“Dr. Alekhines game is 20% bluff!” Capablanca what an incredible champion Capablanca was! Whoever posted this video is a rock star, I never would have imagined being able to see these fine fellows in a color video with sound. Amazing! Thanks so much!
@RaniaIsAwesome bro that’s why I love the phrase Alekhine’s gun. I’m pretty sure if I seen that beast heading my way I would think it would be a ratio of 10% bluff and 90% RUFF hahaha
7 years later he died of a stroke. It was his second stroke. He was 53 years old. I don't think you would not think that as well as he looks in the video.
I ve never seen Capablanca and Euwe together, l want to watch this vivid videos in Chess World Champions. Thank you very much for the videos. I m so happy to see great genius in real world by this video.
Very interesting snippet. Capablanca's being able to sit down and see the winning possible move immediately is simply fantastic (assuming it actually happened in the moment like the video implies). His analytical assessment of the grandmasters' respective abilities is quite amazing as well. Max Euwe's analysis is also very insightful, humble and realistic.
@@dannygjk there also was cameos of Frank Marshal, Richard Reti, Carlos Torre Repetto, Frederick Yates, Ernst Grunfeld among others who played in tournament and acted as themselves
@@dannygjkthere's a Soviet movie made during thé Moscow's tournament. It's a burlesque fiction, very funny, featuring Capablanca : Chessmania.or Chess fever ( 1925l.
ah, Alekhine had to give up smoking and drinking then won their rematch overwhelmingly, Euwe was just lucky on the first, even Capablanca said that here that Alekhine was stronger
No, Capablanca had a flabbergasting sight of board and could play very fast as attested by Manhattan chess club players. Therefore, he could find the right move that fast and Euwe’s reaction proves it was not scripted! Capablanca is exclusively known for his endgame skill and speed of playing according to Wilipedia!
Fascinating! Fabulous! Thank you. Instantly a new subscriber. (I only regret the addition of color adulterates this film, robbing it of historical gravitas).
Capablanca hated Alekheine. After their world championship match, Alekheine scrupulously avoided ever putting himself in position of letting Capablanca secure a rematch.
One of bess movie ever, Capablanca from Cuba explain that at his side there was a better move, many knows that Capablanca wrote some books and articles in New York Times and was an instant genius saw even analysed the position a bit and saw his solution, maybe it was Not as Alekhine or Bobby Fischer or Kasparow young Or Kramnik, Or Inmvabchuj or Ponomariov or Topalov Or Magnus Carlsen who at least best today
Aljechin war auch ein Feigling. Er spielte lieber gegen vermeintlich schwächeren Euwe, als ein Revanche- Match gegen den große Capaplanca zu wagen. Er hat damit die Schachwelt, genau wie später Fischer, um ein tolles Spiel gebracht !
The presenter (han Hollander) said he didn't see any move to win anymore. Euwe then said if he touched the queen he should place a move with it. The presenter then told him he just wanted to polish the piece.
The last part is about the upcoming match. Euwe says he doesn't quite know how to predict the match as sometimes he thinks he will have the edge but other times he thinks he is too unpredictable himself.
I am a fan of Alekine, but I also like Capablanca style. What I cannot understand in this video is that Capablanca admits to be one of the most lucky I am a fan of Alekine, but I also like Capablanca style. What I cannot understand in this video is that Capablanca admits to be one of the most lucky chessplayers of the history: he was defeated 6:3 by an opponent whoose game is 20% bluff! What if Alekine's game were without bluff? I cannot believe that Capablanca hasn't see this variaton!
Alekhine modified his game against Capablanca, recognising that unsound attacks would have no chance. That aside, Capablanca was below his best in that match.
