Home Box Office (HBO) | Release Date: September 9, 2011
7.8
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Generally favorable reviews based on 12 Ratings
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9
DukeJonOct 11, 2019
Outstanding documentary about the flawed genius of chess. However if you're not a fan of chess and haven't heard of Fischer this has limited appeal
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10
jdb26354Sep 10, 2011
Recommended viewing for chess fans but broader appeal could be limited because the Cold War subtext seems irrelevant now and the movie does not have a dramatic arc so much as a focal point - the 1972 Fischer-Spassky match. The treatment ofRecommended viewing for chess fans but broader appeal could be limited because the Cold War subtext seems irrelevant now and the movie does not have a dramatic arc so much as a focal point - the 1972 Fischer-Spassky match. The treatment of the buildup to and playing of that match was adequate - particularly noteworthy is footage of Fischer engaged in exercise workouts to gird himself for the grueling intellectual contest to come. However, the film should have pushed the audience to follow more details of the key strategies used - this is ultimately a movie about chess after all. Once the movie moves past Fischer-Spassky, it seems to lose its bid for pathos, although it keeps up with the chronology of Fischer's life, patchy as it becomes due to his reclusiveness. The frequent inclusion of on-camera interviews with various people who knew Fischer or know chess proved a stylistic distraction - more voiceovers would have been better, so that the film could have kept more of its focus on its charismatic subject. Expand
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8
Sir_BrandonOct 31, 2011
Bobby Fischer is arguably the greatest chess player of all time. Even if you do not play chess, you know his name and his accomplishments. However, who exactly is the man who sits in front of the chess board? Director Liz Garbus tackles thatBobby Fischer is arguably the greatest chess player of all time. Even if you do not play chess, you know his name and his accomplishments. However, who exactly is the man who sits in front of the chess board? Director Liz Garbus tackles that subject and shines a light not only on his professional life, but a brighter one on his personal life. Bobby Fischer Against the World tells about one fascinating man who had a gift for playing the complex game of chess. Ever since he was a boy, he loved the game and it is undoubtedly safe to say he became obsessed with it. But with his genius, he paid a heavy price in the other areas of his life. Bobby Fischer thought the world was against him, but come to find out, it was him against himself the entire time. Fischer had a troubled childhood and the game of chess saved his life. It gave him something he could really apply himself to and it certainly paid off. At the age of 15, he became the U.S. Champion and became World Champion when he was just 29 years-old after defeating Boris Spassky during the height of the Cold War. After that, Fischer was seen as a hero by everyone because he was the American who beat the Russian. And the best part is finding out what occurred before and during the matchup. The realization of the destruction Fischer causes within himself while battling with his own demons starts to sink in and show its ugly face. After he becomes the Michael Phelps of his time, Fischer takes a hiatus from chess and refuses to defend his championship. It isnâ Expand
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10
TrailesqueMar 17, 2021
This is an excellent, thorough look at the life of chess genius Bobby Fischer - his life, his short but brilliant career, and his downfall. Fischer comes across as a gifted, obsessive fanatic. When he devoted himself to chess, he became theThis is an excellent, thorough look at the life of chess genius Bobby Fischer - his life, his short but brilliant career, and his downfall. Fischer comes across as a gifted, obsessive fanatic. When he devoted himself to chess, he became the best in the world, perhaps the best ever. But the film shows us his painful childhood, as the son of a flaky mother who abandoned him at age 16, literally left him and his sister alone in a Brooklyn apartment. We get a brief look at his biological father, who tried to be there for him but who died at a young age. The name Fischer came from one of his mom's boyfriends, who apparently was not in the picture for long. Bobby was a king in the world of chess, but a lost soul in the world at large, and eventually became paranoid and loony, embracing anti-semitism (he was Jewish) and an extreme Christian church, before appearing on the world stage again toward the end of his life. Fischer's life was a frequently sad, but fascinating, story, and we see a lot of it thru the eyes of his good friends, which he did have several of. There is some good archival footage included too, especially from the famous match between Fischer and Spassky. It is hard to picture how this documentary could be made any better. Expand
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