Pieces of My Father

When her father, once the strong head of the family, becomes severely disabled after a stroke, Viki Kühn picks up the camera and begins a search for the past, the present, and what lies ahead. With a touch of humor, Pieces of My Father tells the story of a Viennese family struck by fate—grappling with it, despairing, slowly beginning to heal their wounds, learning to accept, confronting the act of letting go, and ultimately seeking to rediscover hope. (production note)

Immediately after her father suffers a stroke, Viki Kühn begins filming – first at the hospital, then at her parents’ home in Vienna. The family structure has been disrupted. Her father, paralyzed on one side, can no longer speak and his mobility is drastically limited; her mother assumes the role of caregiver and authority figure. In the dual role of daughter and filmmaker – and at times also as co-caregiver – Viki Kühn documents what has become everyday life: the challenges of morning routines, board games and family rituals, the burdens of physical suffering, the coexistence of powerlessness and normality. Kühn’s camera, sometimes static but mostly handheld, is more than a recording device. It creates distance while at the same time relentlessly striving for closeness. Repeatedly, as if through a sensory instrument, she attempts to create empathy with her father’s limited world, showing the perspective from his sickbed or finding moments of physical identification through tactile movements.  

As a cinematic portrayal of a father and his family, Pieces of My Father is inextricably linked to self-portrait. The filmmaker’s own ambivalent feelings are given space: the grief over the loss of the former father figure, gratitude for the continued presence of the “half father”, the desire to hold on to him. At times, the presence of the moment is overlaid with sensual fragments of memory – for example when, in a voiceover, the filmmaker imagines herself returning to a protected state like that of childhood which then comes to a sudden end through a dramatic rupture. As the same routines repeat themselves – caregiving, family rituals, the annual Christmas celebration – periods of time seamlessly blend into one another. In the end, almost imperceptibly, eight years have passed. As the father becomes more frail and withdraws further into himself, the film finds its new focal point in the exhausted yet tirelessly active mother.  

Although radically autobiographical, Pieces of My Father becomes a reflection that transcends the personal experience: on physical disability, family roles, and the changes that come with ageing. (Esther Buss)  

Orig. Title
Mein Halber Vater
Year
2026
Country
Austria
Duration
92 min
Director
Viki Kühn
Category
Documentary
Orig. Language
German
Subtitles
English, AD (deutsch), SDH (deutsch)
Credits
Director
Viki Kühn
Script
Viki Kühn
Cinematography
Viki Kühn
Music
Peter Kutin
Editing
Viki Kühn, Joana Scrinzi
Sound
Viki Kühn
Sound Design
Florian Kindlinger, Peter Kutin
Dramaturgy
Dieter Pichler
Production
KGP Filmproduktion
Producer
Barbara Pichler, Gabriele Kranzelbinder
in collaboration with
3sat
Supported by
ÖFI - Österreichisches Filminstitut, ÖFI+
Available Formats
DCP (Distribution Copy)
Aspect Ratio
16:9
Sound Format
5.1 surround
Frame Rate
25 fps
Color Format
colour
Festivals (Selection)
2026
Graz - Diagonale, Festival des österreichischen Films