@@Straight_Talk Historically he was in his prime, not below. The next few years he played just fine. You can argue and I'd agree with that, that he was in the end of his prime but to say that he was past it... no. Beyond that, computer analysis (these days, not ten years ago) shows that Alekhine was better. Capablanca has a large amount of games where although he won in the endgame he had a big advantage in the middlegame he lost. Now, beyond that, this debate (not ours, Capa's with Alekhine) reminds me of how people used to view martial arts (prior to MMA): I remember I was in a class and the teacher (who of course had a lot of meglomaniac self importance bs thoughts about himself) was talking about how his system of Karate is best. I asked him to demonstrate and after a few attempts where he told me what to do and I followed his orders to the letter and found myself at the losing end, he smiled thinking he just proved his superiority. I then said: "but this is because we are fighting YOUR system". Long story short - we then fought a free style fight in which I beat the living day lights out of him to a point he broke down and cried (yes I'm being serious). Conclusion... real life is everything, not just what you wanted it to be. In a closed setting where you disregard most things and leave only a few specific ones, yes, Capablanca was better. However, in real life where everything is at your disposal, Alekhine was better. That the idea of playing someone's weaknesses against them didn't work for Lasker against Capablanca doesn't mean that the idea itself is wrong. Alekhine was simply good enough to actually do it. Maybe in retrospect Capablanca can analyse a game till the end of time and realise some of the ideas were indeed "a bluff" but in a practical game that doesn't matter. It's the psychological knowledge, the understanding of pressure in conversion with the time at hand. That matters. Tal made a career with it. Nepo constantly bluffs (that is something he himself said), even Anand often referred to bluffs and how it's difficult because Carlsen doesn't fall for them but basically anyone and everyone else does. BTW, you can also claim Alekhine wasn't in his prime and worst of all... you can easily claim Alekhine was never in his prime because he started playing chess when he was 17 and only played his first serious tournament at 19. Had he started at 4 he'd probably be much much much better than he ever was. I used to be stuck on 1800 for several years. Then something clicked and I started to understand profiling and psychology and in one year my rating surpassed 2300. Anyway... you can debate on who was what and when but the reality is Alekhine beat Capablanca in literally every aspect of the game. To ignore that will be deluded. He beat him in tactical combinations, he beat him in strategy, he beat him in preparation, he beat him in middlegame complexes, he beat him in endgame complexes (which is where Capablanca himself though he will have an advantage over Alekhine and was evidently very wrong), he beat him in opening ideas, he beat him in novelties. To look at all of it (in their match) and ignore it is crazy.
@@c2c001 I didn't bother reading most of your book. Suffice it to say, virtually all great chess players, including Lasker (who played both Capa and Alekhine), Fischer and Kasparov, place Capa well ahead of Alekhine. Further, in OMGP, Kasparov said Capa was at his prime in 1916-18, BEFORE he became World Champion.
I agree. When you look Carlsen's personality, his dress or hair, his poor form of talking , not possible to compare with the class of gentlemen grandmasters of that time. But Capablanca telling that Alekhine's play is bluff, I don't believe it.
@@p.jhodeflea789 Carlsen is the Antichrist of chess. An extremely ill-mannered brat dedicating his life to the destruction of the noble game. To think the youngsters revere him is beyond me. But then again, in a normal world, the Botez sisters would sell perfumes for 1300 CAD/month. In ours, they are millionaires, thanks to a game they have no talent whatsoever for...
Being 20% bluff is not something bad, the way I interpret bluffs in chess is more like "Might not be the best move but might confuse or challenge my opponent". Capablanca liked to play in his comfort zone so I kinda understand his interpretation of "bluff" by being just "risky", which in fact, Alekhine took a more risky approach to chess.
“Dr. Alekhines game is 20% bluff!” Capablanca what an incredible champion Capablanca was! Whoever posted this video is a rock star, I never would have imagined being able to see these fine fellows in a color video with sound. Amazing! Thanks so much!
Our pleasure, Joe! Glad it brought you joy!
Thaaank u!
Certainly capablanca was a great champion but with an insufferable ego.
