muted

Adoration

Rating6.3 /10
20091 h 40 m
Canada
3584 people rated

For his French-class assignment, a high school student weaves his family history in a news story involving terrorism, and goes on to invite an Internet audience in on the resulting controversy.

Drama
Romance

User Reviews

PIZKHALIFA

17/11/2024 16:03
Without a doubt,Atom Egoyan is one of Canada's finest directors making thought provoking films,nowadays. 'Adoration' is just another shining example of his craft. A high school student who has just written a short play about fictional events that happened in the life of his parents,manage to produce a tempest in a teacup about terrorism. The premise of forgiveness is also explored. As with any Egoyan film,the elements are provided in the form of an abstract jigsaw puzzle that the audience is expected to pull together (which is what I admire about his films). His films are also slowly paced,testing the patience of his audiences (especially the ones who are used to things being tied up in a nice package in ninety minutes,or less). The cast is made up of mostly an ensemble of unknowns (at least here in the United States,but I'm sure anybody who knows their onions about Canadian actors will spot their favourites). Rated 'R' by the MPAA,for mostly rough language & some brief sexuality,but is generally okay for older teenagers with a long attention span.

Hamza

16/11/2024 16:03
The new drama, Adoration is a confusing drama/thriller about a high school student named Simon (Devon Bostick) who tells his class his mother's husband, and his father put her on a plane with a bomb. He is now living with his uncle, Tom (Scott Speedman), a tow-truck driver. Simon's teacher, Sabine (Arsinee Khanjian) gets her car towed by Tom. She then realizes it is Simon's uncle. There is another plot in which Simon debates in an online chat room via webcam that debates what they think of Simon's view on his father. The two main plots don't seem to have anything in common with the other. This makes the movie have an illogical feeling. I didn't understand why Simon listens to these people tell him that he's right or wrong about his view on his father. He does not seem to think it is an open subject, and yet he's telling a lot of people (some of whom he does not know well if at all) this story. Why was his teacher so intrigued by his story to the point of basic interviewing Simon's uncle? I admit, Bostick is better than I expected for a young actor, but he's playing a character I've seen 3,000 times. I also can admit I think this is a good idea what they're trying to do. That does not save the movie. They never answered important questions like Is Simon telling the truth or making up a story?, and What is with these chatroom people? I just wanted them to answer these questions, but they even fail to do that. Skip it.

