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No Cross Words for This Engaging Puzzle Documentary

No Cross Words for This Engaging Puzzle Documentary

Christian Hamaker

Contributing Film and Culture Writer

Release Date:  June 16, 2006 (limited), June 23, 2006 (select cities)
Rating:  Not Rated
Genre:  Documentary
Run Time:  94 min.
Director:  Patrick Creadon
Actors:  Will Shortz, Merl Reagle, Bill Clinton, Jon Stewart, Indigo Girls, Mike Mussina, Daniel Okrent, Ken Burns, Bob Dole

"Wordplay," the new film documenting New York Times crossword puzzle-meister Will Shortz and the annual crossword competition he founded, provides object lessons in fair play, vocational calling and, well, oddness. For it takes a certain type of person to knock out a Times crossword in two minutes and two seconds.

Not that there’s anything wrong with that. In fact, it makes me envious, watching crossword aficionados ace puzzle after puzzle, while I struggle with the two- and three-letter clues in my weekly TV guide crossword.

But this review isn’t about me. It’s about Them, the Other, those who create the most puzzled-over crosswords in the country, and those who know the clues, the tricks of the trade, the ins and outs, or, more appropriately, the ups and downs of all those “Across” and “Down” numbered boxes.

They’re not like you or me. They’re smarter. They’re masters of the math and music domains, according to one diehard puzzler. Sometimes they’re famous comedians (Jon Stewart), politicians (Bill Clinton and Bob Dole) or professional baseball players (Mike Mussina).

Among the film’s most powerful messages is that our greatest passion can be a vocational calling, even if poverty is the result. “Anyone doing what they like … I have a great deal of respect for that,” says one crossword expert. “It’s a gift,” he says of his abilities, “but one I worked for. I practiced and got good at it.”

Former President Bill Clinton also takes up the nature-versus-nurture debate. “Nature made Einstein what he was, but nurture can make you capable of doing more than you think,” he says.

Those sentiments add a hopeful dimension for those looking to be inspired, but the film works fine as a study of the various personalities, and personality types, who create and conquer crossword puzzles.

The film’s driving force is Will Shortz, whose unusual college degree in “Enigmatology” has propelled him to the top of the puzzle-making world: editorship of the New York Times crossword, which he assumed in 1993, several years after launching the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament – an annual gathering for crossword-obsessives.

Shortz, who sold his first puzzle at age 14, says he was “willing to live in poverty” to pursue his passion for puzzle-making, but his intentions are inspirational: “The best thing is to stretch people’s brains, bring joy to their lives,” he says.

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