@RaniaIsAwesome bro that’s why I love the phrase Alekhine’s gun. I’m pretty sure if I seen that beast heading my way I would think it would be a ratio of 10% bluff and 90% RUFF hahaha
Incredible!! Almost supernatural ....like watching three ghosts !
Capablanca has been my chess hero for 30 years and too see this video was a complete thrill for me...thanks for uploading it
7 years later he died of a stroke. It was his second stroke. He was 53 years old. I don't think you would not think that as well as he looks in the video.
Dit is toch wel een heel mooi document.
Heel apart, inderdaad. Drie grootheden.
I ve never seen Capablanca and Euwe together, l want to watch this vivid videos in Chess World Champions. Thank you very much for the videos. I m so happy to see great genius in real world by this video.
thank you for sharing a piece of chess history
Two legends of chess and a legendary journalist
Amazing! Thank you!
Wow! This unique video should immediately be archived for many generations after us. Incredible footage!!!
This video brought me joy. I would never have thought that I would one day see Capablanca.
You know, I'm not sure I have ever seen live video of either of these legends. Thanks for sharing, super cool.
Very interesting snippet. Capablanca's being able to sit down and see the winning possible move immediately is simply fantastic (assuming it actually happened in the moment like the video implies). His analytical assessment of the grandmasters' respective abilities is quite amazing as well. Max Euwe's analysis is also very insightful, humble and realistic.
I never thought Capablanca video was available on TH-cam. My all-time favorite player. Thank you for sharing ❤❤
iirc a movie was made in which Capa was in. I can't remember tho if it was a documentary or fiction.
VJ, Didn't Capablanca recommend beginning the study of chess by reviewing and understanding positions encountered during the end game?
@@dannygjk "chess fever" 1925 movie
@@dannygjk there also was cameos of Frank Marshal, Richard Reti, Carlos Torre Repetto, Frederick Yates, Ernst Grunfeld among others who played in tournament and acted as themselves
@@dannygjkthere's a Soviet movie made during thé Moscow's tournament. It's a burlesque fiction, very funny, featuring Capablanca : Chessmania.or Chess fever ( 1925l.
0:22 "aanraken". When you touch a piece you must move it. Of course. Hollander's reply: "I wanted to clean the piece." How charming ...
Great find i am the same i would never have thought id see Capablanca speak and Dr Ewve
Who is Ewve supposed to be?
@@azzteke Max's dyslexic brother
Capablanca: *sits down*
Euwe: "Hey wait a minute, I was about to win that game. Dang it."🤣
🤣🤣🤣
Incredible footage! Thank you for posting this!
Este pequeño documental, constituye una reliquia para la humanidad.
Oh!!...incredible video!! Thanks
How the heck did you find this...? There are barely any filmed records of the old chess masters from that time. Wow...!
Capablanca's genius was overwhelming - i am sure he found the best move with no prior analysis
Euwe, the challenger, won the match for the World Championship in 1935 against Alekhine by the narrow margin of 15.5 to 14.5 points. 9 wins to 8.
ah, Alekhine had to give up smoking and drinking then won their rematch overwhelmingly, Euwe was just lucky on the first, even Capablanca said that here that Alekhine was stronger
@@corkystorky Although Alekhine also declined a rematch with Capablanca, so it's unclear if either of them should have stayed champion for very long.
Capablanca saw the right move even before sitting down completely!
Because it was scripted right?
No, Capablanca had a flabbergasting sight of board and could play very fast as attested by Manhattan chess club players. Therefore, he could find the right move that fast and Euwe’s reaction proves it was not scripted! Capablanca is exclusively known for his endgame skill and speed of playing according to Wilipedia!
@@kevinwellwrought2024 But there was a film camera there and he had to have agreed to appear on camera beforehand. Not saying you're wrong.
@RaniaIsAwesome 😂
more please!
Heel bijzonder ; zo verschillend met hedendaagse interpretatie
Han Hollander, 9 juli 1943+ Sobibor.