_j.mi______

15/11/2024 16:02
"Adoration" is, at its heart, a coming-of-age story. It's about that time of self-discovery when the question "who am I?" becomes an obsession. But what makes this film so startlingly refreshing is that it also has a classic structure rarely seen in contemporary cinema. The viewer is never quite sure whether or not the images on screen are real or imagined. Think of a chess game where each move prompts you to replay the entire game in your head. Such is the experience of watching "Adoration," brilliantly conceived and executed by writer/director/co-producer Atom Egoyan. Egoyan is a legend in his adopted country of Canada with dozens of awards and nominations to his credit (1997's "The Sweet Hereafter" earned him Oscar noms for writing and directing). The mere mention of his name widens the eyes of citizens north of the border, as I learned here at the Toronto International Film Festival, where I attended the film's North American Premiere (it debuted at Cannes, where it was nominated for the prestigious Palm D'Or). Locals hold him to a very high standard. For me, I prefer going in cold, knowing as little as possible about a film. Similarly, I won't reveal much about the story here. After losing his parents under questionable circumstances, Simon (Devon Bostick) is reluctantly being raised by his Uncle Tom (Scott Speedman). Simon's memories of his mother Rachel (Rachel Blanchard), an accomplished violinist, and father Sami (Noam Jenkins) are shrouded in mystery. Enter Simon's teacher Sabine (Arsinée Khanjian), who might be able to help Simon unlock the secrets that are the key to his youthful confusion. What follows is a brain teaser which takes great concentration. The wheels are always turning, and the viewer is constantly challenged to figure out exactly what is real or perceived, and by whom. The look of the film enhances the mystery inherent in the story. The use of single-point lighting allows shadows to fall upon already-obscure settings. Music is essential to the plot and, as such, Rachel's violin virtuosity is extended to a string soundtrack that is as haunting as the film itself. Paul Sarossy's cinematography is cleverly integrated with composer Mychael Danna's soundtrack, with tracking shots set to music as a visual ballet. Editor Susan Shipton had a tall order working with Egoyan to craft a virtual puzzle in which nothing is at it seems. Speedman ably plays the father figure who isn't quite ready to take on the task of raising a teen but does so out of loyalty to his late sister. Khanjian's Sabine is simply chilling and central to the power of the film. Blanchard is a joy to watch -- simply an angel on screen (and shot that way, to boot) -- and Jenkins successfully remains an enigmatic personality throughout. But, most of all, this is Bostick's film to carry on his young shoulders. Appearing in almost every scene, it's his curiosity and angst which drive "Adoration," and it's our empathy for him (weren't we all Simon once?) that gives the film its heart and soul. Bostick is one of Canada's most prolific young actors (he co-starred in Citizen Duane, one of my Top Picks from the 2006 festival) and will hopefully be introduced to a wider audience if this film gets the distribution it deserves. The moment the credits began to roll I wanted to see "Adoration" again. If there were back-to-back screenings I would have remained in my seat. This is the first film in recent memory which has had that effect on me. There's nothing more exciting and intriguing than a film that plays with space and time, where perception matters more than anything else. What we see on screen vs. what is in our heads -- the spaces we fill with our own thoughts -- are artfully juggled by Egoyan and the result is simply a masterpiece.

Barsha Basnet

14/11/2024 16:01
Every character is sympathetic, nobody is good or evil, instead showing everyone as a human being, no matter what our cultural differences are. The compelling performances(Bostick in particular) are slightly offset by an overuse of background music, in addition to the slightly non-linear structure taking some time to get used to. Despite the background music occasionally distracting from what's in front of you, Adoration is a compelling film, not just as a character study, but as an experience many will be familiar with. People like me have come to expect thoughtful pieces of celluloid from filmmakers like Egoyan and he delivers once again, even with the film's minor technical flaws.

cv 💣💥 mareim Mar5 ❤🇲🇷🇲

14/11/2024 16:01
I just returned from seeing the North American premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival. As I watched I noted that the movie was extremely well-crafted in terms of cinematography, editing, music score and exceptional performances by a very talented cast. Why did I leave the film feeling disappointment? I think it was due to writing that was well below par. Egoyan wrote and directed the film. It was a masterpiece of character development but the script was inordinately complex. Trying to make nothing seem as it is, or trying to have a plot twist (a la Hitchcock), Egoyan settles for lying to his audience and thus overly complicates the plot. He leads us down one path and then simply takes a side road that makes the first half of the movie irrelevant. Further there are details that are simply inaccurate. The movie is unashamedly shot in Toronto but one of the subtexts (why the main characters live in poverty)simply ignored the Ontario law of wills and estates. To people not trained in law this may seem unimportant. However,surely a director with the genius of Egoyan could have had his script proofread by a lawyer to enhance realism. Film students will love this movie for its artistic value. Just don't expect it to get the box office that a tighter and less contrived plot could have delivered.

