Beth Harmon's Final Chess Game | The Queen's Gambit - Full Scene

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  • Опубликовано: 31 дек 2024

Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @tiagonozelos
    @tiagonozelos 3 года назад +23999

    I loved the fact that russians were not displayed as evil antagonists like many american shows and movies do. Instead, they were shown to be kind and respectful.

    • @peterlever8013
      @peterlever8013 3 года назад +1408

      In complete agreement with you here. Save the propaganda for politics. Through marrying a Russian I’ve become aware that her people have a kindness and regard for others that I have not always observed elsewhere.

    • @tiagonozelos
      @tiagonozelos 3 года назад +827

      @@peterlever8013 It’s sad that the idea of Russians being inherently arrogant and cruel has been spread so much through American pop culture, specially when the tension between the two countries was at its peak. Even in Western Europe some people have this wrong idea due to how popular American culture is.

    • @tiagonozelos
      @tiagonozelos 3 года назад +288

      @Cyril It’s not a matter of political ideologies, it’s a matter of fact. One of those examples is Rocky. And I am neither American nor Liberal.

    • @donoi2k22
      @donoi2k22 3 года назад +91

      I heard Garry Kasparov worked on the series. Probably couldn't do it cuz their chess guy was Russian.

    • @donoi2k22
      @donoi2k22 3 года назад +43

      @@tiagonozelos And I'm saying it's probably because Kasparov worked on the series.

  • @rbutthamilton
    @rbutthamilton 4 года назад +15543

    Don't forget Borgov was also an orphan. That is why he was actually proud of her achievement and disappointed in Paris when he saw her in that hung-over state.

    • @LivinhItUp
      @LivinhItUp 4 года назад +2829

      Yep! Director has stated the antagonist was always Beth herself. The opponents for her chess matches can easily be written as characters you root against, especially Borgov. But he’s displayed nothing but class towards Beth, and it’s only the fact he is number 1, and has beaten Beth on two occasions, that you naturally want him to fall. But he’s proven gracious in defeat, and displayed several scenes where he low key has much respect for her...review the elevator scene.

    • @kevinh.1624
      @kevinh.1624 4 года назад +913

      Asides from the orphan thing and the fact he is actually proud of her, I think it also illustrates that the beauty of chess is such that it goes far beyond any rivalry or feuds. The show does an astounding decoy by initially portraying Borgov as a cold person, in the Cold War context, to finally show us that all of that is absolutely pointless. The game unifies us no matter matter where we're from, as seen in the very last scene, and the true purpose is to get better and to encounter always better opponents rather than simply beating them. You could extend what applies to chess to other competitive disciplines or science, that have more often than not unified humanity instead of dividing it.

    • @matnotyou
      @matnotyou 4 года назад +214

      @Petek Demircioğlu Çelebi I think alot of it is due to the fact the Soviets were one of the first people to legally give women equal rights compared to the conservatism in the US

    • @chezlolxo
      @chezlolxo 4 года назад +98

      @@kevinh.1624 absolutely! This is definitely what I took from this show and I don’t even know how to play chess. I will say this show definitely gave me a new admiration for chess, it’s fascinating.
      But yes, it’s not about winning, it’s about progress. Not a national achievement but an international and human achievement! And it also shows how we can only really make progress when we work together, not working together skews progress.

    • @StudyLens
      @StudyLens 4 года назад +23

      absolute chills!! btw i made a video on this EPIC scene of ‘The Queens Gambit’ and explain why it’s sooo impactful! I hope you can check it out! 💜

  • @juichi8361
    @juichi8361 4 года назад +17653

    Borgov looks intimidating but is the only person who hugged her after a match.

    • @Oldlard
      @Oldlard 4 года назад +987

      I think that scene was based on the 1972 Spassky Fischer match. No hugs but Spassky did stand up and applaud Fischer after his amazing sixth round game.

    • @franchocou
      @franchocou 4 года назад +76

      Sexual abuse

    • @danah7067
      @danah7067 4 года назад +878

      @@franchocou what lmao

    • @iamgarbage8956
      @iamgarbage8956 4 года назад +440

      @@franchocou Wtf are u talkin about

    • @mr_sognr1297
      @mr_sognr1297 4 года назад +44

      @@iamgarbage8956 Jajaja esta bien loco.

  • @kingtrash1051
    @kingtrash1051 2 года назад +4507

    What makes me sad is that Mr Shaibel didn’t get to see her win this game as he loved and admired her so much. But this made me cry. Such an awesome and powerful series

    • @xz3024
      @xz3024 2 года назад +402

      I agree. But the way the show ends, with her playing for fun with an old man, reminds us of him.

    • @samantharandall4634
      @samantharandall4634 2 года назад +136

      I agree with the comment above - the final scene of the old man challenging her to a game @ the end made it feel like a ‘full circle’ moment. Her mentor challenged her in the beginning, now the he’s passed & she’s won… she is challenged by someone with the same spark as her mentor. I love the final scenes & this series so much 🥲

    • @youngspaghetti8050
      @youngspaghetti8050 2 года назад +55

      @@xz3024 Yes, I think the idea is that the old man is supposed to be redolent of Shaibel. So, in a way, the story comes full-circle.

    • @cutecats532
      @cutecats532 2 года назад +54

      Mr. Shaibel was so proud of her, and she honored him making sure they told the story of how he taught her.

    • @FriedSheep69
      @FriedSheep69 2 года назад +13

      The price she paid to win was too great.

  • @GrapevineBranch
    @GrapevineBranch 4 года назад +4354

    The look of disbelief on her face when she wins... And Borgov's smile. He's proud of her. He's seen her at her worst, and now he's seen her at her best.

    • @jumpingship3001
      @jumpingship3001 3 года назад +94

      Yes like a father.

    • @big_dick_energy
      @big_dick_energy 3 года назад +140

      I think that's more about the move he made. His last move, queen to e4 was a last trap. If she moved the king to f1 she would have been mated. That's why she slowly drags the king to d2, showing that she didn't fell in that trap.

    • @grinsplit444
      @grinsplit444 3 года назад +9

      @@jumpingship3001, more like a friend.

    • @waannwaann5048
      @waannwaann5048 3 года назад +2

      💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔😭😭😭😭😭

    • @kylelawson9420
      @kylelawson9420 2 года назад +7

      It’s silly to think that a chess world champion would react like this after being beaten. He offered a draw in a lost position instead of resigning, which is just disrespectful. And the hug was just over the top funny. No one is going to hug someone that beats them.
      Also in the book, every time Beth plays Borgov she was at her best. The whole Paris scene where she woke up in the bathtub hung over was fabricated for the show. She studied and got like 8 hours of sleep and woke up well rested in the book. He never saw her at her “worst.”

  • @2Chenzzzz
    @2Chenzzzz 4 года назад +6510

    I love how she always refused to be a US govt puppet in the show. Instead, she reached out and was friendly to the Russian people, who also responded in kind.

    • @theserialbunny424
      @theserialbunny424 4 года назад +175

      Stayed true to her roots rather get her head up in the sky like most of the successful people do

    • @sudhisira
      @sudhisira 3 года назад +253

      I thought how it would have been a very ordinary day for everyone if Beth had just continued on to the airport. She would have boarded the flight back home, and the chess players at the park would have played their games and gone home as well. Instead, she chose to get out of the car and walk to where they were so she could honor their love of the game, making it such a special day for them - and for her too.

    • @staypositive4358
      @staypositive4358 3 года назад +42

      That part of the plot follows in Bobby Fischer's footsteps.

    • @xoliyah6553
      @xoliyah6553 3 года назад +52

      even took the time to learn the language 🥺

    • @staypositive4358
      @staypositive4358 3 года назад +15

      @@xoliyah6553 . That was also modeled after Bobby Fischer.

  • @caleblim6890
    @caleblim6890 4 года назад +15061

    I like that when Borgov realises he’s lost, he doesn’t seem angry or even disappointed. He’s smiling, because he knows he put up a great fight in a brilliant game against an excellent opponent, and in the end all he cared about was playing the game he loves, so he could smile and applaud Beth’s victory.

    • @GrandMoffTarkinsTeaDispenser
      @GrandMoffTarkinsTeaDispenser 4 года назад +106

      This is very normal in chess.

    • @PieEater
      @PieEater 4 года назад +260

      @@GrandMoffTarkinsTeaDispenser not that normal especially in blitz they rage all the time

    • @bolshoefeodor6536
      @bolshoefeodor6536 4 года назад +51

      @@GrandMoffTarkinsTeaDispenser It wasn't the case with Fischer-Spassky, nor Karpov-Kasparov. But whatever

    • @ForteExpresso
      @ForteExpresso 4 года назад +156

      Successful and intelligent people never act immature,the way most of the people imagine themselves to be like in such a situation

    • @seedyoda5714
      @seedyoda5714 4 года назад +33

      @@bolshoefeodor6536 Citizen, those chess players shake hands at the end of matches faster than they move pieces in blitz tournaments

  • @tlightning8383
    @tlightning8383 3 года назад +4844

    It’s so adorable the way those old Russian men were just ecstatic to see her. She was everyone’s hero.

    • @_RoseDawson_
      @_RoseDawson_ 3 года назад +241

      That scene was powerful.
      Because those old folks there reminded Beth about Mr. Sheibel.
      And the fact that she took the time to shake all of their hands is very heartwarming; she finally made amendments with Mr Sheibel who is probably watching her from heaven :)

    • @LayllasLocker
      @LayllasLocker 3 года назад +108

      @@_RoseDawson_ I cried on that scene when she was back in the basement and found their picture. I wish she shared with him some of her success. :'( That last scene was so wonderful and touching. And how she mentioned Mr. Sheibel to the newspaper, but if only he lived to see that. :(:(

    • @Blueeyesinthesky
      @Blueeyesinthesky 2 года назад +46

      It was a sweet moment because she originally learned from an old man. I think they reminded her of the janitor

    • @colinmaynard2879
      @colinmaynard2879 2 года назад +3

      The unsteady cam made the her approach walk unwatchable

    • @S0ulinth3machin3
      @S0ulinth3machin3 2 года назад +34

      @@colinmaynard2879 I believe it was done on purpose. The point of that scene is to bring the story full circle, she's paying homage to Mr. Shaibel, at the orphanage the addiction was thrust upon her, beating Borgov sober was her exit, buttoning up her white coat concealing her black garment is a metaphor for her graduating to the white queen. At the orphanage she was a pawn and before she attained proficiency, Mr. Shaibel always made her play black. That being said, I haven't yet hit upon why the unsteady cam was utilized, but given how meticulously every other metaphor in this series was set up, I can't imagine that it was an accident.

  • @nugett6835
    @nugett6835 4 года назад +7609

    It’s so cool that every single of the men that intimidated her at the start ended up supporting her and not trying to tear her down or something like that

    • @ShreeNation
      @ShreeNation 3 года назад +609

      That's how it should always be, men and women working together, not against each other.

    • @xavien_818
      @xavien_818 3 года назад +49

      @@ShreeNation y e s

    • @jealousharibo
      @jealousharibo 3 года назад +247

      @@ShreeNation it should be like that, but movies so rarely show it! And here it was executed perfectly. All the amazing chess players, who very early understood she was much better than them and wanted to give her whatever they already knew just for the sake of helping her become the best she could. It was really, really refreshing to see it in this series.

    • @westernspy8461
      @westernspy8461 3 года назад +45

      In real life they would try to tear her down as mush as possible

    • @billelliott3507
      @billelliott3507 3 года назад +13

      It’s more realistic

  • @jumpingship3001
    @jumpingship3001 4 года назад +5913

    By playing the old man, she honored Mr Shaibell. She went to her roots, she went home again. She found her family in chess.

    • @peterguindo1576
      @peterguindo1576 4 года назад +185

      Not only to Mr. Shaibell to all people that love play Chess around the world, she was very humble.

    • @magmarian6235
      @magmarian6235 4 года назад +38

      @@dilanpatel6868 Nope, but I think Jumping Ship's explanation on why Harmon decided to go back to that specific area where elderly were playing chess was spot on.

    • @magmarian6235
      @magmarian6235 4 года назад +2

      @@dilanpatel6868 oh it is?? wow

    • @empebee
      @empebee 4 года назад +26

      @@dilanpatel6868 It's not the same actor. They don't even look remotely similar.

    • @MagnusAnand
      @MagnusAnand 4 года назад +1

      Great comment

  • @momoneylessproblems9183
    @momoneylessproblems9183 4 года назад +3730

    Love how they didn't portray the Russians as the "evil and oppressive" Soviets as they usually do in movies. They just depicted them as people living in a different country who had a profound passion for chess. Especially Borgov. He was never a "bad guy". He was just a very talented chess player who had a lot of respect for the game and for those who played it well. Hence why he was genuinely happy when Beth won. He'd been beautifully outplayed and by an orphan no less (Which he himself was). And he respected her for it.