Dank je, Piet, voor de precieze datum ❤
😢
Fascinating! Fabulous! Thank you. Instantly a new subscriber. (I only regret the addition of color adulterates this film, robbing it of historical gravitas).
Capablanca hated Alekheine. After their world championship match, Alekheine scrupulously avoided ever putting himself in position of letting Capablanca secure a rematch.
Cool !!
super special
Great players ...
One of bess movie ever, Capablanca from Cuba explain that at his side there was a better move, many knows that Capablanca wrote some books and articles in New York Times and was an instant genius saw even analysed the position a bit and saw his solution, maybe it was Not as Alekhine or Bobby Fischer or Kasparow young Or Kramnik, Or Inmvabchuj or Ponomariov or Topalov Or Magnus Carlsen who at least best today
Capablanca looks very suave. Dr Erwe looks more intense. Great footage.
Capablanca speaks perfect English.
He did work as a diplomate and spent many years in the US
1:27 Capa seemed like looking down to read notes 😉and his voice sounded very old
Легендарное видео!!!
Capablanca, the chess machine before the advent of computer chess machines
Mr. Capablanca, what do you think of the match?
It will be close, unsound vs. uninspired🙂
Aljechin war auch ein Feigling. Er spielte lieber gegen vermeintlich schwächeren Euwe, als ein Revanche- Match gegen den große Capaplanca zu wagen. Er hat damit die Schachwelt, genau wie später Fischer, um ein tolles Spiel gebracht !
Capablanca died just 6 years later from a stroke..so sad
Dutch from 1935 sounds closer to English than it does today
Could have talked to Capablanca a bit longer
What they talk when in Dutch in the first part, and the last?
The presenter (han Hollander) said he didn't see any move to win anymore. Euwe then said if he touched the queen he should place a move with it. The presenter then told him he just wanted to polish the piece.
The last part is about the upcoming match. Euwe says he doesn't quite know how to predict the match as sometimes he thinks he will have the edge but other times he thinks he is too unpredictable himself.
@@LPRD, thank you 👍🏼👌🏼
I am a fan of Alekine, but I also like Capablanca style.
What I cannot understand in this video is that Capablanca admits to be one of the most lucky I am a fan of Alekine, but I also like Capablanca style.
What I cannot understand in this video is that Capablanca admits to be one of the most lucky chessplayers of the history: he was defeated 6:3 by an opponent whoose game is 20% bluff! What if Alekine's game were without bluff? I cannot believe that Capablanca hasn't see this variaton!
Is this real footage or Ai?.
It's real footage, Ruben, from 1935.
Whether this is staged or not, either way Euwe is conceding that Capablanca is the real master.
As good as Euwe was, Alekhine was in another league.
Well, Euwe had a life 😉
Capablanca speaks English with an English accent. Wow I never knew.
He spent many decades all over the world and was exposed to English speakers since he was a child. 😊 Officially he was a diplomat.
ik hev aIes vrstaande aan drukked e daume for Max Euwe
Mr. Hollander😂
Did they record this with a toaster
:-) It's the best I could do!
"Dr. Aleychin's game is 20% bluff" - Capablanca.
Well, dear Jose, that bluffer outplayed you in the opening, middlegame and endgame.
Fact.
Alekhine modified his game against Capablanca, recognising that unsound attacks would have no chance.
That aside, Capablanca was below his best in that match.
@@Straight_Talk of course Capa was past his prime.
