Atom Egoyan's Alternate World
May 09, 2008 00:42:21
Tandem, Canada May 8 2008
Atom Egoyan's Alternate World
Canadian director returns to Cannes with film exploring identity and technology
By Paola Bernardini `Films confront things, the most extreme of things, they look them in the face, they analyze them. The role of art is to imagine that which one is afraid to confront in life. Perhaps it provides us with new ways to overcome fear in real life.'
In his new film Adoration, Atom Egoyan confronts the fear of a virtual separation between mind and body and, therefore, the paranoia that technology will replace humankind. The film explores a type of artificial intelligence, with the possibile risk of coming face to face with a computer that has the capacity of human thought, but in the end, reason overcomes fantasy and encounters the reinterpretation of an individual identity.
Adoration, written and directed by Egoyan and a candidate for the Palme d'Or at the 61st edition of the Cannes Film Festival (May 14 - 25), centres on a high-school student who is fascinated by technology and above all by the idea of recreating two historical figures.
Virtual reality is skewed with everyday life and the protagonist's obsession comes to life when he creates a new identity for himself on the Internet, a place where he also encounters threats because of his contact with issues such as international terrorism. Through the Internet, the boy also drags his circle of friends into his unique journey, where they face suffering caused by a tragedy that never took place. This struggle takes place all through the medium of their computer monitors, a space where video is the sole means of communication.
In this film, Egoyan uses a traditional maze-like structure to entrap the audience, including parallel scenarios, and of course there is always a secret hidden in his plots.
`When I began to explore technology in the 1980s, I thought that certain multimedia instruments serve only to distance us from each other,' the director said. `But then I convinced myself that techology actually connects us more than we could have ever imagined.'
The idea for Egoyan's latest film was born some 20 years ago with a news story: a Jordan teenager convinced his pregnant Irish friend to board a plan, unaware of the fact that she was carrying a bomb in her purse. This story is transposed in the film as the protagonist fantasizes about a similar scenario.
http://www.corrieretandem.com/viewstory .php?storyid=8288
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