Computer Chess

  • Austrália Computer Chess
Trailer

Sinopses(1)

In 1980 a group of software programmers converge on a rundown hotel in Middle America for a weekend in which they will stage the ultimate battle between man and machine. The challenge is to program computer software to take on and defeat a human in chess. Meanwhile another group of new age types has descended on the hotel at the same time for primal therapy and group relations, in the case of one zealous hippy couple. Government agents seem to be monitoring the findings of the software designers on the chance they stumble upon a cutting edge breakthrough. A litter of stray cats wander around the corridors while the more ambitious jostle for recognition among their peers. (Accent Film Entertainment)

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Críticas (2)

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Matty 

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inglês Especially in comparison with the flashy American Hustle, Computer Chess makes it apparent how uncanny retro stylisation can be. The analogue camerawork doesn’t draw us into the film’s environment. On the contrary, it constantly reminds us of its technological limitations and thus of its own presence (and the key theme consisting in the conflict between man and technology). Black-and-white, sometimes reminiscent of a low-contrast picture (various shades of grey predominate), 4:3 aspect ratio, smudges, shadows, lines. Like with the Chilean film No, you have the feeling that you are watching a pirated copy of a film (which of course never existed in a different form). The consistent simulation of the visual quality of amateur television shows from the 1970s goes perfectly with the clumsy mumblecore poetics as well as with the awkwardness of the characters, who are a sort of beta version of today’s nerds. Rather than feeling superior, they feel guilty that they understand the language of ones and zeros better than they understand other people. Because society hadn’t yet come up with a specific pigeonhole for nerds, these atypical heroes could seek a balance between the human and the technological, between life in the community and life on their own – their extreme antithesis is the therapy session of a group of hippies running in parallel.  Typical of this is the Kafkaesque subplot with Papageorge, who sees himself as more than a nerd and who (therefore) nobody wants to accept. With its shabby form and sarcastic depiction of a particular generation, Computer Chess is reminiscent of Clerks. However, awareness of the transformation that the IT subculture underwent (dehumanisation and – paradoxically – assimilation into the mainstream) makes this film more bitter and timeless. 75% ()

RUSSELL 

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inglês So this was weirder than I ever expected. I assumed it would be more of a specifically stylized sophisticated comedy, but it turned out that I have no idea what genre to compare it to. It is far from being a pure comedy, although you can find some humorous moments there - but mostly it is such absurd meta humor that you can hardly absorb. I was bored at a lot of passages, the dialogues were lengthy and mostly uninteresting - the whole film seemed to me like one big joke, understood only by the director himself. In the second half, it no longer pretends to be a coherent spectacle, and more and more WTF moments come into play. The ending is so transcendent that I don't know what to say about it. Computer Chess didn't appeal to me, but in a way it fascinated me - at least in its form. Hats off to Bujalski for having the balls to shoot this nerd art and release it among people. ()