Atom Egoyans Exotica is
a paradoxical film. It is intense, yet distant. Erotic, but sterile. Hollow, but pithy. It
is sure to provoke debate, as viewers will likely complain about what they may have
missed. However, it is precisely this type of confusion and controversy that makes this
one of the best movies ever to come out of Canada.
You dont want to know too much of the story, as that would spoil some of the
surprises that make Exotica such a challenging and rewarding experience. However, this
much can be told: the central character, Francis (a tortuously perfect performance by
Bruce Greenwood) spends his days auditing a pet store that is a front for illegally
imported exotic birds while spending his nights trying to exorcise his demons in the
otherworldly strangeness of the movie-titled strip club.
The club is full of odd souls as well: the DJ Eric, played with appropriate intensity by
Elias Koteas, who must watch his ex-girlfriend dance for Francis while also carrying on an affair with the very pregnant
club owner, who just happens to be carrying Erics baby. This is
just the premise, mind you.
The many threads of this story are admirably and intricately woven together until we reach
a climactic set of scenes that clarify everyones relationships and act as a
catharsis for both the characters and the audience.
That the customers at Exotica appear to be in a trance, listening to the gloomy tunes of
Leonard Cohen while watching the girls dance, and that the central figures all have
massive emotional problems that we can only begin to guess at, gives Exotica an
off-putting air for much of the first hour. However, the last half hour of the film brings
everything together in a most satisfying, almost tender, conclusion.
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