Tulku: Divine birth, ordinary life by Gesar Mukpo.
Just came from a screening at the Washington DC BuddhaFest. Not a bad film and not a bad presentation of the tulku phenomena as it has developed in Tibetan Buddhism. However it is not as good as "The Reincarnation of Kensur Rinpoche", "Unmistaken Child" or "Born to Serve". Tulku suffers from an obsession with trying to piece out the role of Western tulkus in a Western context and ends up laying bare the manifest insecurities of most of the still mostly young male Western tulkus interviewed. It appears that western culture is destined to swamp these people's lives with a clash between how they perceive themselves and their religious role as a recognized bodhisattva. Perhaps they are taking the term tulku too literally in the nirmanakaya meaning (several years ago a noted Sakya teacher did tell me directly that tulkus really were nirmanakayas and he meant it literally although I did not pursue what I would expect is a somewhat more nuanced understanding as a practical matter). After all, the western tulkus interviewed readily admit that the fullness of wisdom has not blossomed in their minds yet. The overall impression is the reinforcement of Alan Wallace's essay of a few years ago "Tibetan Buddhism in the West: Is it working here?" with an angsty, still adolescent riff (after all, males in the West have a serious Peter Pan syndrome). Maybe people don't think Buddhism is working because they are fairly together spiritual people to begin with who possibly think that an addiction to the F word entails a degree of failure and have not seen the dramatic transformation that Dharma practice is capable of or do not notice it so much. They have been blessed by some of the greatest yogis of the 20th century. One hopes that some involved will just drop their insecurity and dive deeply into practice. The movie is nonetheless a welcome addition to the growing cannon of Buddhist movies presenting Tibetan Buddhism to the world.
I should mention significant appreances by Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche and HH Karmapa Ogyen Trinley Dorje which tends to balance things out more evenly.
Kirt Undercoffer

