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Forbidden desires and dangerous intrigue generate sizzling heat in this erotic thriller! At a sexy strip club called Exotica, three strangers -- an obsessive man, an erotic table dancer, and the club's mysterious D.J. -- share much more than is apparent at first glance! As their secret passions grow, they become more deeply entangled in an inescapable web of jealousy, deceit, and revenge! The powerfully seductive hit EXOTICA is gripping entertainment -- you won't be able to take your eyes off it!
Despite its initially misleading packaging, Exotica is a beguiling mystery by enigmatic Canadian filmmaker Atom Egoyan, in which people and their relationships are not what they seem. What at first appear to be disparate stories of a tormented tax auditor, a lonely pet-shop owner, and a sensitive stripper and her coworkers gradually merge to reveal a larger, interconnected portrait. The sequences involving Mia Kirshner's schoolgirl stripper are particularly engrossing because of her character's intelligence and the scenes' deeper subtext. Indeed, Exotica is less about stripping than about fragile human relationships, and it is not until the truly revelatory final scene that we are able to fully absorb the film's deeper meaning.
In spite of its atrociously misleading packaging, Exotica is a gripping entertainment that you won't be able to take your eyes off. The powerfully seductive hit EXOTICA is a beguiling mystery by enigmatic Canadian filmmaker Atom Egoyan, in which people and their relationships are not what they seem. What at first appear to be disparate stories of a tormented tax auditor, a lonely pet-shop owner, and a sensitive stripper and her coworkers gradually merge to reveal a larger, interconnected portrait. The sequences involving Mia Kirshner's schoolgirl stripper are particularly engrossing because of her character's intelligence and the scenes' deeper subtext. Indeed, Exotica is less about stripping than about fragile human relationships, and it is not until the truly revelatory final scene that we are able to fully absorb the film's deeper meaning. --Bryan Reesman
product information:
Attribute | Value | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
aspect_ratio | 1.66 | ||||
is_discontinued_by_manufacturer | No | ||||
mpaa_rating | R (Restricted) | ||||
product_dimensions | 7.5 x 5.38 x 0.6 inches; 3.2 ounces | ||||
director | Atom Egoyan | ||||
media_format | Color, Letterboxed, DVD, Closed-captioned, Widescreen, NTSC, Dolby | ||||
run_time | 1 hour and 43 minutes | ||||
release_date | July 3, 2001 | ||||
actors | Bruce Greenwood, Elias Koteas, Don McKellar, David Hemblen, Mia Kirshner | ||||
subtitles | | ||||
language | English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround) | ||||
studio | Miramax | ||||
writers | Atom Egoyan | ||||
number_of_discs | 1 | ||||
best_sellers_rank | #115,605 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV) #5,931 in Mystery & Thrillers (Movies & TV) | ||||
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