In this movie, Mike presents just a single hand, and it will take you under 10 minutes or less to view the movie. Mike provides step-by-step analysis of issues you should think about as a defender on this hand (against a slam!!). The movie advances you through the hand, one bid at a time (a good example for those making their own movies), and one trick at a time. This gives you the feeling that you are kibitzing even playing the hand.
Mike uses quizes to ask you what you would do as the player (no scores assigned).
After the auction is over, the opening lead is made by your partner, and Mike pauses to allow you to view the dummy and offer some analysis. Making the opening lead and pausing is another example of good movie making. At this point, after the lead is tabled, he spends four frames discussing what you should be thinking as a defender.
The hand he uses for this presentation is excellent, and the analysis will lead to what might be a surprising twist that will be new to many people viewing this movie.
There is no voice track to this movie, so you can easily spend as much, or as little time on each frame without it auto-advancing. That is useful here where you are being asked to think a bit before answering some of the questions he ask to force you to think about issues on the hand.
Rating this movie might help others decide which movies they might want to "watch".
This post has been edited by barmar: 2012-November-16, 10:01
Reason for edit: Replaced URL