Empowerment documentaries don’t come better than this one.
Rory Kennedy’s fascinating profile of chess prodigy Judit Polgár prompts viewers to stand up and cheer. Repeatedly.
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| Judit Polgár and Garry Kasparov played each other many times, but no game was more notorious than their first match, in early 1994, at Spain's 12th annual Linares Super Tournament. |
In the hands of Kennedy and co-scripters Mark Bailey and Keven McAlester, this film is engaging, suspenseful, triumphant, emotionally shattering, and — ultimately — a testament to determination and dogged perseverance.
Along with proof that women can compete with men ... and beat them.
“They’re all weak, all women,” chess master Bobby Fischer notoriously comments, during various interviews resurrected from the early 1960s. “They’re stupid compared to men. They can’t concentrate, they don’t have stamina, and they aren’t creative.
“They should keep strictly to the home.”
Judit was born on July 23, 1976, in Budapest: youngest child in a Jewish-Hungarian family. All three girls were part of a nurture-vs.-nature experiment conducted by their father, László, who believed that “geniuses are made, not born.” A chess teacher and player himself, László and his wife, Klára, home-schooled the girls and — starting each at age 5 — spent eight to nine hours every day focused on chess.
Another reason for that choice: the Polgárs were quite poor, and chess components were cheap.
(Yes, László endured criticism for what some perceived as parental abuse.)
From the beginning, László had no interest in women’s competitions; with help from several professional Hungarian and Russian champions, he trained his daughters to be as aggressive as male players. This put him at odds with the Hungarian Chess Federation, with its strict policy of confining women to their own tournaments. Worse yet, the girls weren’t allowed to leave the Eastern Bloc countries.
At one point, László and Klára genuinely feared that they might be arrested, and separated from their daughters.






