'Queen of Katwe': Inspirational Chess Movie Is Feel-Good Checkmate

Queen of Katwe Is the Best Kind of Feel-Good Story

A new  film starring Lupita Nyong’o and David Oyelowo follows the rise of Phiona Mutesi, a poor girl from Uganda who becomes a chess prodigy.

By Pete Travers, Rolling Stone                                               October 7, 2016 11:00 PM 



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Madina Nalwanga and Lupita Nyong'o star in Queen of Katwe, the true story of a young girl from rural Uganda.



Inspirational can be a dirty word at the movies, suggesting fake uplift and sugary excess. There's none of that in Queen of Katwe, the true story of a preteen chess prodigy from Uganda whose skill and backbone took her out of the village slums and onto a world stage. Directed by the great Mira Nair (Salaam Bombay, Monsoon Wedding), the film – laced with grit and grace – hits you like a shot in the heart. Nair catches the thrum of real life without skimping on the hardships that comes with lack of food and education; she gets us so close to Phiona Mutesi (Madina Nalwanga) that we walk with her and see what she sees. Her widowed mother Harriet (Lupita Nyong'o) sells corn at a village food stand to support Phiona and her two younger brothers. Her teen sister Night (Taryn 'Kay' Kyaze) has ridden off with a dude on a motorcycle to sample the high life in the capital city of Kampala.



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Phiona's choices seem non-existent until she meets Robert Katende (a superb David Oyelowo), a soccer player turned missionary. Robert uses an abandoned church to set up a chess club for the youth of Katwe. He soon realizes that Phiona is a natural, blessed with the ability to suss out an opponent and predict his next move on the board. 'This is a place for fighters,' Robert tells her.  Phiona is willing. The resistance comes from her headstrong mother who worries that the false promises of a larger world might corrupt her child. Nyong'o, in her first major screen role since winning an Oscar for 12 Years a Slave, is phenomenal, with a soulful beauty that cuts deep. She's unflinching in revealing a woman whose outward show of brash attitude masks the pressure of holding to the ground while the ground keeps shifting.

And the wonderfully empathetic Oyelowo is stellar as a man with a vocation he thinks he must abandon for an engineering career that can better support his wife and child. The British, Nigerian-born Oyelowo has proved himself an actor of extraordinary power in roles as diverse as Dr. Martin Luther King in Selma and the resentful son of a White House servant in The Butler. As Robert, the actor radiates warm humor and quiet strength. It's a mark of the film's avoidance of Hollywood contrivance that no romance is trumped up between Robert and Harriet. Oyelowo and Nyiong'o are both extraordinary, giving newcomer Nalwanga a chance to shine as Phiona grows from a child into her own woman.


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Madina Nalwanga is Phiona Mutesi and David Oyelowo is Robert Katende in “Queen of Katwe,” based on a true story of a young girl from rural Uganda whose world changes when she is introduced to the game of chess. (Photo credit: Edward Echwalu/Edward Echwalu)



Watch: 'Queen of Katwe' Official Trailer

Queen of Katwe starts Friday at the Twin!
PG

True story of chess prodigy from Uganda. "If there is anyone out there capable of remaining unmoved by this true-life triumph-of-the-underdog sports story, I don't think I want to meet that person." - A.O. Scott, NY Times

"Director Mira Nair (Mississipa Masala, Monsoon Wedding) is back with Queen of Katwe, a biographical sports drama based upon the life of Phiona Mutesi, the first Ugandan woman to ever become a titled chess player.

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