MovieChat Forums > Pawn Sacrifice (2015) Discussion > Chess cliches? All here!

Chess cliches? All here!


1. Eyeballing your opponent, esp. after he makes a particularly strong or interesting move (this never really happens in chess tournaments or matches; strong chess players look at the board or elsewhere; they are not about "psyching the opponent out with their eyes. Neither was Fischer--he let his strategy psych the opponent out.)

2. Your opponent acting surprised when you say "check" (players at Fischer's level and even further below are not surprised. Checks are usually foreseen way before the move is finally made.)

3. Your opponent getting rattled when you say "check", because it means he is in trouble or on the run, and onlookers shuffling about thinking "he's got him now!"(Hardly. Checks are often not the best move, and can even be blunders. Many novices like to "check" a lot, but still lose.)

4. Saying "check". (Actually, most strong players dispense with the obvious "check", since it is so obvious, even discovered checks--especially Grandmasters in a match game. It's a bit gauche to remind your strong opponent he is in check!)

5. Moving pieces very slowly. (No. Most players think of their move, then move the piece to the square in a normal speed, as if they were simply placing a salt shaker on the dinner table. They are not "still thinking" of their move as their moving their piece, moving it very slowly and cautiously.)

6. Calling tournament games "matches". (Matches are 1-on-1 events, which consist of 2 players playing several games to determine the winner. A tournament is a multi-player event. Everyone in the chess world does not confuse these 2 terms.)





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Agreed. The movie is ridiculous, full of these cliches, Fischer is presented as having personality very different from reality. He is shown in the movie as angry and paranoid but otherwise normal. I think in actuality he was more like an autistic kid who might stand somewhere lost in his own thought, with a slightly open mouth as if he breathes through the mouth, and he'd appear like he doesn't really care about questions people ask him. I can be wrong. But from all the videos and interviews I've seen of Fischer he was not how he is shown in Pawn Sacrifice at all.
The movie's style is bad too.

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Actually, by almost all accounts, Fischer always behaved correctly at the board, and often stayed behind to analyze the game with others afterwards. It was his behavior off that board that caused controversies around the time of the 1972 Match. It was this film that put him in a bad light.

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It's a movie about chess... it would have been boring without those cliches

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