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Discovery documentary profiles the culture of Scrabble
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August 16, 2004 - 4:28 pm

Picture

Joel Sherman, 2002 National Scrabble Champion, poses with a game board in this undated promotional photo. Sherman is featured in The Discovery Times Channel's documentary, "Word Wars," which profiles the game and some of it's most skilled players. (AP Photo/Courtesy Discovery Times Channel, Christian Oth)

BURBANK, Calif. - Before the recent National Scrabble Championship, Eric Chaikin was trying to cram for it. But there just wasn't enough time.

He was too busy promoting the documentary he co-directed "Word Wars," which profiles the game and some of Scrabble's most skilled players.

The film, which premiered earlier this year at the Sundance Film Festival, airs 8 p.m EDT Thursday on the Discovery Times Channel's "Screening Room" series.

Co-director Julian Petrillo, who describes himself as slightly better than a "garden variety Scrabble player," has known Chaikin since both attended Brown University.

"I sometimes like to glibly refer to Eric as a recovering Scrabble player, but as he likes to say ... he's not actually recovering," teases Petrillo. (Chaiken managed to participate in the tournament July 31-Aug. 5.)

Their documentary focuses chiefly on four top-ranked, obsessed players of the crossword board game, which was invented during the Depression by an out-of-work architect, Alfred Mosher Butts.

The dedicated tile shufflers - Joe Edley, Matt Graham, Marlon Hill and Joel Sherman - are revealed in all their fascinating eccentricity as they moved from preliminary competitions into the nationals in 2002 in San Diego.

"Basically these four characters distinguished themselves pretty early as a compelling, cohesive group," Chaikin said.

The movie reveals a bag-shaking, tile-picking, quick-thinking subculture, ranging from improv matches in New York's Washington Square Park to Hill's games at home in Baltimore with his mother to the intense sessions of official competition.

Exposed are the fetishes and rituals of a game. Clever graphics using anagrams and word definitions help in probing the players' minds.

Costing in the low six figures, the 77-minute movie was edited down from about 200 hours of footage shot over about 18 months.

"Everybody thinks they know Scrabble, but they don't know Scrabble like these guys know Scrabble," says Vivian Schiller, Discovery Times senior vice president.

Schiller recognized "before they had finished shooting" that the documentary fit the "Screening Room" mission "to tap into American cultural trends that people don't know that much about, that speak to something larger about society."

Chaikin and the "Word Wars" competitors hope that TV audiences will want to see more of the game. The 2001 best-selling book "Word Freak" by journalist Stefan Fatsis raised its profile. This documentary may give it another boost.

Last year, ESPN televised a $100,000 all-star Scrabble game, and on Oct. 3, the network will air an edited version of the now completed 2004 national championship in New Orleans.



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