A pity Aronofsky didn't ask real Go players
It's not that I don't like the movie, but just like with the amateurish math displayed in the movie, Sol & Max's Go game only superficially looks like a game played between knowledgeable players. It looks more like a game played between two players who watched a Go game being played before their eyes once and then tried to emulate that. It becomes particularly apparent at the moment when Sol says something like "stop thinking, follow your intuition" and Max attaches a stone inside his large territorial framework - a completely useless move, giving awkward form, adding no strength, reducing the size of his framework instead of enlarging it, not fixing any of his weaknesses. It's a pity because there are definitely strong Go players in New York and they are probably not that hard to find. Not finding and asking one of them is just lazy. But maybe the small budget really didn't allow for that. Still a pity, because there are not many western movies mentioning Go at all.
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