Siwat Chotchaicharin

14/11/2024 16:01
Atom Egoyan's Adoration weaves a complex tale of a young man searching for the truth about his family by perpetuating a lie in order to witness its consequences. Simon (Devon Bostick), a young high school student, tells his class that his Lebanese father Sami (Noam Jenkins) was a terrorist who attempted to blow up a plane with a bomb carried by his pregnant wife, Rachel (Rachel Blanchard), a talented violinist. In his presentation to the class, Simon says that he is the unborn child, his mother was the innocent being led to her demise, and his father was the killer out to murder 400 innocent people to promote a cause. The only problem with the story is that it is not true. The incident never happened. The film exposes the ease with which people are willing to accept what they are told without question and how modern technology has become a useful tool for those eager to disseminate falsehood. According to the director, the film is "about people dealing with absences. He (Simon) imagines having a father who is a demon; he wants to go as far as possible into what that might mean." Adoration begins with an indelible image – a young woman standing at the end of a pier overlooking a river playing the violin while her husband and young son watch in awe. Moving forward and backward in time with great ease, the film slowly constructs the events which have led to Simon's school confessional. The key player is Simon's French teacher Sabine (Arsinée Khanjian) whose own family was killed in Lebanon by a terrorist attack. Sabine reads an article to the class about an incident that occurred in 1986 in which a Jordanian man, Nezar Hindawi, sent his pregnant Irish girlfriend on an El Al flight with a bomb in her handbag, of which she had no knowledge until it was discovered by Israeli airport security. Heavily influenced by his bigoted grandfather Morris (Kenneth Walsh) to believe that his father intentionally caused his mother's death in a car crash, the vulnerable Simon constructs a parallel between the article read by his French teacher and the death of his parents. On his own, Simon posts his fake story on the Internet and has to deal with emotional responses from holocaust victims, holocaust deniers, students, and professors talking about terrorism, martyrdom, and heroism. It is a discussion that often sinks to the level of victimization as portrayed by veteran actor Maury Chaykin who blames the bogus airplane incident for "ruining" his life. Simon's uncle, Tom (Scott Speedman), who raised the boy after his parents' death, acts as a mediator between his nephew and the teacher who encourages Simon to tell his fake story in the school auditorium. Tom is a tow truck operator with a short fuse who harbors a deep resentment against his father for the way he was treated as a child and his encounters with Sabine contain some of the film's most intense moments. Aided by a tenderly evocative violin-prominent soundtrack by Mychael Danna, Adoration is an intelligent and imaginative study of family conflict and reconciliation that serves as a compelling probe into human behavior and the ability to distinguish between fact and fiction. Though it contains a great deal of ambiguity and character motivations tend to be somewhat mystifying, Adoration is a very involving film with performances that are uniformly excellent, particularly Arsinee Khanjian as the emotionally-damaged teacher and Speedman and Bostock who provide enough tension to keep us riveted throughout.

TV.Quran ✅

14/11/2024 16:01
A teenager (Devon Bostick) who was orphaned after the tragic deaths of his parents is prompted by his teacher (Arsinee Khanjian) to deliver a fictional monologue about his father's failed terrorist act as fact in an elaborate "dramatic exercise" in Armenian-Canadian auteur Atom Egoyan's latest thought-provoking piece of abstraction "Adoration". As the fiction spins out of control over the internet, the true motives of those involved in the lie are revealed and back-stories come collapsing in on each other in Egoyan's signature elliptical style. Egoyan, as always, gives patient viewers plenty to chew on. Like the young man's monologue that marries a true story to a false one about his parents, "Adoration" itself is an interesting dramatic experiment designed to provoke. It tackles many issues including the motives of terrorists, fractured familial relationships, the hollowness of alleged connections made through modern technology and the dangers of thinking those connections can replace real face-to-face human interaction. Though I always question Egoyan's motive in casting his wife Arsinee Khanjian in his films, in many ways, she gives her most understated and powerful performance here. Bostick does a decent job with a tough role, though Rachel Blanchard is curiously flat in the flashbacks as his mother. The true revelation is Scott Speedman as the troubled tow-truck driver who reluctantly steps in to raise his sister's son after she dies. His story arc proves to be the most involving, though one wishes his background had been more developed. The bizarre detour into sleazy mediocrity with "Where the Truth Lies" seems to have made Egoyan a little rusty as he returns to a more familiar form here for those who have been watching the arc of his career. The elliptical folding in of the converging plot lines seems clumsier in "Adoration" than it did in his earlier works, and the "big reveal" comes a few scenes too early and sucks out the emotional impact. Unlike "Exotica" which had the swagger of a young auteur at the top of his game, or "The Sweet Hereafter" which came from the sublime source material of novelist Russell Banks, "Adoration" represents Egoyan bruised from years of wear left to his own devices. Though compelling, he gets the best of himself and let's the ideas take over the characters. He also relies far too much on visuals of non-characters in chat rooms or of people being recorded with cameras. However, Egoyan scores when Mychael Danna lends his musical compositions. The frequent collaborator does a magnificent job creating a haunting score with a recurring violin motif that plays integral to one of the back-stories. Back in the late 1990's Atom Egoyan was in a league of his own and master of his own style. In the past ten years, however, international cinema has seen the emergence of filmmakers like Mexico's Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu ("Amores Perros", "21 Grams" and "Babel") and Germany's Fa-tih Akin (whose superb "The Edge of Heaven" deserved a bigger audience stateside last year). They often tackle similar themes in an elliptical Egoyanesque manner. But because their films are presented on a larger scale and infused with a certain energy and immediacy, Egoyan's films, in all their isolated scholarly austerity, have been unfairly left out in the cold. "Adoration" may not be Egoyan's best, but it proves he still has some good ideas in him and he isn't ready to be dismissed just yet.

