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Web Of Lies: Atom Egoyan Explores The Power Of The Internet In Adora

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  • Web Of Lies: Atom Egoyan Explores The Power Of The Internet In Adora

    WEB OF LIES: ATOM EGOYAN EXPLORES THE POWER OF THE INTERNET IN ADORATION
    Martin Morrow

    CBC.ca
    May 5 2009

    This article originally appeared during the 2008 Toronto International
    Film Festival.

    Atom Egoyan looks toward a window and the late-afternoon sun catches
    the brass rims of his signature round glasses. The celebrated Canadian
    director is perched on a chair in a hotel room and is discussing
    Adoration, his 11th feature. At the time of our interview, it was
    receiving its North American premiere, at the Toronto International
    Film Festival.

    "Maybe this is just a very sophisticated, high-tech version of The
    Boy Who Cried Wolf," he says, gesturing with his slender hands as
    he neatly - if superficially - summarizes his own film. Actually,
    like those specs of his, Adoration is classic Egoyan: an elegantly
    constructed puzzle about family and identity, elusive truth and
    deceptive technology - in this case, the internet.

    The film centres on Simon (the soulful-eyed Devon Bostick), an orphaned
    Toronto teen from a Muslim-Christian couple, who makes up a story that
    his Arab father was a terrorist who attempted to blow up an Israeli
    airliner in the 1980s. The fantasy begins simply as a school writing
    exercise, but Simon's teacher (played by Egoyan's wife, Arsinée
    Khanjian) encourages him to perform it as a dramatic monologue -
    and to not reveal that the story is fiction. The compelling tale gets
    Simon's fellow students talking via an internet chat room. Before long,
    the ruse has gone viral, provoking a passionate online debate about the
    aborted act of terrorism that draws in academics, Holocaust survivors,
    neo-Nazi skinheads and trauma junkies.

    The false history is Simon's way of working out his confused feelings
    about his parents' deaths in a car accident when he was 10. As we
    discover, Simon's racist grandfather (Kenneth Welsh) has told him a
    disturbing version of how they died, while the boy's laconic uncle
    (Scott Speedman), who knows the truth, has never discussed it.

    Egoyan, who wrote as well as directed the film, calls it a
    coming-of-age story for the internet age. "Simon is a young man at
    that point where he's beginning to question certain orthodoxies and
    truths which have been imposed on him," Egoyan explains. "He uses
    any available means to investigate and determine who he is and how
    he got where he is. In a way that's really an age-old quest, but with
    this new technology."

    Devon Bostick stars as the orphaned Simon, who tries to unravel
    a mystery surrounding his parents' deaths in Adoration. (Seville
    Pictures/Maximum Films) Egoyan has always had empathy for young
    people. They figure prominently in many of his films, from his first
    feature, Next of Kin (1984), through his best work, including Exotica
    (1994) and his masterpiece, The Sweet Hereafter (1997). He says he
    finds adolescence an exciting and tumultuous time. "What fascinates
    me about people at that age is that they are ready to question things
    and have the possibility of determining a future for themselves,
    which can be vastly different and more progressive than that which
    they've been born into."

    Simon in some ways resembles Egoyan as a kid. The 48-year-old director
    was born in Egypt to Armenian parents and grew up in Victoria,
    B.C., where high school drama played a big role in his own coming of
    age. "There were a lot of issues that I was trying to understand in
    my own upbringing and when I began to do high school drama, it just
    had a huge effect," he says. "I couldn't believe what I got to do,
    working with friends and creating these alternate realities." One time,
    he and his pals created a fictitious candidate for student council
    president. "We had this whole series of posters, and on the nomination
    day, we made up this story where our candidate couldn't make it and we
    brought out a tape recorder with a prerecorded speech that he wanted
    to deliver to the students. All that stuff was just so exciting for
    me. So if I was a kid now, I would certainly look towards the net."

    The director's teenage son, Arshile, is already doing that. "Oh yeah,
    he creates terrorist plots on the internet all the time," Egoyan jokes.

    It has to be said that Adoration is a flawed film, but it's still
    a welcome return to a more intimate style of filmmaking for Egoyan
    after his last picture, Where the True Lies. That period thriller,
    set in the sleazy backstage world of American showbiz, starred a
    miscast Kevin Bacon and Colin Firth and was a flop. Adoration had
    one-fifth the budget, and features an all-Canadian cast in which
    ex-Torontonian Speedman (of Felicity fame) is the only box-office name.

    Egoyan says the L.A.-based actor sought out the role himself. "He
    read the script and liked my films, so he flew himself up here to
    audition." As Tom, Simon's uncle, Speedman plays a city tow truck
    driver who adopted and raised his nephew on his own after the boy's
    parents died. Egoyan had written the character for an actor in his
    40s. However, when the 32-year-old Speedman read the part, Egoyan
    says he was "floored."

    Arsinee Khanjian plays a high school teacher with mysterious motives in
    Adoration. (Seville Pictures/Maximum Films) "I realized the nature of
    the sacrifice his character makes -- which is to give up his own life
    to look after his nephew -- is way more affecting to a person in their
    early 30s. It meant he gave up his 20s to look after his nephew. That
    seemed to be more touching. It was one of those rare situations where
    an actor, completely of their own volition, changed my mind like that."

    One of Adoration's distinctive Egoyan characteristics is its non-linear
    narrative - the story shifts between past, present and fantasy in
    graceful transitions that the director credits largely to the work
    of cinematographer Paul Sarossy, editor Susan Shipton and composer
    Mychael Danna. I asked Egoyan why he didn't want to tell the story
    in chronological order.

    "That's something everyone keeps asking about," Egoyan replies. "It's
    just a very natural style for me to work in. When you're dealing
    with issues of memory retrieval and how histories are placed and
    displaced, it just seems an organic way of recounting that. I was
    really influenced by the French filmmaker Alain Resnais, and the films
    he made in the late '50s and early '60s, like Hiroshima Mon Amour,
    Last Year at Marienbad, Muriel. He was one of the first filmmakers
    to use that technique."

    While Adoration deals in some of the dangers and lunacies of the
    internet, Egoyan is by no means a Luddite when it comes to the
    web. Quite the contrary: he's addicted to YouTube. "It's embarrassing,"
    he says with a laugh. "It's just compulsive. I can't believe what's
    been recorded. I can't believe the access I have to shows and pop
    figures and events from my own childhood. The other day I was having a
    conversation about the golden days of the NHL, talking about my hero,
    the goaltender Gerry Cheevers. So last night I typed in 'Gerry Cheevers
    Boston Bruins' on YouTube and there were clips of him. The most obscure
    and arcane areas of fascination can become fetishized and traded now."

    At the same time, Egoyan sees the limitations of cyberspace. He says
    that's why, in the end, Simon has to abandon his laptop and make a
    physical journey to come to terms with his past. "As loaded as the
    web is, it's too effortless for a rite of passage," he says. "I don't
    think you can find catharsis through the internet."

    Adoration opens in Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver on May 8.
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