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Tragedy's Lingering Explosions

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  • Tragedy's Lingering Explosions

    TRAGEDY'S LINGERING EXPLOSIONS

    Argus Weekend (South Africa)
    September 20, 2009

    Catastrophe is the internal combustion of Atom Egoyan's movies. Recall
    the skidding school bus from 1997's The Sweet Hereafter, in which
    a small town reels from the deaths of 14 children, or the legacy of
    the Armenian genocide that dizzies the characters in 2002's Ararat.

    In Adoration, which feels like the completion of a trilogy of grief,
    the catastrophe is prevented. Four hundred people do not die on an
    aeroplane bound for Tel Aviv because security catches a bomb that
    was placed in a pregnant woman's bag by her Arab husband.

    The film follows a Toronto high-schooler named Simon, who is encouraged
    by his teacher to translate and retell the old news story in French
    class - as though he were the unborn child of the woman unintentionally
    carrying the bomb.

    The class is rapt, and Simon suddenly becomes a symbol in a debate
    about martyrdom versus mass murder. His story hits the web, and then
    everyone is in on the discussion (even passengers from that aborted
    flight).

    The bomb that didn't go off aboard the flight instead goes off years
    later in the classroom, on the internet and at home, where Simon has
    been raised by his brooding uncle since his mother and father died
    in a car crash a decade earlier.

    The complex story structure teeters between the revelatory and the
    absurd, depending on how much you buy the irritating-then-intriguing
    performance by Arsine Khanjian, who plays Simon's teacher.

    Lending much-needed realism are Devon Bostick, smart and searching as
    Simon, and Scott Speedman, pained and cynical as Simon's guilt-ridden
    uncle.

    Adoration is a delicate rumination on how innocence and truth evolve
    in the aftermath of catastrophe, as people stake their emotional
    ownership in tragedy.

    Simon finds himself without territory to claim in his parents' death,
    and his teacher thinks the best way to the truth is through a lie. Some
    might call this manipulation - of character and of viewer. Others would
    rightly call it an exercise. A provocation of debate. - Washington Post

    Adoration Directed by: Atom Egoyan Starring: Devon Bostick, Scott
    Speedman, Rachel Blanchard, Noam Jenkins Running time: 100 minutes
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