user1348554204499

13/11/2024 16:00
Adoration is one of those stupefying movies that begin to annoy you as the movie runs along culminating to utter contrivance reducing it to junk. The movie feels totally fraudulent by the time the final credits are scrolling mostly because of it's artificial and preposterous writing.(spoiler)The whole movie boils down to a horribly 2-Dimensional racially/religiously charged arguments between Lebonese Dad and Prejudiced Father-In-Law, one which sets the needed friction and momentum for everything else. The movie attempts to weave a big web of details too big for it's own good. There is dead-end scenes over and over talking about terrorism depicted on internet "chatrooms" adding zero - nothing but extraneous dead weight for the sake of shock value and "buzz". This is similar to watching characters in a movie watch another movie or TV - it flat out conveys nothing.(another spoiler)By the end we have a young kid questioning his past and some strangely obsessed Lebonese French teacher egging him on to create untruthful stories about his father to deal with his pent-up emotional grief fortified on by earlier stated Father-in-Law (Grand-father). This is a movie that got re-edited too much.

Nomzy Stholly

13/11/2024 16:00
Atom Egoyan is a very skilled filmmaker that is exploiting a stereotype of the older white person's racism against a Lebanese son in law. Old white people are easy to pick on, Hollywood routinely allows this because there is little criticism generated from it. Does that mean this is right? I don't think so. The film implies that a group of people (older white people) are "monsters." Maybe Atom has experienced racism from white people because of his Egyptian father, I get the feeling that he hates me for being white and 54 years old. I give Atom a 10 for the skill in making this film, he gets a 0 for the subject.

Evie🍫

13/11/2024 16:00
I saw this film at a special screening with Q&A with director and cast and was really blown away by how not-good it really was. I saw "The Sweet Hereafter" and loved it and I guess I expected "Adoration to be somehow in the same class of film. It was not. Adoration is a lot more like a student film, it was kind of embarrassing to watch in many parts and even more embarrassing to hear the cast and director talk about it as though it was a really thoughtful, well-made film. Don't get me wrong, I know they were trying very hard with this movie and it was intended to tackle all sorts of tough topics in a latter-period Godard sort of way, but it just didn't work. I don't know why there are so many good reviews coming out for this film, I'm fairly certain that most of the people who it will be unhappy about their experience. I saw it with four film-literate, film-working friends in Los Angeles and we were all disappointed. I really don't want to hate on films and filmmakers that have credibility but I don't want audiences to be misled into thinking this is even close to an enjoyable film, because it is not.
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