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Interview:
Jeremy Podeswa 1-2
He caused
ripples on the international circuit with his debut film Eclipse
in 1996, and Jeremy Podeswa may soon find himself elevated to
the status of fellow Canadians David Cronenberg and - more specifically
- Atom Egoyan. Taking place over a three-day period, The
Five Senses is about five characters who live or work
in a multi-purpose building across the road from a park where
a young child disappears. While the city is galvanised by the
drama, some of the characters are more absorbed in their own problems.
The five characters
correspond to the five human senses of touch, taste, sight, sound
and smell. Robert (Daniel Maclvor) is a professional house cleaner,
who sets out to examine his romantic past through an interrogation
of his former lovers, both male and female. Rona (Mary Louise
Parker), Robert's best friend, is a cake decorator who makes beautiful
confections with no flavour. Rona is followed back to Canada by
Roberto (Marco Leonardi), an Italian lover she met on vacation.
Roberto, a chef, does not speak English, but is determined to
win Rona's love in spite of her reluctance.
Richard (Philippe
Volter) is a French eye-doctor who is going deaf and needs to
find a new way of hearing. Alone,
he attempts to build a "so library" in his mind but only breaks
through his sense of loneliness isolation when he meets a woman.
Ruth is a widowed massage therapist (Gabrielle Rose) who feels
terribly sorry for the little girl's mother and attempts to befriend
her.
Through this
experience Ruth is able to move a step closer to her own alienated
daughter, Rachel (Nadia Liz), who has a guilty secret that teaches
her a valuable lesson.
"It's narratively
more complex than the first film," explains Podeswa. "The
Five Senses has always been for me a film about the difficulties
we encounter when we venture outside ourselves and attempt to
make meaningful relationships with others."
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