Product Description A riveting tale of love, art, betrayal and forgiveness -- in which the illegitimate son of a legendary architect undertakes a worldwide exploration to discover and understand his father's and the personal choices he made. Louis I. Kahn is considered by many historians to have been the most important architect of the second half of the twentieth century. While Kahn's artistic legacy was a search for truth and clarity, his personal life was secretive and chaotic. His mysterious death in a train station men's room left behind three families -- one with his wife and two with women with whom he had long-term affairs. The child of one of these extra-marital relationships, Kahn's only son Nathaniel, sets out on a journey to reconcile the life and work of this mysterious man. Revealing the haunting beauty of his father's monumental creations and taking us to the rarified heights of the world's celebrated architects and deep within his own divided family, Nathaniel's personal journey becomes a universal investigation of identity, a celebration of art and ultimately, of life itself. .com One nonfiction film that truly creates a narrative journey, My Architect is filmmaker Nathaniel Kahn's engrossing search for his father. Louis Kahn, one of the most celebrated architects of the 20th century, died in 1974 and left behind a highly compartmentalized life, including two children born out of wedlock to two mistresses. Nathaniel interviews the members of this somewhat puzzled family, but his deepest experiences are visits to the buildings that his father made (such as the grand Salk Institute in La Jolla, California), culminating in an emotional trip to Bangladesh. Here, Louis Kahn designed a massive government complex, a soaring achievement (and fascinating paradox--a Muslim capital designed by a Jewish man). This film asks: where does an artist truly live? In his life, or in the work he leaves behind? Nathaniel Kahn takes an amazingly even-tempered approach to this, given his personal stake in the story, and the result is a uniquely stirring movie. --Robert Horton
D**S
Poignant Journey Through Architecture...
Architecture, unlike other art forms, allows for interaction with the art as people live, work, and spend their leisure in the erected structures that architecture creates. Louis I. Kahn lived to create useful monumental masterpieces that now can be found throughout the world in places such as La Jolla, California, Dacca, Bangladesh, and Ahmedabad, India. These and other buildings by Kahn changed the perspective of architecture, as contemporary architects study them. In the light of this, Kahn was a renowned and bankrupt architect who was discovered dead in the men's room at Penn Station without identification papers.In My Architect: A Son's Journey the audience gets to follow Nathaniel Kahn's expedition to discover whom his father was, as he never got the opportunity to get to know him as a child. On this venture, the audience, learns that Nathaniel was one of two children that Louis had out of wedlock. Louis had two affairs outside of his marriage in which he had children. It becomes an emotional turmoil for him and his relatives, as he begins to dig up the old news of his father. Nonetheless, Nathaniel remains firm on continuing his discovery of his father, as he meets with his other sisters and family members. Along the way, he learns that it was suggested to have him aborted while he still was a fetus. Also, he learns that Louis' wife, whom he stayed married to throughout life, never acknowledged him or his sister who were born out of wedlock.Nathaniel visits with architects that praised and critiqued his father while all expressed their admiration for his determination to make artistic masterpieces. Employees of Louis Kahn tell both fond and callous memories of him, while all agree that he had a noble work ethic and mental toughness. For example, one former employee tells a story of how he received an assignment to build a model with very short notice, as Louis had to go on a business trip. Three days later when Louis returned from his trip he called him at three o'clock in the morning and told him that the model was crap. In another interview an architect in Bangladesh describes him as next to divine, as he designed the National Assembly in Dacca, which signifies that country's independence.Despite what people might think they know of Louis I. Kahn it becomes obvious in the documentary that this Jewish boy who emigrated from Estonia when he was just a child had a tough upbringing--an upbringing that colored his life, as he was willing to reach out to all people of the world regardless of ethnicity, religion, and race. His care and nurturing affection spread his joy of architectural art throughout the world and is evident through his work in Dacca, Bangladesh, as he was a Jew helping a Muslim country erecting their symbol of freedom. Maybe, as suggested in the film, his love was so great that he did not have the ability to be there for those closest to him. Maybe, Nathaniel was therefore able to discover who his father was through his journey in My Architect: A Son's Journey.
P**S
Heart-wrenching....
