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Queen of Chess (2026)

Documentary | 93 minutes
3,47 30 votes

Genre: Documentary / Biography

Duration: 93 minuten

Country: United States

Directed by: Rory Kennedy

IMDb score: 7,6 (3.012)

Releasedate: 27 January 2026

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UK
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Queen of Chess plot

The story of Judit Polgar from Hungary, the greatest female chess player of all time. From her rise as a 12-year-old prodigy who broke into the world's top 100, to her historic achievement at 15 when she surpassed Bobby Fischer as the world's youngest grandmaster. The film features interviews with Judit, her family, Garry Kasparov, and other important figures from the chess world.

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avatar van james_cameron

james_cameron

  • 7060 messages
  • 9827 votes

A fun, highly entertaining documentary about Judit Polgar from Hungary, the most successful female chess player of all time. It centers on her ongoing battle with the Russian Garry Kasparov, whom she initially seems unable to defeat. This is perhaps given a bit too much attention, causing other aspects of her life to be somewhat neglected, but it does provide a good dose of suspense. The influence of her father, who groomed Polgar and her sisters for the chess world from a young age, could also have been explored more, but oh well.

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avatar van mrklm

mrklm

  • 11629 messages
  • 10041 votes

After studying the lives of the greatest geniuses of the modern world, László Polgár realizes that genius is within the reach of children who, from the age of five, dedicate themselves to one thing. László and his wife Klára did everything they could to make their daughters Susan, Sofia, and Judit chess geniuses. And with success; in 1993, Judit became the youngest chess grandmaster in history. This documentary portrays the extremely sexist climate in which Judit had to perform and the duels against Garry Kasparov, the greatest chess player of all time. Analyses of the tactics employed require an above-average understanding of chess, which by its very nature isn't very television-friendly. Especially recommended for chess connoisseurs, although the participation of the ever-flamboyant Kasparov is a major plus.

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avatar van Collins

Collins

  • 7350 messages
  • 4348 votes

Queen of Chess features Judit Polgár, the Hungarian chess prodigy. A documentary with a touch of pop culture history, thrilling psychological chess duels, and a critique of the conservative chess world where men rule and women aren't taken seriously. Queen of Chess offers a compelling portrait of a young chess player who not only competed against the world's elite but also fought against the prejudices of a male-dominated world.

The documentary pays excessive attention to that last aspect. An interesting observation in itself, but the constant emphasis and repetition quickly waned my attention. More interesting are the meteoric rise of chess phenomenon Polgár and the games she played, particularly the games against Garry Kasparov. These aspects don't receive the attention they deserve. You find them touched upon and scattered throughout the mix of interviews, archive footage, and reenactments.

From her childhood in an ambitious working-class family in communist Hungary, through her first international successes to her historic breakthrough as the youngest grandmaster ever, the documentary presents it all in close sequence. Early and more recent interviews with Judit Polgár and her sisters provide insight into the mentality, motivation, and way of thinking of the phenomenon.

The pressure to perform and the self-doubt Judit Polgár suffers from aren't explored in depth in the documentary, but rather tactically deployed. They create contrived dramatic moments and artificially tense moments. It struck me as rather calculated. While the documentary does dent Polgár's professional facade, it fails to break it down. And that's what I'd hoped for.

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original