    • @ДаняШиряев-п6е
      @ДаняШиряев-п6е 4 года назад +29

      На самом деле, такие Русские в целом, Русские это монета двух сторон, с одной они такие мрачные и серьезные, но с другой добрые и улыбающиеся

    • @a.f9578
      @a.f9578 4 года назад +68

      this doesn't change the fact how they accurately portrayed the harsh condition of Russian chess players under the Soviet regime which mirrors the day to day conditions of ordinary citizens back then the bureaucracy the secret service the pressure the intimidation and silence tactics etc ...

    • @drjuancruz
      @drjuancruz 4 года назад +125

      Yeah, I loved it! And I also loved how the showed México City: beautiful and marvelous, and not with the usual dirty filter they use to put whenever Latinoamérica appears...

    • @abudgie6909
      @abudgie6909 4 года назад +134

      @@a.f9578 and they accurately portrayed the shady imperialist interests of America in trying to use Beth for their agenda, visible in the CIA dude and the crusaders people. You’re right, but the point is that this is an incredibly refreshing take on the USSR. The Americans have to learn to work together like Borgov and co. and the people of russia embrace Beth because of their mutual love for the game. It’s good.

    • @anweshaiz9
      @anweshaiz9 4 года назад +16

      Omg yes! I really liked that they showed everyone as respectful and well rounded and not some shallow stereotype!!

  • @crucisnh
    @crucisnh 3 года назад +2583

    I love the final scene of Beth Harmon walking through a park and up to the old men playing chess. And how the old guys were incredibly respectful of her and how classy Harmon was in accepting their congratulations, to the point of even accepting an invitation to play a game with a smile on her face. I can't imagine a better ending.

    • @pjeffries301
      @pjeffries301 3 года назад +14

      Me either. Perfection.

    • @Omegascithe
      @Omegascithe 2 года назад +55

      ​@foot bru Her full first name is Elizabeth, and the much more natural way to shorten it in Slavic languages is Liza or Lisa. Beth is a little rougher on the tongue (since 'th' would be pronounced mostly harder on the 't' than a 'th' sound you'd expect in plain English-- also 'th' isn't really a sound in any Slavic languages to my knowledge), while Liza or Lisa would come off the tongue sounding much warmer. A lot of nicknames end in vowels in Slavic languages, and tend to be very endearing towards the person it's meant towards
      Source: Yeah I'm one of 'em Slavs lol

    • @vally732
      @vally732 2 года назад

      because the regular people are the real people, the ones who matter, not the governments and the bs they perpetrate!

    • @gabaghoul23
      @gabaghoul23 2 года назад +20

      pure class on both sides.. chess has no face, race, religion, or politics- the game speaks for itself worldwide

    • @amberlyn28
      @amberlyn28 2 года назад +26

      I love that as well. Of course she wanted to win, but not when for bragging rights or for fame. She wanted to win to prove to herself that she had perfected her craft and that she was a better player than she was in the past. And once she won, she still had the love of the game not the love of the fame. She went to the park to be around other people of like minds who are there JUST to play because they love it

  • @socialvegan263
    @socialvegan263 4 года назад +5814

    She didn't cry for her real mother or her adopted mother when they died but she did broke down when Mr. Shaibel died.. I couldn't hold my tears as well.

    • @wonderwatts7749
      @wonderwatts7749 4 года назад +770

      Because he was the only father figure she had. She didnt appreciate him enough when he was still living. She later on realize his importance after he died.

    • @shoottakeapanorama2062
      @shoottakeapanorama2062 4 года назад +588

      She cried for her adoptive mother tho not just as hard as she cried for Mr. Shaibel

    • @CapeEniEer
      @CapeEniEer 4 года назад +80

      well yeah i was crying like a little girl at that scene too

    • @vaginaflop7523
      @vaginaflop7523 4 года назад +280

      She did cry for Alma (her adoptive mother) on the plane when she was giving the empty seat beside her a toast

    • @ultimatemachine457
      @ultimatemachine457 4 года назад +17

      And that's the reason why it's important for a child to be raised by a father. Doesn't matter if the father is an a**hole, a father naturally love his kids and will do his best to teach them the way

  • @vibhamishra9137
    @vibhamishra9137 4 года назад +6020

    I love it how this show emphasizes the importance of the right friends in one's life. If it wasn't for joelene's money she wouldn't have gone to Russia, and the way Benny and others supported her was so beautiful. People today have forgotten what wonders true friendship can do. Thankyou Netflix.

    • @MonikaUp
      @MonikaUp 4 года назад +5

      True

    • @nealmiles9070
      @nealmiles9070 3 года назад +21

      or you just have horrible friends

    • @situated4
      @situated4 3 года назад +61

      @@nealmiles9070 Like you.

    • @arcticwars
      @arcticwars 3 года назад +15

      The Power of Homieship

    • @nealmiles9070
      @nealmiles9070 3 года назад +25

      @@situated4 lol why are you so salty? you have shitty friends too? or are you the shitty friend?

  • @joannaw1953
    @joannaw1953 4 года назад +3558

    I absolutely ADORE Borgov smiling and hugging her, then remembering he has to look cool and intimidating, and then smiling proudly again.

    • @hamzaahmed3919
      @hamzaahmed3919 3 года назад +138

      @Samm Salvey I believe you’re missing the beauty in the writing. This isn’t a wish wash strong female character trope, this is the story of a character who’s been flawed from the start- but with the friends she’s made and the lessons she’s learned along the way helped her to overcome the flaws and addictions. What makes a character a strong example is being human, not perfect, going through problems such as her drinking and self loathing. You need to look at her development throughout the story, in the end she becomes a strong female character and not the rude or boasting child in the orphanage. It’s portrayed in the symbolism too, she started off as a pawn (with her clothing.) and ended the show in queens clothing.
      I DO however agree that you’d never see hugging in chess matches, too unrealistic.

    • @glennfarr2000
      @glennfarr2000 3 года назад +4

      All she wanted Was the win which he He accepted Her rare smile on the hug was beautiful. Once she sat sat down with the amatuers and said "lets Play", you know she made bliss.

    • @111-rg8
      @111-rg8 3 года назад +10

      @Samm Salvey Why are you even ranting about a friggin fictional character lmfao

    • @111-rg8
      @111-rg8 3 года назад +10

      @Samm Salvey nobody fucking cares lol. Let people have their own opinions.

    • @111-rg8
      @111-rg8 3 года назад +9

      @Samm Salvey What the fuck is this paragraph you're talking about? The only one writing paragraphs here about nonsense is you dumbass. You're being so offended with people having different thoughts like an idiot. "You are the one bitching for nothing" says the one writing entire essays ranting about people having different thoughts over a fictional character. You're such a fucking hypocrite that no one can even compare you to anything lmfao.

  • @MellSayzHi
    @MellSayzHi 2 года назад +1038

    "She WON!" These are people who saw her at her begining and are so proud of where she ended up. I tear up at this scene every time.

    • @alanguages
      @alanguages Год назад +19

      It was amazing, even though they had their differences where they were in life, they were still there to support her. Something she realized, when they called her room in Russia.

  • @RoseisoutofherTOGA
    @RoseisoutofherTOGA 3 года назад +10609

    For me, the scene where the boys leap in happiness “SHE WON!!!” is everything

    • @lottezwink4228
      @lottezwink4228 3 года назад +223

      Oh my god yes! I’ve watched that scene so many times and I always burst out in tears (of joy) !

    • @arcticwars
      @arcticwars 3 года назад +313

      the power of homieship

    • @At0mS8
      @At0mS8 3 года назад +294

      It is my favourite shot of the whole series. It just feels so earned, after so much suffering, to have her friends genuinely happy for Beth.

    • @b_lloydranjith_coronel9513
      @b_lloydranjith_coronel9513 3 года назад +35

      Yeah cuz beth fckd them all

    • @arcticwars
      @arcticwars 3 года назад +111

      @@b_lloydranjith_coronel9513 hey sometimes that's how you make friends

  • @antoniojcarrascoalvarez2526
    @antoniojcarrascoalvarez2526 4 года назад +5406

    Perfect ending: it has the right amount of emotion, without being cheesy.

  • @hdsvideos5481
    @hdsvideos5481 4 года назад +1351

    The subtlety of the symbolism in this was incredible. In the first episode, young Beth was wearing a white dress, showing her as a white pawn, still unprepared, untrained. But slowly throughout the series she becomes a better player, she understands more. The final scene, with her in the white coat, white pants, white hat, represented her as finally being the White Queen, the most powerful player on the board. Incredible.

    • @madisondeechao5728
      @madisondeechao5728 3 года назад +212

      Even better, there are 7 episodes in the series and it takes 7 moves for a pawn to get to the end of the board. It symbolises that Beth's story is that of a pawn promotion.

    • @hdsvideos5481
      @hdsvideos5481 3 года назад +31

      @@madisondeechao5728 OH wow I haven't thought of that that's so cool!!

    • @justynawojcicka5056
      @justynawojcicka5056 3 года назад +5

      Wawww

    • @effersonfrank
      @effersonfrank 3 года назад +41

      ​@@madisondeechao5728 Thank you for this. I also realized the 7 episodes / 7 moves correlation soon after finishing the show, and pointed it out to just a few. It's such an important insight; more should know.
      I'd like to add that while some say Beth reached the 8th rank when she decided to get out of the car (hard to argue), to me the point is that Beth was a Queen all along. It wasn't until she got to Russia and was treated like a Queen by the Russians that she realized that she was. And when Mr. Booth from the State Department tried to give her the "talking points" (implying her new role as a pawn of the U.S. government) the contrast between the two roles was too great to bear, and made the choice to defect obvious.
      Her sense of freedom and relief as she walks from the car, smiling as she buttons her coat, is beautiful to behold. You are a Queen. Move like a Queen.

    • @erenyldz9724
      @erenyldz9724 3 года назад +3

      @@madisondeechao5728 You are probably right about the symbolism thing, I think creators of this movie thought of that like it. But it takes 6 moves to get to the end of the board or 5 if you go 2 forward in first pawn move. Closest you can get to 7 is 6.

  • @greekfountain9303
    @greekfountain9303 3 года назад +793

    The way the old man says “Harmon :D” always gets me because he sounds like someone who just met a long lost friend and it’s so beautiful

    • @twiseart
      @twiseart 2 года назад +26

      I know this is an older comment but I thought you would enjoy the fact that that familiarity is supposed to be there!! That older gentleman is also casted to look similar to mr schaibel so that we end where we begin!

    • @greekfountain9303
      @greekfountain9303 2 года назад +4

      @@twiseart you’re right, that’s beautiful

    • @moldychez5429
      @moldychez5429 2 года назад +10

      I creid during that part and I'm not ashamed

  • @carlaab5897
    @carlaab5897 4 года назад +3808

    Fact that she didn’t take the pills, and that she had her friends helping her for the final game was so great. It’s such an improvement for Beth and the series. Still, at the final part she was on her own and won by playing in her mind. Brilliant show!

    • @avalle4493
      @avalle4493 4 года назад +178

      It also was brilliant that she couldnt defeated Borgov taking the pills.
      When she realize that the reason of her sucess is her talent and not the pills just give me chills.

    • @wiremuwiniata1216
      @wiremuwiniata1216 4 года назад +97

      This was probably one of my favourite moments of the series. Especially with the part (not shown in this video) where she’s able to look up and still see the board and play the game in her mind. It shows an incredibly ignored truth about addiction. People think that drugs like marijuana can boost the mind, but really, it’s their reliance on the drugs that gives them this so called “mind boost”. When the mind is truly free of addiction then is it no longer clouded and shackled, unable to reach it’s full potential, but free to achieve limitless wonders. Such a powerful scene for me, a recovering addict. I loved it so much.

    • @srfh2
      @srfh2 4 года назад +6

      @@wiremuwiniata1216 WOW..well said. Good for you for Recovering. I have this theory about addiction. The brain chemical serratonin is the one reponsible for happiness and therefore the ability to cope with life's problems. Serratonin needs Vitamin D to be made in the brain and with 42% of Americans deficient in Vitamin D the ability to cope with life's problems is nearly 0 for much of the world's problems. Google ---Vitamin D and serratonin and THEN google -------Vit D and coronavirus. Vitamin D in combination with Vit K2 reduces Covid 19 severity and death. Do the research!

