A Master Builder

If the creative minds behind A Master Builder want you to take one thing away from their film, it’s the title; the script manages to smuggle it into dialogue more frequently than character names, and there’s a whole lot of dialogue. You will absolutely never at any point forget that this is a story about a master builder, a man utterly devoted to the craft of architecture. After a point, the constant name-dropping makes the production feel like an echo chamber.
But when the worst crime a film commits is over repetition of a phrase, then that film is in a pretty good place. Such is the case with this collaboration between director Jonathan Demme and the great Wallace Shawn; Demme serves as the project’s helmsman, while Shawn can claim credit for both designing the film’s blueprint and portraying the lead part. His role here as scribe finds its basis in 19th century Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen’s play of the same name, which Shawn has translated anew. That probably only has special significance for chronic theatergoers, but Shawn’s passion for the material shows through even when the film is at its most tautological. This is a movie crafted with care from top to bottom.
It’s also prickly, bitter and surprisingly unsettling. Shawn plays Halvard Solness, the eponymous genius architect and veteran rascal; we meet him lying in bed, accepting the ministrations of home hospice care as a revolving door of supporting players each in turn come to fuss over him. These initial conversations reveal the breadth of Halvard’s infamy within the film’s first half hour. It turns out that he’s responsible for ruining the career of his mentor, Knut Brovik (Andre Gregory, briefly appearing on screen with Shawn once more after 1981’s My Dinner With Andre), and is currently keeping Knut’s son, Ragnar (Jeff Biehl), in professional limbo while dallying with the younger man’s fiancee, Kaya (Emily Cass McDonnell). All the while, Halvard’s long-suffering wife, Aline (Julie Hagerty), watches her narcissistic tyrant of a husband from the sidelines.