DVD : The Chess Player
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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 0014381198027
Format: Black & White, DVD-Video, Full Screen, Silent, Subtitled, NTSC
Label: Image Entertainment
Manufacturer: Image Entertainment
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Image Entertainment
Region Code: 1
Release Date: July 29, 2003
Running Time: 140 minutes
Sales Rank: 94189
Studio: Image Entertainment
Theatrical Release Date: May 17, 1930
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Editorial Review:
Description: This powerful drama of patriotism, betrayal and suspense combines gorgeous decors and thousands of extras. In 1776 Poland, nobleman Boleslas Vorowski heads a secret liberation movement against Russia and learns his childhood sweetheart, Sophie, loves his friend, a Russian officer. When Vorowsky is wounded in battle, his mentor, the inventor Baron Wolfgang von Kempelen, constructs a marvelous chess- playing automaton which, when summoned by Catherine the Great, holds the fate of Polish independence by a single, suspenseful chess game. Like Abel Gance's Napoleon, director Raymond Bernard "Demands a veritable ovation: the cavalry charge reaches heights never before reached in film. So magnificent... So splendid!" - Cinemagazine
Amazon.com: In his landmark history of silent filmmaking The Parade's Gone By..., Kevin Brownlow praised "the imaginative and powerful historical dramas" of Raymond Bernard and regretted their neglect. Now Brownlow has restored Bernard's The Chess Player, a truly epic film in the Abel Gance tradition. Its allegory of Poland's 18th-century struggle for independence from Russia also aspires to a Gance-like dynamism in the camerawork--occasionally handheld, it would seem--and editing, which in two sequences reaches for nothing less than visual music. Still, the film's most audacious, and enduringly weird, dynamics involve one character's penchant for constructing automatons. These include a Turk in a box "who" can beat anybody in Europe at chess--to the royal pique of Empress Catherine the Great. The final reels pose the question, "How many Polish automatons does it take to unscrew a tyranny?" The haunting answer must have made this film a favorite with the Surrealists. --Richard T. Jameson
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
This is surely one of the silent era's most outstanding and special films which probably deserves to be much more famous than it is. Made in the mid to late 1920s when silent films reached their peak of excellence in quality and style, "The Chess Player" excels in all aspects of dramatic cinema. In the years when historic costume dramas were popular, this French production goes to great lengths and details in costume and décor fitting the late 18th century of Eastern Europe. And like many such costume dramas, historic fact blends with fiction to make an entertaining and fascinating film. And the most fascinating aspect of "The Chess Player" is that it is based on fact, namely a chess-playing automaton, or robot, which entertained royalty and the greatest minds of the time, and since there simply was no such technology around 1800, the chess playing aspect of the automaton was some kind of trick. Based on these facts, a romantic story is woven involving war-torn Poland and Lithuania, a love triangle and other intrigues in which the automaton plays a central part.
Beautiful and skilful photography, lavish sets and costumes, and some fascinating scenes of automatons - often human actors moving like puppets - are some of the highlights. Orchestral music has been carefully composed and played to suit the film perfectly, and with perfectly restored picture quality, "The Chess Player" can really take you back in time to another era. Back in the real world however, ... Read More
Rating: -
This French silent movie was apparently discovered and refurbished by a group of British computer scientists fascinated by the automaton chess player from which the film gets its title. However, The Chess Player is a magnificently patriotic film chronicling an 18th Century Polish revolution against Russian occupation. The soundtrack has been constructed by someone who knows the old revolutionary songs of the Polish nation. There is one scene where the Poles are losing the battle, but the heroine, at a site remote from the battle, goes to her piano plays variations of Boze Cos Polska (God Save Poland) and sees above the piano the split screen reality she wishes, namely a victorious charge of Polish cavalry sweeping away the Russians. (There is simultaneous viewing of the grim reality, where the Poles without artillery are being blown to pieces.)There may be an earlier version in cinema of the split screen dual reality, but I am unaware of it. In some ways, The Chess Player, though purely a French production, could be considered a Polish "Birth of a Nation." No doubt the French screenwriter profited from Griffith's epic shot 12 years earlier. There are a number of scenes which have a good deal of resonance with those familiar with the history of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. For example, there is the portrayal of an old Polish couple being stood against a wall and shot by a Russian firing squad. An event repeated countless times during the 200 plus years of Russian occupation. ... Read More
Rating: -
Of the three accessible masterpieces of French silent cinema (the others being Napoleon and The Passion of Joan of Arc) this film is the weakest - but in such exalted company that is by no means a fatal flaw!