    • @soledadferrer1325
      @soledadferrer1325 4 года назад +2

      @@wiremuwiniata1216 stay strong and please recover!

    • @oscarwaterman6137
      @oscarwaterman6137 4 года назад +2

      "Some day you're going to be all alone"

  • @chess
    @chess 4 года назад +17216

    Brilliant game.

  • @Ryan-jx4vh
    @Ryan-jx4vh 4 года назад +2498

    The best part for me was she refused to get into the Cold War politics. At the end, she walked among the average Russian people and they showed her such kindness. Makes you realize there are great people all over the world. 💯

    • @e-drums1115
      @e-drums1115 4 года назад +6

      💯

    • @lelouchlamperouge8560
      @lelouchlamperouge8560 4 года назад +31

      Only the elites politics spoils the fun.

    • @thegreenreaper6660
      @thegreenreaper6660 4 года назад +81

      Note the symbolism; 7 episodes resembling the seven squares it takes from a Pawn's starting point, to the end of the Board and promote to Queen. Her development through every episode, and she actually promotes her Pawn, in the final match against Vasily Borgov, to a Queen!
      But also the counter-symbolism; As she's 'promoted to a Queen, and not some Pawn', so does Borgov pick up hís Kingpiece, hands it to her with great dignity and respect, helps her from her chair as a true gentleman, and embraces her! He's no pawn either! Small detail but it proves that Borgov wasnt the 'badguy'.
      The 'badguys' were the 2 KGB-agents that accompanied Borgov in earlyer episodes and the (CIA?)operative that guided Beth in Moscow!

    • @hosseinoghbaee6461
      @hosseinoghbaee6461 4 года назад +2

      Like YOU❤

    • @MrBizon91
      @MrBizon91 4 года назад +3

      Cia: its a big deal to win soviets in their own game
      Beth: I am the Soviet.

  • @Lilaharrisons
    @Lilaharrisons 2 года назад +351

    this will forever be my PERFECT netflix show. there is no villain, only resilience and love for a game and each other.

    • @snowlothar45
      @snowlothar45 Год назад +29

      There is a villain. Beth is her own villain and the one she ultimately has to overcome.

    • @dfertefwergwergrfgwr
      @dfertefwergwergrfgwr 4 месяца назад +2

      There is a villain. The Christian women. Typical Hollywood.

    • @winter9798
      @winter9798 4 месяца назад +2

      i have to agree 200%. A rare gem where the positives really come through and this ending to me is like no other - just so nice (an overused word but for me it captures this series as it really warms the heart)

  • @maximusdizon7267
    @maximusdizon7267 4 года назад +2084

    I love how her clothing changes from being a pawn (a child in Methuen) to a queen reflected in her outfit.

    • @thegreenreaper6660
      @thegreenreaper6660 4 года назад +167

      There's brilliant sybolism in this show.
      She faced Borgov twice already, and lost both times. This third time she faced him as the US-champion, on 'his own turf': the prestigious and elegenant Moscow World-Championship!
      Borgov played his game, with his strong exchagnings, pressure-play, blocks and assaults. She lured him into a trap in his own game: Making him go forward, 1 step too much(that second pawn in the center) when she 'lost hér Queen', making Borgov thínk he held the advantage. Yet when SHE promoted her Pawn to a Queen, it didnt only resemble that she was still fully fighting in the game and never lost that upper hand, it mostly ment that SHE wasn nobody's Pawn in any game! She was the Queen herself!
      On the board, Borgov immediately saw, she had pushed hím into the corner he always puts his opponents in; Borgov could force a draw still, perhaps, íf she made a crucial mistake(which was unlikely! She knew to plan her moves, as proven with her Pawn-check), his last gambit was trying to push Beth into another Draw offer. When he planted his queen in front of his two Pawns, it was locked from the rest of the board, where her Rook could simply advance over the free lane across the board, and aid her promoted Queen, to Checkmate his King!
      Borgov didnt let it come to such a humiliation, as he knew as a Grandmaster and World Champion; She had him! 'Hook, Line, and Sinker": It was HER game!
      The way she played it out, earned her so much respect from Borgov, the 'unintimidable Dreadnought amongst Grandmasters', that he gallantly offered her his King-piece, took her hand, gentlemanly helped her stand from her chair, and embraced her as a true genius of a player!
      He loved it!
      But the best part: Borgov was an opponent! Never an enemy! Though his stoic and 'brutish' posture and playstyle gave that idea, Borgov showed his true nature, right after he lost to her: He showed his great love for the game, and his massive appreciation for Beth's intelligence as a Chess-grandmaster, and the new World Champion with a wárm embracing!
      Who'd a thought the 'cold and hard Russian' was such a warm and gentle man after all?

    • @kamilkrupinski1793
      @kamilkrupinski1793 4 года назад +17

      @@thegreenreaper6660 Great acting from Dorociński (Borgov).

    • @cesarinzunza7586
      @cesarinzunza7586 3 года назад +9

      @@thegreenreaper6660 your comment was really fun to read. You nailed it on everything.

    • @georgeq_q
      @georgeq_q 3 года назад +4

      @@thegreenreaper6660 you should become a movie reviewer

    • @topgrain
      @topgrain 3 года назад

      As cited in several early reviews of the series.

  • @Sepia1989
    @Sepia1989 4 года назад +9659

    I love how Beth is always surrounded by men in this show, but she's still the most powerful. Just like a Queen on a chess board.

    • @sunreginatto_99
      @sunreginatto_99 4 года назад +326

      OMG YES

    • @idontcare6402
      @idontcare6402 4 года назад +276

      damn bruh you got it

    • @silhouettesix2378
      @silhouettesix2378 4 года назад +797

      I also like how her gender was barely mentioned after episode 2-3. At that point she was recognized as so good, the other players didn’t even consider her gender, only her technique.

    • @FabledGentleman
      @FabledGentleman 4 года назад +286

      Well it was the point of the series.
      Beth mom (Alice) said : "Men are gonna come along and wanna teach you things. You just let them blow-by, and you go on ahead and do just what the hell you feel like." Implying that this world is run by men that want to control things and keep women in "check". But women don't have to listen to those men, or fear them.

    • @Oldlard
      @Oldlard 4 года назад +219

      @@FabledGentleman I didn't really agree with that line, in fact it's totally backwards. Sure some men can be patronising but ultimately if they are teaching you they are trying to help. It's when they DON'T teach you they are keeping you in check. This whole story would have ended if Mr Shaibel just told Beth to get out of his basement - he almost did right at the start but she persisted.

  • @LilyKing03
    @LilyKing03 4 года назад +2995

    I really adore how he hugged her. So humble.

    • @donovanmartin7946
      @donovanmartin7946 4 года назад +110

      Something you won’t see in any Hollywood film rn it’s the ultimate sign of respect

    • @patgreen1309
      @patgreen1309 4 года назад +248

      He was shown as cold and hard up right until the moment that he conceded. I was happy to see him concede gracefully. It's how it should be done.

    • @jumafaro
      @jumafaro 4 года назад +250

      I feel Borgov was rooting for her the whole time...but he made her earn the victory.

    • @kaspafischer
      @kaspafischer 4 года назад +19

      that's respect...

    • @LilyKing03
      @LilyKing03 4 года назад +111

      @@kaspafischer I was just saying that because many shows would make him out to be a villain, instead of simply being respectful when he lost and being happy for her.

  • @SharonVeeLee
    @SharonVeeLee 2 года назад +558

    You know it's funny thinking on it... she really had no external enemies. Everyone could see her greatness and wanted her to succeed. Even Vasily, her biggest challenge, turns out to be a quiet, kind man. All of her struggles are within and everyone around her supported her, even her competitors.

    • @MeyaRoseGirl
      @MeyaRoseGirl 2 года назад +46

      Right!?! And then how it ended with her playing with people in a park, it means that the game is now just fun, instead of it being about competition or proving herself.

    • @riocharles9217
      @riocharles9217 Год назад +17

      D
      For some their greatest enemy truly is within

    • @KingCraze22
      @KingCraze22 Год назад +10

      Man vs Self is the most compelling conflict in storytelling.

    • @squeakysneakers6685
      @squeakysneakers6685 Год назад

      Sounds just like Bobby Fischer.

  • @petershahan533
    @petershahan533 4 года назад +5899

    Please. Please don't make season 2 . Because the end is more than perfect

    • @rrr19741208
      @rrr19741208 4 года назад +182

      I hope The second season would be about bridge players

    • @sundarbe
      @sundarbe 3 года назад +328

      I’d like to see a different chess champion’s story.

    • @johnrickbriguel8930
      @johnrickbriguel8930 3 года назад +559

      The producers already said, there would be no season 2, as this ending is already outstanding.

    • @markherring3513
      @markherring3513 3 года назад +253

      There is no season two...this was a 'one off" series. Its a masterpiece..leave it as it is...I hope the powers that be dont get caught up in the dollar signs and FORCING a sequel.

    • @mrnakulbhaii
      @mrnakulbhaii 3 года назад +62

      Watching this season again and again would be better than watching season 2

  • @jaredtibayan7157
    @jaredtibayan7157 4 года назад +6274

    Everybody gangsta till borgov speaks English

    • @jangkarsuci8885
      @jangkarsuci8885 4 года назад +193

      At the middle of the series, i was thinking, he must speaks English, his wife is a translator, :-)

    • @littledino3468
      @littledino3468 4 года назад +25

      FR I WAS WAIT YOUR NOT SUPPOSED TO DO THAT 😂

    • @ConnorC97
      @ConnorC97 4 года назад +1

      Jojiiiiii

    • @jt2214
      @jt2214 4 года назад +1

      jojii

    • @BeadsByAria
      @BeadsByAria 4 года назад +36

      And Beth speaks Russian

  • @Aryan_homophobe
    @Aryan_homophobe 4 года назад +2422

    About why everyone in Russia called her Liza and not Beth. Liza is a common Russian way to shorten the name Elizaveta, also if you try to say 'Beth' in Russian you will most likely end with 'Bes' which means 'imp'. So it was a nice little touch with Russians calling her Liza.

    • @kukchek
      @kukchek 4 года назад +41

      If u watch this series in Russian language, her name is pronounced as "Bet", not Liza. I don’t understand why they decided she should be called as Liza by Soviet guys in eng version of Queen’s gambit.

    • @СиняяЗвезда-ж8б
      @СиняяЗвезда-ж8б 4 года назад +32

      @@kukchek как по мне все логично. Мы часто иностранные имена под свои подстраиваем. Английскую королеву тоже у нас называют Елизавета, а не Элизабет. Есть и другие случаи, может это только у меня, но Артаса из Варика 3, все называли Артёмом.

    • @unemiryune9322
      @unemiryune9322 3 года назад +8

      holy fuck dude, you've posted that WRONG about her name comment under every singe video of this scene

    • @noreng4933
      @noreng4933 3 года назад +36

      Also, while she does use Beth for her friends, strangers can't know that so they only see her full name and take tve nickname that is the most common in their language.

    • @zanedavid1
      @zanedavid1 3 года назад +2

      And to think I was the only one to catch that ... silly me.

  • @JoelApplegate
    @JoelApplegate 2 года назад +262

    I loved the closing sequence where she walks among the old chess players in the park. So full of heart - and human connection - I teared up a little myself.

    • @matthewswila2327
      @matthewswila2327 2 года назад +4

      Very emotional scene indeed.

    • @gabaghoul23
      @gabaghoul23 2 года назад +6

      he the old man offered her a chair and she puts her hands together and speaks in russian LETS PLAY got me the most

    • @professionalhuman2722
      @professionalhuman2722 4 месяца назад +2

      The scene itself is lovely but why on earth did they use shaky cam for that 😭

  • @yes-dq8lm
    @yes-dq8lm 3 года назад +3740

    One a side note:
    - that chess set is gorgeous
    - anna taylor-joy has the most unique eyes I've ever seen

    • @saetmusic
      @saetmusic 3 года назад +166

      I don't know about the chess set but her EYES are STUNNING!

    • @garys261
      @garys261 3 года назад +126

      Her eyes are so big.. like real life anime character

    • @blekfut5763
      @blekfut5763 3 года назад +25

      I think the tears are running down her back when she's crying.

    • @madeofstarlight22
      @madeofstarlight22 3 года назад +100

      It's a Soviet-Latvian chess set, which can't be found for sale online anymore thanks to this series...and yes, Anya is stunning. Sad to know that when she was younger she got bullied for her eyes. I think her eyes are beautiful.

