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Ambitious 'Adoration' Is Easy To Admire, Hard To Worship

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  • Ambitious 'Adoration' Is Easy To Admire, Hard To Worship

    AMBITIOUS 'ADORATION' IS EASY TO ADMIRE, HARD TO WORSHIP
    Mark Hinson

    Tallahassee.com
    August 14, 2009

    Del.icio.usFacebookDiggRedditNewsvineBuzz up!TwitterArmenian-Canadian
    director Atom Egoyan is not exactly a snuggly, huggable filmmaker -
    and that's OK.

    He is an artful stylist whose movies are tightly controlled and usually
    have an air of emotional removal. Think of "The Sweet Hereafter"
    (1997), his smart adaptation of a Russell Banks book that methodically
    told the story of the fallout after a school bus full of kids plunged
    into an icy body of water.

    Yeah, the guy ain't cheery.

    In his latest film, "Adoration," Egoyan carefully constructs a social
    drama about fear, religious intolerance, racism and terrorism as
    if he were the brightest kid in class putting together an elaborate
    display for the state science fair. "Adoration" is smart, well-acted
    and daring, but does everything add up in the end?

    The story really starts in a Toronto high school where a teenager
    named Simon (Devon Bostick) is coached to write a first-person essay
    after hearing his French teacher (Arsinee Khanjian) read a news story
    about a thwarted terrorist plot in Israel. The assignment quickly
    snowballs into something else.

    Simon claims his late father was a terrorist who once plotted to
    blow up a passenger jet to Israel in a very despicable manner. When
    Simon's paper/confession hits the Web, the banter in the chat rooms
    goes profane and ballistic.

    Most of the incendiary cyber-chat is unnoticed, at first, by Simon's
    guardian and uncle Tom (Scott Speedman). Tom is a tow-truck driver who
    moved from the country to the big city to care for his nephew following
    a family tragedy. The financially frustrated Tom is also not completely
    comfortable with his new Middle Eastern neighbors in the wake of 9/11.

    To make matters worse, Tom was the family underachiever. His sister
    was a music prodigy and concert violinist who was worshiped by Tom's
    wealthy father (Kenneth Welsh), who is seen in flashbacks. Even
    though the old man is dead, Tom is haunted by his self-perceived
    failure. No wonder he's so crabby and rude when his Middle Eastern
    neighbor - covered from head to toe in traditional ethnic garb -
    steps on his lawn to admire a hand-made Nativity scene. (Hey, the
    film is called "Adoration," so the Wise Men and the Baby Jesus had
    to show up somewhere, right?) At many points, the plot feels like
    Egoyan is moving chess pieces - rather than real humans - around to
    make his point(s). It's all very calculated and as cold as Toronto,
    which Egoyan makes look as colorless as fellow Canadian director
    David Cronenberg does in his movies. Yet, when it's over, it's all not
    nearly as complicated as it once seemed. And maybe that's the point?

    When "Adoration" was shown in competition at the Cannes Film Festival
    way back in 2008, it brought home the Ecumenical Jury Prize. That's
    a special honor given to films about "the spiritual dimension of
    our existence."

    Egoyan, by the way, was named Atom in honor of Egypt's first nuclear
    plant.
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