Words Of My Perfect Teacher
Review by Lee Anne Gillan
HFX/The Daily News
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
We generally expect our spiritual leaders to be serious and all-knowing. We don’t expect them to be witty, mischievous and overly concerned with soccer results.
In Lesley Ann Patten’s warm and funny story of her quest to be the perfect student, she follows (and sometimes chases) Buddhist teacher Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche around the world, interviewing him, his followers, and other Buddhists (best of all is a hilarious interlude with Steven Seagal).
This enlightening game of follow-the-leader is beautifully shot, and beautifully pieced together. Voice-over narration in a personal documentary can sometimes feel self-indulgent, but in Patten’s dry tones you can hear confusion, amusement, and longing as she tries to understand both her teacher and herself.
There’s also a fair bit of irritation, as her elusive subject keeps her waiting for hours or months -- Words Of My Perfect Teacher could be subtitled Rinpoche and Me - or answers questions with questions.
Rinpoche comes off as both a wise grandmother and annoying little brother, sometimes in the same sentence.
His refusal to be pinned down or locked in is the space where learning takes place. He calls a teacher a mirror, and an assasin, hired to completely dismantle you.
Words Of My Perfect Teacher doesn’t preach. It doesn’t have to. Slowly, stealthily, like Rinpoche’s teaching itself, the film draws you into questioning what you believe about the world and your place in it.
Reprinted with permission.
|