The films of Atom Egoyan immerse the viewer in a world of lush
sensuality, melancholia, and brooding obsession. From his earliest films
Next of Kin and Family Viewing, to his coruscating Exotica and
recent projects such as Where the Truth Lies, Egoyan has paid infinite
attention to narrative intricacy and psychological complexity. Traumatic
loss and its management through ritual return as themes in his films as
he explores personal scenarios of mourning and broader issues of
genocide, exile, and postmemory, in particular in relation to his own
Armenian heritage.
In this study, Emma Wilson closely analyzes the range of Egoyan's films
and their visual textures, emotional control, and perverse beauty.
Offering a full-scale chronological overview of Egoyan's work on films
up to and including Where the Truth Lies, Wilson shows the persistence
and development of certain structures and themes in Egoyan's cinema:
questions of exile and nostalgia, trauma and healing, the family and
sexuality. While drawing on ideas about intercultural cinema, Wilson
also sets Egoyan's films in the context of contemporary Canadian cinema
and European art-house cinema. Egoyan's own comments on his films thread
throughout Wilson's analyses, and the book features a recent interview
with the director.