Chess of the Wind (1976): A Gothic Tragedy of Wealth and Ruin – Review

A film the universe refused to lose, saved from its time and returned to the director’s own son, just to be celebrated globally.
Feels like being dropped into someone else’s daily life without a guide. Traditions, habits, small details that actually mean something. You’re not just watching a story, you’re picking up how people move, live, and see the world.

A film the universe refused to lose, saved from its time and returned to the director’s own son, just to be celebrated globally.