Dangerous Moves Movie Review
Dangerous Moves Review
"Dangerous Moves" Overview

Rating: NR
1984
Cast and Crew
Director : Richard DemboProducer : Arthur Cohn,Martine Marignac
Screenwiter : Richard Dembo
Starring : Michel Piccoli,Alexandre Arbatt,Liv Ullmann,Leslie Caron,Wojciech Pszoniak
The title may sound like soft-core porn, but it's actually a Best Foreign Film
Oscar winner that you've never heard of.
Never before seen in the US, this Swiss production concerns a championship
chess match between Soviet master Liebskind (Michel Piccoli) and his former
student, a defector named Fromm (Alexandre Arbatt). The underlying political
intrigue -- which we expect -- is quite understated as the film focuses on the
mind games between the two players. Sure, there's a political agenda, but the
insight into how these players try to outfox each other between matches is
priceless. They plan strategies, only to watch them come undone during the
actual game. When we learn that Liebskind is dying, the game becomes a
metaphor for not just east vs. west, but life vs. life.
Piccoli and Arbatt, actors whom I've never seen before, are outstandingly
well-cast. I'm equally unfamiliar with the small body of work of Richard Dembo,
but if a guy can make a chess game exciting, he earns a gold star in my book.
Veteran producer Arthur Cohn also has a hand in film, and on the new DVD
release of the film he offers by way of interview some of his insights into the
filmmaking process. A handy guide to chess notation will help your enjoyment of
the film if you aren't a player.
Recommended.
Aka Le Diagonale du fou.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



