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Egoyan Rips into Pop Culture Icons in "Where the Truth Lies"

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  • Egoyan Rips into Pop Culture Icons in "Where the Truth Lies"

    Egoyan Rips into Pop Culture Icons in "Where the Truth Lies"

    October 15, 2005

    In the 1950s, there was no greater entertainment team than manic
    comedian Lanny Morris (Kevin Bacon) and suave singer Vince Collins
    (Colin Firth). There was also no team with bigger secrets to hide,
    including the truth behind how a female corpse managed to turn up in
    their hotel room one inconvenient evening. In bringing his adaptation
    of Rupert Holmes' novel, "Where the Truth Lies," to the screen, Atom
    Egoyan follows an ambitious writer's (Alison Lohman) investigation
    into the mystery of a decades-old crime, and in the process once again
    explores the many ways humans revise their pasts to salvage their
    presents. IFC News' Dan Persons had an opportunity to speak with the
    director: Just a wild guess: The title's what first attracted you to
    the project.

    It's a title that could kind of serve as a guide to a lot of the work
    that I've done. But I think it was an enormously entertaining and
    vivid window into American pop culture that Rupert Holmes provided. I
    was delighted by the book and the possibilities, but the latent theme
    that the title suggests was compelling as well.

    There are several levels to the romanticism in "Where the Truth Lies:"
    There's the otherworldliness of the sequences in the TV studio, but
    even when you move out of that environment, you're dwelling in a
    stylized world.

    But only because one of the characters, Lanny Morris, is trying to
    present that stylized world. He has an agenda with the way he's trying
    to present what his life meant at that time, what his life was geared
    towards at the height of his fame. The Kevin Bacon character, in his
    voice-over -- purportedly writing his autobiography -- is trying to
    present a version where everything, and anyone, was available to
    him. He was this voracious, lascivious, erotic being moving through
    countless women, so it behooves his legacy to sustain that.

    He does that very meticulously, but we find out that that's not the
    case.

    There are obvious parallels between Vince and Lanny and the real-life
    team of Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. What was the line you had to walk
    to make the characters stand on their own?

    Well, in the book, they're actually modeled after [Martin and Lewis],
    and I found that very distracting. I wanted to create an act that
    didn't exist, but which people felt could have existed. There's a
    whole kind of history of duos that we've lost a sense of, because we
    don't have teams anymore in our popular culture. There's a Freudian
    make-up to them, which is based on a sort of ego/id principle: One is
    unleashed, very impulsive, and the other is always trying to civilize
    and tame him. It's a recurring sort of construction, and I just
    thought, Why don't we look at this idea of the Englishman, the
    ultimate civilizing influence, and how that intersects with American
    culture at that time? You did have these people like Noel Coward and
    David Niven and Rex Harrison, even Peter Lawford -- kind of suave and
    the picture of etiquette -- trying to tame someone else, trying to
    keep a lid on it. That just seemed an interesting way to construct a
    team. We worked on that and scrupulously avoided direct references to
    Martin and Lewis.

    Am I off-base in thinking you don't have any romantic regard for the
    past? I'm certainly fascinated by the role of sentiment in the way we
    construct our sense of what the past is about, the ability to
    manipulate and present histories that may not have been what they seem
    to be, but which have a powerful hold over our subconscious
    otherwise. Those can sometimes be romantic constructions, and often I
    will create a view of something which seems to be loaded with a
    romanticism, only to have that deconstructed, ultimately, just because
    the characters are trying to arrive at some sort of clarity. But I'm
    also trying to create an atmosphere which is seductive and which draws
    us in, so I will use any one of a number of stylistic devices to do
    that. So sometimes the music can be very romantic, and there's a type
    of imagery which seems to suggest another world, but my goal is to
    arrive at something with as much clarity as possible.

    "Where the Truth Lies" opens in New York and Los Angeles on October 14,
    rolling out to other cities in subsequent weeks. For more on the film, see the
    _official site._ (http://www.thinkfilmcompany.com/)

    IFC is IFC is a network of _Rainbow Media Holdings LLC_
    (http://www.rainbow-media.com/) ,a subsidiary of _Cablevision Systems
    Corporation_ (http://www.cablevision.com/) a network of _Rainbow Media
    Holdings LLC_ (http://www.rainbow-media.com/) ,a subsidiary of
    _Cablevision Systems Corporation_ (http://www.cablevision.com/)
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