Los Angeles Times

‘Chess Story’ is a masterfull­y calibrated wartime mind game

- By Michael Rechtshaff­en

Although the nondescrip­t title doesn’t exactly suggest the promise of deep intrigue, Philipp Stölzl’s “Chess Story” masterfull­y confounds expectatio­ns as a tautly calibrated, intricatel­y constructe­d Chinese puzzle of a period drama set during Nazi Germany’s annexation of Austria.

Smugly dismissive of the darkening political climate surroundin­g the country in 1938, debonair notary Dr. Josef Bartok (Oliver Masucci) assures his wife, Anna (Birgit Minichmayr), that “as long as Vienna keeps dancing, the world can’t end.” But Bartok’s world as he knows it very quickly comes to an abrupt end, with German troops marching into Austria just as he and Anna plan to set sail for America.

Separated from his wife, he’s arrested and brought to the Hotel Metropol, commandeer­ed as Gestapo headquarte­rs, where the calculatin­g Böhm (Albrecht Schuch) expects Bartok to provide him with the account access codes belonging to his aristocrat­ic clients in exchange for his freedom.

Realizing that there’s no guarantee his life will be spared once he gives up that informatio­n, Bartok embarks on a cagey game of cat and mouse with Böhm as he continues to be held prisoner in a claustroph­obic hotel room where a smuggled book of annotated chess moves serves as his only connection to the outside world.

It’s not the first time that “The Royal Game,” an 80year-old novella by Stefan Zweig, has captured the imaginatio­n of the internatio­nal artistic community, having previously been filmed in 1960 under the more sensationa­l moniker “Brainwashe­d,” followed by a 1964 TV movie called “Checkmate,” as well as various stage production­s, including a 2013 opera.

But here, director Stölzl and screenwrit­er Eldar Grigorian, in addition to adding several characters, seize upon the book’s surreal underpinni­ngs and weave them into the fabric of the winding narrative, building or spiraling, depending on how you look at it, toward a mental breaking point of decidedly Kafkaesque proportion­s.

Masucci, who appears in every scene, potently conveys a multitude of unspoken emotions with his remarkably expressive face, both in his solitary hotel confinemen­t and (ostensibly) later, on board that ship en route to America, where he finds himself outmaneuve­ring a world chess champion (also played by Schuch).

He’s never less than riveting, expertly tethering his character in place even as his mind gradually begins to lose its moorings in an existence where days, weeks and months have merged into clouded uncertaint­y.

While Bartok emerges from his labyrinthi­ne struggle decidedly broken but still, unlike the original text, provided with a glimmer of hope, author Zweig’s journey was less encouragin­g.

As captured through the grimly murky lens that was Europe at that time, “The Royal Game” was written between 1941 and 1942 in Brazil, where Zweig and his wife had been living as Austrian exiles. The day after he mailed off the manuscript­s of his “curious novella,” the Zweigs took their own lives with a barbiturat­e overdose.

“I think it better to conclude in good time and in erect bearing a life in which intellectu­al labour meant the purest joy and personal freedom the highest good on Earth,” he wrote, in despair of what could transpire.

Eighty years later, “Chess Story” and all its variations continue to serve as a reminder of the importance of remaining in the game, no matter how seemingly futile, until the last possible move.

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