    • @tuhin9910
      @tuhin9910 3 года назад +7

      @@madeofstarlight22 do you have an exact name for the chess set

  • @jamlym4974
    @jamlym4974 4 года назад +1521

    I like how the camera gets more loose and shaky as she walks down the street like the tension is over and she can finally relax.

    • @ClaudiaReyy
      @ClaudiaReyy 4 года назад +3

      Hey Jam ! Just made a piano cover of this song! I hope you can check it out🙏

    • @DanS044
      @DanS044 3 года назад +18

      @@ClaudiaReyy hard pass, maybe I’ll listen to it in about 104 years time?

    • @xavien_818
      @xavien_818 3 года назад

      @@DanS044 love the pfp

    • @kimbo5260
      @kimbo5260 3 года назад +4

      Great observation!

  • @themissingmile
    @themissingmile 4 года назад +2582

    She beat Borgov because she took control of her demons. Master yourself before conquering the world.

    • @theserialbunny424
      @theserialbunny424 4 года назад +3

      👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

    • @dannbarod6269
      @dannbarod6269 4 года назад +4

      Great comment! 👌🏼👏🏼

    • @RinDemon5
      @RinDemon5 3 года назад +2

      I was here when this comment had 666 likes. Coincidence? I think yes

    • @themissingmile
      @themissingmile 3 года назад +3

      @@RinDemon5
      Off with you, Satan!!

    • @Daddywood2230
      @Daddywood2230 3 года назад

      @Miro Reverby this is so true.

  • @clifton12345
    @clifton12345 2 года назад +148

    I don’t care what anyone says, Jolene’s reaction hits the hardest. Grew up with her as an orphan. Stuck by her through everything. That’s everything. That’s what a real friend is. She didn’t give a shit about chess. She cared about her friend that she grew up with as a little girl. She just wanted to see her succeed. Because she came from that same walk of life and knew the pain that she felt. And it’s just like “fuck yes finally we got a break”

  • @KarenFoo
    @KarenFoo 4 года назад +9240

    What I like is that when she reached fame and success, she didnt get distracted by all the glamorous stuff and decide to still focus on her true purpose which is playing the game and enjoying it. Respect.

    • @innismor11
      @innismor11 4 года назад +52

      ..... as opposed to the Kardashian's ?
      People, this is about people (women's) BRAINS. Exercising brains, in competition (but also enjoying the beauty of the game). Not too many real people Grandmastering at chess are in it for the fame. Like maybe none.

    • @boubacarsow5951
      @boubacarsow5951 4 года назад +323

      @@innismor11 what the kardashians have to do with any of this

    • @bene233
      @bene233 4 года назад +257

      Yeah but she did spiral into drug and alcohol addiction. So there's that....

    • @jolan3720
      @jolan3720 4 года назад +190

      Did you even watch the show? there's an entire episode about her doing exactly that

    • @thegreenreaper6660
      @thegreenreaper6660 4 года назад +66

      Dont forget the entire perspective: Every tournament thus far, even the one in 'poshy Paris', was NOTHING, compared to the immense stage in Moscow! The enormous respect the Russians have for the Game, and the exciting press and crowd were following évery single move. Not even all the other tourneys combined, came even close to that!
      Nice 'nod' to it; In the US and in Paris, the tourneys were held at a highschool, and a hotel. In Russia: an ancient Monastery! What a decor, and what a difference!

  • @agenttheater5
    @agenttheater5 4 года назад +2469

    She's respected and admired in Russia, and she has friends in America.......I think this is the first time she's been genuinely happy

    • @mr_sognr1297
      @mr_sognr1297 4 года назад +4

      Es muy bonito la verdad!
      Si fuese real sería una admiración para todos!

    • @AnujKumar-vb2sp
      @AnujKumar-vb2sp 4 года назад +113

      That's the reality of chess in Russia they don't see your nationality they admire your talent that's their love for the game
      they loved Vishy also after Vishy beat Kramnik

    • @mr_sognr1297
      @mr_sognr1297 4 года назад +16

      @@AnujKumar-vb2sp You are all right!
      Dont care if you are Woman or Gentleman. The important its love the game, and be appasionate, Like Beth Harmon.
      She is the "Best Player"
      And dont care the Nationality
      If you are NorthAmerican, England, Mexican, Russo, etc.

    • @StudyLens
      @StudyLens 4 года назад +2

      it so great to watch her grow and come so far!! btw i made a video on this EPIC scene of ‘The Queens Gambit’ and explain why it’s sooo impactful! I hope you can check it out! 💜

    • @pjeffries301
      @pjeffries301 4 года назад +4

      Its the friend she finally made on the inside which makes everything possible - no longer confined by 64 squares, the smiling queen, sacrificed (by her Mother) then reborn (by a pawn), is freed and immediately encircled. Wonderful tale fully told.

  • @JustforNow777
    @JustforNow777 4 года назад +7183

    Just like she hid she spoke Russian, he hid he spoke English.

    • @yzahbel
      @yzahbel 4 года назад +543

      ohh I missed this bit. you're right!

    • @Vanessa-dq1bw
      @Vanessa-dq1bw 4 года назад +196

      Ohhh good catch!

    • @JairoOrtizT
      @JairoOrtizT 4 года назад +67

      He just said take it...

    • @bboyo8307
      @bboyo8307 4 года назад +46

      @@JairoOrtizT its ur game

    • @kotpsot5140
      @kotpsot5140 4 года назад +68

      Well one doesn't need to be fluent in English to say take it though

  • @СимеонТотев-в3п
    @СимеонТотев-в3п 3 года назад +198

    I love how the series so nicely captured and delivered the true sportsmanship of chess. When you play chess, there is no place for the ego.

    • @nerevarchthn6860
      @nerevarchthn6860 3 года назад

      Well this wasnt a championship or anything so why would borgov be angry about losing 1 game against her

    • @gabaghoul23
      @gabaghoul23 2 года назад

      ever evolving 2000 year old sport- and there is no right or wrong, no best or worst.. the worst person can beat the best person in the world with 3 moves chess is pure

  • @asherintech
    @asherintech 4 года назад +5647

    Maybe I’m being a prisoner of the moment but this was honestly one of the best series I’ve ever watched, gonna have to go back and rewatch it 👏

    • @TheMrQuino
      @TheMrQuino 4 года назад +84

      Agree, watched 3 times within a week

    • @Poeskino
      @Poeskino 4 года назад +72

      I watched it all yesterday and I think it was remarkable. Possibly the best thing I've watched all year.

    • @brassattacks2411
      @brassattacks2411 4 года назад +16

      fiction is excellent entertainment

    • @vesnahozjan5704
      @vesnahozjan5704 4 года назад +3

      I thought the same right now.

    • @naid5533
      @naid5533 4 года назад +9

      I agree, definitely going to watch this again

  • @willyj3321
    @willyj3321 4 года назад +1472

    THIS is how you write a strong female lead! So many movies and shows think she has to be invincible, but Beth has genuine and intense struggles that she is eventually able to overcome with hard work! There is a difference between real feminism and feminist pandering. This show undoubtedly falls into the former category.

    • @sena3561
      @sena3561 4 года назад +20

      What's that supposed to mean? There should be bad female leads just as many bad male leads. It mustn't be a requirement for the female lead to be brilliantly written in order for it to not be tagged as "feminist pandering".

    • @dracu9833
      @dracu9833 4 года назад +119

      @@sena3561 I think willy was referring to the trope of female characters being written as invincible demigods who never fail. though that's not as common as many people might think, it does stick out like a sore thumb whenever you see it

    • @willyj3321
      @willyj3321 4 года назад +73

      @@dracu9833 Exactly. It’s just as bad when male protagonists are written as invincible demigods, but there’s usually no underlying agenda in those cases. It’s just bad writing. If there were a mainstream pro-male movement like there is for females (feminism), then I would accuse invincible male protagonists of doing the same thing.

    • @1Lordbuddy
      @1Lordbuddy 4 года назад +26

      When she envisioned the chess set on the ceiling and finished off the game, it was so satisfying to watch and applaud and cheer, so incredibly well-earned. I couldn't help contrast that scene (edit: almost immediately) to Rey's power level up scenes from the recent Star Wars trilogy, esp. when she lifted the rocks. It looked cool, but her entire story is just insanely unearned. Legit there was no ascent to greatness, just GREATNESS from start to finish. And the thinly veiled agenda behind the greatness of such heroines makes it a little hard to watch. When it comes with Supergirl's attitude, the show becomes unbearable!!

    • @Chariking13
      @Chariking13 3 года назад +33

      Also how she accepts help from her male peers, especially during the final game. Some feminist writers would seeth at Beth getting help from her 'inferior' male friends. Ofcourse she is better, but getting help from multiple people who spent hours analysing is obviously the right thing to do and also shows how she respects her friends.

  • @crazidominican
    @crazidominican 4 года назад +2072

    Loved the fact that she looked like the queen piece in the end. An absolute masterpiece and a stellar job from everyone who worked on this series. A small gem in a crappy year.

    • @Bitter_Biscuit
      @Bitter_Biscuit 4 года назад +7

      She looked more like a pawn to me xD

    • @crazidominican
      @crazidominican 4 года назад +29

      @@Bitter_Biscuit If her hat didn't have the little fluffy ball on top perhaps xD

    • @tenzintsenpey5274
      @tenzintsenpey5274 4 года назад +15

      not just a queen piece but a white queen piece.

    • @swifttodeath
      @swifttodeath 4 года назад +10

      THE BEST THING THAT CAME OUT OF NETFLIX EVER PERIOD

    • @swifttodeath
      @swifttodeath 4 года назад +4

      THE BEST THING THAT CAME OUT OF NETFLIX EVER PERIOD

  • @freakinfiretruckxx
    @freakinfiretruckxx 3 года назад +80

    I've been struggling with my thesis and this show is helping me. The sheer dedication of Beth, despite her flaws and mishaps, utterly inspiring.

  • @coconutsciencegirl9232
    @coconutsciencegirl9232 4 года назад +1286

    She stopped wanting to win. I wish they’d acknowledged that more. She began to love chess. And that’s why she was able to win. The fear wasn’t there anymore.

    • @thegreenreaper6660
      @thegreenreaper6660 4 года назад +67

      No? Sorry but 0:55 she moves her King away from the rook, and you can see the 'scare' in her eyes yelling out: "Did i just WIN by that move?"
      Borgov made a mistake earlyer when he had to re-place his queen, blocking the Pawn she promoted(awesome symbolism!!!) again. That one cóst him a move, and Beth was ahead of him from that on! Borgov only could halt her, and force a draw: He hoped she would hide her King behind the Rook there, so he could check her a few times and offer a Draw again. By moving the King away, Borgov locked up his Queen there in the 2-pawn wall in the center. With Beth's Rook free to move across the free lane over the board, her promoted Queen on the opposite side, keeping hís King in a locked position: Harmon was about 2 moves away from check-mating him! Borgov knew that. With his King locked, and his Queen in a 'stalemate'. She had won the game! His honesty and integrity as a world-champion and Grandmaster, he admitted defeat, took his King off the board, and offered it to her as a symbol of her victory, and becoming the new World Champion!
      But she was a tad scared there when she made the move. She looked over the board, analysed any possibilitys left for Borgov, which there were not anymore, and the realisation struck her there: She did it!! She actually did it!!
      Personally, i loved Borgov's 'coming out'there: No longer the stoic and unintimidable 'dreadnought of a Grandmaster', admitting his defeat, and embracing her as the young lady who was able to best him in an absolute stunning Finale-match!
      It had everything it needed: Brutal exchanges, forced errors, and making Borgov 'choke' on his own tactic: That double-pawn blockade in the center, caused HIS queen to be locked up, giving her the victory!

    • @thegreenreaper6660
      @thegreenreaper6660 4 года назад +13

      @@adrianmeerman6493 She followed the advice: Played her ówn game! Didnt go into Borgov's tactic, but turned it around?
      Not as easy as it seems perhaps, but you do see at one point "She's got him'; The moment that Borgov moves his Queen back to block her almost-promoting Pawn! He has to sacrifice a move, to do that. From that point, Harmon is 1 step ahead of him and its Borgov who has to go after hér again: Force her into such a mistake to 'level the playing field again'.
      It adds up magnificently to the symbolism of the Pawn, becoming a Queen: Thats where shé became the Queen who made her own moves, not a pawn that followed orders.

    • @jashuah9993
      @jashuah9993 3 года назад +1

      @@thegreenreaper6660 She was winning from the beginning of the video. I have seen analysis by Magnus. In the beginning of the video it is said pawn becomes a queen. Magnus said she was winning before this. You can see her smiling. So she was not scared with the last move(reply to your first comment)

    • @Muradova100
      @Muradova100 3 года назад

      On my channel I have a quiz about Queen’s gambit. You can check if you want))

    • @dorothyyoung8231
      @dorothyyoung8231 3 года назад +1

      I see the climax of the movie as her realization that she’s not alone - that the support of her friends could take the place drugs once played in her life.

