The strange music tones; the clicking, mechanical sounds that accompanied the equally strange cut-scenes to the Turk throughout; the odd, whispered voice that narrated occasionally as if sharing some great secret; all of this added up to me not enjoying this documentary when I really wanted to. Kasparov himself is an extremely enigmatic and passionate figure, the footage of him in the press conferences that took place after each of the six games is dynamite. Kasparov lost the match. Great content, amateurish presentation. Pure a-holes. 7.88. Sadly that doesn't stop Jayanti, his subjective approach is unaffected by the apparent stalemate.Fortunately the film has more to offer. I too didn't know there was so much controversy surrounding the match. A chambermaid on Corsica is obsessed with chess after seeing a US expat play it lovingly with l'Américaine. Someone could make this move 100% better by just editing out the sound effects and music. The "turk" images and continual biased references throughout the documentary tainted the film. Garry Kasparov is arguably the greatest chess player who has ever lived. printouts of Deep Blue's "thinking" processes, IBM refused him. My personal opinion is that the Deep Blue team did cheat, though anyone watching the film will have to decide for themselves. Choose an adventure below and discover your next favorite movie or TV show. nobody else could see. There are several ways to be notified about new content on TDF. It is very insightful to see how each side felt about the match and although fairly even handed, there is a slight bias against IBM with a strong intimation of suspicious behaviour. This documentary makes IBM and Kasparov look bad IMHO. I would love to see a rematch played out. Instead, they had the machine disassembled before anyone could learn anything about its play. It makes Kasparov look like a paranoid nut and IBM looks like they cheated. I ordered it to play in the Netherlands Europe. Even if you assume that IBM did not use any human intervention, it still did not dominate. As IMDb celebrates its 30th birthday, we have six shows to get you ready for those pivotal years of your life ... your 30s. Prime members enjoy FREE Delivery and exclusive access to music, movies, TV shows, original audio series, and Kindle books. In some way IBM wasn't trying to play chess, Kasparov couldn't see any games or any log... You can be sure, they tested the computer's moves against Kasparov's previous games so them saying it would be unfair to the computer giving logs isn't quite true. A pure machine couldn't even value the purpose of competition to begin with....so then , why would it cheat. This film shows the match and the events surrounding it from Kasparov's perspective. I agree with the review. Blue was not located in the playing room, but in another room that Kasparov lost the match. I mean, after all, you're being asked there to trust in the integrity of a corporation... and anything can be doctored, given enough time. What to Watch if You Miss the "Game of Thrones" Cast, Self - Interviewing Garry Kasparov This was a very interesting DVD and definately deserves to be watched by anyone interested in chess, or the famous Kasparov and Deep Blue games. International customers: beware!