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Director Egoyan Challenges Web "Cliche"

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  • Director Egoyan Challenges Web "Cliche"

    DIRECTOR EGOYAN CHALLENGES WEB "CLICHE"
    Bob Tourtellotte, Reuters

    Ottawa Citizen
    May 22 2008
    Canada

    CANNES, France (Reuters) - Who said the Web was worldwide? Not director
    Atom Egoyan, whose new film "Adoration" explores just how confining
    cyberspace can be when a teenager confronts a culture clash that has
    damaged him and his family.

    "Adoration" premiered on Thursday at the Cannes film festival, and
    following a press screening, Egoyan challenged the notion that the
    World Wide Web has fostered a global community.

    "That's the cliche of the Internet, but the reality is that it exists
    in small interest groups," Egoyan told reporters.

    In "Adoration," the key character is a Toronto teenager named Simon
    who confesses to a small Web chat room containing only his friends
    that his Middle-Eastern father planted a bomb in the suitcase of
    his Canadian mother, who was pregnant with Simon at the time, as she
    boarded a plane to Israel.

    The bomb was discovered, and no one was hurt. But Simon's confession
    touches off a firestorm of controversy on the Web and fuels a wide
    range of reactions -- from sympathy to empathy and from love to hate.

    But Egoyan does not see the response as coming from a singular
    collection of people all connected by the Web, but rather as reactions
    by different groups of Web users who have happened onto a small piece
    of information on the Internet.

    "These are ultimately really closed communities that are responding
    to each other. It's just drowned out by kind of a global noise,"
    Egoyan said.

    Moreover, the Web is just one part of a multi-layered story in
    "Adoration" that ultimately tells of one teenager coming to a new
    understanding of himself, as well as his family's dealing with the
    pain and loss of Simon's mother and father who come from vastly
    different worlds.

    EAST MEETS WEST

    Egoyan's background lends credibility to the idea that he is
    well-suited to talking about growing up across cultural boundaries. His
    parents are Armenian, he was born in Egypt, raised in Canada, where
    he still makes his home.

    "Adoration" is a nod to all sorts of symbols people use as ways to
    identify themselves and, ultimately, as weapons to exert control
    over others.

    Simon, who confesses his story in the chat room after his French
    teacher reads the tale of his parents from an old news clipping, finds
    himself steeped in the Christian religion symbolized by a Nativity
    scene his uncle, who is now raising Simon, sets up at Christmas.

    Simon and his Uncle Tom's beliefs are challenged by a Middle-Eastern
    woman wearing a burqa who happens by their suburban home one evening
    and returns later to further place herself into their lives.

    But as Egoyan sees it, he was not so much trying to talk about the
    clash of Eastern and Western cultures as much how that conflict exists
    in modern life for all the world's people and, in particular, how it
    has impacted Simon and his family.

    "We're all interconnected. These stories all reverberate in ways we
    cannot understand at times," he said. "You have three characters
    who were all using these props of religions or these ancient
    traditions. That's exactly what they've become in a way. They've
    become props. They've been cut off from their original intentions
    and are being used for other purposes."

    For Simon and for most people, the wielding of those props people
    claim to adore -- as Egoyan puts it -- can have damaging consequences.
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