  • @wandrinfox1910
    @wandrinfox1910 4 года назад +3613

    Love how Beth is dressed as the White Queen; the most powerful piece in chess.

    • @Akuvision2011
      @Akuvision2011 4 года назад +47

      For some reason its called 'Black Queen' in finnish though.

    • @imissthefloor
      @imissthefloor 4 года назад +73

      And it’s also the dress she was wearing when she lost so much against Benny when they played speed chess

    • @imissthefloor
      @imissthefloor 4 года назад +49

      @@geraldposey1496 omg it’s all coming together i love this series

    • @sany678
      @sany678 4 года назад +42

      @@geraldposey1496 but pawn can queen in 5 or 6 moves. How 7? Lol

    • @user-he4dv5nh1c
      @user-he4dv5nh1c 4 года назад +9

      @@sany678 Ikr🤣

  • @saraarmijoprudencio6890
    @saraarmijoprudencio6890 4 года назад +4843

    It’s your game, take it
    I get that Borgov was her biggest rival and strongest competitor, but I love him and I love how the show didn’t made him a villain, the man just loved chess and he recognized Beth’s talent
    On a sidenote, I’m gonna need proof of Beth paying Jolene her money back, still haven’t forgotten about the money she owned Mr. Shaibel

    • @ElElGato1947Gato
      @ElElGato1947Gato 4 года назад +56

      Exactly!!!

    • @sergejpetkovic2414
      @sergejpetkovic2414 4 года назад +499

      Don't forget this was in the time of Cold War and Sovyets still congratulated Beth. As a Slav I am glad they aren't potrayed in negative way, and the scene with old people gathering around her shows the russian mentality.

    • @papurrurru
      @papurrurru 4 года назад +220

      Made sad to hear she didn't pay the 10 dollars to Mr shaibel

    • @mzt8787
      @mzt8787 4 года назад +175

      @@sergejpetkovic2414 I was anxious to see some Soviets dirty nature in Mexico episode but the Russian kid and the character of Borgov and the people of Russia being portrayed in this way made me had a short and quiet sigh of relief. Russians are not bad. The US and its media constant scrutiny and Russian military history made them look bad.

    • @Poeskino
      @Poeskino 4 года назад +92

      Absolutely agree. I was ready for them to portray him as some sort of villian and I was relieved when they didn't. Such a fantastic show I'm not ready to move on from.

  • @sharonfenech2912
    @sharonfenech2912 3 года назад +46

    Does anyone burst into tears when they see the last scene of the elderly shouting "Harmon". It always makes me so emotional 🥺

  • @taylordavis812
    @taylordavis812 4 года назад +703

    The very last scene with her in the park is just perfect. Countries have their own culture, countries have their own government but that should never define a person as an individual. Those men could care less that she's an American and she could care less that they are Russian in this scene. Just people being people.

    • @fum4491
      @fum4491 3 года назад

      Sadly, USRR was doing everything it could to erase individualism using violence and fear...

  • @alexiacolette9994
    @alexiacolette9994 4 года назад +903

    Jolene is a real one. I loved the way their relationship was portrayed.

    • @bhamacuk
      @bhamacuk 4 года назад +44

      If only we could all have a friend in life like Jolene.

    • @Eruerucamicaminono
      @Eruerucamicaminono 4 года назад +151

      @@bhamacukDon't ask for a Jolene. Be the Jolene.

    • @bhamacuk
      @bhamacuk 4 года назад +24

      @@Eruerucamicaminono you got a point, man.

    • @hstsvstyve
      @hstsvstyve 4 года назад +3

      @@Eruerucamicaminono what if you don't know how to be a Jolene? Talk like a Jolene? Fail awkwardly then lol

    • @paulinapadillasuarez9853
      @paulinapadillasuarez9853 4 года назад +6

      She's the one that encouraged her to go to Russia. She's amazing. I loved her.

  • @ughthat_girl
    @ughthat_girl 4 года назад +2529

    I’m not even going to lie this was genuinely the best series I’ve ever watched in my entire life. The show isn’t just about chess, it’s about addiction and mental health and growing up and life problems and the cinematography is amazing, the soundtrack is fucking on point and the acting is 10/10. I’ve already watched it twice and I plan on watching it more. Honestly it’s just one of them shows that motivate you to improve your own intelligence, which isn’t a bad message to spread to people

    • @avantikaroy5146
      @avantikaroy5146 4 года назад +5

      Watch haunting of hill house it's better. But this was phenominal as well.

    • @donovanmartin7946
      @donovanmartin7946 4 года назад +44

      One of the greatest and the ending is not only diserved but it’s earned in such a respectful way

    • @shauncoptcoat9378
      @shauncoptcoat9378 4 года назад +5

      Loved it too and agree about the message of intelligence, sadly too little focus on that today

    • @InfamousAWJ
      @InfamousAWJ 4 года назад +23

      I thought I was the only one. People keep saying it’s ONE of the best shows they watched or the best they’ve seen THIS year, but for me it’s 100 percent the best show I’ve ever fucking watched.

    • @matthzzz95
      @matthzzz95 4 года назад +8

      @@avantikaroy5146 Totally opposite style of show so it's hard to compare. Both are two of my favorite series I've seen. But if you look at every aspect of the show, down to the acting, cinematography, writing, music, etc, I would actually give the edge to The Queen's Gambit, even if I would personally choose The Haunting of Hill House since horror is my favorite genre.

  • @sundaygirl006
    @sundaygirl006 3 года назад +56

    This show was an absolute masterpiece. Every aspect of it, the acting, sets, costumes and music, was perfection.

  • @nappiichu
    @nappiichu 3 года назад +4165

    The scene where Jolene smiles after hearing Beth won the game never fails to make me tear up.

    • @eliminator7of999
      @eliminator7of999 3 года назад +57

      Same here- my favourite moment of the show

    • @horseoperamarker
      @horseoperamarker 3 года назад +128

      the boys shouting "SHE WON!!" was more emotional for me

    • @danielhuynh6080
      @danielhuynh6080 3 года назад +29

      Same. More emotional than the boys one 😭

    • @nrr9565
      @nrr9565 3 года назад +7

      Same and I don’t know why

    • @z_stuartoliver
      @z_stuartoliver 3 года назад +1

      sameee, she prolly was like fuckin called that shit. IT'S MF BETH

  • @redramiro
    @redramiro 4 года назад +2211

    I wish Mr. Shaibel was alive to see this. He would've been very proud of her.

  • @easytiger266
    @easytiger266 4 года назад +2794

    Take note Hollywood. This is how endings are done. What a great finish ✅

    • @DerekMcAdam2023
      @DerekMcAdam2023 4 года назад +19

      They are all should learn from Frank Scott

    • @andreagrazianodibenedetto1464
      @andreagrazianodibenedetto1464 4 года назад +61

      You're right, Hollywood has been producing crap for the last 10 years at least, with only few exceptions.

    • @bait5257
      @bait5257 4 года назад +11

      @@andreagrazianodibenedetto1464 well this is one of those exception

    • @anthonykent00
      @anthonykent00 4 года назад +9

      I would argue that not ALL movies/shows should end this way, but this one is very satisfying.

    • @arnav9192
      @arnav9192 4 года назад +8

      that is hollywood bruh

  • @willhull1735
    @willhull1735 3 года назад +241

    The Russians showed her more love and respect than her own country. They respected her brilliance as the best chess player in the world ❤❤

    • @termlesshalo
      @termlesshalo 3 года назад +12

      And that’s my favorite part. Was the park where all the old Russians were playing chess and respecting Beth.

    • @willhull1735
      @willhull1735 3 года назад +6

      @@termlesshalo agreed the whole series was brilliant. One of the best I've seen in a long time.

    • @gabaghoul23
      @gabaghoul23 2 года назад

      russians are caring loving ppl unlike us woke destructive BLM ANTIFA ppl here- we want to blame Putin for everyhitng but dont talk about the ppl tha tlive there. the US government are the terrorists of this world and noone seems to address this we have started wars with everyoe for 150 years now for our on interestes and commodoties saying its for "democracy" yet you ppl vote these war mongers in that destroys the rest of the world while hike up our cost of living day to day in the name of "freedome"? this is not freedom this is tacxation slavery to expand your military to take over us when when we had enough to say NO

    • @yulanalow2395
      @yulanalow2395 7 месяцев назад

      I loved how after her first win there was a smattering of women fans to greet her. Then as she continued to defeat each player, the crowd swelled with adoring and admiring fans. She felt at home, was at home in a land that loved and repected their chess players.

  • @gailrodgers4434
    @gailrodgers4434 3 года назад +2028

    One thing I haven't seen mentioned: the musical score was so well done. The whole orchestra coming in when she sees the pieces on the ceiling, wow! I could listen to it over and over. I hope the composer gets an award as well.

    • @mivsen00
      @mivsen00 3 года назад +14

      Agree. This is simply a masterpiece. I have watched this ending time and time again simply because of the brilliantly composed score!

    • @chrisclevenger1582
      @chrisclevenger1582 3 года назад +2

      Absolutely

    • @Kiera_Jackson74
      @Kiera_Jackson74 3 года назад +4

      Yes both the piano and orchestra scores were so well done. I learned the piano parts that were so effective and simple. As a beginner, I just loved learning them.

    • @idoheldman
      @idoheldman 2 года назад +13

      it won a Grammy Award 2022 for 'Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media'

    • @ryanwilliams7270
      @ryanwilliams7270 2 года назад +1

      💯

  • @madapigi1
    @madapigi1 4 года назад +3306

    The final scene of her playing with the Russian man reminded me of when she used to play with Mr. Shaibel

    • @paulwillard81
      @paulwillard81 4 года назад +472

      I mean ... that's kind of the point LOL. Getting back to the love of the game purely for love of the game. Not trying to win. Not trying to oust anyone. Just playing to play.

    • @madapigi1
      @madapigi1 4 года назад +79

      @@paulwillard81 i know that’s the point lmao I just wanted to point it out because it's my favorite scene

    • @dr.sivavignesh664
      @dr.sivavignesh664 4 года назад +283

      Even in death Mr shaibel was the one who helped her. His death brought her back from the hole she dug herself. Mr. Shaibel might not have been recognised when he was alive but he was the true hero.

    • @maliheh3086
      @maliheh3086 4 года назад +44

      Yes, exactly. The last chess scene was a reminder of the first

    • @wyattlockhart3829
      @wyattlockhart3829 4 года назад +17

      I think it was the same actor that played Mr. Shaibel in that scene.

  • @darcyissues
    @darcyissues 3 года назад +5893

    Netflix does not always get it right when they do their own shows but on this one, they nailed it.

    • @TheBelrick
      @TheBelrick 3 года назад +22

      Right: Except that in order to have a female chess character (chess as a sport is also gender segregated, but men and women are equal right?) compete with men they had to invent one and pretend that she was real. Why cannot we have a society that celebrates the success of men as a gender which includes dominating chess?

    • @dyinginsidelol
      @dyinginsidelol 3 года назад +289

      @@TheBelrick I don’t see how this show is the antithesis of celebrating the successes of men’s domination in chess. It’s just a fictional chess show with a female character in lead. There are plenty of movies celebrating male chess champions and so on. Just because they chose to make the lead a female, it doesn’t mean they are actively going against males…

    • @philippizza1
      @philippizza1 3 года назад +186

      ​@@TheBelrick bruh, it's not that deep. Gender wasn't even pushed in the series or in the book, and even Beth herself said it shouldn't be that important. It's not a plot device anywhere here. Why would you even bring up gender here? Are you a menenist?

    • @99txgh
      @99txgh 3 года назад +111

      @@TheBelrick this comment is so stupid 😭 men are already successful in most fields because of thousands of years of patriarchal society allowed them to actually have a chance in those fields for years instead of homemaking, and there's countless movies that show this too

    • @TheBelrick
      @TheBelrick 3 года назад +9

      @@99txgh Beth is a fictional character because real women chess champions dont exist. Because men are smarter and more focused and determined and more prepared to invest time and training. All this due to evolution.

  • @Bonbon-lk9gv
    @Bonbon-lk9gv 3 года назад +21

    It’s so heartwarming to see how throughout the series, she was so intimidated by and scared of him. But at the very last moment when she finally did win, he embraced her with kindness and proudness. She finally got the recognition from someone she feared and looked up to.

