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  • Egoyan 'Goes Hollywood' with big-budget sex thriller

    Vancouver Sun, Canada
    Jan 10 2009


    Egoyan 'Goes Hollywood' with big-budget sex thriller

    Egoyan gets the call to direct big-budget sex thriller

    By Michael D. Reid, Times ColonistJanuary 10, 2009


    Yes, Atom Egoyan says, it's true. He's going Hollywood and this time
    it's on his own terms.

    Egoyan, 48, will direct Chloe, an erotic thriller starring Oscar
    nominees Julianne Moore and Liam Neeson, and Amanda Seyfried (Mamma
    Mia!). The script was penned by one of Egoyan's favourite writers --
    Erin Cressida Wilson (Secretary).

    Described as "a smart, sexy thriller in the vein of Fatal Attraction,"
    Chloe, which starts filming in Toronto Feb. 9, centres on a successful
    doctor (Moore) who inadvertently endangers her family when she hires
    an alluring young escort (Seyfried) to seduce her husband (Neeson),
    whom she suspects of cheating.

    "It's a really intelligent script," Egoyan said. "It's incredible
    because the prostitute comes back with these amazing erotic stories
    about a man his wife thought she knew. She gets addicted to them and
    they enter into a complicated relationship."

    The escort's seductive behaviour begins to obsess Moore's character,
    reawakening her sexual desire.

    Chloe is being fully financed by StudioCanal, the French production
    company behind the Coen brothers' Burn After Reading.

    It's being produced through Montecito Picture Company, co-founded by
    Ivan Reitman and former Universal chairman Tom Pollock, who developed
    the film. Their company has produced a string of hits including Old
    School, Eurotrip and Disturbia.

    Juno director Jason Reitman is an executive producer, and Joe Medjuck
    and Jeffrey Cllifford will also produce.

    "Working with Liam is what really made it come together," Egoyan
    explained.

    The Victoria-raised filmmaker directed Neeson last summer in an
    acclaimed Lincoln Center remount of Eh, Joe, a mixed-media production
    of Samuel Beckett's teleplay.

    Ironically, Neeson had been approached to do an earlier incarnation of
    the film, but declined.

    "He said he wanted us to work together again, so I implored him to
    read it again," Egoyan said.

    After making his mark internationally with a dozen indie features
    exploring themes including alienation, incest, genocide and
    technology, Egoyan said the timing was right for him to branch out
    with a film regarded as more mainstream.

    "It will be liberating," said Egoyan, whose 12th feature -- Adoration,
    an exploration of deception in the Internet age -- is being released
    this spring.

    "Chloe is an interesting hybrid," he said. "Even though there's this
    aspect of storytelling about people getting caught up in histories and
    projections they don't understand -- a study of certain needs and
    desires -- it is, unlike my own scripts, quite linear."

    He said he was impressed that Seyfried, whom he saw in open auditions
    in Los Angeles before Mamma Mia opened, was fearless in taking on her
    challenging role. "She has this extraordinary combination of sincerity
    and drive and endless depths of emotional reserve," he said.

    Laughingly describing Ivan Reitman as "Mr. Hollywood," Egoyan said
    he's enjoying working with the veteran Toronto producer and director
    (Animal House, Ghostbusters) who was a fan of his 1999 drama,
    Felicia's Journey.

    He looked at several genre options before joining the creative team
    behind Chloe, he said. "It's full of psychological nuance. It's very
    much in my world even though it's written by someone else."

    He said this Hollywood experience is far more satisfying than his
    first unpleasant foray in 1995 when he spent a year "wasting time in
    L.A." waging polite battles with Warner Bros. executives who invited
    him to direct the thriller Dead Sleep.

    The studio resisted Egoyan's casting choice of Susan Sarandon, who
    then became unavailable after her Oscar win for Dead Man Walking.

    Disillusioned and with his option about to expire on The Sweet
    Hereafter, Egoyan walked away from the studio deal to make his
    masterwork based on the Russell Banks novel. It brought him Oscar
    nominations for best direction and adapted screenplay.

    "I have more of a sense that everything feels right this time," said
    Egoyan, who says he's a genre enthusiast despite his reputation as an
    auteur. "It's subject matter I feel I can serve because I've had time
    to work on the script and I'm thrilled that I got my dream cast."

    Although Chloe was originally set in San Francisco, he persuaded
    Reitman to relocate to Toronto, where he could work with his own team,
    including director of photography Paul Sarossy and composer Mychael
    Danna.

    "It's a wintry film," he said. "I tried to make the point, for better
    or worse, that most Americans are familiar with Toronto."

    http://www.vancouversun.com/Entert ainment/Director+Atom+Egoyan+goes+Hollywood+with+b udget+thriller/1163290/story.html
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