SXSW Review: Brooklyn Castle

Score:A-

Director:Katie Dellamaggiore

Cast:Various

Running Time:101 Minutes

Rated:NR

I.S. 318 is an inner-city school in New York City where over 65 percent of the students come from homes with incomes below the federal poverty level.  It also happens to have the best, most-winning junior high chess team in the country.  Sadly, its winning tradition is being threatened as the chess team could face dismemberment as the school begins to face budget cuts across the district.

For years, we have been told of the effects that come from a cut education budget.  Katie Dellamaggiore has finally given the serious problem a face in her eye-opening documentary Brooklyn Castle.

This film, which showcases the events that occur during a single school year, evenly displaces the lives of the chess team members both at and away from school.  From their joyous moments to their personal struggles, Dellamaggiore presents them in such a style that each student is able to connect with the audience.  We see a bit of ourselves within their fight to excel.

Brooklyn Castle walks a fine line between being informative and preachy.  A set of characters, each in different places within the game of chess, are offered up to the audience and none disappoint.  From the budding scholar to the struggling beginner, there is a bit of everything wrapped within this extremely concise and well-organized story.  There is simply no denying it"”Brooklyn Castle has just accomplished its ultimate goal: check mate.

Facebooktwitterredditmail

About Stephen Davis

Stephen Davis
I owe this hobby/career to the one and only Stephanie Peterman who, while interning at Fox, told me that I had too many opinions and irrelevant information to keep it all bottled up inside. I survived my first rated R film, Alive, at the ripe age of 8, it took me months to grasp the fact that Julia Roberts actually died at the end of Steel Magnolias, and I might be the only person alive who actually enjoyed Sorority Row…for its comedic value of course. While my friends can drink you under the table, I can outwatch you when it comes iconic, yet horrid 80s films like Adventures in Babysitting and Troop Beverly Hills. I have no shame when it comes to what I like, and if you have a problem with that, then we’ll settle it on the racquetball court. I see too many movies to actually win any film trivia contest, so don’t waste your first pick on me. My friends rent movies from my bookcase shelves, and one day I do plan to start charging. I long to live in LA, where my movie obsession will actually help me fit in, but for now I am content with my home in Austin. I prefer indies to blockbusters, Longhorns to Sooners and Halloween to Friday the 13th. I miss the classics, as well as John Ritter, and I hope to one day sit down and interview the amazing Kate Winslet.

Leave a Reply