Summaries

"The younger you are, the more aggressive you play". Three-way themed film about trial and error, "The Chess Players" is the chronicle of the 2008 Chess Olympiad in Germany and the failure to reach the set goal, perpetuated through the generation clash. Paradigm on pride and moderation, Stephan Hilpert's documentary is a mosaic of incompatible characters and psychologies. The focus stays on the team captain as a national emblem in Elisabeth Pähtz, the precocious fighting figure, trained by her own father - the youngest national chess champion. Chess, as a mental combat against one's own confining adamancy, is shown, past the competitional context, as a stage of personal growth and a moral example of passing fame, of precarity and insufficiency, about youth's thriving talent, of self-regeneration lacking weariness and the unbalanced pride power games.—Laura Dumitrescu

The German women's national chess team goes to the Chess Olympiad. The goals are ambitious, but due to the high pressure tensions arise in the group, and eventually the situation goes from bad to worse. A documentary about winning and losing in a sport in which players fight with the sharpest weapon: the mind.—Anonymous

Details

Genres
  • Drama
  • Sport
  • Documentary
Release date Oct 16, 2012
Countries of origin Germany
Language German
Production companies Hochschule für Fernsehen und Film München (HFF)

Box office

Tech specs

Runtime 57m
Color Color
Sound mix Dolby Stereo
Aspect ratio

Synopsis

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