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Egoyan Makes Cannes Cut For The Sixth Time

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  • Egoyan Makes Cannes Cut For The Sixth Time

    EGOYAN MAKES CANNES CUT FOR THE SIXTH TIME

    Globe and Mail, Canada
    April 24 2008

    The Canadian director's new movie, Adoration, will compete next month
    for the Palme d'Or along side films by Clint Eastwood and Steven
    Soderbergh. 'It's always a little overwhelming when you look at the
    competition,' he tells Gayle MacDonald GAYLE MACDONALD

    Atom Egoyan's new film, Adoration, was named yesterday one of the 19
    finalists that will be in competition next month for the prestigious
    Palme d'Or Award at the 61st annual Festival de Cannes.

    The film's inclusion in Official Selection marks the sixth time that
    a feature film from the Victoria-raised, Toronto-based director's
    work has made the cut.

    Reached yesterday, Egoyan said it was "an honour" to be included,
    adding "this is not something I take for granted.

    "Especially with this movie. It's a more intimate film. It's very much
    rooted in this culture and I'm so proud to represent the country at
    this level."

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    The previous Egoyan titles in the running for the Palme d'Or include
    Exotica (1994), The Sweet Hereafter (1997), Felicia's Journey (1999)
    and Where the Truth Lies (2005). Ararat, his 2002 film about the
    Armenian genocide, was an Official Selection in Cannes as well.

    The 19-strong competition lineup includes projects from veteran
    directors including Clint Eastwood's Changeling, Jean-Pierre and Luc
    Dardenne's Le Silence de Lorna, Walter Salles and Daniela Thomas's
    Linha de Passe, Wim Wenders's The Palermo Shooting, and Steven
    Soderbergh's four-hour biopic, Che, about Sixties revolutionary
    Ernesto Che Guevara.

    "It's always a little overwhelming when you look at the competition,"
    Egoyan noted of his fellow filmmakers. "Having been on the jury
    there as well, however, it begins to make more sense once you're
    in the middle of it. From the outside, it seems a little crazy to
    just throw all these movies together, but they are selected quite
    carefully. There's an internal logic that you don't really get until
    you're actually there."

    The Cannes' committee only screened Adoration this past weekend. Egoyan
    and his colleagues found out they would be vying for the Palme d'Or
    a few days ago.

    Yesterday, Adoration's co-producers Simone Urdl and Jennifer Weiss
    said they were "thrilled" to get the news. "We certainly hoped it
    would happen," said the co-founders of Toronto's Film Farm, "and
    Cannes was the place we wanted the film to go. But because we were
    so late submitting it - and because there seems to be a lot of great
    films out there right now - we still weren't sure."

    Urdl, who started as Egoyan's production assistant in 1991, added "I
    don't think you can ever take these things for granted. People assume
    - because it's Atom and he has such a long history [with Cannes] -
    that he'll get in. But that's not the case.

    "Adoration is quite different than his last couple of films. And the
    head of the Cannes festival had changed. So we truly weren't sure,
    and to get in, was really exciting news."

    Weiss says Adoration - a film shot in Toronto last fall for about
    $5.5-million - was a nice change of pace for Egoyan. "For him,
    going back to this budget and scale was liberating. There's simply
    not the same pressure to make a big, splashy film with big stars. So
    we have an ensemble cast, and the discovery of a new actor (Devon
    Bostick) who is only now 16 and plays the lead. All those elements,
    meant Atom got to have fun. It's an extremely personal film for him,
    without external pressure."

    Adoration focuses on one young man's fascination with the possibility
    he's the spawn of two historical figures - and how his personal
    obsession is both enabled, and threatened, by technology.

    The film also stars Scott Speedman, Rachel Blanchard, Kenneth Welsh,
    and Arsinee Khanjian (Egoyan's wife).

    The director says his screenplay grew out of a true-life story he'd
    heard 20 years ago about a young man who convinced his pregnant Irish
    girlfriend to board a flight, carrying a bomb that she didn't know
    had been planted on her. "This story - or a version of it - is read
    in the main character's high school and it triggers his imagination,"
    Egoyan explains.

    The film is executive produced by Robert Lantos's Serendipity Point
    Films, and will be distributed by his company Maximum Film.

    "This is the seventh time I've gone to Cannes in competition," Lantos
    said yesterday. ". ... Maybe this time, we'll be seven times lucky
    and get the Palme d'Or."

    *****

    The competition

    The 19 films competing for the 2008 Palme d'or

    (a 20th film, from France, is still to be announced):

    Uc Maymun (Three Monkeys)

    by Nuri Bilge Ceylan (Turkey)

    Le Silence de Lorna (The Silence of Lorna)

    by Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne (Belgium)

    Un Conte de Noël (A Christmas Tale)

    by Arnaud Desplechin (France)

    Changeling

    by Clint Eastwood (U.S.)

    Adoration

    by Atom Egoyan (Canada)

    Waltz with Bashir

    by Ari Folman (Israel)

    La Frontière de l'aube (The Frontier of Dawn)

    by Philippe Garrel (France)

    Gomorra

    by Matteo Garrone (Italy)

    24 City

    by Jia Zhangke (China)

    Synecdoche, New York

    by Charlie Kaufman (U.S.)

    My Magic

    by Eric Khoo (Singapore)

    La Mujer Sin Cabeza (Woman Without a Head)

    by Lucretia Martel (Argentina)

    Serbis

    by Brillante Mendoza (Philippines)

    Delta

    by Kornel Mundruczo (Hungary)

    Linha de Passe (Line of Passage)

    by Walter Salles, Daniela Thomas (Brazil)

    Che

    by Steven Soderbergh (U.S.)

    Il Divo

    by Paolo Sorrentino (Italy)

    Leonera

    by Pablo Trapero (Argentina)

    The Palermo Shooting

    by Wim Wenders (Germany)

    --Boundary_(ID_SB1ZRISUDnaXhpHvO2wnwQ)- -
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