Movie Description Though he's only seven, Josh looks at a chessboard and anticipates moves that mature chess players don't even see. He's a malleable young boy with an incredible talent for the game of masterminds. When Josh begins honing his talent, playing a speedy version of the game called "blitz" with hustlers and hobos, his father decides to take him to world reknowned coach Bruce Pandolfini, who claims Josh may well be the second coming of chess legend Bobby Fischer. But family struggles ensue when the mother worries that in cultivating the genius, they may be hurting the child.
| Credits | | Cast: | Ben Kingsley, Joan Allen |
Notes "Searching For Bobby Fischer" is a true story based on the book of the same title by Fred Waitzkin about his experiences with his chess-playing prodigy son Josh. This is screenwriter-director Steven Zaillian's directorial debut.
Producer Scott Rudin can be credited as having first brought the book to Academy Award-nominated screenwriter Steven Zaillian's attention. Zaillian, nominated for his "Awakenings" script, has turned many stories about ordinary people into compassionate screenplays dramatizing life's mysteries. For the part of Josh, casting agent Avy Kaufman issued a national talent search, hoping to find a child actor capable of balancing the challenges that accompany playing a child prodigy: familiarity with chess, ability to memorize lines, and acting skill. Kaufman provided the same assistance for Jodie Foster's 1991 directorial debut, "Little Man Tate." According to the film's production notes, the real Bruce Pandolfini, responsible for discovering Josh's talent, was technical advisor on the film. To Pandolfini, verisimilitude was the goal. According to Paramount's press kit, he worked with the cast to coach them on chess techniques, perfect their chess style and help them memorize their moves.
Rated BBFC PG by the British Board of Film Classification.
"Innocent Moves" is the British title; "Searching for Bobby Fisher" is the U.S. title., DVD Features
Region 1 Keep Case Generic Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.85 Audio: Dolby Digital 5.1 - English Additional Release Material: Interactive Features: Interactive Menus Scene Selection
Editorial Reviews "...Riveting." -- Rating: A- Entertainment Weekly - Steve Daly (07/08/1994)
"...Earnest and well-acted....Mantegna adds to his portfolio with a fine, subdued performance....Joan Allen is strong..." Variety - Brian Lowry (08/16/1993)
"...Wonderful....A film of remarkable sensitivity and insight....By the end of SEARCHING FOR BOBBY FISHER we have learned something about tournament chess, and a great deal about human nature..." Chicago Sun-Times - Roger Ebert (08/11/1993)
"Accessible, involving..." USA Today - Mike Clark (07/21/2000)
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