Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Examination of deceit in 'Adoration' is worthwhile but baffling

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Examination of deceit in 'Adoration' is worthwhile but baffling

    Examination of deceit in 'Adoration' is worthwhile but baffling

    Detroit Free Press (Detroit, Michigan)
    July 17, 2009

    BY ROGER MOORE, ORLANDO SENTINEL

    Canadian director Atom Egoyan is most at home wrapping delicate
    mysteries of fate inside mournful elegies, but in recent years, he has
    strayed from the style and sort of story that made him famous. His
    restlessness has led him to risk obscurity ("Ararat," "Citadel") and
    ridicule ("Where the Truth Lies").

    Egoyan returns to his "The Sweet Hereafter" (1997) comfort zone with
    "Adoration," a gimmicky, sad and beautifully acted mystery that keeps
    its secrets even when it loses its grasp of the logical.

    Simon (Devon Bostick), a Toronto teen, listens with growing agitation
    as his French teacher reads a famous news account of a mass murder
    that was narrowly averted by Israeli airport security. A pregnant
    woman about to board a plane for the Holy Land was stopped when a bomb
    was found in her purse. Her Palestinian lover had planted it and
    packed her off, sentencing her and his unborn child to death.

    Simon doesn't translate the article, as assigned, but instead writes a
    biographical essay. He was the unborn child, he writes. If his father
    had succeeded,

    Simon would not exist, and hundreds would have died. Simon's tale
    rivets his classmates, who tie up his evenings with Web arguments over
    truth, prejudice and bad parenting.

    His teacher, played by Egoyan's wife, Arsinee Khanjian, doubles as
    drama director. She is fascinated by the object lesson she sees this
    story teaching the class. She's also intrigued by how it tests the
    tolerance of the kids' parents.

    The only problem? It's not true. We learn that the teacher has
    embraced and encouraged this charade. Over the course of the film --
    told in flashbacks to that day at the airport, to Simon's real-life
    past, his relationship to his late grandfather and his current
    difficulties with his uncle -- we struggle with truth and drama,
    voyeuristically peeking in on this revealing lie and its far-reaching
    consequences lin solos dominate the score. Her violin is a piece of
    the puzzle, which Egoyan is more interested in complicating than
    solving.

    But as lovely and thought-provoking as "Adoration" is, the
    coincidences, illogical behavior and the baffling acts by the teacher
    are so jarring that it's easy to get lost trying to explain her
    motivations.

    Egoyan certainly did.

    Additional Facts
    'Adoration'
    Three out of four stars
    Rated R; language
    1 hour, 40 minutes

    http://www.freep.com/article/20090717/ENT 01/907170301/1035/rss04

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X