New Times (L.A.) by Bill Gallo
In the end, it demonstrates all over again the virtual impossibility of doing Nabokov justice on film, because his work is so resolutely and brilliantly made of words.
✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
United Kingdom, France · 2000
Rated PG-13 · 1h 49m
Director Marleen Gorris
Starring John Turturro, Emily Watson, Geraldine James, Stuart Wilson
Genre Drama, Romance
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Discovering his prodigious talent in boyhood, Luzhin's passion for chess has become his refuge. Already matched up by her family to the very suitable Comte de Stassard, when Natalia meets Luzhin, she is drawn to his genius and offers him a glimpse outside of his chess obsession. However, it is a world he is not equipped to deal with...
New Times (L.A.) by Bill Gallo
In the end, it demonstrates all over again the virtual impossibility of doing Nabokov justice on film, because his work is so resolutely and brilliantly made of words.
San Francisco Chronicle by Bob Graham
When the film sticks with the eccentric comedy of a highborn woman attracted to a preoccupied genius, it works splendidly. When it strays into melodrama, it is as ill-equipped as Luzhin.
Watson's character grows in importance until she eclipses the recessive Luzhin.
Wall Street Journal by Joe Morgenstern
An attractive, intelligent film that's intractably at odds with itself.
Austin Chronicle by Marjorie Baumgarten
It's one of those period dramas about upper-crust Europeans in vacation resorts, which at first we think we've seen a million times before.
Baltimore Sun by Michael Sragow
Handsome and well-acted, yet it can't hold a pawn to Nabokov's harrowing and moving character study.
Chicago Tribune by Michael Wilmington
You'll find heartbreakingly star-crossed lovers, a heartless villain (Wilson) and a dazzling backdrop of aristocratic life before and after the Russian Revolution.
Gorris has beefed up the role of Natalia (Watson), with the end result that the film's emphasis is appropriately divided between the two characters in an emotionally satisfying way.
Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert
The film is elegiac and sad, beautifully mounted, but not as compelling as it should be.
Seattle Post-Intelligencer by William Arnold
I can't think of another movie that more fluently communicates the special agony and ecstasy of the game of chess.
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