You know, I'm not too sure just exactly how I stumbled upon this film, but it has joined the limited number of films I think of as "five star." I really was unaware of Louis Kahn's work, but the theme of the film, a son's search for the man behind his father, proved arresting.Like Frank Lloyd Wright, Louis Kahn was a species of narcissist, insensitive to the needs of his fellow human beings, cognizant only of his own needs and his drive to achieve great buildings. Although physically less than attractive, Kahn's magnetism seduced two appealing young women and resulted in two illegitimate offspring. The fact that the film maker was Louis's only male heir seemed to delude his mother into a form of cognitive dissonance, namely, that despite all his actions to the contrary, she believed Kahn was going to leave his wife and move in with her and their son. Unlikely as that wish might have been, she's touchingly adament in it.The film shows Kahn's finished buildings and their unique features which inspired respect in me, but that respect is evenly balanced with the basic unlikeability of the man himself. Disheveled, insensitive, narcissistic, work obsessed -- this is a hard man to admire and yet...and yet...by the end of the movie I had tears rolling down my cheeks as a grateful Bangladesh official tells Kahn's son that while the man himself might have been deeply flawed as a human being, nevertheless, the overwhelming greatness of his work transcends his human fraility.And that's a hard legacy to top.
M**T
The artist as bigamist
Years ago, when I was a child, I first heard the word "bigamist," and my response was, "Oh, another thing that men can do and women can't!" It seemed to me that a bigamist had more than ordinary men -- more wives, more children, more houses, more LIFE. But in "My Architect," the story of the legendary Louis Kahn, who sustained three such relationships, the arrangement did not seem to make any of them -- women, children, progenitor -- happy.This is a fascinating film centered around a son's search for his father that leads us through his work, the people who knew him, and the reclusive and mysterious life he led. It's a great pleasure to meet this son. And a great pleasure to look at his father's buildings.I have watched this film several times, and I never fail to come to tears at the end, when it is explained to Nathaniel that though he may have been disappointed in his father as a father, Bangladesh owes him endless gratitude for creating a building that centered a young nation, gave it selfhood, a place to gather and a place to feel proud. It is truly a masterpiece of a building.
L**T
So Much More than the typical bio documentary: Fascinating, Entertaining & Good History.
When I viewed My Architect, I experienced a well written & skillfully directed Documentary about the life & works of Louis Kahn AIA; I was fascinated, interested, I learned, was informed & entertained (unlike most documentaries).In My Architect, Nathaniel Kahn brings the viewer along & shares a son's journey of purpose. My Architect is a special documentary on multiple levels: A) The Quest: The desire, the need & will of a young man to understand "Did my Father love me?" B) The Uncomfortable Details: Nathaniel boldly unveils Lou Kahn's personal life through interviews with the "wives" & siblings from the 3 families his father simultaneously juggled. C) The Work, the Work, the Work... Nathaniel travels & beautifully films Lou's magnificent buildings & interviews many people involved & impacted by the Work. D) Insight: I learned so much about the man, his ways, his passion. E) Good History: Accurate History is important & Nathaniel Kahn has documented, collected & shared meaningful factual information. F) Made Me Think. My Architect caused me to think about Architecture & about how we each actualize our lives & make decisions.This is a special entertaining & thought provoking documentary. L
C**N
La vie professionnelle et privée d'un des plus grands architectes du XXème siècle.
Très beau reportage sur la vie professionnelle et privée de l'architecte Louis Kahn réalisé par son fils Nathaniel.Un documentaire rare et émouvant avec des images fortes sur ses réalisations.A voir et à revoir...
W**T
Five Stars
Very enjoyable, and very informative.
A**ー
失敗
購入したDVDは日本では再生できないもので、結局見られませんでした。返品を依頼しましたが、それにも返事はありません。
P**R
Very Worthwhile!
Released in 2003, this documentary about architect Louis Kahn, by Nathaniel Kahn, his son with one of his mistresses, traces the latter’s search into his father’s life and personality. To do so, he visits most of Louis Kahn’s buildings and interviews a wide range of persons who dealt with him on a personal or professional level. This includes not only multiple family members but also all top American architects of the second half of the 20th century: Philip Johnson, E. M. Pei, Frank Gehry, Robert A. M. Stern, Moshe Safdie, etc.Nathaniel Kahn strikes a healthy balance between private and architectural matters. He does not shy away from appearing on screen and sharing his own feelings and views. Most viewers will consider that this candidness compensates various technical glitches regarding camera work and continuity (Nathaniel Kahn dyeing his gray hair away at some point, for instance).Supplements to the DVD are limited to an attractive colour booklet and an enlightening Q & A session with the filmmaker, which includes sequences not integrated into the movie.Overall, anyone interested in architecture, and in father-son relations, will be fascinated by this offering.
L**C
my architect
Un film bouleversant sur un fils qui cherche à percer les nombreux mystères qui ont entourés la vie et la mort de son père. C'est en même temps un film sur un des plus grands architectes du XXème siècle : Louis Kahn. L'architecture est tout ce qui reste à ce fils de ce que fut son père, mais la poésie, la beauté, l'art et l'émotion que dégagent ces bâtiments sont inoubliables et Louis Kahn vit encore à travers eux.
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