For various reasons the film reminded me of Griffith's Orphans of the Storm. Superficially one of the central themes is that of "sibling" affection and the heroine (Edith Jehanne) bore a striking resemblance to Lilian Gish. More substantively, as with Orphans, The Chess Player somehow seems to add up to less than the sum of its parts. For me this was largely due to the fact that I found the central love story mostly unengaging (perhaps because in his attention to detail the filmmaker retained for his actors the pleated sidelocks presumably worn by Polish officers of the period and consequently in several scenes the hero looks decidedly like a woman!)
That said the film is sumptuous to look at, the locations are beautifully shot and the editing is technically inventive throughout. Definitely a production far superior to the average fare offered to moviegoers in 1927.
Rating: -
The Chess Player is set in 1776, but rather than being a story of Americans fighting to gain independence, it is a story of Poles struggling to regain their independence from Russia. Dashing Polish nobleman Boleslas Vorowski leads the resistance using both his skill as a fighter and as a chess player to undermine the Russians. Eventually he has to go into hiding and the resistance movement devises a scheme to deceive his pursuers. Vorowski is hidden inside a mechanical chess-playing automaton called the Turk. He uses his skill at the game to defeat all comers, but this success leads him into danger. When an invitation arrives to play chess with Catherine the Great in Saint Petersburg, he must journey to the heart of the Russian empire and face a chess player who doesn't like to lose.
The Chess player is a spectacular film with many stunning scenes. It is beautiful to look at with lavish sets and costumes. The acting is good and the direction is often inspired, displaying impressive filmmaking technique with its use of unusual camera angles and inventive camera movement. The editing at times resembles the fast, creative style of filmmakers like Eisenstein and Pudovkin. But The Chess Player, although well worth seeing, is rather a flawed film. The story is slight and at times rather ludicrous. It does not have the depth to justify the epic scope of the film. The biggest problem is that the story of the chess-playing automaton fits uneasily into a story of the Polish struggle ... Read More
Rating: -
In his book THE PARADE'S GONE BY Kevin Brownlow mentions THE CHESS PLAYER and other films by Raymond Bernard as being among the treasures of late silent cinema so it's no surprise that his Photoplay Productions was responsible for this magnificent restoration. What is surprising is that the restoration was done in 1990 and is only now coming to DVD. At least four different 35mm prints were used to create this complete version which also features a modern recording of the original Henri Rambaud score done by Brownlow's longtime musical partner Carl Davis.
As for the picture itself, I wish I could say that I was totally bowled over by the film as I have waited a long time to see it, but I wasn't. The sets and costumes are the equal of NAPOLEON, the cinematography is a striking combination of Eisenstein and Gance, and part of the story is based on historical fact (there really was a Baron von Kempelen in the late 18th century who created a mechanical chess player called the Turk) but Bernard is no Abel Gance. At 140 minutes the film seemed far too long for the story it had to tell. The pace flags from time to time especially in the romantic scenes which seem to interrupt the flow of the movie. Nevertheless THE CHESS PLAYER is chock full of startling images thanks to the automaton subplot. The final sequence inside the inventor's house will stay with you for a long time afterwards. The performances for the most part are subservient to the overall look of the film but Charles ... Read More
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starring: Pierre Blanchar, Charles Dullin, Édith Jéhanne, Camille Bert, Pierre Batcheff directed by: Raymond Bernard
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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 0014381198027
Format: Black & White, DVD-Video, Full Screen, Silent, Subtitled, NTSC
Label: Image Entertainment
Manufacturer: Image Entertainment
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Image Entertainment
Region Code: 1
Release Date: July 29, 2003
Running Time: 140 minutes
Sales Rank: 94189
Studio: Image Entertainment
Theatrical Release Date: May 17, 1930
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