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Film: My Uncle Rafael

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  • Film: My Uncle Rafael

    The New York Times
    September 21, 2012 Friday
    Late Edition - Final


    My Uncle Rafael

    By NICOLAS RAPOLD



    At first glance, the kindly, bearish oldster who headlines ''My Uncle
    Rafael'' suggests broad comedy straight ahead: age makeup, cardigan,
    hat with feather, jokes about an adult E.S.L. class. But Vahik
    Pirhamzei's Armenian title character, adapted from his stage routines,
    turns out to be a sweet and often funny creation: a well-meaning,
    lumbering family man from the old country who dispenses advice and
    proudly dons a uniform to serve coffee at his daughter's shop.

    This walking ethnic type, familiar but grounded in specific gestures
    and rhythms, is unfortunately mired in a hokey story with a needless
    reality-show overlay. A budding young producer (Rachel Blanchard)
    persuades Rafael to star in her first project, a TV pilot about an
    Armenian uncle who must help a soon-to-be-divorced couple; the woman
    is about to remarry a sketchy lawyer.

    Rafael, who is universally tolerated or beloved, works to solve
    everyone's concerns, preaches the importance of love and
    responsibility and reconnects with his go-getter son (also played by
    Mr. Pirhamzei). The cast is a professional bunch with recognizable
    faces (Missi Pyle as the woman, Joe Lo Truglio as a priest). But ''My
    Uncle Rafael'' stumbles over forced plotting and setups and falls prey
    to its hero's avuncular mushiness.

    ''My Uncle Rafael'' is rated PG-13 (Parents strongly cautioned) for
    language and sexual references.

    Opens on Friday in Manhattan. Directed by Marc Fusco 1 hour 42 minutes


    From: Baghdasarian
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