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Game Over: Kasparov vs. the Machine

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  • Game Over: Kasparov vs. the Machine

    Newsday, NY
    Dec 3 2004

    Movie Review
    Game Over: Kasparov vs. the Machine


    BY JOHN ANDERSON
    STAFF WRITER

    (U). Hitchcockian re- examination of the 1997 chess match between
    grandmaster Gary Kasparov and IBM computer Deep Blue. Written and
    directed by Vikram Jayanti. 1:24. At Cinema Village, Manhattan

    Shot, edited and scored like a psychological thriller - which is
    precisely what it is - Vikram Jayanti's "Game Over: Kasparov vs. the
    Machine" is the "Gaslight" of the chessboard. Was Kasparov just a
    frustrated genius? Or the victim of an elaborate corporate scam?

    Either way, the story behind the Kasparov-Deep Blue match of 1997 -
    he beat the computer in '96 - should be seen as a tribute to the
    pugnacious grandmaster, generally acknowledged as both the greatest
    who ever played the game, and a perpetual outsider: That he was an
    Armenian Jew playing a Russian-dominated game made his rival, Anatoly
    Karpov, the establishment favorite during their glory days under
    Soviet chess. Or so Kasparov thinks. Of course, he also thinks IBM
    rigged the match between its computer and himself. And Jayanti's
    investigation makes a good case that it did.

    In order to beat the reigning champ, it took a team of programmers,
    years of research and a roster of consulting grandmasters. But did
    they actually succeed? As Jayanti tells it - while also making
    world-class chess not only digestible but appetizing for the average
    viewer - it was in Game 2 of the match in New York that Deep Blue
    suddenly ignored a Kasparov ploy and played like a human.

    That IBM's stock jumped 15 percent after the match - and that the
    company refused a rematch - doesn't help its case. Neither does
    Jayanti's use of Raymond Bernard's 1927 silent "The Chess Player," in
    which a mysterious chess machine is found to have a human operator.
    That IBM's Dr. Murray Campbell can't seem to get the back panel off
    the retired Deep Blue for Jayanti's camera probably is just a
    coincidence. But the film is shot in such eerie, suggestive fashion,
    the viewer can become susceptible to Kasparovian paranoia.
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