  • @jpearson274
    @jpearson274 3 года назад +2016

    I love how they didn’t portray the Soviets as disrespectful and horrible men. They were honourable and acted well in defeat.

    • @LeighWinspear
      @LeighWinspear 2 года назад +26

      And now its march 2022.

    • @Gigachad-mc5qz
      @Gigachad-mc5qz 2 года назад +1

      Wow its almost as if russians are normal people?

    • @responsiblejerk2328
      @responsiblejerk2328 2 года назад

      Don't confuse Russians with Soviets. The Russian people are just people. The Soviets were the Communist government.

    • @maryanneboblin4345
      @maryanneboblin4345 2 года назад +89

      Most don't understand that the Russian government has made themselves our enemy, not the people. They are like us, just like us, can be good to each other, despite political differences.

    • @Gigachad-mc5qz
      @Gigachad-mc5qz 2 года назад +1

      @@maryanneboblin4345 i hate that people treat russians badly its not their fault jist cause they are russian

  • @tuxmode
    @tuxmode 4 года назад +4413

    Let's take a moment and pay respect to the real master, Mr. Shaibel.
    Edit: corrected his name.
    Edit: I hope I got the name right this time.

    • @O_Towne_Bear
      @O_Towne_Bear 4 года назад +447

      Oh man, when she finds the picture of the two of them - it crushed me.

    • @ngwantsing9070
      @ngwantsing9070 4 года назад +106

      Yes. You respecting him but spelling his name wrong.

    • @DoronZender
      @DoronZender 4 года назад +53

      When i saw The frame at the end i saw shaibel
      brilliant!

    • @royfablooo2810
      @royfablooo2810 4 года назад +113

      I wish they met before he died, which make some even more sad because it was just recent

    • @remasthebogtrotter
      @remasthebogtrotter 4 года назад +23

      shaibel*

  • @only0221
    @only0221 3 года назад +4682

    is it weird that i enjoyed watching this series without even knowing a single thing about chess?

    • @SWAGTACULAR314
      @SWAGTACULAR314 3 года назад +64

      Same

    • @Mochiki76
      @Mochiki76 3 года назад +237

      not at all! because imo this series is more about the character development

    • @marshacagle4435
      @marshacagle4435 3 года назад +172

      Not at all. The game of chess was almost the side story here. It was her personal growth that took center stage in the movie. Without it, this could just have been a documentary on chess. I'm still trying to convince some of my friends to watch it because they think the whole thing is only about chess. I'm like "No, there's so much more. I promise."

    • @madman7544
      @madman7544 3 года назад +8

      Like most of the people watching :D
      Even though knowing about is makes it more enjoyable it's totally normal otherwise as well.

    • @pinkgiraffe378
      @pinkgiraffe378 3 года назад +5

      Nope, I did too. It was a lot about the characters and their development as well as chess I think.

  • @quengquymaiman8005
    @quengquymaiman8005 2 года назад +23

    i love how this series is like a journey of Beth collecting her true family members
    jolene is her big sister
    mrs wheatley is her mom
    mr shaibel is her dad
    harry, benny and the twins are her brothers
    really show how sometimes family doesnt have to be blood-related

    • @sumaiya5916
      @sumaiya5916 Год назад +3

      Wouldn’t refer to benny and harry as her brothers as she slept with both of them lol

  • @natepm6589
    @natepm6589 4 года назад +566

    That moment when Beth realized that she won while playing that last move was chilling. Great work from Anya.

    • @blakedavies1992
      @blakedavies1992 4 года назад +52

      for half a second I actually thought she had made and error or missed something and maybe it wasnt going to end with her winning (which would have been fine in its own way). I thought the moment was going to reference her learning about the touch-move rule she learnt at her first tournament. So for me the moment was also one of suspense :P

    • @CountryCowboy008
      @CountryCowboy008 4 года назад +35

      The look that she gave Borgov says a lot, like "Is this happening? Did I really just beat you?" Wow.

    • @thegreenreaper6660
      @thegreenreaper6660 4 года назад +19

      @@CountryCowboy008 It gets even better when you see the stoic and unintimidable Borgov, fínally give her a smile and sais 'Its your game", picks up his King-piece, hands it to her with the words' Take it', then tightly grabs her hand, and helps her up from her seat and the table as a classy gentleman would, embraces her, and gives her the applause she deserved!

    • @esal1575
      @esal1575 4 года назад +2

      Starting at 0:40, black queen checks white king, white rook blocks check, black queen moves diagonally to check, white king moves left and out of check... how does white win???
      White checkmates if white queen is moved diagonally next to white rook, after removing self from the check mentioned before, presumably blocking with bishop

    • @natepm6589
      @natepm6589 4 года назад +1

      @@esal1575 from what I could see after she moved her king he doesn’t have any more checks he can make without losing his queen. Beth has her rook on an open file and the queen is very close to his king so she can start attacking

  • @eloisagarcia3300
    @eloisagarcia3300 3 года назад +722

    I love how both Borgov and Luchenko were so graceful about losing, like really... no ego whatsoever, they were just aknowledging Beth's talent, I love that with all my heart

    • @gabaghoul23
      @gabaghoul23 2 года назад +26

      if you are really that good and you lose... you lose with respect

    • @ramencurry6672
      @ramencurry6672 11 месяцев назад +3

      If you lose, admit it. Nothing to be ashamed of it even if a person a big ego

    • @KristineMaitland
      @KristineMaitland 9 месяцев назад +2

      Luchenko amuses me as he is one of the producers of TQG and got a Primetime emmy for it. He also worked on V for Vendetta.

  • @roddyricch1913
    @roddyricch1913 4 года назад +701

    They made this show perfectly. Every single second had my attention and I’d personally have to say it’s 10/10. As much as I want another season, they can’t do it, they will ruin it.

    • @chienglsictfried1858
      @chienglsictfried1858 3 года назад +14

      It has a perfect ending, can't see how to start a second season

    • @russcoleman2338
      @russcoleman2338 3 года назад +6

      Agree........shootings, car chases, sex & violence in movies puts me to sleep.......but this whole show had me on the edge of my seat

    • @kylelawson9420
      @kylelawson9420 2 года назад +1

      It’s based off a book lol there won’t be a season 2

  • @herberttovar6262
    @herberttovar6262 Год назад +23

    I love how it feels at the end that Borgov always knew she would beat him someday and he was waiting for this moment, instead of being disappointed, he looked like a proud father🥺

  • @sudhisira
    @sudhisira 3 года назад +2929

    She refused to be a pawn of the government and walked out like a queen!

    • @jumpingship3001
      @jumpingship3001 3 года назад +115

      She opened her sails of freedom. Salute to anyone who struggles and finds their way and appreciate those who helped them.

    • @digitalankit3309
      @digitalankit3309 3 года назад +1

      Awesome

    • @laurahuynh8333
      @laurahuynh8333 3 года назад +82

      Even her winter outfit resembles the white Queen chess piece.

    • @cuivre2004
      @cuivre2004 3 года назад

      Yes- there was very transparent propaganda from the leftist point of view in this series. The pro-communist rhetoric as well as the anti-Christian rhetoric as well as the "women can do anything better than a man" rhetoric. Funny how people routinely fail to see their own propaganda in their own eye, eh??? This was a refined copy of "Black Panther" which patronized african Americans in a similar vein with their "Wakanda" fantasy-land.

    • @sudhisira
      @sudhisira 3 года назад +1

      LOL. We are not in the 1950s anymore (when all Russians were "bad guys") or in the 1920s (when women were in the kitchen) or in the 1820s (when all African Americans were enslaved). Keep up with the times!
      Interestingly, it is the so-called "left" wing party of today (which is really yet another flavor of right-wing) that portrays all Russians as "evil". Strange times indeed!

  • @lorezn9416
    @lorezn9416 4 года назад +654

    Am I the only one who almost cried when she sees the photograph with Mr Shaibel? Brilliant story and performance

    • @silistar2646
      @silistar2646 4 года назад

      Nope

    • @simaskara
      @simaskara 4 года назад +51

      Nah i'm not "almost" i legit cry hard

    • @ImperiousRexRacing
      @ImperiousRexRacing 4 года назад +61

      I love that she had multiple mother figures in her life (her mother, foster mother and motherly friend) but Mr. Shaibel was the only real father figure she had in her life. The importance of both roles in a child’s development can’t be overstated...

    • @jasperhalsey8574
      @jasperhalsey8574 4 года назад +2

      best moment in the show

    • @droho7597
      @droho7597 4 года назад

      Bruh...

  • @Joshua.977
    @Joshua.977 3 года назад +717

    I absolutely loved Borgov in this series. He seemed so intimidating in the earlier episodes which made me think that he had the personality of an arrogant asshole. But, he clearly proved me otherwise and took that defeat with class and grace. I have nothing but respect for this man.
    Also, this whole series made my year a little bit better. Thank you for this gem, Netflix.

    • @gabaghoul23
      @gabaghoul23 2 года назад

      well he technically didnt lose cuz that was not a winning checkmate moving that king over at the end.. netflix is just that ignorant

    • @pr3ttyb0yfl4cko
      @pr3ttyb0yfl4cko 2 года назад +28

      @@gabaghoul23 Of course moving the king was not a checkmate but that leaves Borgov with no good moves since he can't check Harmon's king anymore. Borgov's position was terrible and he's about to get mated, he resigned which means he lose. With your logic, it's like saying Japan didn't lose against America after being bombarded by nuclear bombs lmao.

    • @gabaghoul23
      @gabaghoul23 2 года назад +8

      @@pr3ttyb0yfl4cko i know now and wasnt thinking at the time i watched it when someone stated the obvious which as an avid chess player I should have been more aware they think several moves ahead at that level. alcohol hell uva drug

    • @pr3ttyb0yfl4cko
      @pr3ttyb0yfl4cko 2 года назад +6

      @@gabaghoul23 Lmao it's fine bro, we've all been there. You good. 😁

    • @cesareltraviezo9882
      @cesareltraviezo9882 Год назад +1

      @@gabaghoul23 You are wrong, Borgov with those checks was looking for a draw with repeated checks, did you know that? Since he could no longer check him due to the move of Beth's king, he could no longer check and any move he had made would have been lost since Beth had to checkmate him on the next move. You have to observe the game carefully.

  • @LeighWinspear
    @LeighWinspear 2 года назад +29

    1:56, "SHE Won.................". Instant goosebumps. Another simply amazing moment, of the greatest mini series, I have had the pleasure to see.

  • @Liftheavy85
    @Liftheavy85 4 года назад +1265

    I really enjoyed the moment when she was finally able to unlock her imagination without needing to use alcohol or drugs.

    • @sydneydileo
      @sydneydileo 4 года назад +7

      I liked the idea of that but I don’t think it was realistic at all. I think she could still win the game without the pills but being able to see the board on the ceiling and force her mind to be foggy when she is actually sober didn’t make sense. In real life she would have needed to come up with a different method to get her mind like that

    • @pipinm2214
      @pipinm2214 4 года назад +16

      I was shocked that she thought that she needed the pills because in the beginning when she played as child she never used them, it's only after the convincing of her friends that the drugs are magic at night that she started taking them.

    • @sydneydileo
      @sydneydileo 4 года назад +32

      @@pipinm2214 the first time she even saw the game she was on the pills

    • @gayprinceofzora1884
      @gayprinceofzora1884 4 года назад

      @@sydneydileo yea I was going to say that as well I forgot she used pills as a kid too

    • @Frandahab
      @Frandahab 4 года назад +16

      @@sydneydileo it absolutely is realistic, Naka and many other chess GMs are known to look at the ceiling to visualize the game. Nothing stopping her from learning to do it sober

  • @alfianodamanik
    @alfianodamanik 4 года назад +606

    The entire series I was like “Why wont she visit Shabiel?.?” But the ending sure did my emotions tingle

    • @thegreenreaper6660
      @thegreenreaper6660 4 года назад +51

      I had hoped she'd give a short speech at his funeral, starting something like 'what did Mr Shaibel mean to me? Well, 10 dollars to be fair..."... and then the story behind those 10 dollars: How he taught her the game as a young orphan, to the point she got adopted, and wanted to sign in for her first Tourney, it was William Shaibel who 'gave' her the 5 dollars entry-fee, she promised him to double in return if she'd won any prize.
      The scene in 'Shaibel's Basement', with the board where he kept évery article and picture of his 'pupil', including her very first note where she asked him for those 5 dollars was an impact though. He never wanted those 5 or 10 dollars back! To be fair: it was probably the best 5 dollars the man spent in his entire life!
      Perhaps she should have told the Press a bit sooner of her old Mentor, who taught her, only to rub it in to that cold ms Deardorff. imagine chess-admires, or press coming to that orphanage, and ms Deardorf was only 'the doorknob' towards her concierge, who in fact was a brilliant chess-teacher!! And that 'tart' had such a mastermind, right under her nose and never saw him for who he truly was!

