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Lost in a well of loneliness; Atom Egoyan's 'Exotica'...

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  • Lost in a well of loneliness; Atom Egoyan's 'Exotica'...

    Chicago Sun Times
    March 13, 2009 Friday
    Final Edition



    Lost in a well of loneliness; Atom Egoyan's 'Exotica' a painful film
    about sadness & guilt

    by Roger Ebert, The Chicago Sun-Times


    Sex for money sometimes conceals great sadness. It can be sought to
    treat wounds it cannot heal. I believe that may happen less in actual
    prostitution than in the parody of prostitution offered in
    "gentleman's clubs." Whatever is going on is less about sex than
    psychological need, sometimes on both sides. Atom Egoyan's "Exotica"
    is a deep, painful film about those closed worlds of stage-managed
    lust.

    It is also a tender film about a lonely and desperate man, and a woman
    who is kind to him. How desperate and how kind are only slowly
    revealed. In a technical sense, this is a "hyperlink movie," in which
    characters are revealed to be connected in ways they may not know
    about. But Egoyan, who also wrote the film, surprises us in how slowly
    he reveals the links and even more slowly reveals what the characters
    know about them. When the film ends, you sit regarding the screen,
    putting together what you have just learned and using it to think
    again about what went before.

    The critic Bryant Frazer wrote that after the film played in the 1994
    New York Film Festival, a woman asked Egoyan what had happened at the
    end. Egoyan was "visibly perturbed" by the question, he said, but
    finally responded. Frazer writes, "Here is what the last scene in the
    film meant, he explained, his four- or five-word declamation a stark
    and numbing negation of the gentle, almost languid spirit of the film,
    which invites the audience to its own discovery. The 'what happened'
    is simple enough to explain, but you can't really understand it unless
    you're fully caught up in the cinema when it unfolds in front of you."

    Frazer is right: There is no mystery at the end, except the mysteries
    of human nature that Egoyan evokes. What you think about those will
    define the film's importance to you. For me, they make it a cry of
    sympathy for people suffering from loss and guilt, and also an
    affirmation about how others are wiling to understand them. A film can
    only get so far by simply stating its message; if the message is that
    easily defined, why bother with the film? "Exotica" does what many
    good films do and implies its troubled feelings. Nothing is solved at
    the end, except that we have learned to understand the characters.

    "Exotica" takes place in a Toronto strip club, but not one of those
    hellholes of expense account executives and drunken bachelor
    parties. This club seems to fill the special needs of the men who go
    there, although we learn only about one. He is Francis (Bruce
    Greenwood), who every night buys the company of Christina (Mia
    Kirshner). She looks young, dresses in a school uniform, opens her
    shirt before him, and then they talk softly and intensely.

    Watching this is the club DJ, Eric (Elias Koteas), who stands on a
    perch above the action and contributes an insinuating commentary on
    the lives below. Also watching, from behind one-way mirrors, is the
    pregnant Zoe (Arsinée Khanjian), who inherited the club from her
    mother. The decor creates a tropical club heavy with palm fronds, the
    music slinks between the tables, the lighting is an oddly muted
    garishness, gloom cut with neon reds, greens and blues. Egoyan's
    camera glides around the room, pausing to regard Francis and
    Christina. Whatever they're talking about hardly seems to be sex and
    seems to absorb them equally. The DJ notices this.

    Other characters are implicated. The opening shots of the film show
    customs officers scrutinizing an arrival on a flight from the Far
    East, through a one-way mirror. This is Thomas, whom we discover is
    smuggling rare macaw eggs. At the airport, a man suggests they share a
    ride to town and pays his share of the ride with two ballet
    tickets. Thomas gives one of the tickets to a good-looking gay man
    outside the theater, and they eventually spend the night together. The
    man was one of the customs officers. He confiscates the eggs, but
    wants to see Thomas again. Thomas' pet shop is audited under suspicion
    of illegal imports -- by Francis, who later wants him to help
    eavesdrop on Christina. You see how the subterranean connections link.

    I have made "Exotica" seem to be all complexities. Following the
    connections is straightforward. Deciding what they mean is the
    challenge. Egoyan has not unfolded the plot as simply as I summarized
    it, and he uses other suggestive characters. There is Tracey (Sarah
    Polley, then 15), the young girl Francis hires every night to baby-sit
    while he is visiting the club. But it's other than baby-sitting. At
    the club. he's a client of Christina, who dresses as a schoolgirl;
    does this suggest he has a sexual interest in Tracey? What does
    Tracey's father think of the arrangement?

    Enough of the plot. Let's draw back to admire Egoyan's method. If we
    do not at first understand all of the relationships between the
    characters, they do not all understand them themselves, and in certain
    ways never figure them out. That provides the film with hidden
    emotional currents as powerful as those that are visible. When you
    think through the film later, you realize how much some of the
    characters never know, and yet how important it has been to the
    outcome. Egoyan isn't weaving these strands simply to divert us with a
    labyrinth; he is suggesting the hidden ways in which we affect other
    lives with our choices and behavior even though unaware.

    Beneath everything pulses the atmosphere of the club Exotica, its
    promise of sexuality masking deeper needs and obsessions. The grave
    voice of Leonard Cohen and the starkness of his songs, played by Eric
    the DJ, seem wrong for a strip club, but not for this one, where not
    desire but desperation is catered to. The advertising, selling a sexy
    thriller, is all wrong.

    Zoe, the club owner, is in some ways the spirit of the film. She is
    very pregnant, very happy about it, very convinced that her mother
    created the club in a special way for a special clientele with special
    needs. She knows more about some of the clients than they realize. She
    is worried about the tension between Eric and Christina. She meets
    with Francis after he is thrown out of the club. She wants to restore
    peace and order, and I won't tell you why that is so difficult for
    her.

    Atom Egoyan, born in 1960 in Egypt of Armenian parents, brought up in
    Canada, has consistently stepped outside the mainstream in style and
    subjects. He's fascinated by how people are kept separated by the
    realities of culture (ethnicity, gender, background) and walls of
    images, and how they try to get through or around them. One of the
    most uncompromising of major directors, he hasn't made a single film
    for solely commercial reasons.

    Egoyan is best known for "The Sweet Hereafter," which won the grand
    jury prize at Cannes 1997; "Felicia's Journey" (1998), and "Where the
    Truth Lies," that remarkable 2005 film with Kevin Bacon and Colin
    Firth as a team not unlike Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis, implicated in
    a murder. He often works with his wife, Arsinee Khanjian, who like
    Ingrid Bergman has the ability to project carnality and sweetness
    simultaneously. Egoyan brought his first feature, the $20,000 "Next of
    Kin," to the Toronto Film Festival in 1984. He was only 24.

    There is a quality in all of his work that resists the superficial and
    facile. Even at the very start, he wasn't interested in simple
    storytelling. He is drawn to what Fitzgerald called the dark night of
    the soul. Secrets, shames, the hidden and the forbidden coil around
    his characters, but he is not quick to condemn them. He and Khanjian
    are warm, friendly and smile easily, and in the films, you sense love
    for the characters and the belief that to know more is to forgive
    more.

    "Exotica" is a Miramax Classics DVD. Most of Egoyan's films are
    reviewed at rogerebert.com.
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