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Egoyan Recognized For Armenian Perspective In Ararat

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  • Egoyan Recognized For Armenian Perspective In Ararat

    EGOYAN RECOGNIZED FOR ARMENIAN PERSPECTIVE IN ARARAT
    Martin Knelman

    Toronto Star
    Feb 28 2008
    Canada

    Atom Egoyan has won Genies and prizes at Cannes, and has gone to
    the Oscars as a double nominee, but on May 19 he will be in Israel
    receiving an award that takes him into another realm and recognizes
    him as one of the great humanitarians of the cultural world.

    The multi-talented Toronto director will be in the heady company of
    playwright Tom Stoppard and novelist Amos Oz, who will share the $1
    million (U.S.) Dan David Prize for "creative rendering of the past"
    in literature, theatre or film.

    In particular, the award to Egoyan is in recognition of his
    controversial 2002 near-epic Ararat, which concerned the 1915 Armenian
    genocide in Turkey and the attempt to deny it ever happened.

    "One of the great things about it is that I get to meet two of my
    idols," Egoyan said yesterday when I caught up with him at the Regent
    Theatre, where he is editing his next movie, Adoration, which could
    have its world premiere at Cannes in May the same week Egoyan is
    honoured in Tel Aviv. The film, shot in Toronto, concerns a teenager
    who poses on the Internet as the son of a terrorist.

    "When I made Ararat, something in my career shifted," Egoyan recalls,
    casually attired in black pants and T-shirt. He was greatly influenced
    by Arsinee Khanjian, his partner both personally and professionally,
    who had always felt a strong link with Armenian history. And he was
    prodded by producer Robert Lantos, who not only pressed him to tell
    this story but came up with a big budget to make it possible.

    "This is a great honour," Lantos said yesterday, "and it is also a
    powerful illustration of the way Israel and the Jewish people embrace
    the plight of others who are persecuted."

    Egoyan says he made Ararat when he realized he had reached a point
    when he needed to become a spokesperson. "The film was an expression
    of something I wanted to say," he explains, "and it became an object
    that was viciously attacked."

    Protesters threatened to disrupt the world premiere of the film at
    Roy Thomson Hall on opening night of the Toronto International Film
    Festival.

    And in Turkey - where artists and writers are still hounded if they
    dispute official claims that there was never a genocide - Ararat
    was withdrawn by its distributor after threats that cinemas would be
    blown up.

    With characteristic understatement, Egoyan allows that he has had
    movies that were better received than Ararat. "Some people felt it
    was too strident," he says, "but there were others who complained it
    wasn't strident enough.

    "Despite all that, this is the film of mine that will survive after
    others have been forgotten," he predicts.

    What he may not have realized at the time he made the film was that
    it would not be over when the final credits rolled, that it would
    shape his life for years to come.

    Case in point: Egoyan has become a continuing voice for the rights of
    oppressed people, whether or not they happen to be Armenian. That's
    why he will be the guest speaker tonight when the compelling Human
    Rights Watch Film Festival opens at the Isabel Bader Theatre with a
    screening of the eye-opening Buddha Collapsed Out of Shame, which
    presents Taliban oppression of Afghan civilians from the fresh
    perspective of children, especially a girl determined to attend school.

    It was officials of the University of Toronto - where Egoyan has become
    a distinguished visiting lecturer for three years - who submitted
    his name for the Dan David Prize. And Egoyan is giving 10 per cent
    of the prize money to set up a U of T scholarship.

    According to the prize citation, Egoyan is being honoured "for his
    superb modernist filmmaking, which explores Armenian history and
    culture and the human impact of a historical event while examining
    the nature of truth and its representation through art."

    Play it again, Atom.
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