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  • Checkmate: Machine defeats man

    The Gazette (Montreal)
    March 4, 2005 Friday
    Final Edition

    Checkmate: Machine defeats man: Chess grand master takes on Deep
    Blue. Stylish documentary raises questions about Garry Kasparov's
    1997 loss to IBM supercomputer

    by JOHN GRIFFIN, The Gazette


    A knowledge of chess is useful but not essential to the enjoyment of
    Vikram Jayanti's stylish new NFB and Alliance Atlantis documentary
    Game Over: Kasparov and the Machine.

    In 1997, Garry Kasparov took on an IBM computer named Deep Blue in a
    chess tournament and lost, in an event that has been described as "a
    blow against mankind."

    How did it happen? A year earlier, the man considered the greatest
    grand master in recorded history had accepted a "scientific"
    challenge by IBM to play against one of its computers, and wiped the
    floor with it.

    The "half-Jewish, half-Armenian" Russian graciously offered a
    rematch. Little did he know IBM would throw almost limitless
    resources at constructing a 11/2-tonne supercomputer dubbed Deep Blue
    specifically configured to deal with the mind-blowing numbers
    involved in the game.

    It was dubbed the "brute force" approach to combating the nimbleness
    of the human brain and it attracted wide international public
    interest in the six-game/nine-day New York smackdown.

    Game Over combines actual tournament footage and memories of those
    involved with a return visit to what Kasparov calls "the scene of the
    crime."

    In his mind, no more or less paranoid than others playing a devilish
    game at levels unimaginable to mere mortals, IBM cheated on the
    match. Specifically, in the second game, Deep Blue made a move too
    human to have come from a programmed digital brain.

    Kasparov is convinced a human interfered with the process in one of a
    number of rooms locked and off-limits to the Russian and his team.
    The film cites the unwillingness of the IBM mob to share any
    information about Deep Blue - "Garry thought it was about science and
    research, and played right into their hands."

    It is also noted after Kasparov had a meltdown to lose the last game
    and the tournament, IBM wonks immediately dismantled the machine
    they'd worked a year on constructing.

    "It's like going to the moon, looking around and coming home with
    nothing to show for it," someone says about the shelving of such an
    intensive project.

    Still, things might have worked out for the company in the long run.
    Its shares jumped 15 per cent after the win, and a giant considered
    an also-ran in the computer business became a player.

    As for Kasparov, he recovered enough to continue his extraordinary
    career, but Game Over makes clear something has been lost. And it's
    more than a game.

    "Human beings are weak in everything but intelligence," the grand
    master explains. "Now something comes along that says 'I might be
    smarter' - and it's a machine."

    [email protected]

    Game Over: Kasparov and the Machine

    Rating 3 1/2

    Playing at: AMC cinema.

    Parents' guide: required viewing for chess nuts, some language.
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