
Beat the Lotto coming to cinemas next month
Beat the Lotto, the award-winning documentary from director Ross Whitaker (Between Land and Sea, Katie), will be released in cinemas on Friday 4 July.
The film "charts the true story that captivated Ireland in 1992; the syndicate helmed by mathematician Stefan Klincewicz and their attempt to cover close to two million combinations and guarantee a rollover Lotto jackpot win".
Describing his film as "a reflection of Ireland in the 1990s", director Whitaker said: "We wanted to make a film that encouraged people to reflect on what side they take - are they in favour of the syndicate who are trying to beat the system, or the trusted national institution that was a very positive force in 1990s Ireland?
"It was enjoyable to build the film to an exciting climax and for the audience to wonder who would win out in the end."
Beat the Lotto received its world premiere at the Dublin International Film Festival in February 2025, winning the Best Irish Film award from the Dublin Film Critics' Circle.
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She found herself liaising with Klincewicz's dad, a Polish paediatrician, and, after getting together romantically, they pondered where in world such a couple would find home. Most of the elder Klincewicz's family made their way to the United States. 'Mum said to Dad, 'Look, come to Ireland. We'll go there. Try it for a year. And if you don't like it we'll go to Chicago.' So, obviously, the rest is history. Dad loved Ireland, loved the people, and that's how they came to be in Cork.' Might we find clues to his interest in the mathematics of gambling from a legend about his grandparents, exiled to Siberia by the Bolsheviks? 'I could never get missing pieces of the jigsaw, but apparently they escaped as a result of the outcome of a game of chance,' he says. 'I'm not sure if it was poker. I don't know what card game it was, but they escaped with assistance based on the outcome of this card game.' Klincewicz, who was in the rare-stamp business at the time of the Lotto project, makes no claims for academic standing. 'I have no PhDs, nothing whatsoever like that,' he says. 'I would prefer to say I had no qualifications. Any papers that I do have are only diplomas or things like that – which are not major, not relevant.' The lottery had already delivered Klincewicz a degree of fame. The documentary shows him promoting his bestselling book, Win the Lotto, on RTÉ television. One cannot overstate the impact of the National Lottery in the late 1980s and early 1990s. This was a time of great hardship, and the lure of instant wealth proved an irresistible intoxicant. Then there were the community projects that the profits financed. 'It was seen as a really positive thing in a time that was, I suppose, quite dark,' Whitaker says. 'We don't want to go on and on about that, but that's very much how people felt at the time. All you ever heard at school was the unemployment numbers going up.' This explains the divided feelings about the syndicate at the time. A television audience shown in the film seems to be wishing for them to fail. Here were these cynics playing poker with the people's dream machine. Yet, 33 years later, it is hard to watch Beat the Lotto without rooting for Klincewicz and his band of investors. They were breaking no laws. The flaw was in the system. And the plan involved a lot of hard work. 'I have heard of people coming out of screenings of the film arguing over which side they would be on,' Whitaker says. 'And, in fact, some of the programmers in different cinemas have been relaying that back to us.' Yet Beat the Lotto is structured like a heist movie, and everyone wants the plotters to succeed in such an entertainment. Right? All the more so if it's strictly legal. Don't the Irish pride themselves on enjoying the establishment being taken down a peg? 'You do lean a little bit into the tropes of the genre you're in,' Whitaker says. 'And, when it comes down to it, it wasn't illegal to do what they did. It was an incredible undertaking. They spent over a year filling out those tickets by hand, which just feels like an insane thing for someone to do.' So where did Klincewicz find the other members of the syndicate? For all the simplicity of the idea, you still need to gather a large number of people who are prepared to risk some unexpected glitch frustrating the mathematics. 'It would have been due to the formation of smaller syndicates prior to doing this and building up contacts through those circles,' he says, slightly cryptically. 'So many diverse aspects of life. One of the people – and I don't want to make the name public – was a major car dealer, a big name, the managing director of that company. I got to know him because I got my first car in Dublin from him. And stayed with them. So he was part of the syndicate.' He reveals that the biggest single investment would have been £220,000. 'When the news got out, one person whom I knew very well arrived into my offices on the Thursday morning and said, 'I want to invest in this.' There was very little left at the time. I think there was probably around £10,000 needed to complete it – which would have been filled anyway. He handed £50 over for his share. Ha ha!' The task of buying the tickets was shared out among members in impressively logical fashion. 'It wasn't pro rata,' he says. 'It was a case of [allocating] somebody who had the knowledge how to get, for example, £100,000 worth of tickets on. They had the ability to do it. They had the contacts to do it. They had the assistance to do it.' It would be as well going into Beat the Lotto without knowing how the plan worked out. We certainly shan't spoil that here, but inevitably a host of complications mount as we veer towards the fateful draw. Klincewicz seems genuinely puzzled when I ask if he would like to have done anything differently. 'Well, not really. No, no.' No regrets? He still feels the plan itself was sound? 'It was, yeah, yeah, yeah … apart from the complications.' Life is ever thus. Beat the Lotto is in cinemas from Friday, July 4th