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Tuld kuningale (1969) Estonian Film Database (EFIS): A portrait film about chess grandmaster Paul Keres. Film time: 1935-1939; 1948-1966. An inter-society chess tournament in Tallinn in 1969. A retrospective of the earlier achievements of chess player Paul Keres follows. As a young man, he becomes an international grandmaster and wins a chess tournament in 1938, proving, according to the announcer, that he is “made of wood from which world champions grow”. Shots of the atmosphere of the tournament, the audience, the honoring of the winner and the awards, souvenirs and chess books at Paul Keres’s home, with a metronome ticking in the background. Keres will remain a candidate for world champion for a long time to come. His entire life has been filled only with chess – a childhood hobby that has become a job, the announcer notes. The Hague–Moscow chess tournament 1948. In the colonnaded hall of the Moscow House of Trade Unions, Keres is seen thinking intently, playing with Vasily Smyslov, drinking coffee behind the scenes, etc. The winner of the tournament is Mikhail Botvinnik, who is honored with an oak wreath. The crowd in the hall and in front of the house greets him with enthusiasm. The following are shots from the Botvinnik-Smyslov match in 1957 in a large sports hall and from the 1965 tournament, where Keres loses to Boris Spassky. Keres walks between the chessboards with a worried expression and watches the games of others. Episodes from the Botvinnik-Tal match in 1960, which Tal wins, and the Botvinnik-Petrosyan match in 1963, which the latter wins. Many other top chess players of their time are also on the screen – David Bronstein, Lajos Portisch, Max Euwe, Samuel Reshevsky, Miguel Najdorf, Florin Gheorghiu, Miroslav Filip, Tigran Petrosyan, Jefim Geller, Leonid Stein, Svetozar Gligorić, Wolfgang Uhlmann and Gedeon Barcza. Announcer: “A lot has been said that Keres remained second forever. But to us, he is still "our Keres." The film does not really explain why Keres always finished second or was forced to finish second under the influence of USSR sports politicians. The final shots show the festive celebration of Paul Keres' 50th birthday at the Estonia Concert Hall in 1966.