Computer Chess is an odd film for sure. The premise is simple enough: this is a mockumentary focused upon a computer chess conference set in the mid-eighties. This is computer chess as in AI - the machines compete. The film effortlessly portrays and parodies the idea of ‘geek’ computer programmers from the eighties era. Everything down to the bland hotel (shared here with a couples counselling convention) is spot on. The acting is first rate. The characters are hilarious and very different - paranoid, shy, autistic, cocky. And when it wants to be Computer Chess is very funny but, despite the set-up, the film is not really played for laughs. The sinister menace of AI (a more contemporary concern) takes over the film more and more (the film shares much in common, at least thematically, with Charlie Brooker’s later ‘Bandersnatch’ episode of Black Mirror). Shot almost entirely in black-and-white and archly conveying a lo-fi aesthetic, this is a uniquely original and technically accomplished feature.
It’s a movie for fans of intelligent, thoughtful film-making. While Computer Chess is a witty comedy the humour is very subtle and I anticipate a few reviews of the ‘I was mystified and bored’ persuasion. Good, though.