fbpx
We rely on advertising revenue to support the creative content on our site. Please consider whitelisting our site in your settings, or pausing your adblocker while stopping by.

Get the Magazine

Filmed, produced, directed and edited by Tomas Koolhaas over the course of four years, Rem is a film about an architect more than it is a film about architecture.

The feature-length documentary provides glimpses into the daily life of Rem Koolhaas, arguably the most important architect of our time, as the filmmaker followed his father during his continuous travels. The spectacular cinematography, much of it in slow motion, cuts effortlessly and seemingly at random from one site to another while its subject intones his personal reflections, all to the accompaniment of a dramatic musical score composed by Murray Hidary.

The film portrays Rem as being seemingly everywhere at once. He visits a construction site in Doha, attends an office meeting in New York, swims in the Mediterranean, walks an arid desert at one moment and a verdant Dutch polder at another. He rides in a water taxi after a morning press conference in Venice and stands pensively on the CCTV rooftop helicopter pad, overlooking Beijing at sunset. Occasional testimonials from partners, clients and building users – including two homeless men who frequent the Seattle Central Library – provide some welcome additional voices to a narrative that would otherwise be a monologue.

Among the many subjects Rem ruminates on are the importance of “doing the opposite,” the concept of “time as a barcode,” and his sense of still being a journalist – “a question machine.” Defining himself as “an expert in different contexts and environments” who “counteracts the cynical effects of globalization,” Rem reveals that the world in its complex entirety is precisely his specialization. By foregrounding Rem’s worldview over the body of fascinating work that earned the architect his reputation, the film undoubtedly aims to appeal to a wider audience than just acolytes and architecture geeks. It thus mythologizes and aggrandizes even further a figure who is already larger than life.

Rafael Gomez-Moriana is a Spanish Canadian architect, educator and critic based in Barcelona who is currently struggling to complete a book about the “touristification” of architecture.

We rely on advertising revenue to support the creative content on our site. Please consider whitelisting our site in your settings, or pausing your adblocker while stopping by.