EXOTICA (1994)
this is another one i caught on late night '90s canadian television as a perhaps-too-young teen, and yet...
nothing could have prepared me for witnessing this hypnotic film as an adult. i couldn't get it out of my head. i watched it. i watched it again. i invited a friend over and we watched it together just so we could talk about it. though it takes place in a sexy setting, it's not a story about sex... or anything lurid at all, really. it's about pain, and it's about the strange rituals we create to help us endure our pain.
as he often could, roger ebert said it perfectly in his review:
"some directors make movies like onions, peeling off one layer after another. [egoyan] works in the opposite way. his new movie, EXOTICA reconstructs the onion, one layer at a time. it starts with small pearls of a story that seem mysterious and unconnected, and gradually the whole form becomes clear. it's a curiously satisfying experience."
i couldn't be prouder that canada had one of the best entries in the mid-'90s indie film explosion, and i love finding out all these years later that atom egoyan and arsinée khanjian were a canadian/armenian indie film power couple. i can't wait to dig into more of their work.
p.s. the criterion edition of this is an delight in film study, from the illuminating sarah polley/atom egoyan conversation and the archival egoyan film, to the audio commentary and the damn fine cover art.
* * * * / 4
2023.03.03