Now available worldwide for purchase and streaming, plus some merchandise.
https://mailchi.mp/surroundinggamemovie/the-surrounding-game-is-now-available-worldwide
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Finally …
See also http://www.surroundinggamemovie.com/en/schedule/
Eh?!!! I haven't watched this film but in the past week or so I have watched documentaries on Madonna and Kylie Minogue, on rituals around the world, on adoptees searching for their birth mothers in India, on VE-Day, and probably other things. I rarely enjoy pop music, have no real interest in anthropology, genealogy, India or war. But I enjoyed all these films because they were about other people doing things differently from me. "There's nowt as interesting as other folk."While the film is interesting for some go players, IMO it is uninteresting for non-players. Do the producers expect to sell it to non-players, too? The production quality resembles that of an ordinary but dedicated TV documentary film, as it might have been produced for a portrait of expert musicians. Why has so much effort been invested in production? It can't only be go players' obsession to do other go players a favour, can it?
That is not my experience at all. I was at the world premiere showing at a film festival, and the audience members were largely non-Go players and they found the film very interesting, as evidenced by the participation levels in the Q&A session afterwards. I've also shown this to friends and family who are not Go players and they enjoyed it immensely.RobertJasiek wrote:While the film is interesting for some go players, IMO it is uninteresting for non-players.
My wife, also not a go player, did not enjoy it, probably because she knows one of the people featured all too well.John Fairbairn wrote:I just watched the film tonight. I enjoyed it, and my wife - not a go player - also enjoyed it, although in her case she has met several of the people featured and been to several of the places shown.