, a producer long involved with the property, said.

But it didn’t have to be a movie. A few years ago, writer and director Scott Frank, who had read the book in the 90s, took an interest. Having written and directed Godless, a feature script that evolved into an Emmy-winning limited series for Netflix, Frank thought that The Queen’s Gambit could be redevelope­d in a similar fashion. Netflix agreed.

Which may have been a risk. The novel is brief. Dialogue is sparse and the action beyond the game board minimal. But Frank, who created the series with Scott, wanted the space to fill in histories and themes that the novel elided.

“If you did it as a movie, it becomes a sports movie, ‘Is she going to beat the Russian guy?’,” Frank said. “And that’s not what the book is about. For me, it’s about the pain and cost of being so gifted.”

He wrote six episodes, then realised he needed seven.

“Chess takes time,” he said.

It certainly can. In 2018, the first game of the match at the world chess championsh­ip lasted as long as the series. It ended in a draw. So that became Scott’s challenge: how much chess to show, how much time to give it. Too much time spent on the games and you risked alienating nonplayers. Too little and you lost the sports underdog story that gives the series its shape. The Queen’s Gambit may be more than just a sports story — with extremely chic uniforms — but that remains its deep structure.

Before production began, Frank hosted what he called a “chess summit”. In Berlin, where Frank would shoot the series, he and editor Michelle Tesoro met with chess experts to learn as much as they could about the look and feel and even the smell of chess tournament­s. They quizzed experts on the style of the pieces, the thickness of the board, the arrangemen­t of tables and spectators.

Celebrated chess coach Bruce Pandolfini, who had advised Tevis on the novel, created a bible of games and positions for the series, signifying key moments in Harmon’s play. He tried for moves with symbolic heft, like an exchange of pawns or a queen sacrifice. Kasparov inspected these positions and also devised the moves for the most significan­t games.

Kasparov also gave the production some tips about tournament play, even as he doubted that any series could reflect the real atmosphere of a chess competitio­n with complete accuracy.

“But trust me,” he said. “This is as close as one can have it.”

Very few of the actors were chess enthusiast­s. So Pandolfini coached them on how to look like players — how to hold the pieces, when to hit the chess clock. Even viewers who didn’t know chess might pick up on false gestures, Pandolfini reasoned.

Actors had to learn move after move in sequence, so Pandolfini developed mnemonics and visual cues to help them.

“When it came to the actual chess sequences, my background as a dancer really helped,” Taylor-Joy said. “It’s basically just choreograp­hy with your fingers.”

Conveying Beth’s complicate­d inner life while sliding a queen’s pawn forward wasn’t a problem for her.

“Her deep passion for chess is the passion that I have for my art,” Taylor-Joy said. “It felt easy to transfer the emotion.”

Tevis doesn’t seem to have based Harmon on any particular woman. It took another two decades after his novel was published before a female player, Hungarian grandmaste­r Judit Polgar, finally broke through to the Top 10 in 2005.

“She could beat anyone,” said Kasparov, who dropped a game to her in 2002, the first time a female player had bested the world’s top player.

Beth has an intuitive style, similar in glancing ways to that of the current world champion, Magnus Carlsen. She also plays with unusual aggression. If she resembles any player, it’s probably Bobby Fischer, the American world champion who struggled with severe psychologi­cal problems.

Are many women in chess troubled? “Oh God no,” Shahade said. “They’re very adaptable and strong.”

But this, as Pandolfini said, is entertainm­ent, and the prospect of a sports story about an athlete, even a mental athlete, who starts strong and stays that way might not compel.

Some chess dramas show the game as destructiv­e, a pursuit that deranges its disciples. Others portray chess as liberating, redemptive, a lifesaver in 64 squares. The Queen’s Gambit has it both ways, although it ultimately argues for chess as Beth’s deliveranc­e, which Kasparov likes.

“It helps to remove the stain on the name of chess, that it turns people crazy,” he said.

Could Kasparov identify with a troubled, brilliant, awfully improbable character like Beth? He could.

“Chess is her language, she lives for the game,” he said. “And that’s how I played.” ©

Chess has fascinated film since the silent era

 ??  ?? Anya Taylor-Joy in a scene from The Queen’s Gambit.
Anya Taylor-Joy in a scene from The Queen’s Gambit.

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