makes its mark on the cinematic landscape as a fitting memorial—to Louis Kahn specifically, and to the artistic spirit in a more universal sense
My Architect: A Son's Journey (2003)
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Reviews Counted:89
Fresh:83
Rotten:6
Average Rating:7.5/10
Consensus: A moving and enlightening documentary about architect Louis Kahn.
Theatrical Release:Nov 12, 2003 Limited
Box Office: $2,672,377
Synopsis: My Architect is a tale of love and art, betrayal and forgiveness -- in which the illegitimate son of a legendary artist undertakes a five year, worldwide exploration to understand his long-dead... My Architect is a tale of love and art, betrayal and forgiveness -- in which the illegitimate son of a legendary artist undertakes a five year, worldwide exploration to understand his long-dead father. Louis I. Kahn, who died in 1974, is considered by many architectural historians to have been the most important architect of the second half of the twentieth century. A Jewish immigrant who overcame poverty and the effects of a devastating childhood accident, Kahn created a handful of intensely powerful and spiritual buildings -- geometric compositions of brick, concrete and light -- which, in the words of one critic, "change your life." While Kahn's artistic legacy was an uncompromising search for truth and clarity, his personal life was filled with secrets and chaos: He died, bankrupt and unidentified, in the men's room in Penn Station, New York, leaving behind three families -- one with his wife of many years and two with women with whom he'd had long-term affairs. In My Architect, the child of one of these extra-marital relationships, Kahn's only son Nathaniel, sets out on an epic journey to reconcile the life and work of this mysterious, contradictory man. The riveting narrative leads us from the subterranean corridors of Penn Station to the roiling streets of Bangladesh (where Kahn built the astonishing Capital), and from the coast of New England to the inner sanctums of Jerusalem politics. Along the way, we encounter a series of characters that are by turns fascinating, hilarious, adoring and critical: from the cabbies who drove Kahn around his native Philadelphia, to former lovers and clients, to the rarified heights of the world's most celebrated architects -- Frank Gehry, I.M. Pei and Philip Johnson among them. In My Architect, the filmmaker reveals the haunting beauty of his father's monumental creations and takes us deep within his own divided family, uncovering a world of prejudice, intrigue and the myths that haunt parents and children. In a documentary with the emotional impact of a dramatic feature film (including an original orchestral score), Nathaniel's personal journey becomes a universal investigation of identity, a celebration of art and ultimately, of life itself. -- © New Yorker Films [More]
Director: Nathanial Kahn
Director: Nathanial Kahn
Producer: Susan Rose Behr, Nathanial Kahn
Composer: Joseph Vitarelli
Studio: New Yorker Films
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Reviews for My Architect: A Son's Journey
Movies about acrimony between mothers and daughters are a dime a dozen. But it's difficult to find one about the tensions between fathers and sons.
Kahn and cinematographer Robert Richman work miracles, capturing the majesty and beauty of Kahn's buildings.
As My Architect blossoms into a reunion of Kahn's human and artistic legacy, we see how changing light and passing time animate all our lives.
The young Kahn is not a graceful filmmaker. Yet the subject matter is engrossing for anyone interested in architecture and also one of its greatest practitioners.
Kahn’s triumph is a small-scale monument to one of the deepest human needs, the longing for a bridge between man and his maker.
Students of architecture will probably find more to like than students of filmmaking
While primarily a film about a man searching for roots, "My Architect" also pays tribute to the folks who make such monumental structures.
Isn't a bad place to begin if you're curious about architecture and don't know much about Louis Kahn.
By the end of My Architect, Kahn has learned that the central contradiction of his father's life can't be resolved -- and that realization becomes the filmmaker's solace and the film's triumph.
The finest achievement of My Architect is the way the son locates the light of his father's personality.
A showcase of Louis Kahn's genius and an artistic triumph for his son.
I suspect Nathaniel got a lot out of it, and good for him, but it did little for me.
Does Nathaniel finally find his father? If so, it's neither to excuse nor to condemn him but to do what he was unable properly to do at his father's wake: say goodbye.
A film with all the passion, mystery, tears and joy of first-rate, fully fleshed fiction.
Appeals on several levels. The son's journey is compelling, but there's also the draw of celebrity: The fact that he had a famous father who dreamed big and built even bigger.
It is a stunning work that captures with elegance -- and touches of lyricism -- the challenge of finding the man through the artist.
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