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  • Two kings, but only one ruler

    Two kings, but only one ruler
    By RICK GROEN

    Globe and Mail, Canada
    Sept 3 2005

    They are the co-reigning kings of movies in Canada, English fiefdom,
    and have been for the last decade. Both are renowned abroad and the
    darlings of the Cannes crowd, if not of any mass audience (no one said
    kings have to be popular). Both are as amiable in person as their work
    is disturbing on the screen. Both make difficult films that dole out
    plenty of sex and violence, yet always in an individual style and in
    pursuit of similarly modern themes. Both continue to live in their
    home base of Toronto, whose namesake university both attended and in
    whose film festival, this year, both have brand new pictures treated
    as gala presentations.

    So, with all that David Cronenberg and Atom Egoyan hold in common,
    how is it that their movies are so completely, so emphatically,
    so apples-and-oranges different?

    Well, their destination may be the same, but they sure took divergent
    routes to get there. In fact, their current offerings at next week's
    TIFF - Egoyan's Where the Truth Lies, Cronenberg's A Hi story
    of Violence - speak volumes about those separate paths and their
    competing talents. And, maybe, about who sits higher on the throne.
    Each movie is essentially a genre flick, but - call out the palace
    guard - one is very good and the other decidedly ain't.

    More about that later.

    Advertisements Let's first return to the beginnings, where, since
    the two are almost a generation apart in age, we already find their
    paths divided. Cronenberg is 62, an early baby boomer born and bred
    in Toronto the staid, but soon exposed to the headier air of Sixties
    rebellion. His artistic heroes were literary and openly subversive -
    William Burroughs, Vladimir Nabokov. Egoyan is only 45, an immigrant
    born in Egypt to Armenian parents, then raised in British Columbia
    and required to adapt to Western ways. His heroes were theatrical
    and existentially bleak - Samuel Beckett, Harold Pinter.

    Now cue the further separation. "For me, art is almost a sacred thing,"
    Egoyan has said, and from the outset he established himself as an
    art-house director whose work - technically accomplished, non-linear
    in plot, European in style - was almost immediately embraced by the
    festival set. An early film, 1987's Family Viewing, not only won the
    top Canadian prize at TIFF but reaped further accolades (and some
    money too) from none other than Wim Wenders himself. So Egoyan quickly
    found his niche, and, thanks partly to him and his awardable skills,
    that niche would set the dominant tone in our industry. He was the
    artiste; he was the anti-Hollywood.

    Not so the young Cronenberg. When TIFF started up 30 years ago,
    Cronenberg had just made Shivers, a picture that stood about as much
    chance of getting invited to a film festival as a squeegee kid does
    to a Rosedale brunch. Not only did critics diss Shivers as schlock
    horror at its depraved worst, but even the pols in the House of Commons
    turned their collective thumbs down, wondering aloud why good Canadian
    taxpayers should be funding such low trash.

    Temporarily thwarted but hardly daunted, Cronenberg answered with a
    succession of movies - Rabid, The Brood, Scanners, Videodrome - that
    only upped the ante further. But by then, amid the ongoing spectacle
    of exploding heads and mutating parasites, of syringes growing out
    of armpits, and vaginas sprouting from stomachs, the discerning few
    were beginning to detect something else, too - a brain at work, a
    man grappling with a metaphor, pondering the age-old schism between
    mind and body, contemplating the psyche at war with itself, wondering
    whether we are consuming technology or technology is consuming us.

    Later, in films like Family Viewing, The Adjuster (1991) and Exotica
    (1994), Egoyan would also use technology, especially video technology,
    but strictly as a distancing device - a symbol of alienation,
    a tool for objectification, a means of revealing and concealing,
    of sustaining illusions and masking reality. These films are cool,
    dispassionate and cerebral. By contrast, in Videodrome and again in
    eXistenZ, Cronenberg has people plunging cassettes into the gaping
    portals of their tummies, whereupon the illusion/reality fun really
    begins. These films are hot, outrageous and, yet, cerebral too. Same
    theme, very different approach. Egoyan, the smart immigrant, is
    conforming within an artistic model; Cronenberg, the smart baby boomer,
    is rebelling within a commercial model.

    The rebellion would continue. Who's more commercial than Stephen
    King, yet, in The Dead Zone, Cronenberg redeemed the book with an
    infusion of melancholy, even as he extracted from Christopher Walken
    one of the few unmannered performances in his ultramannered career.
    He did the same in The Fly, turning a safe remake into a lovely
    mediation on his favourite subject - the monster within us all. In
    1988, when the subject got embodied in the twin gynecologists of Dead
    Ringers, he spurned his usual special effects without giving up an
    ounce of menace - that film is both profoundly creepy and creepily
    profound. And everyone who saw it agreed. With Dead Ringers, Cronenberg
    had completed his own metamorphosis from schlockmeister to auteur -
    he was now critically respectable.

