Long Live the Queen (film)
[4] Sara, a young girl with an active imagination, buys a chess set from a friend's father with her pocket money.The film includes several chess games, most noteworthy of which is in the finale, with Sara as black in the simultaneous exhibition against Hook.1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 is played, and then coverage resumes here: It is the position immediately following an inaccuracy by white (Alexander Alekhine) on move 29 of his C49 game on 11 October 1936 in the Arbeiderspers International Tournament against then World Champion Euwe, who went on to win the tournament on tie-break from Reuben Fine.The other is a Scandinavian Defense (B01), transposing into a Dunst Opening line, won by Sara in simul over the schoolteacher whose chess is mediocre: 1.e4 d5 (the teacher's face suggests he views this sound opening as incorrect) 2.exd5 Nf6 3.c4 (trying to hang on to the pawn loses too much tempo) c6 4.Qa4 Bd7 5.dxc6?(the final error - the last hope of a draw was 7.Qd1) 7...e5 8.f4 Bb4 9.Qd3 Bf5 10.Qg3 Ne4 11.Qxg7 Nc2+ 12.Ke2 (12.Kd1 Nf2+ 13.Ke2 Qd3+ 14.Kxf2 Bc5#) 12...Qd3+ (Mariette, the contemptuous classmate, wrongly equates this most efficient way of winning with her own queen-losing blunder) 13.