    • @meiz1795
      @meiz1795 4 года назад +51

      @@thegreenreaper6660 Well, as far as i remember she did tell the press who was her teacher fairly early, i think it was after her 2nd state tournament(?). The press ignored it tho and she got very irritated by that, hence her question by the end "will you please promise to include that?" when asked about who was her teacher or something like that

    • @niteshbhasin2884
      @niteshbhasin2884 4 года назад +10

      you know lots of grown men and women cried at that

    • @snoylax69
      @snoylax69 4 года назад +14

      @@meiz1795 Yes that one female interviewer who was smoking on her room. When her mom was reading the article about her, Beth mentioned that all of what is written is just her being a woman and never included what she said about Mr. Shaibel.

    • @maddiesiegmund5623
      @maddiesiegmund5623 4 года назад +2

      Would have helped if he hadn't refused to say goodbye to her at the orphanage. In her mind she was probably like, oh, I fucked up irreparably. Best to "move on" like with everything else...

  • @VivaLaDnDLogs
    @VivaLaDnDLogs 4 года назад +645

    I loved this game, but I still think my favorite was the previous game against the eldest Soviet master. He was so genuinely happy to have played her, and you can even see her fangirling a little! So weird getting to play against someone you've studied since childhood!

    • @bhamacuk
      @bhamacuk 4 года назад +68

      He paid her the most wonderful compliment. Such respect. Tennis can be like that, when you can end up playing against your former idol.

    • @kaiserxblue
      @kaiserxblue 4 года назад +54

      Yes me too. That was the best match. He called her a marvel and was very grateful for the match. It's an amazing feeling when you get praised by one of your idols you grew up.

    • @stefan4159
      @stefan4159 4 года назад +8

      This has happened to me, one of the first chess masters I found out about when starting out in 2001 was GM Luke McShane from England. I read about him in my first ever chess book, and then it was such an honour to play against him in London 2015 during a simul.

    • @dracu9833
      @dracu9833 4 года назад

      @@stefan4159 did you win?

    • @RahulKumar-ng2gh
      @RahulKumar-ng2gh 4 года назад

      @@stefan4159 tell us more

  • @nourtohme4998
    @nourtohme4998 8 месяцев назад +1

    The way the camera is hand-held and almost jittery in the final scene... Brillant emotional and intimate touch.

  • @Octobris
    @Octobris 4 года назад +586

    Dorociński's acting in this series was phenomenal. Every time there was a closeup on his face, his well thought out slight muscle movements gave me chills. He conveyed every emotion (while still maintaining the portrayal of a distant and cold character) with incredible precision. World class level of skill. This man deserves recognition!

    • @edyta8461
      @edyta8461 3 года назад +22

      He is very talented polish actor,very modest, down to earth and also very hansome:)

    • @ewabielecka925
      @ewabielecka925 2 года назад +1

      Dokładnie tak👍

  • @nope3662
    @nope3662 4 года назад +299

    The fact that she didn't only win with Borgov but with herself too and that, that in one of the most important moments of her life she finally wasn't alone like she was most of her life, makes me so proud of her

    • @who_am_ii
      @who_am_ii 4 года назад +1

      You didnt even know her

  • @adtc
    @adtc 4 года назад +1304

    I like how the old people called her Liza. It symbolises that she's entering a new chapter in her life and becoming a new person (not Beth anymore) after defeating the one and only chess player she feared. The director is so spot on!

    • @akoszahorsky1071
      @akoszahorsky1071 4 года назад +258

      Liza is the nickname version of Elizabeth in slavic languages instead of Beth or Lizzie or whatever (Beth doesn't have an equivalent there AFAIK). So it is more of pure authenticity in my opinion, but you do you :)

    • @agushll74
      @agushll74 4 года назад +37

      It’s a powerful scene with an astonishing sountrack. From the moment she gets out the car and starts walking to the end. It couldn’t have had a better ending.

    • @annaradka5137
      @annaradka5137 4 года назад +17

      ​@@akoszahorsky1071 Yeah, that's true. The closest to Elizabeth is probably Elizaveta but I'm not sure. There is a character in,, Crime and Punishment'' who is called Elizavieta and a famous figure skater Elizaveta Tuktamyshewa. The latter is called Liza by many fans and commentators.

    • @yanayakomelova
      @yanayakomelova 4 года назад +30

      I watched Garry Kasparov's interview, and it was his advice to call her Liza by Russians as more natural. We use an informal version of the most names when we want to make it more softer. I am very curious was Beth called Lizzie by her mom in a book or those scenes were added to create her revival in the final? Can't wait to read it!.

    • @balymsekenova1289
      @balymsekenova1289 4 года назад +3

      на самом деле в России тоже есть имена как «Элизабетта» и мы просто сокращаем это до Лиза
      это обычное явление на самом деле)

  • @kxngs4f35
    @kxngs4f35 2 года назад +54

    They somehow managed to make chess matches feel like big action sequences in movies. Great show.

    • @jaidevnani2253
      @jaidevnani2253 Год назад +3

      If you reach a certain level in chess, you start to realise just how much action happens among the boring pieces on a chessboard. Constant threats being created, heroic defensive maneuvers and every once in a while, a thing of pure beauty happens which is forever a part of history. For example, a game between two gentlemen named Edward Lasker and George Alan Thomas nicknamed Fatal Attraction.

  • @enriqueshockwave8869
    @enriqueshockwave8869 4 года назад +315

    The writers did well. I like the ending sitting across from an old guy the way she began with the janitor.

    • @jeffchew152
      @jeffchew152 3 года назад +5

      Wow! You summed in all up! Bravo!

    • @jencruz8231
      @jencruz8231 3 года назад +6

      Yes! how i wish it was Mr. Shaibel

    • @richardposna3223
      @richardposna3223 3 года назад

      @@jencruz8231
      looked like him tho

    • @chessman7558
      @chessman7558 3 года назад +7

      @@richardposna3223 that “old guy” is Anatoly Karpov - world chess champion before Kasparov

    • @richardposna3223
      @richardposna3223 3 года назад +1

      @@chessman7558
      WoW. didn’t catch that . Thank You

  • @MassEffectFan113
    @MassEffectFan113 4 года назад +130

    Best part of the entire series was all the old men at the end being so surprised and happy at seeing Harmon visiting their chess games. Something about this scene warmed my heart. Seeing the young visit the old showing them that they are not forgotten, which tends to happen in our time all too often.

    • @pipinm2214
      @pipinm2214 4 года назад +11

      The music was perfect too and the old man who first shook her hand had the warmest smile calling her Lisa Harmon, it was so epic I have watched it like 10 times now.

    • @MassEffectFan113
      @MassEffectFan113 4 года назад +1

      @@pipinm2214 Yes exactly. Love how pure that old man's smile was.

    • @WhenInRomePlease
      @WhenInRomePlease 4 года назад +3

      The fact she went to say hi and didn't have an ego about playing the old timers was class

  • @aaronh248
    @aaronh248 4 года назад +324

    She deserves awards, the show deserves awards, the co-stars deserve awards, the directors, the musicians. Give em all the awards.

    • @jangkarsuci8885
      @jangkarsuci8885 4 года назад +13

      You get an award, you get an award, you get an award *in Oprah voice :-D

    • @mapleva
      @mapleva 4 года назад +5

      She will get awards, the entire series will have many nominations.

    • @komangputrardelrey
      @komangputrardelrey 4 года назад +5

      Costume designer too 🔥

    • @marcellebatshonkhoury1842
      @marcellebatshonkhoury1842 4 года назад +2

      Best show ever!!!
      An epic in motion!

  • @mikejp1480
    @mikejp1480 4 года назад +730

    This performance by Anya Taylor-Joy is beyond an actor portrayal, she became Beth Harmon.

    • @thegreenreaper6660
      @thegreenreaper6660 4 года назад +55

      Dont forget Marcin Dorocinski as Vasily Borgov btw! He was a perfect 'antagonist' in the series, who proved to be not her enemy, but a great admired of the game! he didnt 'boost off in a rage of anger, for losing to a little girl', he took her hand like a gentleman, when he handed her his King, and helped her up from her chair, and embraced her!
      A ráre thing to only see in the most respecful and greatest of players! Rival in the Game, but a great friend out of that!
      Dorocinsky was pérfectly cast for this role, but he outdid it with his 'unintimidable' performance too!

    • @gilberteaston1087
      @gilberteaston1087 3 года назад +2

      She should have won the golden globe.

    • @smarkslowplay3512
      @smarkslowplay3512 3 года назад +6

      @@gilberteaston1087 she did

    • @SamMito28
      @SamMito28 3 года назад +3

      She became Heisenberg
      Bravo Vince

    • @PatricioHondagneuRoig
      @PatricioHondagneuRoig 3 года назад +1

      @@SamMito28 I cannot wait for this meme to dissapear
      so Heisenberg can take its place

  • @willgorton5404
    @willgorton5404 3 года назад +504

    This series really showed the true colors of sportsmanship and respect of chess players, simply because it is a game of pure skill, when you are beaten its by someone better than you and they respect this so much, its just so wholesome you cant help but shed a tear.

    • @waannwaann5048
      @waannwaann5048 3 года назад +1

      💔💔💔💔😭😭😭😭😭😭

    • @amberlyn28
      @amberlyn28 2 года назад +9

      I take it beyond the game. I feel like it’s a true testament of sportsmanship across the board. Notice how there was a moment where they said that the Russians helped each other where people in America play against each other. She eventually got support from her friends even though she was the better player. That goes to show that even if you are the best you can still have humility and listen to people who might have one or two helpful tips. It also shows that teamwork and support can push you above and beyond. It also shows that being a great player does it mean you are not good when someone else beats you. Remember when the old man with the white hair congratulated her for winning, and she responded that she read all of his books. That was two people who had a tremendous amount of respect for each other instead of saying ha ha I’m better than you.

    • @willgorton5404
      @willgorton5404 2 года назад +3

      @@amberlyn28 completely agree lol like i say there just so much respect whether you win or lose, its just really refreshing to see that as its very rare nowadays, this is just on a whole other level and thats why i not only love the game but started to get into it myself

    • @amberlyn28
      @amberlyn28 2 года назад +1

      @@willgorton5404 that’s so good!! I always played chess but never took it further. Wished I had

    • @andro99991
      @andro99991 Год назад +1

      There are so many examples of this in real life:
      Capablanca and Alekhine hated each other, but Capablanca still sent a congratulatory letter to Alekhine when he won the world championship.
      Korchnoi and Spassky almost came to a fistfight during their 1978 match. Two years later, they were sitting together (playing in the same tournament) at a celebratory dinner and between them sat Mikhail Tal, who was drunk as a skunk. At one point, Tal’s head fell to the table and he started snoring. “Shall we carry him out”? , Korchnoi asked. “Yup”-came the answer from Spassky. And so two sworn enemies together carried out their fallen comrade to his hotel room. When the hotel doorman saw the three of them and asked what the hell was going on, Spassky casually answered that grandmaster Tal had been thinking so much in his game and that he was very tired.
      - You cannot imagine two more different men than Karpov and Kasparov. Karpov a positional player, Kasparov a tactician. Karpov always close to the establishment, Kasparov always the rebel. Karpov a calm, a little bit cold and calculated person, Kasparov a bundle of nerves. Karpov, an ardent communist and later a Putin supporter, Kasparov a staunch anti-communist and later the leader of Russian opposition to Putin. And of course, both of them well aware for more than 20 years that each one can only be beaten by the other one. The result-they hated each other’s guts.
      Still, when Putin’s regime arrested Kasparov, Karpov went to prison to visit him, brought him food, books and a chessboard, and publicly supported him.

  • @alalcoolj216
    @alalcoolj216 4 года назад +6274

    She won't do well playing outside. No ceiling to look at.

    • @leiru06
      @leiru06 4 года назад +105

      haha

    • @Daisiesandcherryblossom
      @Daisiesandcherryblossom 4 года назад +58

      LOL

    • @floraescudero9649
      @floraescudero9649 4 года назад +167

      There is a lot of room if is cloudy!😎

    • @foodbug
      @foodbug 4 года назад +16

      The clouds?

    • @ieorlich
      @ieorlich 4 года назад +54

      looks pretty cloudy to me...So, that's bigger than a ceiling.
      But i don't think she would need it against those men anyways...

