Father's Day

A son searches for the meaning of his father's death
by
Year Released
2003
Film Length(s)
38 mins
Closed captioning available
Remote video URL

Introduction

Filmmaker Mark Lipman looks back at the impact of his father's death over thirty years ago and uncovers more than he bargained for. What begins as a personal memorial to his father evolves into a moving exploration of grief and depression, the vagaries of memory and the veneer of family normalcy.

Featured review

An amazing accomplishment. Father's Day is an intensely personal film that will speak to anyone exploring the imprint of their parents on their own lives.
Bo Smith
Film Curator Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Synopsis

Haunted by his inability to prevent his father's death at age 17, the making of this film came to span twenty years as Lipman tried to construct an image of his father from relatives' memories and psychiatric records unearthed from hospital archives. The film circles around to become an inquiry into his own life - the choices he has made and how his father's life resonates within his own. Using evocative home movies and poetic imagery, Father's Day allows the viewer to become immersed in intimate conversations about death, suicide, mental illness and the choices that went into the creation of a family. There are no easy answers or tidy conclusions and so the film creates an unusual space for viewers to reflect upon their own lives.

Reviews

Images, sounds, and thoughts, past and present, are orchestrated with riveting art into a pulse of rumination over family and self. Irresistibly, viewers are absorbed by lives and feelings that may seem as unremarkable as their own, but, once addressed here, blossom with the import of what we can and cannot know about our selves and others. Father's Day is a remarkable achievement.
Jeff Clark
James Madison University, Booklist
Mark Lipman's Father's Day is a compelling and original look at the father-son relationship. His efforts to penetrate the secrets in his family echo the mystery and uncertainty and, ultimately, the powerful bond between all fathers and sons.
Sam Osherson
Ph.D. Author, Finding Our Fathers
The spark of originality burns no brighter than in Father's Day by director Mark Lipman. More than with most films, describing this documentary falls painfully short of the experience from viewing it. To say it is an examination of a 49-year old man coping with the death (and possible suicide) of his father can't begin to capture the subtle, subliminal power of what you'll actually witness.
Marc Thomson
Palm Springs Daily Post Weekly
Father's Day is a story of loss, love and healing. It compellingly captures the heart of an unfinished story between a father and a son.
David C. Treadway
Ph.D. Author, Dead Reckoning: A Therapist Confronts His Own Grief

Features and Languages

Film Features

  • Closed Captioning

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