@@Straight_Talk Historically he was in his prime, not below. The next few years he played just fine. You can argue and I'd agree with that, that he was in the end of his prime but to say that he was past it... no. Beyond that, computer analysis (these days, not ten years ago) shows that Alekhine was better. Capablanca has a large amount of games where although he won in the endgame he had a big advantage in the middlegame he lost. Now, beyond that, this debate (not ours, Capa's with Alekhine) reminds me of how people used to view martial arts (prior to MMA): I remember I was in a class and the teacher (who of course had a lot of meglomaniac self importance bs thoughts about himself) was talking about how his system of Karate is best. I asked him to demonstrate and after a few attempts where he told me what to do and I followed his orders to the letter and found myself at the losing end, he smiled thinking he just proved his superiority. I then said: "but this is because we are fighting YOUR system". Long story short - we then fought a free style fight in which I beat the living day lights out of him to a point he broke down and cried (yes I'm being serious). Conclusion... real life is everything, not just what you wanted it to be. In a closed setting where you disregard most things and leave only a few specific ones, yes, Capablanca was better. However, in real life where everything is at your disposal, Alekhine was better.
That the idea of playing someone's weaknesses against them didn't work for Lasker against Capablanca doesn't mean that the idea itself is wrong. Alekhine was simply good enough to actually do it.
Maybe in retrospect Capablanca can analyse a game till the end of time and realise some of the ideas were indeed "a bluff" but in a practical game that doesn't matter. It's the psychological knowledge, the understanding of pressure in conversion with the time at hand. That matters.
Tal made a career with it. Nepo constantly bluffs (that is something he himself said), even Anand often referred to bluffs and how it's difficult because Carlsen doesn't fall for them but basically anyone and everyone else does.
BTW, you can also claim Alekhine wasn't in his prime and worst of all... you can easily claim Alekhine was never in his prime because he started playing chess when he was 17 and only played his first serious tournament at 19. Had he started at 4 he'd probably be much much much better than he ever was.
I used to be stuck on 1800 for several years. Then something clicked and I started to understand profiling and psychology and in one year my rating surpassed 2300.
Anyway... you can debate on who was what and when but the reality is Alekhine beat Capablanca in literally every aspect of the game. To ignore that will be deluded. He beat him in tactical combinations, he beat him in strategy, he beat him in preparation, he beat him in middlegame complexes, he beat him in endgame complexes (which is where Capablanca himself though he will have an advantage over Alekhine and was evidently very wrong), he beat him in opening ideas, he beat him in novelties. To look at all of it (in their match) and ignore it is crazy.
@@c2c001 I didn't bother reading most of your book. Suffice it to say, virtually all great chess players, including Lasker (who played both Capa and Alekhine), Fischer and Kasparov, place Capa well ahead of Alekhine.
Further, in OMGP, Kasparov said Capa was at his prime in 1916-18, BEFORE he became World Champion.
this is how chessplayers should talk and dress, nowadays they look like arroganr brats without style, bad versions of Bobby fisher
I agree. When you look Carlsen's personality, his dress or hair, his poor form of talking , not possible to compare with the class of gentlemen grandmasters of that time. But Capablanca telling that Alekhine's play is bluff, I don't believe it.
Yeah? Well, you know, that's just like your opinion, man.
@@p.jhodeflea789 Carlsen is the Antichrist of chess. An extremely ill-mannered brat dedicating his life to the destruction of the noble game. To think the youngsters revere him is beyond me.
But then again, in a normal world, the Botez sisters would sell perfumes for 1300 CAD/month. In ours, they are millionaires, thanks to a game they have no talent whatsoever for...
@@earlmyers2874 It's "maaaaaaan" 😋
@@earlmyers2874 Carlsen being an extremely ill-mannered and arrogant brat is no opinion. It's plain fact.
Love Capa, but he got blitzed 6-3 via Alekhine. Tough pill to swallow apparently.
Disgruntled capablanca calling Alekhines game 20% bluff is laughable! It must have been a good bluff for Alekhine to have crushed capablanca in 1927.
Being 20% bluff is not something bad, the way I interpret bluffs in chess is more like "Might not be the best move but might confuse or challenge my opponent".
Capablanca liked to play in his comfort zone so I kinda understand his interpretation of "bluff" by being just "risky", which in fact, Alekhine took a more risky approach to chess.