Computer Chess review

The dot-matrix reloaded...

Why you can trust 12DOVE Our experts review games, movies and tech over countless hours, so you can choose the best for you. Find out more about our reviews policy.

At the outset, this low-fi gem from godfather of mumblecore Andrew Bujalski ( Funny Ha Ha , Mutual Appreciation ) seems to go out of its way to appear uninviting. Shot on fuzzy black-and-white video and set in the early ’80s, it’s a pseudo-documentary centred on the Annual North American Computer Chess Tournament.

Our host is chess master Pat Henderson (Gerald Peary), a man spectacularly lacking in charisma. Proceedings open with a stilted panel discussion. Excitement? Barely discernible. But it’s not long before things heat up – in a uniquely deadpan fashion.

Bujalski imposes a structure of sorts; taking place in an Austin hotel, the tournament comprises a five-round artificial-intelligence face-off, set to climax with the winning chess program taking on Henderson himself in a battle of man versus machine. But plot proves almost incidental as events sprawl in appealingly random directions.

There are technical meltdowns and human tantrums, a plague of cats, a religious cult and a solitary female programmer (Robin Schwartz) who creates an unwanted stir… and all before things take a sci-fi-esque turn for the even stranger.

To populate his peculiar universe, Bujalski has assembled a cast combining (vaguely) familiar faces ( Dazed And Confused ’s Wiley Wiggins) with first-timers, several of whom are real-life computing professionals.

Computer Chess takes place at a time before geek became chic, yet avoids easy laughs at the expense of its socially awkward characters. Though it can be classified as a comedy (just), the film is pleasingly underplayed, filtering its madness through a poker-faced prism.

One of the key characters is Michael, an independent programmer cum chancer who spends much of the movie scouring the hotel for a place to rest his head. Yours will be left refreshed – and slightly befuddled – after it’s been for a spin around these captivating corridors.