In The Queen’s Gambit, Benny has a more established professional chess career than Beth and should be successful enough to own a nice home, but his apartment is a bit of a dive. Early in the Netflix miniseries, the eccentric and arrogant Benny proves to be one of the few chess players in the country that can rival Beth’s talent. Beth’s loss to Benny at the US Open in Las Vegas is her first professional loss and it’s a huge blow to Beth’s self-esteem, even though Benny acknowledges that Beth, a child prodigy, is an extremely talented chess player. When they face off again in season 1, episode 5, “Fork,” Beth manages to beat Benny and he becomes even more intrigued by her. He offers to mentor Beth, who initially balks at the offer, but later accepts.
Beth then goes with Benny to his home in New York City, where he helps her prepare for her international chess competitions in Paris and Moscow. When they first arrive, Benny parks the car on a street lined with townhomes and Beth assumes that one belongs to him. Instead, Benny leads her to his underground apartment, walking past garbage bags and down a long flight of stairs. The bare-floored apartment is populated with very little furniture: a few large cushions, a small table with chairs, and several bookshelves, but not much more. For New York City, the apartment is actually pretty spacious, but it’s old, run-down, and lacking in amenities, including a couch – and privacy. On the other hand, Beth – who hasn’t been in the chess game as long as Benny – lives in a suburban home, newly remodeled by Beth herself. Understandably, Benny’s humble NYC apartment is not at all what Beth expected, but there are several things that explain Benny’s living situation.
First, Benny probably isn’t making as much money as Beth, whether by choice or not. Benny did write a book on chess, but the profits from his book are probably negligible. Professional chess-playing is depicted as extremely prestigious in The Queen’s Gambit, but, in reality, it was not a lucrative career (at least in the US, as The Queen’s Gambit also depicts). Benny also seemed less aggressive about seeking out tournaments with cash prizes like Beth. He doesn’t care about the prestige or money, he just wants to play chess – and he only plays when he wants to play. Likewise, his independent and unsentimental personality indicates that he might not care about owning nicer things and living in a nicer apartment. Then there's the fact that he lives in New York City, where the cost of living is higher than almost anywhere in the US. But on top of all that, Benny is a gambler.
Like Beth’s struggle with drug and alcohol addiction, Benny has his own vices to cope with his troubles. In The Queen’s Gambit, Beth and Benny play several rounds of speed chess for cash and neither of them is willing to quit until they literally can’t play anymore because they’re out of money. If Benny had a serious gambling problem, it wouldn’t matter how much money he was making as a chess player (which, again, was probably not that much) – the money would be gone, and he would be forced to live in the cheapest apartment he could find.
In the end, neither Benny, Beth, nor any of their friends seemed to mind that Benny didn't live in a luxury apartment. And despite starting out as rivals, Benny and Beth bond over chess as friends and then, briefly, as lovers. They eventually go their separate ways when Beth sees that Benny is ultimately more singular in his purpose than she realized. Beth does want to travel, fall in love, renovate her home, and buy fashionable clothes. While Beth finds great fulfillment in playing chess, she occasionally uses it as a means to an end throughout The Queen's Gambit. Beth, at least for part of her life, plays chess to live. Benny, on the other hand, lives to play chess.
from ScreenRant - Feed https://ift.tt/2LJJdTk
No comments: