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My Architect (2003)
7/10
Crushingly Sad and Great
28 April 2005
Video Vault By Shawn K. Inlow

My Architect: A Son's Journey 2003 - Nathaniel Kahn Not Rated: 116minutes Vault Rating: 7

What a thing to be fatherless. "My Architect: A Son's Journey" follows Philadelphia filmmaker, Nathaniel Kahn, as he desperately seeks answers from his father, the renowned architect, Louis I. Kahn, dead these 30 years.

Louis Kahn died in a train station in 1974 and left behind more than one family. The funeral service, when the filmmaker was just a boy, was, shall we say, an unpleasant surprise.

We find that Nathaniel only knew his father en passant, from his sporadic visits with his mother, whom, we are told, he loved deeply. This movie is about a boy seeking his father and perhaps himself by visiting his work, as if the magnificent structures hold some secret.

To be sure, Louis Kahn was a gifted architect, but "architect" is a cold word. The man was a sculptor on a grand scale who spoke of his craft in airy terms of silence and art.

Among his notable works, explored lovingly in the film, are the Salk Institute (1965), The Kimball Art Museum (1972) and the monumental capitol complex in Bangladesh (1983). The portion of the film where Nathaniel first visits Dhaka, Bangladesh, finds the work, but not the man.

The film benefits greatly from having much footage of the very public man as he worked in New York City and as a professor at Yale and the University of Pennsylvania. Many of Khan's contemporaries and collaborators also help flesh out the filmmaker's ghost- father.

Even so, the viewer seems not to come to a particularly satisfying place. The answers Nathaniel Khan is looking for seem hollow. Not good enough.

In scenes where the director meets with his half sisters, both from different mothers, one can feel the tensions of the years, the slights and hurts. One might expect them to burst into anger, but only the camera saves them from hostilities. Each of these children has visibly lost something.

It might be pointed out that Khan, who seemed a driven perfectionist, never became rich. Instead, he became noteworthy. It was as if he sacrificed his family for his art. This is a crushingly sad and great thing.

April 28, 2005
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It's Torture Watching Old Yeller
25 May 2004
"It's torture watching Old Yeller," said Levi Abrino in a recent Vault interview. "We raised basset hounds. I figured out that if you start out with the dog dead, nothing bad can happen."

It is Vault's distinct pleasure to introduce the Curwensville, Pa. filmmaker and his debut independent.

The film short, Abrino's senior thesis in film/video production at Penn State, is now making the rounds in the festival circuit, has appeared on public television, and may be pointing to bigger things as he continues his work at NYU.

"Burying Dvorak" is an odd and touching coming of age story of a boy and his

dog. It is odd because the boy, Ben (14 year old Ben Carlson of State College, Pa.) clings to the deceased basset hound of the title, which he has had stuffed and mounted on rollers.

"Struck down by a massive coronary heart attack at the age of two," complains Ben to his mom at the film's opening. "I'll probably die this year."

It is touching in the way of effective coming of age stories, giving us an outcast or, forgive me, an underdog to empathize with and a situation that can only be resolved within.

"The dog is the last thread to a world of innocence. Giving it up is like letting go of the childish view," said Abrino. "People often use someone else for their salvation and come to realize they're in charge of their own salvation. Like when a kid realizes his parents aren't super-heroes anymore."

Viewers may quickly understand Ben's bleak outlook. He clings vainly to his dog the way he might cling to the unrealistic idea of a perfect family life complete with a father in the house.

The movie is about that moment when Ben is forced to confront his own broken heart and decides whether or not it is less painful to move on.

Ben is a vulnerable nerd, very much a proto-Woody Allen, whose nightmares pretty much consist of gym class and whose observations are slightly brainy.

He does not deliver his dialogue as much as allow it to seep out, almost as if he only really speaks to himself. After all, he doesn't have his dog anymore and it isn't as if he can actually talk to his mother.

The other actors in the small cast are uniformly good as they present thematic forces brought to bear on a weakling kid who is slowly arming himself against the slings and arrows of the world.

Another local tie in the film is the particularly evocative score by Chris Farley, also of Curwensville, Pa., who is a Duquesne graduate in music composition. Video Vault Rating: 8
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A quiet meditation of life and death without judging.
22 August 2003
Warning: Spoilers
This is a thoughtful meditation. It is a quiet movie that looks at a life and death situation without passing judgment or, most strikingly, giving easy answers.

Iranian auteur Abbas Kiarostami's "Taste of Cherry," examines the middle aged Mr. Badii as he drives through the hilly outskirts of Tehran, searching for someone to rescue or bury him.

He's dug an open grave beneath a lonely tree in a desolate patch of reg. He is wrestling with killing himself, yet he needs someone to properly bury him.

There is a cultural bias at work in this film that I wish I understood better. I don't profess any expertise in Muslim culture and I would love to understand either the cultural or scriptural underpinnings of the film. Still, a simple human decency is on display here that extends well beyond the cultural settings of the film. Indeed, these people are not the Muslims I see portrayed on television every day.

"At six in the morning, come and call me twice," he says to a poor soldier who could use the six months wages Badii offers. "If I reply, take my hand. If I don't, throw in 20 spades of earth."

"I can't do this for you," replies the soldier. "You can't throw earth on someone."

Badii is banking on this somehow. As he grapples with his moral dilemma, he seems to be casting about looking for someone to give him any reason to continue.

Badii, you see, is an everyman, grappling with the big questions and suffering this life while praying God for solace. As such, the viewer doesn't even need to know the protagonist's particular anguish, but can fill in the blanks themselves. The viewer can lay down in a bed of earth, amid gathering storm clouds and fallen leaves, and if God is merciful he will take him or answer him.

Video Vault Rating: 8
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