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Adoration, identity in an electronic age

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  • Adoration, identity in an electronic age

    Business Day (South Africa)
    September 19, 2009
    Weekend Review Edition


    Adoration, identity in an electronic age

    by: Phillip Altbeker

    Egoyan's latest is, typically, interesting and frustrating, says
    PHILLIP ALTBEKER

    THE truism that the films of Adam Egoyan can be infuriating and
    frustrating yet always interesting because of his oblique approach to
    narrative is certainly applicable to his Adoration. His most
    accessible movie was The Sweet Hereafter (1997) based on the Russell
    Banks novel about the crash of a schoolbus and its effect on a small
    community. Terrific performances from Ian Holm and Sarah Polley
    brought out the grief of the mourners and the feelings of the
    insurance assessor dispatched to investigate the devastating incident.

    That was preceded by Exotica (1994); set mainly in a strip club, it
    examined the lives of the participants and the spectators, in the
    process revealing connections that come out in the course of a tax
    audit of a pet shop.

    Felicia's Journey and Where the Truth Lies were more conventional
    stories but, as treated by Egoyan, they took on unexpected depth as he
    delved into characters, their thoughts and actions. Ararat (2002), one
    of his most honoured films, was deemed unfit for local consumption; it
    dealt with a director (Charles Aznavour) working on a drama placed
    within the context of Turkey's alleged massacre of Armenians during
    the First World War.

    In the course of filming, present-day Canadians of Armenian descent
    try to relate to the event and its effect on their generation.

    Born in Cairo to Armenian parents who relocated to Canada, Egoyan
    became the best-known director working in the shadow of Hollywood by
    rejecting the cinematic conventions associated with commercial
    filmmaking. Determined by nature and inclination to be different,
    Egoyan often gives the impression he is unable to distinguish between
    pretension and substance, a charge that could be levelled against
    Adoration.

    Sabine (Arsinee Khanjian, the writer-director's wife and frequent
    collaborator), a teacher, gives her teenage class a translation
    exercise based on a news item about a Palestinian who sends his
    pregnant girlfriend to meet his family in Bethlehem.

    Unbeknownst to her, he has packed a bomb in her hand luggage, the
    morality of his potentially lethal deception giving rise to a heated
    discussion on the internet.

    The assignment deeply affects Simon (Devon Bostick), one of the
    students, who fuels the debate by so identifying with the incident
    that he adopts it as his own history. His parents were killed in an
    accident that he begins to believe may have been deliberate and his
    sense of loss adds to his need to find completeness and closure in the
    fate of presumed strangers.

    Raised by Tom (Scott Speedman), his uncle, Simon is absorbed into the
    story and convinces himself, and others, that he was the child being
    carried by the duped woman.

    Fantasy and reality become intertwined until the truth emerges and a
    connection that manages to be both surprising and predictable is made.

    Egoyan uses imagination's ability to see parallels where none might
    exist and combines it with modern technology's tendency to give even
    the most trivial personal thoughts of anyone with access to the web
    widespread credibility, as if the medium was created solely to enforce
    his ideas on coincidence and interconnectivity.

    Adoration remains a provocative study of identity and a telling
    critique of the possible misuse of communication tools.

    "Fantasy and reality become intertwined until the truth emerges and a
    connection that manages to be both surprising and predictable is made"

    REWRITING OUR HISTORIES: Tom (Scott Speedman), Sabine (Arsinee
    Khanjian) and Simon (Devon Bostick) are caught up in a conflict
    between truth and fiction.
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