Film Threat - March 3, 2005 - David Finkelstein
(review available on Filmthreat.com)
This short film, edited in a fast rhythm, shows footage of individuals and tourist
sites in a variety of cities, mostly European. In the foreground of most of the
shots is an old-fashioned, transistor style cassette recorder. Over a background
of carnivalesque music, the voice of the tape recorder (played by Kevin Silva)
acts as a philosophical tourguide, musing on the existential meanings of travel.

Baeumler has an eye for interesting shots, and a feel for creating an exciting
rhythm though editing, making this film visually more interesting than the
average travelogue film. The character of the "tape recorder" has a droll take
on the multifarious spectacles of travel: pondering how the sights, sounds, and
people of foreign cities are endlessly fascinating but ultimately
incomprehensible. "We aren't on this planet long enough to answer all the
mysteries, and even if we were, what would the knowledge get us?" observes
the tape recorder. "Understanding is like examining darkness with a flashlight,"
he concludes. Despite differences between cultures, we are all connected
through an "invisible network."

"I cannot understand you" provides the enjoyable experience of a thrill ride
through the spectacle of the world, guided by an agreeable philosophical object
with a relaxed attitude towards intellectual inquiry.)
BACK