    Of course, over on the Egoyan side of the ledger, respectability
    was never at issue, and it skyrocketed with his 1997 adaptation
    of the Russell Banks novel, The Sweet Hereafter. Hollywood itself
    paid homage to our artiste, awarding him Oscar nominations for both
    directing and writing. Not that Egoyan dumbed down his aesthetic
    principles. Quite the contrary. He took Banks's tragedy - on the
    death of children - and overlaid it with his trademark complexity,
    keeping the survivors alienated and their understanding fragmentary.
    The movie's few detractors argued that, in so doing, he robbed the book
    of its raw, incisive emotion. But his legion of admirers countered
    that the emotion in any Egoyan film lies in precisely this lack of
    incisiveness, that his work (like a Beckett play) triggers anxious
    feelings all the more powerful because they can't be traced to an
    "understandable" source. Perhaps.

    Over approximately the same period, Cronenberg was taking his
    hard-earned reputation and rolling the dice with it, heading off on
    his boldest tangent yet. After a bravely hallucinatory attempt to
    adapt the unadaptable novel of his beloved Burroughs ( Naked Lunch),
    followed by another tiptoe along the illusion/reality boundary ( M.
    Butterfly), Cronenberg brought that tangent to an extraordinary
    culmination in Crash (1996) - a movie so artfully unsettling that
    even the deep thinkers at Cannes couldn't decide what to make of it.
    They settled on conferring a special prize for "audacity." Others,
    appalled by the unholy trinity mating cars to sex to violence, and
    by the grisly congress of metal and flesh, reached out for blunter
    adjectives. "Pornographic" got thrown around a lot - Cronenberg was
    back where he began in Shivers.

    Still, whatever you may think of Crash - I find it truly provocative
    - this is hardly the labour of a guy resting on his laurels. Unlike
    most American directors of his generation, Cronenberg has forged an
    independence that he uses to continually take risks, which, more often
    than not, pay off in unique and worthy pictures. Like Spider (2002),
    a stark yet poignant trip into the divided mind of a schizophrenic,
    one more embattled psyche where objective reality wages war with
    subjective perception.

    Meanwhile, Egoyan has been spinning his wheels of late. Felicia's
    Journey, another tale of imperilled innocence, seemed less a revisiting
    than a rehashing of the topic. In Ararat, Egoyan returned to an Armenia
    he explored earlier in his most affectingly personal film (1993's
    Calendar). Here, however, the historical canvas is too broad, the
    subplots are awkward, and the ending suffers from a near-sentimental
    leap into hopefulness.

    Which brings us, finally, to the present, to TIFF and the kings'
    pair of galas. Where the Truth Lies is a backstage whodunit, a murder
    mystery involving a celebrated comedy team. A History of Violence
    is a contemporary retelling of that old yarn where an ex-gunslinger,
    buoyed by the love of a good woman, tries to go straight even as his
    past catches up with him. Okay, but when it comes to smartening up
    a dull genre pic, mining for merit in commercial pits, guess who has
    the upper hand?

    Don't pick Egoyan. Despite operating with his fattest budget to
    date, he badly miscasts a crucial role and, beneath the surface of
    the whodunit, finds precious little substance to chew on, nothing
    much to interest either him or us. Conversely, Cronenberg, casting
    impeccably throughout, converts his gunslinger into yet another study
    of the "beast within," and the movie into a subtle essay on society's
    investment in that beast. Typically, Cronenberg refuses to lyricize
    the violence - it's dirty and brutal. But he's equally unwilling to
    simplify our reaction to violence, insisting that what we abhor we
    also lionize, that the same bloody fist that is repellent in the back
    alley can be sexy in the bedroom.

    Yes, the sex. Compare what both directors do with it. Egoyan has
    managed to earn his film an NC-17 rating (in the U.S.) for a sexual
    encounter that doesn't shock, or dismay, or even titillate, that
    doesn't really do anything except forward the plot. While dodging
    the censor's pencil, Cronenberg includes a sex scene that does shock,
    that does dismay, and that, both during and in its aftermath, gives
    the central theme a wickedly intelligent twist.

    In that scene, Cronenberg finds the art that Egoyan holds sacred. And
    he finds it for the very reason that nothing is entirely sacred to
    him - even art, especially his art, must co-exist with the profane.
    So all hail our reigning monarchs who, in their different ways, serve
    us well. As to who has served better, I don't know where that truth
    lies - but I'm damn sure where my affection does.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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