The Chess Player

The Chess Player (French: Le Joueur d'échecs) is a 1927 French silent film directed by Raymond Bernard and based on a novel by Henry Dupuy-Mazuel. It is a historical drama set in the late 18th century during the Russian domination of Polish Lithuania, and elements of the plot are drawn from the story of the chess-playing automaton known as The Turk.

The Chess Player
Le Joueur d'échecs
French language poster
Directed byRaymond Bernard
Written byRaymond Bernard
Jean-José Frappa
Based onLe Joueur d'échecs
by Henry Dupuy-Mazuel
Starring
Cinematography
  • Joseph-Louis Mundviller
  • Marc Bujard
Music byHenri Rabaud
Production
company
La Société des Films Historiques
Release date
  • 6 January 1927 (1927-01-06)
Running time
135 minutes
CountryFrance
Languagesilent
BudgetFF 6 million[1]

Plot

In 1776, a young Polish patriot, Boleslas Vorowski, is wounded in an abortive uprising against the Russian forces in Vilnius. A reward for his capture is offered but he is sheltered by Baron von Kempelen, an inventor of lifelike automata, who plans to smuggle Vorowski, a skilful chess-player, to Germany concealed inside a chess-playing automaton called The Turk. Major Nicolaïeff, a Russian rival of Vorowski, challenges The Turk to a game and is defeated, but he realises that the machine is being secretly operated by Vorowski. He arranges for The Turk to be sent to Moscow to entertain the Empress Catherine II. When The Turk refuses to allow Catherine to cheat, the Empress orders that the automaton is to be executed by firing squad at dawn. During a masked ball, von Kempelen replaces Vorowski inside The Turk, to enable him to escape with his lover Sophie. Nicolaïeff, who has been sent to search von Kempelen's house, is slain by the inventor's sabre-wielding automata.

Cast

Production

The Chess Player was the second film which Raymond Bernard made for the Société des Films Historiques, although on this occasion its subject matter of the Polish struggle for independence from Russia did not correspond with the company's avowed devotion to French history. Some scenes were filmed on location in Poland with the assistance of the Polish army (notably the Vilno insurrection and the large-scale cavalry charge). For many of the other spectacular locations, 35 sets were created at the Joinville Studios by Robert Mallet-Stevens and Jean Perrier; the most spectacular was the facade and courtyard of the Winter Palace, which covered some 5000 square metres of land beside the studio. Additional special effects were provided by the British film designer W. Percy Day. Filming began on 15 March 1926 and was completed on 31 October, leaving Bernard only two months for its post-production before the premiere in January 1927.[1][2] An orchestral score was written for the film by Henri Rabaud.

The gala premiere at the Marivaux cinema in Paris was a huge success and the film went on to have a first run of three months at that cinema before its general release in the summer of 1927. Audiences were particularly impressed by the spectacular cavalry charge imagined by Sophie as she sings the Polish hymn of independence. The press reception in France was generally enthusiastic .[2][3] The film was released in the UK in early 1928, and in the US in 1930 (where however the reviewer for The New York Times was unimpressed).[4]

A restoration of the film was undertaken in the 1980s, led by Kevin Brownlow and David Gill. In the absence of any definitive negative or print, it required the collaboration of several European film archives from which material in several variant copies was collated; sources in an East German archive and the Cinémathèque Municipale in Luxembourg provided the most complete material. The finished tinted print received its first screenings in London in December 1990, with Henri Rabaud's original score conducted by Carl Davis.[5]

References

  1. Richard Abel. French Cinema: the First Wave, 1915-1929. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1984. p. 140.
  2. Lenny Borger. [Programme notes for the Thames Silents screenings of The Chess Player in London, December 1990. p. 6]
  3. Cinémagazine, 1927, no.2 (14 Jan 1927), p. 72: "une grande et très belle œuvre qui fera, nous n'en doutons pas, le tour du monde pour la plus belle gloire du cinéma français."
  4. "A Film Featuring Robots", in The New York Times, 19 May 1930.
  5. Kevin Brownlow. [Programme notes for the Thames Silents screenings of The Chess Player in London, December 1990. p. 7.]
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