Amidst financial crises and unprecedented public school budget cuts, Brooklyn
Castle takes an intimate look at the challenges and triumphs facing members
of a junior high school's champion chess team. The film is a documentary about
I.S. 318 – an inner-city school where more than 65 percent of students
are from homes with incomes below the federal poverty level – that also
happens to have the best, most winning junior high school chess team in the
country. (If Albert Einstein, who was rated 1800, were to join the team, he'd
only rank fifth best). Chess has transformed the school from one cited in 2003
as a "school in need of improvement" to one of New York City's best.
But a series of recession-driven pubic school budget cuts now threaten to undermine
those hard-won successes. Source:
IMDB.
Official trailer
This award winning documentary was released today (October 19, 2012). It tells
the stories of five members of the chess team at a below-the-poverty-line inner
city junior high school that has won more national championships than any other
in the country. The film follows the challenges these kids face in their personal
lives as well as on the chessboard, and is as much about the sting of their
losses as it is about the anticipation of their victories.
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Time
Entertainment: Brooklyn Castle: The Cool Kids Play Chess
It would be hard not to fall in love with the five kids profiled in the
film, which won the audience award at this year’s South by Southwest
Film Festival. First, there’s Rochelle Ballantyne, the player to beat,
one of few girls on the team, who is well on her way to becoming the first
female African American chess master in the history of chess. Another superstar,
Justus Williams, joins the team as a new sixth grade student, and at 11-years-old
has already won some of the highest national honors possible for a young
chess player. And Alexis Paredes, another of the team’s top players,
who sees chess as a stepping stone to a career that will allow him to help
support his immigrant parents. At the other end of the spectrum is Patrick
Johnston, the lovable underdog with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder,
who eagerly wants to improve his ranking on the team. And finally, there’s
Pobo, the team’s backbone, biggest cheerleader and arguably the film’s
star, who dubs himself “Pobama” and runs for school president.
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New
York Times: At a Brooklyn School, the Cool Crowd Pushes the King Around
Chess is embedded in the culture of I.S. 318. All sixth graders take weekly
chess classes and can continue chess as an elective for the next two years.
Players from acclaimed elementary school chess programs like the one at
Public School 31 in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, feed the school, but the team
also welcomes beginners. Chess banners line the hallways, and the school’s
answering machine says, “Thank you for calling I.S. 318, home of the
national chess champions.”
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New
York Times: The Game Is All-Consuming, at Least Until the Outside World
Intrudes
October 18 2012 – “Brooklyn Castle” is itself
an argument about how children succeed, but it is also unabashedly and somewhat
overexcitedly a feature-length mash note to its young subjects. Yet why
not? It’s deeply satisfying watching these public school, hard-knock
kids win, and [Director] Ms. Dellamaggiore knows it. They struggle, these
children, and their struggling reaches its climax in tournaments that are
at once dramatic and nicely cinematic, as illustrated by the many wide shots
of rows upon rows of boys and girls hunched over boards in cavernous hotel
rooms. Will they win? You know it. Read it and weep: In April, after the
documentary wrapped, I.S. 318 became the first middle school team to win
the United States Chess Federation’s national high school championship.
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