  • @streetphone4619
    @streetphone4619 5 месяцев назад +3

    There are many re-watchable scenes from that series but the one at the end of this clip is my absolute favorite. When she is mobbed, joyfully and respectfully, by people that truly understood her achievement. It's just... Great!

  • @zac2790
    @zac2790 4 года назад +129

    Borgov hugging her and Luchenko happy for her in the crowd. I loved those moments

    • @thegreenreaper6660
      @thegreenreaper6660 4 года назад +9

      Kinda shows that the class and respect of these Russian Grandmasters is on a whole different level than the US or anywhere else in the world. The entire scenery around the Moscow Tournament is magnificent to start with: a beautiful ancient Abbey, with the lighting setup mainly on the Chess-tables.
      Outside an enthousiastic crowd, patiently waiting. Large press-hoardes, and even a Live-Broadcast on television(which was a pretty big thing in the mid-60's?) on the matches!
      The great respect these two Grandmasters show to her is the finishing touch!
      The whole show, you think that Borgov is the Main-antagonist and the badguy, but in the finale, he proves to néver have been the badguy.
      That 'despicable' title goes to the 2 KGB-agents who accompanied Borgov in the earlter episodes, and that (CIA?)operative that guided Harmon in Moscow: those were the propaganda-influences. Borgov didnt give 2 sh*ts about those Agents. And neither did Harmon in the end when she walked out the taxi.

    • @michaelschmitt6399
      @michaelschmitt6399 3 года назад

      I would have hugged her

  • @julietteferrars7739
    @julietteferrars7739 4 года назад +266

    What I love about this series was the portrayal of the characters in a realistic way. There were no entirely evil characters and no entirely good characters. Her biological mother, her biological father, her foster mother, her foster father, Harry Beltik, Jolene, Cleo(not sure about this bitch but imma include her), Benny, and in this clip, Borgov. And not the cheesy type of like he changed because of realization or something but just the sense that these people, they were all as dark and light as ever, just that we see them in different shades. Maybe like the chess pieces even, there are no protagonists and antagonists, just pieces trying to win the game. Also, the lack of closure with Mr. Shaibel was quite an angering thought, but I guess it shows that closures don't always happen.

    • @haeyba
      @haeyba 4 года назад +5

      What a brilliant comment!

    • @mynameisreallycool1
      @mynameisreallycool1 3 года назад +8

      I thought Cleo was cool until she basically ruined Beth's chance at succeeding with that game in Paris by pressuring her to drink the night before the game. Plus we never hear from her after that point at all after they hooked up. She could've waited until after Beth's game to hang out and drink with her.
      Her foster father was the worst though of course. Most of the characters from the show were, although imperfect and flawed, pretty likable.

    • @kristen1684
      @kristen1684 3 года назад

      ?? What’s your problem with Cleo she’s legit just a normal character lol

  • @danielgadomski5129
    @danielgadomski5129 4 года назад +235

    Huge props to Dorociński - he barely moves his face, yet he shows so many emotions going on behind a mask. And Anya Taylor-Joy was beautiful and mesmerising in her role. Beth is incredibly beautiful and intelligent, yet she is a really damaged and she has to work hard over her flaws. Wonderful series.

    • @jangkarsuci8885
      @jangkarsuci8885 4 года назад +1

      Yessss

    • @thegreenreaper6660
      @thegreenreaper6660 4 года назад +10

      Best Supporting Actor in a TV-series on the next Emmy Awards imho! He deserves it as much as Anya Taylor-Joy deserves an Emmy for this! The show was a masterpiece! The book was said to be this good already but the casting, and more importantly the splendid acting from these 2, made the show a stunner!
      I was skeptical at first to see 'yet another show with yet another Strong Female Protagonist'...etc. yet The Queen's Gambit was a very bright and pleasant surprise!
      Marcin Dorocinski is a véry good actor! Its rare to see an actor show such dominance and intimidation. I'd compare it to the masterclass that Charles Dance showed as Tywin Lannister in Game of Thrones, for example. Not many actors can actually pull that off!

    • @thearbitrarynerd1667
      @thearbitrarynerd1667 3 года назад

      The beautiful bit is what comes last imo. I hate that even in a series supposed to underline female intelligence and individuality, the beautiful is still put first.

    • @danielgadomski5129
      @danielgadomski5129 3 года назад +1

      @@thearbitrarynerd1667 I'm pretty sure that was the whole point of Beths pretty clothes, hairstyles and makeup. You don't need to go to the another end of the spectrum and abandon your womanhood (in this case I mean pretty looks) to show your individuality. Quite the opposite - Beth is making more and more conscious fashion choices and embraces her feminity (in a classical sense) while still remaining strongly independent and breaking a lot of stereotypes. I would say it emphasizes the point even more, cause when people try to put her in the box because of her gender/looks/age, the more shocked they are by her intelligence and strong character.
      Sorry if my reply is not clearly written but English is not my first language, and I'm dead tired after this week, so maybe I'm not making any sense rn 😉

    • @thearbitrarynerd1667
      @thearbitrarynerd1667 3 года назад

      @@danielgadomski5129 I completely agree with you, but my message still stands. Her intelligence is much more important and she also learns to embrace her femininity and adapt and act a bit more like “a woman” because society implies this is a bit compulsory (same thing happens to me) so intelligence is more important anyway

  • @MrUsnavyvet
    @MrUsnavyvet 3 года назад +57

    The Polish actor, who played the Russian champion, I would like to see him be cast in American movies. He has charisma.

  • @mja4353
    @mja4353 4 года назад +299

    There needs to be a series on Borgov. My favourite scene is when he's in the elevator and Beth is listening to his convo with his gang. He's such a boss.

    • @jangkarsuci8885
      @jangkarsuci8885 4 года назад +2

      Yeah i like it too

    • @thegreenreaper6660
      @thegreenreaper6660 4 года назад +24

      Aye! Borgov was trying to get a measure on HER, where the two KGB-agents were trying to politically manipulate him: He didnt give two SH*TS about those 2 goons, he was there for the chessmatch against a very potential player: Beth Harmon!
      As a youngling, Beth was quickly intimidated by Borgov's posture and playstyle, and lost.
      Ps, it was wonderful to see in the ending, that BEth did the exact same: She wasnt a political Pawn in a cold war-propaganda. Just loke Borgov wasnt. She just exited the taxi, and went straight to the park, to play with the old men gathered there, to do what she loved: play the game!

    • @mja4353
      @mja4353 4 года назад +11

      @@thegreenreaper6660 yeah I liked the ending a lot. Honestly, it seems like one of the few Western media pieces that doesn't show the Russians as bad guys. I also liked how Borgov turned out to be one of the few decent human beings ( when he hugged her ).

    • @thegreenreaper6660
      @thegreenreaper6660 4 года назад +22

      @@mja4353 They wrote this extremely well imo: During the episodes, you get the idea that Borgov ís the bad-guy, but in that elevator-scene with the 2 KGB-agents, you're getting a bit of a doubt.
      In this finale, where he warmly and respectfully admits his defeat to the young Elizabeth Harmon, offers her his King, and firmly grabs her hand to help her stand up for an embrace, shows he never wás a badguy at all! He was the greatest of them all!
      Dibs to Marcin Doroceski, how he can sáy so much with a personage that has so féw lines in a show! Facial expressions, composure, body language! Extremely well acted!

    • @anjelaflores5005
      @anjelaflores5005 4 года назад +8

      Beth also refused the offer from the church guys paying her tickets in exchange of supporting their political views, like Borgov did in the elevator scene. I kind of think that they are similar in some ways.

  • @myahya1987
    @myahya1987 3 года назад +672

    I think THIS episode should easily win her the Emmy for best lead actress

    • @smarkslowplay3512
      @smarkslowplay3512 3 года назад +3

      She will

    • @kit675
      @kit675 3 года назад +2

      welp

    • @Billie0708
      @Billie0708 3 года назад +2

      Kate Winslet won for Mare of Easttown.

    • @CidTheNadie
      @CidTheNadie 2 года назад +1

      @@Billie0708 Kate Winslet did a beautiful job but wow Anya deserved that award as well

  • @dylanbanocy7729
    @dylanbanocy7729 3 года назад +425

    I love how, Borgov is such a kind hearted antagonist, seriously, you could tell he knew what she was going through, he im sure was hoping she could finally defeat him, when they hugged. that was brilliant almost made me cry.

    • @justynawojcicka5056
      @justynawojcicka5056 3 года назад +15

      When he say is your game I feel like he say is your life you win your life that mean she not ruin her self in drugs and alcohol

    • @kris_py
      @kris_py 3 года назад +10

      Borgov isn't the antagonist, Beth is.

    • @redbloodbluemoon1423
      @redbloodbluemoon1423 3 года назад +8

      He's not an antagonist tho

    • @kylelawson9420
      @kylelawson9420 2 года назад

      What world champion wants someone to beat them? Lol.

    • @noahsvirsky9962
      @noahsvirsky9962 2 года назад +9

      @@redbloodbluemoon1423 he certainly is, however not all antagonists are evil in stories

  • @tomevans7567
    @tomevans7567 8 месяцев назад +3

    This is one of my all-time favorite shows. Anya Taylor-Joy was absolutely amazing in this.

  • @dominikuhlir2347
    @dominikuhlir2347 3 года назад +333

    I love the look on her face after she does the final move and looks at Borgov in disbelief realizing she just won

    • @sabertooth4740
      @sabertooth4740 3 года назад +7

      That was awesome!

    • @cuivre2004
      @cuivre2004 3 года назад +1

      Wouldn't she have know she won 5 plays before it actually happened though? ;-)

    • @dominikuhlir2347
      @dominikuhlir2347 3 года назад +3

      @@cuivre2004 no. She didnt win by the move itself, she Just made a great decision that would lead to her Victory in about 5-6 moves. What she did was genius, I recommend u some vid where they alanyzed the entire match.

    • @gabaghoul23
      @gabaghoul23 2 года назад

      wasnt a winning move- just a move on netflix to show she won- 2e king 5 to queen is not a winngin move there was no checkmate there when she was white- just bullshit netflix wanted you to see

    • @dominikuhlir2347
      @dominikuhlir2347 2 года назад +1

      @@gabaghoul23 well, I think you might not get the depth of the game :D Yes - you are right the move she did was not 'yet' the winning move. But the move she made secured her win in anout 6 more moves cuz there was literally no other outcome of the game at that point. Thats why he forfeited.

  • @dankgymrat
    @dankgymrat 4 года назад +259

    I've always thought netflix is capable of producing good shows but never have I imagined they would create such a master-piece. Absolutely one of the best shows of all time. The plot, the directing, the cinematography, soundtrack, wardrobe, anya-taylor joy, just everything. It's perfection. It sets a precedent to upcoming netflix shows in the future.

    • @ryanbrets7695
      @ryanbrets7695 4 года назад +1

      If you like this, watch "Unbelievable". Its another limited series.

    • @dankgymrat
      @dankgymrat 4 года назад

      @@ryanbrets7695 watched it already. Queen's gambit is still a better one. But yes unbelievable is ridiculously good too

    • @milissapotter4473
      @milissapotter4473 4 года назад +2

      Feel the same❤

    • @paulgotik
      @paulgotik 4 года назад

      just the chess was kinda meh for what I've seen. But the rest was good.

    • @thegreenreaper6660
      @thegreenreaper6660 4 года назад

      Dont forget Marcin Dorocinski as Vasily Borgov! He played the part márvellous!!
      I'd never heard of that actor before.... Until now! Wow! What a stunner! He was dominant and intimidating in a matter, comparable to the masterclass of Charles Dance as Tywin Lannister in GoT! Few actors can actually pull that off with such skill and magnificence!
      I hope Dorocinski atleast gets 'Best Supporting Actor in a TV series', at the next Emmy's.
      (Anya Taylor-Joy for Lead-actress... I dont know who of the two earns it more!)

  • @sheerluck2646
    @sheerluck2646 4 года назад +314

    This is how you end a series. Emotionally satisfying.

    • @ClaudiaReyy
      @ClaudiaReyy 4 года назад +4

      Hey Sheer Just made a piano cover of this song! I hope you can check it out🙏

  • @ManiacRacing
    @ManiacRacing 10 месяцев назад +2

    This is the kind of show that creates emotion and connection. Great stuff! And the stunning, almost supernatural beauty of Anna just adds to the complexity of her character. I started watching because of her looks, and was captured by her talent and the writing. What a fantastic show!

  • @shamikghoshxd
    @shamikghoshxd 4 года назад +83

    The way Borgov claps is so genuine. Hats off to the creators of this series for offering such an insight into the game.