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  • Egoyan serves up food for thought

    VNU Entertainment News Wire (Online)
    May 6, 2009 Wednesday


    Egoyan serves up food for thought

    by ANGELA DAWSON


    HOLLYWOOD _ Atom Egoyan was nearing completion of production on
    "Chloe" when he learned the devastating news about British actress
    Natasha Richardson's untimely death in a Quebec skiing
    accident. Richardson was married to actor Liam Neeson, who stars in
    the dramatic thriller. The Irish actor still had a few scenes to
    complete and the tragedy left a cloud of uncertainty about Neeson's
    ability to return to Canada to do them. Just a couple weeks after his
    wife's fatal fall, though, Neeson returned and finished the job.

    "There were some really emotional scenes he had to do," says Egoyan
    admiringly. "It was unbelievable that he was able to be so
    professional. He was really committed to finishing the film and it was
    the only time he could have done it. He's a professional and a great
    actor."

    Egoyan is now editing the film, which is due out later this
    year. Meanwhile, the Canadian filmmaker is promoting "Adoration," his
    12th feature film. It stars Rachel Blanchard, Scott Speedman, Devon
    Bostick, Noam Jenkins and Arsinee Khanjian, his wife and muse, who
    appears in all of his films.

    The story revolves around Sabine (Khanjian), a high school French
    teacher who gives her class an exercise based on a news story about a
    terrorist who plants a bomb in his pregnant girlfriend's airline
    luggage. The assignment has a profound effect on Simon (Bostick), an
    orphan who lives with his uncle (Speedman). In the course of
    translating the assignment, the boy re-imagines the news item is his
    own family's story with the terrorist standing in for his
    father. Turns out, his father was behind the wheel of the family car
    when it crashed, killing both himself and his wife. Simon has always
    suspected the accident was intentional, an idea fueled by his maternal
    grandfather, who intensely disliked his son-in-law. When Simon puts
    his story on the Internet, strangers start to believe it's true,
    creating chaos for Simon and his teacher. Meantime, a mysterious woman
    starts showing up at Simon's house, making things uncomfortable for
    the boy and his overwhelmed uncle.

    Egoyan, 48, says the film speaks to people's connections with each
    other, their family history, technology and the modern world. He
    insists the drama is not anti-Internet or anti-technology, but merely
    cautionary about how these communication tools are used in the modern
    age.

    "Any democracy or democratic process has to accommodate wildly
    different views, and some of them are going to be absurd," the
    filmmaker says. "Some will be given more credence than they should,
    but if the alternative is to censor, then I think it becomes really
    dangerous. You just have to know when to turn it off and not take it
    seriously."

    Egoyan, who directed the 1997 Oscar nominated drama, "The Sweet
    Hereafter," was inspired to include the terrorist plot line in
    "Adoration" from a news story in which a Jordanian man reportedly
    talked his pregnant Irish girlfriend into boarding a passenger jet
    after surreptitiously planting a bomb in her suitcase. The plot was
    uncovered before the woman boarded, and the man was arrested and
    jailed. As Egoyan was writing "Adoration," he was reminded of the
    terrorist story because the man was up for parole at the time.

    "He was completely unrepentant," Egoyan says. "That has to be the most
    extreme example of someone who is evil."

    Egoyan figured the incredible story would be just the type of fantasy
    his teenage character, who has been raised to believe his father
    intentionally killed his mother, would tap into.

    Egoyan immediately thought of Blanchard, whom he had cast in his 2005
    thriller "Where the Truth Lies," for the role of Rachel, Simon's
    mom. "There's something ethereal about her," he says. "I sensed that
    when we made 'Where the Truth Lies.'"

    He wasn't so certain about Speedman, whom he initially thought was too
    young for the role of Simon's uncle. "It was written for an older
    character, but he was insistent on auditioning for it and I was kind
    of resistant," he recalls with a chuckle. "When we finally connected,
    it was interesting to see his read and see how emotionally invested
    that character was with a whole other dimension which I hadn't really
    anticipated."

    Lanky and serious, Bostick previously had appeared on Canadian
    television and in a few small movie roles when he was cast at 16 in
    the pivotal role of Simon. "He was just this incredible gift, because
    he looks so amazing," says Egoyan. "There was just a sincerity to him
    which is rare and I didn't want to make it too manufactured."

    TKhanjian's character of the teacher is complex and her actions
    unpredictable. "She's been obsessed with her ex-husband and maybe it's
    been out of her control for several years," he says cryptically. "Her
    relationship with the boy reawakens all these feelings, and she begins
    to realize she's done the wrong thing, but she's not a completely
    stable character."

    Egoyan, who made his first feature, "Next of Kin," in 1984, is
    astonished he has just finished shooting his 13th feature film. Other
    credits include "Family Viewing," "Speaking Parts," "Exotica" and his
    very personal "Ararat," which delved into the Armenian genocide.

    "It never seems particularly easier," he says of making independent
    movies, which he usually writes, directs and produces himself.

    "The independent film scene has evolved from when I started," he
    says. "It wasn't glamorous or what anyone else wanted to do, but now
    it has so much attention paid to it. I don't know if I would have been
    able to have the career I've had in this current climate."

    He thinks the mid-range independent films he is used to making may be
    endangered, so he's looking either to go bigger or perhaps make
    smaller, less expensive films.

    "The role of the filmmaker has changed radically, and I think it's
    time to reflect a little bit," he says.
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