Toni Rakkaen

How To Win At Checkers (Every Time)
HOW TO WIN AT CHECKERS (EVERY TIME) Never Explores The Sad Reality Beneath The Surface

When a writer/director makes a film set in a country foreign to them, it is clear to local audiences that this is an outsider’s view of their nation and their culture. There’s a reason Lost in Translation is derided in Japan and Match Point is met with sheer indifference in the UK. It becomes alienating to see your country through the eyes of somebody who hasn’t spent the majority of their life there, especially when the film is a work of social realism made by somebody with merely a second-hand knowledge of the realities of life there.